The title is named after the eponymous 1966 Laura Nyro song which was more famously covered by The 5th Dimension in 1969. It has lent its name to various other media, including a movie, an episode of Gilmore Girls, as well as an episode of Cheers. Itās sung from the point of view of a woman wanting her boyfriend to marry her.
The Stardate is 2251.7, three months after the events of SNW: āHegemony, Part IIā. The Federation Day Centennial being 3 days away places the Earth year as 2261. Various non-canon sources give different dates for Federation Day, ranging from an unused newspaper clipping from Generations giving the date as October 11 to May 8 in Geoffrey Mandelās Star Charts.
The music being played as we move through a Starbase One biodome (SNW: āStrange New Worldsā) is āHacker De Tu Pielā by Lavanda Son, a Venezuelan tropical salsa band.
Chapel has returned from her three month fellowship and brings along with her Dr Roger Korby (her future fiancĆ© as per TOS: āWhat Are Little Girls Made Of?ā). Korby was played in the TOS episode by Michael Strong. In that episode, Spock referred to Korby as the Pasteur of archeological medicine, whose translation of old Orion records revolutionised immunization techniques. Of course, in the original, there is no hint that Korby and Spock had met before. In any case, if the timeline in the original still holds, Korby will disappear on Exo III within the year. Cillian OāSullivan, who plays him in SNW, has an Irish accent which Strong did not display.
As Spock digests the information that Korby is Chapelās date, the background music echoes the āfight musicā from TOS: āAmok Timeā, indicating his jealousy.
Ortegasās personnel file seen in SNW: āAmong the Lotus Eatersā seemed to mention only one sibling, Fabiola (a feminine name). Here her brother is named āBetoā, which a nickname for Spanish names that end in ā-bertoā.
Pike does have an impressive array of medals (Memory Alpha lists 17), and in 2256 was ranked among the most decorated captains in Starfleet (DIS: āChoose Your Painā). Batel makes a crack about Pikeās hair products, a rather meta joke considering the Internet memes about his hair.
The closed captioning says āTilarian Star Gemsā, but it could be āTalarianā, a race first seen in TNG: āSuddenly Humanā. The Talarian Republic encompasses at least two Alpha Quadrant star systems in the 24th Century.
The second act resets to the same opening narration of the first act (similar to TNG: āCause and Effectā), but then takes it into different events - the celebration of Spock and Chapelās wedding instead of the Federation Day Centennial.
One of the items on the wedding checklist is for a wedding licence and Pikeās approval, giving us a clue as to the legal requirements for a wedding for Starfleet personnel.
Kal-if-fee refers to part of the traditional Vulcan wedding ceremony (the kun-ut-kal-if-fee), specifically where the bride opts for a ritual challenge where two males fight for the right to mate with her (āAmok Timeā).
Korby says heās checked himself for phase variances to see if heās in an alternate dimension. As we learned from TNG: āParallelsā, each parallel universe (and its inhabitants) has its own quantum signature. Spock refers to an improbability field that once made the crew sing (SNW: āSubspace Rhapsodyā).
The entity says, āGreetings and many felicitationsā. In TOS: āThe Squire of Gothosā, Trelaneās first message to Enterprise is āGreetings and Felicitationsā. His snapping of fingers is also reminiscent of Trelane and Q. The possible relationship between Trelane and the Q has been the result of much fan speculation and made explicit in some licensed fiction (the late and much lamented Peter Davidās Q-Square being the best example).
Scottyās claim that heās not much of a drinker is belied by his conduct during TOS, especially when he literally drinks the alien Tomar under the table in TOS: āBy Any Other Nameā.
Korbyās remark about āwishing us all into a cornfieldā is a reference to the classic Twilight Zone episode āItās a Good Lifeā, where Bill Mumy (who would later star in DS9: āThe Siege of AR-558ā) plays a malevolent child with immense reality-altering powers who banishes people who defy him to āthe cornfieldā, where they are never seen again.
Spock quotes from Pablo Narudaās Love Sonnet XI as part of his vows (and I believe it was also quoted earlier when he was speaking with Korby).
While no names are mentioned, I think itās pretty clear it is Trelane (he even lets loose with a āTally Ho!ā), and his father, appropriately enough is voiced by John de Lancie, namely Q. Why Spock doesnāt remember this when āThe Squire of Gothosā comes around is now an open question. Trelane also mentions an unnamed āold home worldā Korby was digging around in and that he is 8,020 years old.
The song that closes out the celebrations is, of course, āWake Me Up Before You Go Goā by 80s pop duo Wham!. And it appears that Ortegas was more affected by her encounter with the Gorn than we thought although whether itās PTSD (like Keyla Detmer in DIS) or something more sinister remains to be seen.
As said on the Daystrom crosspost, the bartender is the first live action appearance of an Edosian, dirst introduced in TAS.
When Spock first meets Trelane at the bar, he said he didnāt know there was a Vulcan bartender on board. Later, as the wedding planner, Trelane looks at his reflection and is clearly Andorian. I think we as the audience see him as Trelane, but Spock and the rest of the crew never see the ārealā him. This would explain why Spock doesnāt remember him in TOS.
Pike also commented on the wedding planner being Andorian. Spock didnāt seem to react to that statement, so I guess he also saw the Trelane as Andorian at that point.
It would be a simple matter for Trelane to make them all forget about him in āThe Squire of Gothosā so that he could have more fun with them. I also like the idea that the Q wore the raiment of āenergy entitiesā at this point in history just as fashion.