Difference between revisions of "Deanna Troi"

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== You've been misinformed ==
== You've been misinformed ==


She fully accepts [[Federation]] utopian propaganda, best demonstrated by her claiming that disease is eliminated within 50 years of [[Zephram Cochrane]] acheiving warp capabilities<ref>''[[Star Trek: First Contact]]''</ref> even though both [[TOS]] and TNG featured mutliple episodes with disease-centered plots.
She fully accepts [[Federation]] utopian propaganda, best demonstrated by her claiming that disease is eliminated within 50 years of [[Zephram Cochrane]] acheiving warp capabilities<ref>''[[Star Trek: First Contact]]''</ref> even though both [[TOS]] and TNG featured multiple episodes with disease-centered plots.


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 14:02, 3 March 2008

My telepathic powers tell me you're staring at my cleavage.

Counselor Deanna Troi is the product of yet another of many cross-species matings in Star Trek, this time half-human, half Betazoid. Aided by the telepathic abilities of her alien half, she serves as the psychiatrist on the Enterprise-D. It's hoped that her abilities were of better use in her counseling sessions than on the bridge as fans joke about not needing telepathy to tell what a certain character was feeling.

Ship's doorknob

Everyone gets a piece with Troi, even in Data's fantasies.

Troi is the object of desire for much of the Enterprise crew. She was in a long relationship with Riker before their assignment to the ship which is renewed and results in marriage between them in the TNG movie era. Reginald Barclay was infatuated with her upon his first coming aboard the Enterprise.[1] Worf pursued a relationship with her and the two were actually married in a parallel universe.[2]

In her role as easiest character in the crew, Deanna is also frequently the object of desire for visiting aliens. A sleazy part-Betazoid negotiator hooked up with her once[3], and an alien seeking to understand human feelings impregnated Troi with itself.[4]

The one man she was prearranged to marry dumped her for a woman he only knew from dreams and fantasies and who turned out to be on board a plague-filled starship.[5]

Mental hell

Don't make me be in Nemesis!!!

In addition to the alien impregnation, she has suffered two incidents of telepathic mental violations.[6][7] She was used as a dumping ground for dark thoughts by a diplomat travelling on the Enterprise, causing her to age extremely rapidly[8]. She has also been possessed by alien energy beings on multiple occasions[9][10]. Together, these incidents constitute essentially being raped at least half a dozen different times. Add to that her loony mother, the death of her father at an early age, learning that she had a sister who died when she was a baby[11], and being kidnapped and surgically altered by Romulans[12], and one wonders how she can still counsel others. The only time she showed real emotional distress was when she temporarily lost her telepathic abilities.

Interests

She enjoys chocolate sundaes and moonlight swims.

You've been misinformed

She fully accepts Federation utopian propaganda, best demonstrated by her claiming that disease is eliminated within 50 years of Zephram Cochrane acheiving warp capabilities[13] even though both TOS and TNG featured multiple episodes with disease-centered plots.

References

  1. TNG "Hollow Pursuits"
  2. TNG "Parallels"
  3. TNG "The Price"
  4. TNG "The Child"
  5. TNG "Haven"
  6. TNG “Violations”
  7. Star Trek: Nemesis
  8. TNG “Man of the People”
  9. TNG “Clues”
  10. TNG “Power Play”
  11. TNG “Dark Page”
  12. TNG “Face of the Enemy”
  13. Star Trek: First Contact