Human Error (Star Trek: Voyager)

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"Human Error"
Star Trek: Voyager episode
Episode no.Season 7
Episode 18
Directed by Allan Kroeker
Story by André Bormanis
Kenneth Biller
Teleplay by Brannon Braga
André Bormanis
Featured music Jay Chattaway
Production code264
Original air dateMarch 7, 2001 (2001-03-07)
Guest appearance
Episode chronology
 Previous
"Workforce, Part II"
Next 
"Q2"
Star Trek: Voyager season 7
List of episodes

"Human Error" is the 164th episode of the TV series Star Trek: Voyager , the 18th episode of the seventh season. Seven of Nine explores her romantic side, in her ongoing recovery aboard the USS Voyager. Set in the Star Trek universe, a Federation starship must spend decades making its way back to Earth. In its last season, writers take us deeper into the character Seven of Nine (played by Jeri Ryan).[ citation needed ]

Contents

This episode aired on the United Paramount Network (UPN) on March 7, 2001(23 years ago). [1]

During the episode, Seven of Nine seeks to explore her humanity more on an emotional level. She is also shown spending time sleeping outside of her regeneration alcove, showing that on a physical level her humanity is reasserting itself more, making Seven less reliant on Borg technology than she has been in the past.

Plot

Seven has been using Voyager's holodeck to try to experience what it would be like to be more human; she enjoys a simulation of the upcoming baby shower for Paris and Torres, and starts to develop a relationship with a computer-generated Chakotay. Outside of the holodeck, though she has been invited to the baby shower, Seven declines. Tuvok assures her that despite their mutual discomfort at such social situations, they are good for morale and encourages her to attend. Seven still decides not to go, and later discusses her feelings while seeing the Doctor about malfunctions in one of her Borg implants. The Doctor finds he cannot extract the implant, which reminds Seven that she is not fully human.

Sometime later, Voyager is knocked out of warp by a nearby explosion. Though the ship is unharmed, they investigate the source of the explosion and find it was from a warhead launched some distance away to a nearby beacon. Fearing that another warhead may actually harm the ship, Captain Janeway orders Seven to find a method to detect the warheads to give them time to evade them. Seven works with Icheb in the Astrometrics lab. She also continues to use the holodeck, the relationship with the virtual Chakotay becoming more romantic.

Seven begins to have difficulty separating the events on the holodeck from that on the real ship; she interrupts Torres during a situation in Engineering to present her with a baby shower gift, mimics some of the behavior she had towards the holodeck Chakotay with the real version, and becomes short-tempered at Icheb. As a result, she fails to complete her assignment, and Voyager is rocked by an explosion from another warhead, closer than the last. Janeway speaks to Seven, seeing that she is distracted, and has Chakotay keep watch on her. Seven goes to the holodeck to break up with the virtual Chakotay, but she suddenly feels pain from her implants, and calls for the Doctor. The Doctor appears in the holodeck, sees the program that she is running, and then has her transported to Sick Bay. After some operations, Seven regains consciousness, and tells the Doctor she plans to delete that program. The Doctor encourages her to continue exploring her humanity, and explains that she just needs to find the balance between her personal life and her duties.

Seven returns to Astrometrics and completes her assignment; they discover a series of warheads approaching Voyager but are able to safely evade them without damage to the ship. Later, the Doctor tells Seven that he believes her Borg implants short-circuited as a failsafe that would be triggered if a drone ever gained back their emotions. He suggests he could remove them after a long series of surgeries, but Seven declines, believing it necessary to keep her focus on her duties. When she later encounters Chakotay, he invites her to a dinner party for the senior crew that even Tuvok is attending, but she declines and walks away.

Reception

Negative

In 2015, a Star Trek: Voyager binge-watching guide by WIRED suggested skipping this episode. [2]

Positive

In 2017, Screen Rant ranked "Human Error" the tenth best romantic episode of Star Trek, in a story that mixes a holodeck driven fantasy with daily life aboard a starship. [3]

SyFy recommended this episode for their Seven of Nine binge-watching guide. [4]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chakotay</span> Character from Star Trek: Voyager

Chakotay is a fictional character who appears in each of the seven seasons of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager. Portrayed by Robert Beltran, he was First Officer aboard the Starfleet starship USS Voyager, and later promoted to Captain in command of the USS Protostar in Star Trek: Prodigy. The character was suggested at an early stage of the development of the series. He is the first Native American main character in the Star Trek franchise. This was a deliberate move by the producers of the series, who sought to provide an inspiration as with Uhura in Star Trek: The Original Series for African Americans. To develop the character, the producers sought the assistance of Jamake Highwater who falsely claimed to be Native American. Despite first being named by producers as a Sioux, and later a Hopi, Chakotay was given no tribal affiliation at the start of the series, and eventually was assigned ancestry with a fictional tribe in the episode "Tattoo”. It wasn’t until his appearance in Star Trek: Prodigy that he was formally identified as a descendant of the Nicarao people of Central America.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Seven of Nine</span> Fictional character in Star Trek franchise

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References

  1. "Star Trek: Voyager". TV Guide. 2020. Archived from the original on 2020-11-10.
  2. McMillan, Graeme (2015-05-27). "WIRED Binge-Watching Guide: Star Trek: Voyager" . Wired. ISSN   1059-1028. Archived from the original on 2019-07-15. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
  3. Ulster, Laurie (2017-02-06). "Star Trek's 15 Greatest Romances". Screen Rant . Archived from the original on 2022-08-17.
  4. Fleenor, S. E. (2019-04-16). "The Seven of Nine binge guide". SYFY WIRE. Archived from the original on 2019-04-17. Retrieved 2019-06-12.