Fabula
S3E17 · Sins of the Father

Favoritism and Friction in Ten Forward

In Ten Forward Riker finds Wesley brooding and Geordi openly frustrated — the Enterprise's new Klingon first officer, Commander Kurn, has been conducting abrasive surprise inspections that have flattened morale. Riker initially frames Kurn's behavior as cultural formality, but Wesley and Geordi push back: Kurn is harder on everyone except one person. The conversation reframes the problem from mere style clash to potential favoritism, isolating Worf and suggesting Kurn's presence may serve a private or political agenda. This scene functions as a setup and early turning point, exposing internal division and raising stakes for Worf's honor and the ship's cohesion.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

5

Riker approaches Wesley, noticing his unhappiness and attempts to engage him in conversation.

neutral to concern ['Ten Forward']

Wesley reluctantly admits his frustration with Commander Kurn's harsh treatment.

concern to frustration ['Ten Forward']

Geordi interrupts, visibly upset about Kurn's surprise inspection in Engineering.

frustration to outrage ['Ten Forward']

Riker attempts to justify Kurn's behavior as cultural differences, but Geordi and Wesley push back.

outrage to defiance ['Ten Forward']

Wesley and Geordi hint that Kurn is singling out everyone except Worf, implying favoritism.

defiance to suspicion ['Ten Forward']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Brooding and exposed; surface deference to Riker masks real anxiety about reputation and fear of ostracism.

Wesley sits withdrawn at a table, stares into space, reports feeling singled out by Commander Kurn and expresses insecurity about his competence and standing on the ship.

Goals in this moment
  • Seek validation and reassurance from a senior officer (Riker).
  • Understand why he is being treated harshly and whether it's personal.
  • Avoid further humiliation and protect his standing aboard the Enterprise.
Active beliefs
  • Kurn dislikes him personally and is singling him out.
  • Command-level intervention (Riker) can remedy perceived unfairness.
  • If the pattern continues, it will harm his ability to serve effectively.
Character traits
vulnerable insecure self-conscious honest
Follow Wesley Crusher's journey

Authoritative and implacable in description; implied confidence and lack of concern for Starfleet norms, possibly purposeful in showing favor to a compatriot.

Commander Kurn is not physically present but is described as conducting abrasive, surprise inspections that single out most crew while sparing at least one Klingon—his actions are the catalyst for the conversation and morale collapse.

Goals in this moment
  • Enforce strict discipline and test the crew's readiness through surprise inspections.
  • Establish his authority aboard the Enterprise and align behavior with Klingon expectations.
  • (Implied) Protect or advance a Klingon colleague, potentially for private or political ends.
Active beliefs
  • Strict, formal Klingon command is the correct way to achieve discipline.
  • Showing favoritism toward a fellow Klingon (or particular crewman) is acceptable if it preserves Klingon honor or alliances.
  • Starfleet's more relaxed norms are secondary to Klingon modes of proving strength and loyalty.
Character traits
stern abrasive authoritative politically opaque
Follow Kurn's journey

Measured and attentive on the surface; quietly concerned about morale and the potential political consequences of an internal division.

Riker enters Ten Forward, sits with Wesley, asks probing questions and reframes the crew's complaints as a cultural clash; he listens, attempts to mediate, and registers the larger implication when Geordi reports Engineering's burdens.

Goals in this moment
  • Reassure Wesley and stabilize a distressed crew member.
  • Ascertain whether Kurn's behavior is cultural misunderstanding or something more corrosive.
  • Prevent an interpersonal issue from escalating into a breakdown of shipboard discipline and honor.
Active beliefs
  • Cultural differences (Klingon formality) can explain abrasive behavior.
  • As first officer, he must defuse tension before it harms mission readiness.
  • Open discussion in neutral spaces can reveal the root cause of crew discontent.
Character traits
calm diplomatic observant protective of crew cohesion
Follow William Riker's journey

Frustrated and worn thin; angry at the unfairness and the operational cost of Kurn's actions, seeking support and relief from a senior officer.

Geordi approaches the table visibly outraged, summarizes Kurn's surprise inspection of Engineering, and warns that the section will face extra shifts; his frustration voices operational and morale concerns to command.

Goals in this moment
  • Alert command to the practical consequences of Kurn's inspections.
  • Gain Riker's support to mitigate extra workload and protect his crew.
  • Expose any unfairness so Engineering isn't disproportionately punished.
Active beliefs
  • Kurn's inspection style is inappropriate for Starfleet context and harms operations.
  • Leadership should intervene to prevent unnecessary double shifts and preserve morale.
  • Clear communication of operational constraints should earn leniency.
Character traits
exasperated protective practical direct
Follow Geordi La …'s journey

Narrative Connections

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Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"WESLEY: "He... just doesn't seem to like me, sir. I can't do anything right for him. Every time I respond to one of his orders... he jumps down my throat. I'm not sure what I'm doing wrong.""
"GEORDI: "Well, sir... it's our new first officer.""
"RIKER: "His style of command is just different. Klingons believe in a strict formality of command and obedience.""