Talk:Alexander Rozhenko

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I have here that Alexander's birth year was 2359 rather than 2366. Both StarTrek.com and the Star Trek Encyclopedia contradict themselves by giving the two different years in various places. I chose 2359 because it makes more sense. For example, Alexander fought with the Klingon Defense Force in 2374. If he had been born in 2359, this would make him fifteen years old (not an out-of-the-ordinary age for serving in the military, especially in warrior cultures such as the Klingon Empire); if he had been born in 2366, this would make him eight. -Branddobbe 21:09, Mar 13, 2004 (UTC)

But the Stardate of his birth Alexander gives in New Ground places it clearly within the third season of TNG... therefore, 2366.

The relationships between stardates and calendar dates is, in a word, flexible. It is not even absolutely established that stardates always run forwards, and there is definitely not an established-in-canon system for converting stardates to calendar dates. (For that matter, although it is almost universally assumed, it is to my knowledge not actually established in canon that events occur in the order in which episodes first aired.) Hanging an argument for a character's age at a certain point on a stardate, in the absense of any on-screen connection between that particular stardate and a particular calendar date, is tenuous at best. --Jonadab

Well, that's certainly true of the original series and broadly true of all Star Trek as well. But cannot we at least allow that since the Stardate of Alexander's birth corresponds exactly to the episode Booby Trap, that they must have happened at the same time? You can split hairs all you like, but it's plain that the writers had no intention for Alexander to have been born any time but during the third season of TNG (to say nothing of the clear subtext of The Emissay that Worf and K'Ehleyr had not consumated their relationship before that point -- hence Worf's insistence on the pledge of marriage as soon as they did).

With regard to this sentence:

In order to try and rationalize Alexander's fast growth, some sources have suggested that he was actually born in 2359, however this is contradicted by the official biography for the character at startrek.com which gives the 2366 birthdate...

Since when is startrek.com canon? In the Star Trek universe, only what appears onscreen is canon. If his birth date was not given on screen, then it is not known for certain. --Jonadab, 2006 Mar 29.

It should also be noted that in Bloodlines the Alexander of the future says he was three years old when his mother died -- which works with neither of these dates!

The actor who played Alexander in "Reunion" was also the first "Quentin" in Grace Under Fire. As he was six at the time I think I assumed that was Alexander's age. Although as young as three I guess could be possible.(What would that make his birth year 2361? The three figure I guess would be 2364 as in the first season) I don't think he could've been a year old when his Mom died as he walked and talked in the episode without difficulty. Maybe Klingon kids advance faster, but he's one-quarter human so that fast seems a bit unlikely. How does this square with him as a warrior in DS9? It doesn't. I remember in one interview a writer for DS9 sheepishly admitted he forgot Worf had a son and in DS9 he could be whatever age they needed. A similar phenomenon happens in soap operas where kids age or fail to age depending on plot concerns. Usually in soaps they go from 5, when they're still "cute", to around 16(when they can legally have romantic entanglements) over night. That's kind of what happened to Alexander except it's not a soap so it's more like he went from 10(so he could be a student) to adulthood overnight.--T. Anthony 10:17, 26 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Assessment[edit]

I have added a quality assessment rating and importance rating to this article. Feel free to change them as the article improves! Also, feel free to add more issues to the list below, and strike them out (strike) when they're completed. — OranL (talk) 22:52, 27 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Notable issues[edit]

  • The lead section may need clarification for readers who are unfamiliar with the Star Trek fictional universe.
  • The article needs more sources cited (preferably in-line citations using <ref></ref>).

Recent addition[edit]

At first, Worf showed no confidence in his son, coming to his aid various times to protect him in the episode, even when his help was not wanted or warranted (which caused Alexander to lose face with his shipmates who were already shunning him for his mixed heritage and lack of traditional Klingon background having, for the most part, been raised with human cultural ideals). Worf attempted to train Alexander in hand-to-hand combat to prepare him for service, but his personal feelings got in the way and ended in a heated argument. However, during an attack by the Jem'Hadar, Alexander, though inexperienced, showed potential and usefulness and finally gained a measure of respect from not only his ship mates, but finally from his father as well who finally came to terms with the fact that his son was no longer a child. Afterwards, Alexander joined his father as a member of the House of Martok in an onboard ceremony. Alexander, leaving on good terms with his father, was soon transferred to the battle cruiser Ya'Vang. He acted as sword-bearer at his father's wedding to Jadzia Dax.

I find the tone of this too much like "story-telling" and a bit sloppy. Anyone want to clean it up or make suggestions before I go at it?Vinithehat (talk) 20:14, 12 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]