Tribbles for Ichneumon: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 16: Line 16:


<gallery>
<gallery>
File:The Trouble With Triffids.jpg|link=The Trouble With Triffids|"'''[[The Trouble With Triffids]]'''" wins the Caldecott Medal for Children's literature.
File:Death_of_a_Stalactite.jpg|link=Death of a Stalactite|"'''[[Death of a Stalactite]]'''" is one of the "Forbidden Episodes" of the television series ''Star Trek''.  
File:Death_of_a_Stalactite.jpg|link=Death of a Stalactite|"'''[[Death of a Stalactite]]'''" is one of the "Forbidden Episodes" of the television series ''Star Trek''.  


Line 43: Line 45:
* [[The Casein Glory]]
* [[The Casein Glory]]
* [[The Socialist Iteration]]
* [[The Socialist Iteration]]
* [[The Trouble With Triffids]]
* [[Weaponizing Spirograph]] - documentary film which has short interview with The Ichneumon discussing the inherent menace of recursion
* [[Weaponizing Spirograph]] - documentary film which has short interview with The Ichneumon discussing the inherent menace of recursion



Revision as of 16:42, 2 January 2022

Tribbles for Ichneumon.
"Tribbles for Ichneumon" inspired a brief fashion craze for Tribble-pelt sporrans.

"Tribbles for Ichneumon" is one of the "Forbidden Episodes" of the television series Star Trek.

Plot

The Ichneumon, an alien ambassador from the "Spock's Bug" parallel universe, is sterile, and will soon die without progeny, threatening the intra-universe treaty between Insects and Humanoids.

In a desperate effort to save both universes from extinction, Doctor McCoy synthesizes an experimental fertility drug using compounds isolated from living tribbles, but The Ichneumon refuses to take the drug unless it can first sting its eggs into a living host, naming McCoy as its host of choice.

McCoy is ready to sacrifice himself, but is knocked unconscious by a stunt double playing Kirk, who is in turn neck-pinched by the actual Leonard Nimoy (who narrates the episode).

During this human-on-human action, The Ichneumon grows increasingly impatient, finally stinging itself in a tantrum of alien petulance.

Thus does The Ichneumon bear its own young, which eat their progenitor and then sting themselves, sub specie aeternitatis.

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links