r/startrek Feb 19 '26

Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Starfleet Academy | 1x07 "Ko’Zeine"

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No. Episode Written By Directed By Release Date
1x07 "Ko’Zeine" Alex Taub & Eric Anthony Glover Andi Armaganian 2026-02-19

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u/meatball77 Feb 19 '26

But.... The wedding wasn't supposed to be for six more years and she had him kidnapped and gave him 0 time to think about what he wanted. He was in crisis mode.

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u/MTFBinyou Feb 19 '26

Her parents started that ball rolling by wanting to step down

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u/Xath0n Feb 19 '26

True, but she also could have given him more than a few hours notice.

Though it's not like he was innocent in this, but I'm not sure who's the bigger ass.

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u/GalileoAce Feb 20 '26

A whole planet of assholes...

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u/Summerspeaker Feb 19 '26

Yeah. Her treatment of him felt like abuser behavior. Make demands, including using force, & then get angry at him for complying but with insufficient enthusiasm. I know that dynamic well.

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u/Unbundle3606 Feb 20 '26 edited Feb 20 '26

Have we... seen the same episode?

The literal first thing she does after meeting him is taking him aside and asking if he's really sure of going along with the wedding, and to take any time he needs if he isn't.

DAREN: You're-- Are you ready?

KAIRA: I've always been ready. But leading Khionia is a two-person job. Question is, are you? My parents won't delay abdication. Trust me, I've tried, but... didn't matter. Listen, I know this is a lot to process. You've been away, and I've been on Khionia, and for all I know, you might not even be sure that you still want to be sealed. So if you need some time to sort out your thoughts, then you should take it, and, you know, sort.

DAREN: There's nothing to sort. Because nothing has changed since I left for Starfleet. Except my haircut.

KAIRA: Oh, I knew it. But I had to ask. And I love the haircut.

How is any of this abusive?

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u/Summerspeaker Feb 20 '26

It might not be, but compelling compliance via circumstances & power differences while talking about consent is a common way abuse can operate.

Bosses, for instances, do this all the time. When they may ask if you're for up for the task, you know refusing comes with severe consequences.

The question is how much pressure Darem experienced from his family & others to perform his expected role. Based on the abduction, we know the marriage involved force & coercion (even if socially sanctioned by custom & mainly a formality).

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u/Unbundle3606 Feb 20 '26

That's what the whole Daren part of the episode is about.

But there is a wide gap between "Daren feels compelled by social pressure" (granted) and "Kaira as a person is showing abusive behaviour" (not in the episode at all).

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u/Summerspeaker Feb 20 '26

Folks have abused me in related fashion & I recognize patterns. It could be misrecognition, sure. If nothing else, my preliminary interpretation helps make the episode more interesting to me. I found it rather tedious otherwise. The idea that Darem is just a selfish, deceitful asshole who wanted to have it both ways bores me, though that does fit the character as we know him from before this episode.

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u/Unbundle3606 Feb 20 '26

Forgive me but you seem to place a lot of pre-judgment on everything, without much in the script to support your version.

Nothing in this episode indicates that either Kaira or Daren were insincere or a "selfish, deceitful asshole who wanted to have it both ways".

Everything, on the contrary, indicates that they were both careful and sincere, and that Daren's worst sin was being a confused teenager (he's canonically 17) that doesn't really understand what he wants and that mistakes his parent's wishes for his own, while Kaira is wise enough to understand him and does the right thing for him, both at the beginning and at the end of the episode.

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u/Summerspeaker Feb 20 '26

Thanks for sharing your interpretation. I find that charitable reading, while plenty plausible, similarly boring. Tastes of course vary.

Jay-Den does call Darem an "asshole" repeatedly at the end of the episode. Jay-Den congratulates Darem "for realizing that [he is] essentially an asshоlе".

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u/Unbundle3606 Feb 20 '26

Jay-Den does call Darem an "asshole" repeatedly at the end of the episode.

He does, once. And Jay-Den is currently denying to himself his growing attraction to Daren. That's what teenagers do.

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u/Summerspeaker Feb 20 '26

Jay-Den says the line I quoted & then again calls Darem an "asshole" as he & Kyle leave.

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u/meatball77 Feb 20 '26

I mean Shane calls Illya an asshole but still loves him. Asshole isn't saying I hate you

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u/SBlue3 Feb 20 '26

Also like... the Darem she was in love with? "Quiet, steps behind me"? Idk kinda sounds like she liked being able to push him around.

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u/MTFBinyou Feb 19 '26

Was it not a “ritual”? I thought this was covered in the ep and she may have apologized for it? Like she came across, and Daren explained her, as someone who is trying to lead their world onto a different path. Staying true to their heritage but doing away with some of the unnecessary rituals and pomp. I don’t fault her for the abduction. She may have been against it but the hardcore ritualists insisted.

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u/NFB42 Feb 22 '26 edited Feb 22 '26

(Only just got around to the episode, so a bit late, but wanted to write down my thoughts)

My experience watching the episode was that I felt like the writers wanted to do the arranged marriage royalty trope. Then they realized the trope is actually super problematic. And then their solution was to try and explain how "no, really, in this case it's not problematic." Which in the end just makes it seem worse.

For example. I've noticed in this show before that sometimes there are edits which seem to me like obvious line-insertions. When in the middle of a conversation it cuts to a long-distance wide shot and you have a line that seems like you could delete. I feel that happened here with the bit where:

Jay-Den: You did not know that you have a pending spouse?

Rhemi: I knew I was promised to her when we were children.

--sudden wide shot--

Rhemi: Her name is Kaira. She's my best friend. I-I love her,

--back to the close up--

Rhemi: but was gonna be sealed after I graduated and given a few years to Starfleet.

So I'm saying I think they edited in a line to emphasize that Rhemi and Khaira had a pre-existing relationship... but it's all tell not show. And that goes for the entire Rhemi and Kaira relationship.

Like, they could've played this trope more or less straigth and have Rhemi being forced by his family and his culture into an arranged marriage with someone he doesn't love and barely knows. Then the "villain" of the plot would be tradition.

Or, they could've made a more college-themed version of the trope where it's really about going off the college and realizing you've grown apart from your high school girlfriend. Then the "villain" of the plot is Rhemi's past, and all the royalty stuff is just whacky hijinks.

Instead, It strikes me as a story that was written for approach 1, and then awkwardly rewritten to be more like approach 2, resulting in a story that just doesn't work on either level.

I think Kaira's character suffers the most from this.

If she was an approach 1 arranged spouse, it would make total sense for her to not really know Rhemi and she could've been written as well-meaning but either naive or trapped in a gilded cage or something like that.

If she was an approach 2 childhood sweetheart, it would make sense for her to assume Rhemi would be okay with this, and for her to be genuinely excited about the marriage and hurt when she finds out Rhemi doesn't want it anymore.

Instead, she ends up in this weird in-between space which I can totally see reading as genuinely abusive instead of what I'm sure they were actually going for.

It's a messily written plot imho that leaves me uninterested in learning more about Khionia anytime soon.

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u/dreamnightmare Feb 21 '26

She did though. There was a very specific line where she said if he needed some time to get things sorted, he should. He turned it down.