Author, Author (Voyager episode)

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Star Trek: VOY episode
"Author, Author"

The Doctor reviews his holonovel.
Episode no. 165
Prod. code 266
Airdate April 18, 2001
Writer(s) Phyllis Strong
Mike Sussman
Brannon Braga
Director David Livingston
Guest star(s) Dwight Schultz as Reginald Barclay
Richard Herd as Admiral Paris
Barry Gordon as Broht
Joseph Campanella as Arbitrator
Lorinne Vozoff as Irene Hansen
Juan Garcia as John Torres
Robert Ito as John Kim
Irene Tsu as Mary Kim
Year 2377
Stardate 54732.3
Episode chronology
Previous "Q2"
Next "Friendship One"

Author, Author is an episode of the TV series Star Trek: Voyager, the twentieth episode of the seventh season.

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

A new method of communications allows Voyager to contact home for eleven minutes each day. In the holodeck, the Doctor edits his holonovel Photons Be Free, is pleased with his work, and saves the file. He plans to use this new method of communication to publish his work in Federation space.

Tom Paris asks the Doctor to let him preview Photons Be Free, set on the fictional USS Vortex, a Starfleet ship lost in the Delta Quadrant. The character of the doctor undergoes mistreatment. His holo-emitter is portrayed as a heavy, cumbersome backpack. Although the obnoxious and horrible high ranking officers in the novel resemble the Voyager crew the Doctor insists his work is fictional.

The senior crew plays through the novel one by one. When Janeway sees the fate of the fictional doctor, she orders a meeting. The Doctor reveals his novel was to highlight the plight of Mark 1 holograms back home. The Doctor, a Mark 1 hologram, does not like the fact the other holograms are now reduced to menial tasks.

Going back to the holodeck, the Doctor encounters a parody where he is a boor, slacker and ladies man. Unknown to the Doctor, Paris had rewritten the holonovel to show him how hurtful the Vortex portrayals really are. This, and a talk with Neelix convince him to edit his work so it is more fictionalized. He does not wish the entire Federation to see his friends in a negative light. The issue seems to become moot when Admiral Paris from Earth lets Captain Kathryn Janeway know that Photons Be Free is already being distributed by the Doctor's intended publisher, without his permission, and people are wondering how fictional it really is.

When the publisher refuses to recall the holonovel, an arbitration hearing is conducted by long distance. After several days, the arbiter rules that the Doctor is not a person under Federation law but is an artist and therefore has the right to control his work.

Flash-forward to a few months later, to an asteroid where several EMH Mark Ones perform menial labor. One of them suggests to another that at the diagnostic station they play Photons Be Free.

[edit] Notes

  • The Mark 1 holograms performing menial labor was first referred to in "Life Line," when Zimmerman expressed profound embarrassment that holograms he had modeled on himself were taken off medical duty and summarily reprogrammed.
  • Some fans have noted the similarity of this episode to the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Measure of a Man", in which the android crew member Data calls a trial to establish that he is a person in order to avoid being reassigned and disassembled. That episode's ruling concludes that Data has the right to self-determination, while this episode's ruling does not grant that same right to the Doctor, but does grant him the right to control his work.

[edit] External links

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