Babel (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)
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This article consists almost entirely of a plot summary and should be expanded to provide more balanced coverage that includes real-world context. Please edit the article to focus on discussing the work rather than merely reiterating the plot. (August 2011) |
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This article describes a work or element of fiction in a primarily in-universe style. Please help rewrite it to explain the fiction more clearly and provide non-fictional perspective. (August 2011) |
| "Babel" | |||
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| Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode | |||
The crew loses the ability to communicate |
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| Episode no. | Season 1 Episode 5 |
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| Directed by | Paul Lynch | ||
| Teleplay by | Michael McGreevey Naren Shankar |
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| Story by | Sally Caves Ira Steven Behr |
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| Featured music | Dennis McCarthy | ||
| Production code | 405 | ||
| Original air date | January 24, 1993 | ||
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| Episode chronology | |||
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| List of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes | |||
"Babel" is the fifth episode of the science fiction television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
[edit] Overview
A mysterious virus plagues the station that disrupts people's mind connection between the mundane things which are seen and their mental comprehension. Because of this, everybody is disconnected from their everyday duties.
[edit] Plot
Chief O'Brien is having to deal with numerous malfunctions throughout the station. This includes most of the station's replicators. While fixing one of the replicators, O'Brien unknowingly activates a device that was placed in one of the replicators. Shortly afterwards, O'Brien begins showing signs of aphasia — he becomes unable to speak coherently owing to a dissociation between any intended thought and the ulterior expression.
At first, Doctor Bashir isn't sure why O'Brien suddenly became aphasic. Tests showed no physiological causes, but when Lt. Dax suddenly becomes aphasic right before his eyes, he soon realizes that they are dealing with a virus that only mimics aphasia. He also determines that the virus is in the food that had come from command level replicators, but that the other replicators aren't producing contaminated food. People all over the station were showing signs of infection as well. The station is put under quarantine to keep the virus from spreading.
Quark, with his replicators still not functioning, claims that his brother, Rom, fixed the replicators. Odo discovers that Quark decided to produce the menu from his bar using a functional replicator in an abandoned set of crew quarters on the command level. The result was that the contaminated food was spread all over the station. As the virus spreads, Bashir discovers that the virus has mutated to become airborne. It also caused a dangerous high fever in its victims, which might kill them.
Kira soon finds a module in the last replicator O'Brien had worked on. It planted itself as a virus during the materialization process of the replicator, therefore, not being affected by the Biofilter. Taking it to Bashir, the crew discovers that the module inserted computer code into the replicators that built the virus into the food. Bashir reveals that the Bajoran underground placed the module in the replicator 18 years prior, and that the virus was engineered by a Bajoran terrorist during the time of the Cardassian occupation of Bajor.
The doctor (Dekon Elig) who created the virus had died while in a Cardassian prison. As the doctor (Surmak Ren) terminates a Comm line as Kira asks him about the virus, Kira decides to go get him. At first, Sisko declines Kira's offer, but then Odo recommends to Sisko that she goes because she is "all we have". Kira links with a computer in his office and transports him to a runabout. He is infected upon entering the runabout.
Meanwhile, virtually the entire crew is incapacitated. Captain Jameel, who was desperate to leave in order to deliver a perishable cargo, tries to leave the station without clearance, and ruptures his power core in the process. Odo mentions that if it were to explode it would take half the docking ring with it. Quark helps Odo save the station from the ship by ejecting it from its docking port before it could explode, destroying the ship in the process. The Bajoran doctor eventually finds a cure and the station's crew returns to normal.
[edit] References
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine DVD set, volume 1, disc 2, selection 1.
- P. Farrand, Nitpicker's Guide for Deep space Nine Trekkers New York: Dell (1996): 21 - 24
[edit] External links
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Babel |
- Babel at the Internet Movie Database
- "Babel" at TV.com
- Babel at Memory Alpha (a Star Trek wiki)
- Babel at StarTrek.com
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