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1[[WMG:[[center:[-''WesternAnimation/StarTrekLowerDecks'' '''[[Characters/StarTrekLowerDecks Main Character Index]]'''\
2''[[Characters/StarTrekLowerDecksUSSCerritos U.S.S. Cerritos]]'' ([[Characters/StarTrekLowerDecksMainCrewmates Main Characters]], [[Characters/StarTrekLowerDecksBeckettMariner Beckett Mariner]], '''Other Crewmates''') | [[Characters/StarTrekLowerDecksStarfleetShips Other Starfleet Crews]] | [[Characters/StarTrekLowerDecksOtherCharacters Independent Characters]]-]]]]]
3
4!!Other Crew on the ''U.S.S. Cerritos''
5
6[[foldercontrol]]
7
8[[folder:Dr. Migleemo]]
9!!Dr. Migleemo
10[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stld_migleemo.png]]
11[[caption-width-right:300:''"Tendi, that's cantaloupe talk! I want you to be a CAN-aloupe!"'']]
12!!!'''Voiced by:''' Creator/PaulFTompkins
13
14Ship's counselor aboard the ''Cerritos''. Mariner calls him the worst counselor in the fleet.
15----
16* ActorAllusion: Paul F. Tompkins playing [[WesternAnimation/Ducktales2017 a smug anthropomorphic bird associated with the color green]] [[WesternAnimation/BojackHorseman who gets on everybody's nerves with his chipper attitude and wordplay]].
17* AscendedExtra: He becomes more prominent after he's assigned to mentor Tendi.
18* BirdPeople: His species hasn't been named yet, but he's some kind of humanoid bird with green feathers.
19* CustomUniform: Much like [[Characters/StarTrekTheNextGenerationMainCharacters Deanna Troi]] on the ''Enterprise''-D, Dr. Migleemo's Starfleet duty uniform apparently consists of his normal civilian attire and a comm badge. Whether this is some sort of standard practice for ships' counselors in Starfleet or not is debatable.
20* EpicFail: He's chosen to partake in a battle on Tendi's behalf to force her sister into giving an Orion ship they can use to rescue Mariner. He nearly wins by fluffing his down to give his opponent a very bad case of allergies, but he bungles that by not getting out of the way in time when she falls, resulting in him losing by default. This forces Tendi to make a deal to leave Starfleet and return to the Orion Syndicate in order to get the ship, rather than hand the ''Cerritos'' over to her sister.
21* TheFriendNobodyLikes: ''Nobody'' likes therapy sessions with him because of his obnoxious food metaphors. Unlike a certain other Ship's Counselor, he is also rarely seen on the bridge, with the third seat in the command well typically being filled by Chief Engineer Lt. Commander Andy Billups. Tendi later grows to have a better rapport with him though, albeit after a rocky start.
22* KnowNothingKnowItAll: Though he is the ship's counselor, he repeatedly demonstrates he's nowhere near qualified to even be considered one, no thanks to his constant source of food puns as well as causing multiple diplomatic incidents because he can't keep his beak shut. What's worse is that Mariner is clearly suffering from PTSD over her experiences in losing her friend and fighting in the Dominion War, but she'd never trust him with that information because she knows he'll just babble about food, preventing this issue from being addressed and compounding her bad cycle of self-sabotage. The one time she ''is'' seen going to therapy with Migleemo, it leads to her turning Boimler's interview preparation holoprogram into a bizarre PercussiveTherapy revenge fantasy, he's ''that'' bad at his job. It's a miracle he hasn't been fired yet.
23* TheMentor: Is appointed as Tendi's mentor for bridge officer training despite having no experience in that area. Surprisingly, however, he turns out to be pretty good at it (if a little ''too'' self-congratulatory).
24* TheMillstone: While everyone aboard the ''Cerritos'' is prone to screw-ups and bouts of ineptitude, the ship's crew is for the most part genuinely competent at their respective jobs, if eccentric in their methods. Migleemo stands out by being ''genuinely'' incompetent and terrible at his job, and often proves to be detrimental to the crew. The one time he's called into action, he screws up massively and [[spoiler:forces Tendi to leave the ''Cerritos''.]]
25* MommasBoy: When Freeman leaves him in command for the first time, his very first order is to open a channel to his ''"meemaw"'' so she can see him sitting in the captain's chair.
26* ObsessedWithFood: Claims his species started traveling into space to seek out "strange new meals". Whether this is the reason for the RunningGag below is unclear.
27* QuackDoctor: Dr. Migleemo is a literal example of this as much as he is a figurative one. Besides being a bird-like species of alien, he has no actual knowledge of science or psychological practices, instead providing his services in the form of constant food puns that do nothing but annoy his patients. The ''Cerritos'' isn't exactly the ''Enterprise'', but his level of incompetence is so bad that ''no one'' on the ship trusts him, and Season 4 reveals that Mariner's problems stemming from her PTSD of losing her friend Ensign Sito and fighting in the Dominion War only became compounded because she doesn't trust the only therapist she has access to. Really, it's a miracle that Migleemo hasn't been fired yet.
28* RunningGag: He uses food metaphors in sessions to an annoying degree.
29-->'''Dr. Migleemo:''' Carol, you're being a real prickly pineapple right now.\
30'''Capt. Freeman:''' Ugh, stop referencing foods!
31* VisualPun: He's some kind of avian (bird) alien. That, combined with him being a lousy therapist, clearly makes him a '''quack'''.
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Lieutenant Commander Steve Stevens]]
35!!Lieutenant Commander Steve Stevens
36[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stld_stevens.png]]
37[[caption-width-right:300:''"OH GAWD, my beautiful (insert body part here)!"'']]
38!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/BenRodgers
39
40A command division officer on the ''Cerritos''.
41----
42* AfraidOfDoctors: Implied in "Mugato, Gumato", in which he's among the crew members who skipped getting their annual physical exam. After the AndShowItToYou incident mentioned below, it's hard to blame him.
43* AmbiguouslyBi: Though he is seen hitting on women, his idolization of Commander Ransom seems to go far beyond HeroWorship, and in the holographic orgy in "I, Excretus" he can be seen riding and spanking Ransom. May be a case of IfItsYouItsOkay.
44* AndShowItToYou: Subverted in "Second Contact". After having his chest ripped open by a HatePlague-infected crew member, Tendi has to keep his heart pumping with her bare hands without anesthetic, much to his horror and agony. It does save his life, but he's AfraidOfDoctors as a consequence.
45* BerserkButton: Naturally, insulting Ransom is a good way to rile him up. Mariner exploits this at one point by saying the ''Carlsbad'' crew were talking smack about his core.
46-->'''Stevens:''' Bull[bleep]! He's got the best core in the fleet!
47* ButtMonkey: He's rarely seen having a good day, and his suffering tends to be PlayedForLaughs.
48* CasanovaWannabe: He propositions people often in the ''Cerritos'' bar, and gets shot down at least as much if not more than his idol Ransom.
49* TheChewToy: He tends to get kicked around a lot when he appears, be it getting injured, ignored by his superiors, or embarrassed.
50* {{Foil}}: For Boimler. He seems to be where someone just like Boimler would have ended up without the CharacterDevelopment he goes through.
51* HeroWorship: He ''idolizes'' Commander Ransom. When the latter becomes imbued with god-like powers in "Strange Energies", Stevens ''immediately'' begins openly worshipping him, much to the annoyance of Mariner and T'Ana.
52* TheKlutz: At one point, he [[KillItWithFire leans on]] [[{{Antimatter}} the warp core]] ''[[BodyHorror twice]]'' in a single day.
53* IronButtMonkey: He's incured several, normally fatal, injuries including petrification and extensive radiation burns (twice in one day!), yet manages to recover with zero lasting physical trauma thanks to 24th century medical science.
54* OverrankedSoldier:
55** Stevens is a Lieutenant Commander in the Command division, which on any other ship would make him a prime candidate for Second Officer, which he may very well be on the ''Cerritos'' as well. However, he behaves far more like a lickspittle Ensign than a senior officer or command crew.
56** Stevens is also one of only five officers on the ''Cerritos'' with the confirmed rank of Lieutenant Commander or higher[[note]]Captain Freeman, Commanders Ransom and T'Ana, Lieutenant Commanders Billups and Stevens[[/note]] and he is the only one of those five who does not have clearly delineated duties.
57* RepetitiveName: His name is Steve (possibly short for Steven) Stevens.
58* StrawLoser: A {{downplayed}} example for the ''Cerritos'' crew as a whole. Most of his screen time is devoted to [[HeroWorshipper simpering over Ransom]] or suffering AmusingInjuries, but while he's not the only accident-prone fellow on the ship (read: "Boimler"), his misfortunes tend to stem from his own incompetence/stupidity rather than bad luck, and he's yet to demonstrate any of the HiddenBadass qualities common to the rest of the crew.
59* TakenForGranite: Happens to him in "Mining the Mind's Mines". He gets better. Somehow.
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Lieutenant Dirk]]
63!!Lieutenant Dirk
64
65A command division Lieutenant who dislikes the lower ranked crew, he's also in charge of hazing crewmembers.
66----
67* EstablishingCharacterMoment: When Tendi boards the Cerritos for the first time he voices his disdain for her due to her rank.
68-->'''Dirk:''' Keep it moving lower decks!
69* FantasticRacism: Well, classism. He disparages anyone who is lower ranked than him, in ''I, Excretus'' he even does it to the Bridge crew after they're temporarily demoted as part of the test.
70* ForeheadOfDoom: His most notable physical feature is his large forehead.
71[[/folder]]
72
73[[folder:Lieutenant Steve Levy]]
74!!Lieutenant Steve Levy
75[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/steve_levy.png]]
76[[caption-width-right:250:''"Changelings aren't real! The Dominion War didn't happen!"'']]
77!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/FredTatasciore
78
79A science division Lieutenant aboard the ''Cerritos''. Apparently a math prodigy, but unfortunately also a massive ConspiracyTheorist.
80----
81* ArbitrarySkepticism: Wolf 359 and the Dominion War cost countless lives across all corners of the Federation, but he claims the latter never happened and the former was an inside job. Note that the Dominion War ended just ''five years ago'' in-universe, and he's been in Starfleet for at least ten.
82* BosssUnfavoriteEmployee: According to Boimler the reason he hasn't been promoted in ages is because everyone finds his conspiracy theories annoying.
83* TheCuckoolanderWasRight: In "Caves" one of his theories proved right for once.
84* ConspiracyTheorist: He thinks Wolf 359 was an inside job, that Changelings aren't real, and that the Dominion War didn't happen. He also believes Q doesn’t exist, Picard is a hologram and the Doctor isn’t. "Caves" deconstructs this as it shows that this habit has gotten him stuck as a lieutenant for about a decade.
85* CasanovaWannabe: Mariner went on one date with him in 2379 and hasn't willingly talked to him since. Her interaction with him a year later does ''not'' make her regret it. Probably not a good idea to spout conspiracy theories about Changelings and the Dominion to [[ShellShockedVeteran a Dominion War veteran]] who's been deliberately stalling her career for the last half a decade because of it.
86* ADayInTheLimelight: Is the co-lead of Boimler's segment in "Caves".
87* DitzyGenius: According to Boimler, he's some kind of outside-the-box math genius. Unfortunately, he's also a fruitcake who rejects factual accounts just because they're the "official" explanation.
88* EveryoneHasStandards: While he dismisses the feud between Freeman and Buenamigo as part of the Temporal Cold War, he still considers Mariner ruining the ''Cerritos''' reputation in Veronica's report "pretty messed up". Subverted when it turns out Mariner actually didn't cause the report to go wrong this time.
89* IJustWantToBeSpecial: Boimler, rightly, calls out his constant conspiritizing as trying to cast himself in the center of a massive web of unseen happenings where he's the only one smart enough to see the "truth". Levy, for his part, doesn't exactly argue with that assesment.
90* OddFriendship: He and Boimler -- an optimist who is unwaveringly faithful to Starfleet ideals -- struck up a friendship as a result of their time trapped together in a cave.
91* PassedOverPromotion: His career has been stalled out at Lieutenant for a decade because it's not in anyone's interest to promote a raving conspiracy theorist to a command rank.
92* ProfessionalButtKisser: Tries to pitch some ideas for decorating the Captain's Yacht to Mariner the instant he finds out she's Captain Freeman's daughter.
93* TooCleverByHalf: His prodigy-level math ability appears to have resulted in him developing something akin to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_disease Nobel disease]] and embracing all manner of nonsensical alternative explanations for things that happened.
94[[/folder]]
95
96[[folder:Lieutenants Kimolu and Matt]]
97!!Lieutenants Kimolu and Matt
98
99A pair of beluga whales who work in Cetacean Ops.
100----
101* BigEater: An advantage to working on a Federation ship? ''Unlimited'' fish.
102* ExtremeOmnisexual: They... really want people to swim with them. This led many viewers to assume they were meant to be dolphins (who are notoriously horny) before it was confirmed that they are beluga whales.
103* FriendlyPlayfulDolphin: Beluga whales, but [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delphinoidea close enough]].
104* IntelligibleUnintelligible: Being whales, they speak in squeaks and clicks, but everyone understands them. (It might help that usually all they talk about is people swimming with them.)
105* LockedOutOfTheLoop: Kimolu missed the revelation that Captain Freeman is Mariner's mom.
106* MythologyGag: An early concept for the ''Enterprise''-D was that it would have a giant water tank with dolphins who would help with navigation. It was dropped because it was deemed too expensive, though Cetacean Ops is mentioned a few times on screen. It would take 34 years before the franchise finally showed Cetacean Ops aboard a Starfleet ship.
107* NoSympathy: Their reaction to Boimler running from K'ranch is to dismiss him as a drama magnet. Admittedly, Boimler does turn out to be in less danger than he assumed.
108* SapientCetaceans: They're intelligent enough to serve as commissioned officers on a Starfleet ship.
109* SeriousBusiness: If you're gonna dive in their tank, take your shoes off first. They shoot Boimler a serious DeathGlare when he splashes in while running for his life.
110* SkewedPriorities: Ship about to fly into a debris field? Almost died? Being hunted? Sounds like a good excuse to strip down and swim with them.
111* ThoseTwoGuys: They both work in a giant water tank and thus are never apart.
112* WeaksauceWeakness: In fine Starfleet tradition of questionable design planning, an emergency release for the ship's paneling is located in Cetacean Ops, and neither of them can be called upon to operate it since it requires something they don't have - ''hands''. Needless to say, they are [[{{Angrish}} not happy about it]].
113* WorstAid: Their advice when they bring up Boimler after he runs out of air is to keep him wet, as though he were a beached whale. To be fair, they ARE beluga whales, and that is how they'd treat their own.
114[[/folder]]
115
116[[folder:Lieutenant (j.g.) Kayshon]]
117!!Lieutenant (j.g.) Kayshon
118[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lt_jr_kayshon.png]]
119[[caption-width-right:250:''"You gettin' 'Bazminti, when he pulled back the veil' vibes from this guy?"'']]
120!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/CarlTart
121
122A Tamarian Security chief aboard U.S.S. ''Cerritos'', brought in to replace Shaxs.
123----
124* AirplaneArms: When the security detail is called to action in "Empathological Fallacies," Kayshon races past his colleagues using the ninja variant of this posture, accompanied by an audible "whoosh." Whether this is a quirk of Kayshon's or a trait common to Tamarians remains to be seen.
125* CallBack: To Worf and his dispensation to wear his Klingon baldric. Kayshon wears a Tamarian sash with a ceremonial military officer's dagger as part of his hybridized uniform.
126* CaringGardener: A quick cut-away shows him TalkingToPlants in the ship's hydroponics lab, presumably during his off-hours.
127* CasanovaWannabe: Tries to flirt with a fellow officer using his people's metaphors, only for her to roll her eyes and leave.
128* ContrastingReplacementCharacter: While Shaxs was a violent Bajoran BloodKnight with NoIndoorVoice, Kayshon is a soft-spoken GentleGiant.
129* ForcedTransformation: Gets turned into a puppet in "Kayshon, His Eyes Open". He gets better.
130* NoodleIncident: According to him, he once lived in a cave.
131* StrangeSyntaxSpeaker: Seemingly at first, as he uses a Tamarian metaphor when he first comes aboard. {{Subverted|Trope}} when he then explains that the Universal Translator can now ''mostly'' translate Tamarian metaphors into regular Federation Standard and that he's also been taking language lessons as well, but sometimes misses one and translates it literally.
132* TemporarySubstitute: He fills in for Shaxs for all of two episodes before Shaxs returns from the dead. Unlike most other characters in ''Trek'' who fit this role, Kayshon instead just sticks around and continues being an active part of the ''Cerritos'''s crew, as part of its Security team under Shaxs.
133* WeightWoe: A failed attempt by Boimler to speak in Tamarian metaphors apparently comes across as an insult regarding Kayshon's weight, sending the security officer storming off in a huff.
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Lieutenant (j.g.) Winger Bingston, Jr.]]
137!!Lieutenant (j.g.) Winger Bingston, Jr.
138[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/winger_bingston_jr.png]]
139!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/EugeneCordero
140
141A science division Lieutenant serving aboard the ''Cerritos''.
142----
143* MasterActor: Puts on a one man show for Starfleet diversity training, "The United Federation of Characters." Mariner is aghast at [[ThisIsGonnaSuck having to sit through it]].
144-->''(Spotlight illuminates him sitting on a stool)'' "Oh hello... didn't see you beam in there..."
145* SitcomArchNemesis: Mariner seems to ''really'' hold a grudge after being forced to sit through his one-man show, since she opts to crush him to death during her Holodeck program in "Crisis Point".
146[[/folder]]
147
148[[folder:Lieutenant (j.g.) O'Connor]]
149!!Lieutenant (j.g.) O'Connor
150[[quoteright:162:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lieutenant_oconnor.jpg]]
151 [[caption-width-right:162:]]
152!!!'''Voiced by:''' Creator/HaleyJoelOsment
153
154An operations division officer serving on the ''Cerritos''.
155----
156* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: His goal, which apparently is attainable through meditation and sacrifice.
157* GoMadFromTheRevelation: Turns out ascension is a ''really'' intense and painful process. Time has no meaning and apparently, the universe is balanced on the back of a giant koala.
158-->"WHY IS HE SMILING?!! ''WHAT DOES HE KNOW??''"
159* HeroicSacrifice: He's crushed by debris while trying to save Tendi. His selflessness is what helps him finally ascend (though he may regret that).
160* HotBlooded: Hasn't spiritually ascended yet because of his volatile temper.
161* IJustWantToBeSpecial: Finally admits he was attempting ascension to stand out in Starfleet.
162[[/folder]]
163
164[[folder:Ensign Barnes]]
165!!Ensign Barnes
166[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stld_barnes.png]]
167!!!'''Voiced by:''' Creator/JessicaMcKenna
168
169A Trill junior officer who mans the ''Cerritos''' operations console on the bridge.
170----
171* AmbiguouslyBi: Briefly dated Rutherford in Season 1, and a holographic representation of her can be seen in ''I, Excretus'' having a drunken make-out session with Ensign Jennifer Sh'reyan. That said, the ambiguous part comes from the latter example being a ''hologram'' and not the real Barnes.
172* BridgeBunnies: She can often be seen working on the bridge whenever the senior staff are featured, and the lower-deckers aren't.
173* CasualDangerDialogue: During her date with Rutherford in "Second Contact", they continue asking get-to-know-you questions and flirting after they get caught up in the firefight and emergency evacuation caused by the virus.
174* FanOfThePast: She's fond of a "classical" band called Music/TheMonkees, a group that is over ''400 years old'' from her perspective.
175* HalfHumanHybrid: {{Implied|Trope}}. She has a human-sounding surname, and her spots seem less prominent than those of normal Trills.
176** Becomes a half-Bajoran in ''Twovix'' when T'illups combines her offscreen with Lt. Shaxs.
177* InformedAttractiveness: Mariner thinks that Barnes is "crazy hot", and Rutherford later confirms that she's pretty. However, due to the show's simple character designs, she isn't very different from any other female characters in the audience's eyes.
178* MsFanservice: Arguably the closest the show has to one: She comes on to Rutherford pretty aggressively, even suggesting a skinny-dipping threesome with a whale, and in a "Naked Time"-inspired simulation, is seen making out with the similarly attractive Jennifer.
179* UnusuallyUninterestingSight: Regards Tendi sneaking up on Rutherford to shoot him with mild curiosity, and then leaves him to face his increasingly manic friend without bothering to try and stop what's going on.
180[[/folder]]
181
182[[folder:Ensign Jet Manhaver]]
183!!Ensign Jet Manhaver
184[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stld_jet.png]]
185[[caption-width-right:300:''"We don't have to be heroes today, people. We just have to survive."'']]
186!!!'''Voiced By:''' Creator/MarcusHenderson
187
188An operations division officer serving aboard the ''Cerritos''.
189----
190* TheAce: Tall, strong, handsome, and a model officer respected by the crew. Boimler calls him a "Kirk sundae with [[Series/StarTrekEnterprise Trip Tucker]] sprinkles".
191* AlwaysSomeoneBetter: There's always someone better, and that someone tends to be Jet. He's not even ''trying'' to outdo everyone else or be a jerk about it, but both Mariner and Boimler are irritated by him being so dang good at everything.
192* AmicableExes: He used to date Lt. Brinson, [[GreenEyedMonster much to Boimler's paranoia]].
193* ByTheBookCop: Insists on following procedure compared to Mariner's gung-ho attitude in a crisis.
194* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: He wears two rank pips in "Cupid's Errant Arrow", which paints him as a full Lieutenant, but in "Kayshon, His Eyes Opened" he's an Ensign and referred to as such. {{Lampshaded}} -- apparently he just had a stray kernel of corn on his neck.
195* TheRival: In "Kayshon, His Eyes Open", he constantly butts up against Mariner's rebellious nature and tries to take her leadership role after Kayshon was transformed into a puppet.
196[[/folder]]
197
198[[folder:Ensign Livik]]
199!!Ensign Livik
200
201----
202* AlwaysSomeoneBetter: Rutherford finds him to be this at every turn, although Livik's last line implies it was the other way around.
203* SitcomArchnemesis: He is this to Rutherford in the second episode of season four, until Tendi intervenes.
204* WimpFight: The background argument he and Ensign Gary get into during the T'Lyn-generated insanity in the ship's lounge winds up as this, which he eventually wins.
205[[/folder]]
206
207[[folder:Ensign Peanut Hamper]]
208!!Ensign Peanut Hamper
209[[quoteright:295:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/peanut_hamper.png]]
210[[caption-width-right:295:''"Smell ya later! And I mean that literally, y'all just [bleep] everywhere!"'']]
211[[quoteright:295:[[labelnote:Click here to see her in Season 3]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/30be2738_77c6_42ff_98c8_392b7a9f7633.jpeg]][[/labelnote]]
212!!!'''Voiced by:''' Creator/KetherDonohue
213
214A "female" Exocomp serving in Starfleet. She seems like a hardworking CuteClumsyGirl at first, but she eventually proves to have personality flaws that make her entirely unfit to serve in Starfleet, or really ''any'' military-ish organization...
215----
216* AIIsACrapshoot: A variation on the trope: she's definitely bad, but it's not due to any programming fault, she's just a horrible ''person''. When first introduced, she's nothing but sweet--up until she's asked to go on a suicide mission (ironically, one that she had the best chance of surviving out of anyone on the crew), at which point she pulls a ScrewThisImOuttaHere and runs for it. When she returns in "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", it's revealed she was willing to risk the destruction of an entire species and the ''Cerritos'' as a means to get back in Starfleet. Unfortunately for her, the ''Cerritos'' crew is far from amused and stuff her in the Daystrom Institute to rot with the other examples of this trope. Right next to AGIMUS, in fact.
217* AlwaysSomeoneBetter: To Tendi initially. Peanut Hamper is able to upstage her on her (Peanut Hamper's) first day in the job with her medical prowess without help, though Tendi being who she is, she's happy that Peanut Hamper's fitting in regardless of her jealousy. It doesn't last, as Peanut Hamper quickly reveals her true colors at the first sign of danger and bails.
218* AndIMustScream: After abandoning the ''Cerritos'' and stupidly beaming herself into space, Peanut Hamper is left stranded in an isolated pocket of space entirely alone. She's stranded for a year in-universe, though she's eventually able to escape (albeit now much more ruthless).
219* AntiRoleModel: She's an example of exactly what a Starfleet officer ''shouldn't'' be, in contrast to the eccentric but competent Lower Deckers. She's selfish, cowardly, immoral, flagrantly breaks the Prime Directive, and dismisses TheNeedsOfTheMany in favor of her own gain.
220* AscendedExtra: She was initially a one-shot character who was there for a gag about her having the exact abilities needed to save the day, but refusing to do so. She returns two seasons later to have [[ADayInTheLimelight an entire episode centered around her.]]
221* TheAtoner: Subverted. She acts like she's come to terms with her wrongs and wants to make up for abandoning the ''Cerritos'' in "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", but it's revealed to have all been a ruse to be accepted back into Starfleet. In reality, Peanut Hamper [[NeverMyFault doesn't think she's done anything wrong]] and is just trying to get her career back. Ultimately played straight in "A Few Badgeys More" when, in the process of writing her parole appeal, she ends up realizing she feels genuine remorse for her actions and reconciles with her father.
222* BaitTheDog: She initially seems like a sweet-natured CuteClumsyGirl happy to help around the ''Cerritos'', only to reveal herself to be a massive {{Jerkass}} and a coward to boot the second she's expected to risk her life. Similarly, in "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", she seems to have genuinely reformed and started to care for Rawda, only for it to turn out it was all an act and she's even worse than ever.
223* BerserkButton: [[HatesBeingTouched Being touched.]] While she's generally not pleasant to be around unless she's putting up an act, touching her will always get her to lash out and become even more openly hostile than usual.
224* BeyondRedemption: While the ''Cerritos'' crew and Tendi in particular are initially willing to accept her redemption and the latter even offers Peanut Hamper a second chance after it's clear her HeelFaceTurn was entirely faked. However, after she not only turns it down but tries to summon the Borg to assimilate everyone out of spite, they finally decide she's too far gone and have her imprisoned in the Daystrom Institute.
225* BitchInSheepsClothing: She may seem like a clumsy yet well-meaning little robot, but when she's called upon to save the ''Cerritos'' from destruction, she [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere beams herself away]] while taunting her crewmates over their impending demise.
226* BlamingTheVictim: When her EngineeredHeroics are revealed, she immediately blames the Areore for it because she assumed their hidden ships wouldn't work because of her own FantasticRacism.
227* BlatantLies: After it's exposed that she endangered the Aerore with her EngineeredHeroics, Peanut Hamper insists it was for a good cause. She then immediately admits said cause was saving her career without a hint of shame.
228* BrilliantButLazy: ZigZagged. Peanut Hamper is a stunningly competent doctor able to heal an entire village with ease, but her own cowardice and selfishness stop her from living up to her full potential. When saving the Aerore from the Drookmani, she's able to infiltrate their ship and disable it in the exact manner she was asked to do with the Pakleds and survives without a scratch, but she only does it because it was EngineeredHeroics that would directly benefit her. Once the truth comes out and the Drookmani start attacking again, she abandons everyone to save her own skin.
229* BrokenAce: She's an extremely competent physician, being able to effortlessly perform skin grafts while onboard the ''Cerritos'' and being able to heal the entire Aerore village with limited medical supplies on hand effortlessly due to her natural abilities. T'Ana even calls her one of the best doctors she's ever seen, and Peanut Hamper is able to easily charm people as well. Unfortunately, she's also a cowardly, self-serving narcissist with a LackOfEmpathy for everyone around her and she's utterly immoral to boot.
230* BrokenPedestal: Tendi initially considers Peanut Hamper as a friend and protege, and views her as a model Starfleet officer. This quickly changes after Peanut Hamper reveals how much of a selfish coward she really is, but even then Tendi is willing to accept her apparent HeelFaceTurn… only for the pedestal to be broken again once it's revealed it was all an act.
231* TheBusCameBack: After spending nearly two seasons absent due to being stranded in space, she returns in "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption".
232* CallAHumanAMeatbag: She has a hatred for all organic life, particularly those that aren't technologically advanced. Even when she's pretending to be reformed, she can't stop sneeringly calling the Aerore "organics".
233* CharacterDevelopment: [[TookALevelInJerkass Of the worst kind.]] She starts off as a DirtyCoward who prioritizes her own self-preservation above the greater good, but isn't evil so much as she is a {{Jerkass}}. Season 3 sees her go JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope into villainy, and go from merely selfish to actively putting people's lives on the line for her own gain.
234* CharacterizationMarchesOn: She's depicted as fairly clumsy in her first appearance due to lacking hands, but during her reappearance in Season 3 this trait has vanished and she's able to move objects around with a gravitational beam. Given [[ManipulativeBastard her personality]], it's possible it was all an act in the first place.
235* ChildHater: Implied. While she hates all of the Aerore, she has a special distaste for the village children and spends a lot of time insulting them [[UngratefulBastard even though they're nothing but nice to her]]. She does wind up giving them candy with a replicator, but spends the entire time yelling at them to stay still.
236* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: She's very prone to betraying her allies for her own gain. She abandons the ''Cerritos'' rather than risk her own neck, and later sics the Drookmani on the Aerore (who helped nurse her back to health and viewed her as a local hero) for the sake of EngineeredHeroics designed to get her back into Starfleet. [[EntitledBastard She's genuinely surprised that neither of them will accept her back after it, too.]]
237--> '''Peanut Hamper:''' [[NeverMyFault They're so uptight about being betrayed.]]
238* CompanionCube: She makes one while trapped in Space. It also reveals her true nature. She treats her Companion Cube as a dear companion and promises to never abandon it, only to ultimately ditch it without a second thought.
239* CuteClumsyGirl: She initially comes across as this, being clumsy but nevertheless helpful and polite. It's subverted when she turns out to be a massive {{Jerkass}}, and by her return in Season 3 she's able to move objects around with a gravitational beam, negating her clumsiness. It's entirely possible it was simply an act to lower people's guard and endear herself to the crew.
240* DeadpanSnarker: She's extremely sarcastic and prone to making quips about others' perceived failings, albeit in a manner that only further shows how much of a condescending {{Jerkass}} she is.
241* DidntSeeThatComing: She calls in the Drookmani to attack the Aerore, but didn't expect them to record the conversation in case anyone doubted them, which is exactly what they did.
242* DidntThinkThisThrough: Her FatalFlaw stemming from shortsighted selfishness. Peanut Hamper tends to go with whatever will benefit her at ''that exact moment'', forgetting to play the LongGame (which is [[TruthInTelevision quite common among sociopaths]]). She abandons the ''Cerritos'' by beaming herself into space, but has no means to go anywhere herself and is unsurprisingly left behind by the ''Titan'' because they didn't even know she was there. Her attempt to manipulate others later don't pan out because she regularly forgets to check a crucial detail that completely ruins her plans. Even her last attempt at lashing out, summoning the Borg, would have backfired because of her lack of foresight; they eat technology just as readily as organic beings.
243* DiggingYourselfDeeper: Refusing to die for the ''Cerritos'' would have gotten her written up for insubordination at worst, but actively beaming away makes her a deserter and would give her time in a penal colony. Then she risks a village full of people so she can play hero. Then she tries to call the Borg to assimilate the ''Cerritos'' and the planet she landed on. By the end of it all, she's gone from "mild reprimand" to "indefinitely locked in the Daystrom Institute". And she's learned nothing from it.
244* DirtyCoward: Beams off the ''Cerritos'' at the first sign of trouble rather than help in a crisis. She does risk her life for her EngineeredHeroics scheme in "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", but the second it spirals out of control she refuses to do anything and once again tries to abandon everyone.
245-->"I joined Starfleet to piss off my dad, not to be a virus bomb!"
246* DoAnythingRobot: Exocomps were designed to be this by default with a mini-replicator nozzle in front for making tools. Peanut is also able to replicate small treats for kids, vitamin supplements, and has enough engineering know-how to build a rudimentary starship from salvage and scavenged bits of dilithim.
247* EngineeredHeroics: In order to convince Starfleet she's reformed so they'll take her back, she contacts the Drookmani and convinces them to plunder the Aerore's homes and abandoned ships so she can stop them and come out looking like a hero.
248* EntitledBastard: She expects both the Aerores and the ''Cerritos'' crew to take her back immediately after she nearly got them killed through her EngineeredHeroics backfiring and abandoned them to save herself. Needless to say, they don't.
249* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Subverted. She appears to genuinely come to love Rawda even before she starts making strides to improving herself, but it turns out it was all part of a plan to save her career in Starfleet through EngineeredHeroics. Once it's revealed, she expresses nothing but contempt for him and coldly mocks his grief at her betrayal.
250** Later played straight when she reforms for real in "A Few Badgeys More" and returns to working with her family on a research station after being paroled from the Daystrom Institute.
251* EvilAllAlong: "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption" pulls out all the stops to make it look like Peanut Hamper has made a HeelFaceTurn and [[TheAtoner wants to atone for her actions]], only for the twist ending to reveal that she had been faking her CharacterDevelopment the entire time. If anything, she's even worse than ever.
252* EvilCannotComprehendGood: Downplayed. She ''can'' comprehend good enough to fake it, most notably her stint convincingly pretending to be TheAtoner in "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", but she doesn't grasp it outside of something that appeals to people. Upon seeing Shaxs' HeroicSacrifice, Peanut Hamper immediately mocks him for being stupid enough to do it and congratulates herself on avoiding the same fate (ignoring the fact she forced Shaxs and Rutherford into that position by abandoning the ship).
253* EvilCostumeSwitch: In "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", the external damage she takes after entering Areolus's atmosphere and her subsequent recovery results in her gaining a darker-red coloration. Fittingly, within the same episode she shifts from a mere {{Jerkass}} into genuinely evil territory.
254* EvilIsPetty: Peanut Hamper is extremely petty and spiteful, often going out of her way to mock and insult people once she sees no reason to keep up her [[BitchInSheepsClothing kind facade]]. Notable examples include mockingly revealing Rawda [[CryingAfterSex cries after sex]] immediately after betraying him just for the sake of it, and trying to call the Borg to assimilate everyone once the ''Cerritos'' crew and the Aerore turn on her.
255* FaceHeelTurn: She starts off as a member of Starfleet and at least nominally aligned with the heroes even if she [[DirtyCoward ultimately winds up abandoning them]], but her subsequent efforts to cover for her desertion results in her becoming increasingly villainous and ultimately turning against Starfleet.
256* FalselyReformedVillain: "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption" centers around her seemingly redeeming herself and changing for the better, only for the ending to reveal she had been faking it the entire time and had been scheming to get back into Starfleet through EngineeredHeroics.
257* FantasticRacism: {{Downplayed}}. She doesn't hate organic life, but she does hate organics from a less technologically-advanced civilization. While she [[SubvertedTrope seems to get over this]] [[BecauseYouWereNiceToMe given how they took her in despite their own misgivings]], it becomes Double Subverted when it's shown she still hates how less advanced they are.
258* FatalFlaw: [[DidntThinkThisThrough Short-sightedness]]. Peanut Hamper never thinks about the consequences of her actions and prioritizes short-term benefit over the long-term. It costs her dearly, as her impulsive desertion and subsequent efforts to cover her own ass result in her committing an increasing amount of crimes with no real thought to the consequences. The result is that her career is ruined and she's imprisoned for everything she's done.
259* FauxAffablyEvil: She shifts from a mere BitchInSheepsClothing into this in Season 3 as she becomes a full-on villain. While she's fairly rude to the Aerore at first, she's able to successfully feign reforming and acts polite and gracious all the while endangering all of them with her EngineeredHeroics and not giving a damn about their lives.
260* FirstDayFromHell: She's not on the ''Cerritos'' three hours before the Pakleds attack. She later fumes that it was unreasonable of them to expect her to risk her life on those grounds. Never mind that she had gone through the Starfleet Academy, where death in the line of duty is a tragic but unavoidable risk and there are ''multiple'' tests to make sure cadets understand this and commit despite the risk.
261* FreudianExcuse: She mentions her father is extremely overprotective and controlling, which fuels her utter disregard for authority.
262* GoMadFromTheIsolation: Downplayed. She spends a year in-universe stranded alone in space and has become far more irritable and amoral than she was prior, but she remains sane for the most part outside of having made a CompanionCube out of space debris.
263* HateSink: Eventually revealed to be one over the course of the series. While her first appearance presented her exit from a suicide mission and taunting everyone about it as dickish (albeit not entirely wrong), "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption" demonstrates her as TheSociopath who's willing to manipulate everyone around her to get her way, toy with another beings' feelings for her, and let innocents die (including and up to ''Borg assimilation'') if it means she comes out on top. Starfleet then stuffs her in the Rogue A.I. containment unit at the Daystrom Institute, utterly disgusted with her.
264* HatesBeingTouched: She absolutely loses it whenever she's touched and tends to lash out even more than usual when it happens.
265* HatesTheirParent: She at the very least is resentful of her father for ([[UnreliableExpositor according to her]]) being overprotective. By her own admission, she only joined Starfleet to piss him off and previously entertained fantasies of being a dabo girl (the ''Trek'' equivalent of a stripper).
266* HeelRealization: Subverted. She ''seems'' to have one in "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", admitting to Rawda that she abandoned her "flock" and needs to make amends. However, it's revealed she was faking it as part of a plan to rejoin Starfleet - in reality, she's learned absolutely nothing and [[NeverMyFault refuses to accept responsibility for her actions]].
267* HiddenDisdainReveal:
268** She acts perfectly nice after first boarding the ''Cerritos'', but the second she's asked to risk her life she immediately insults the crew and gleefully taunts them about their impending deaths at the hands of the Pakleds.
269** She feigns growing beyond her initial hatred for the Aerore and coming to love Rawda, but the second her EngineeredHeroics are exposed she reveals she ''still'' hates them and their planet. She coldly insults Rawda and shows nothing but contempt for him, even going so far as to mock him for crying at her betrayal and reveals he [[CryingAfterSex cries after sex]] just to be a jerk.
270* InsaneTrollLogic: When Freeman bluntly tells her that there's no way she'll ever serve onboard the ''Cerritos'' again for her actions on Areolus, Peanut Hamper immediately accuses her of doing it because [[YoureJustJealous she's "jealous of [her] advanced intelligence"]] and not [[NeverMyFault her blatant disregard for other's lives.]]
271* InsufferableGenius: She's highly intelligent, and never passes up an opportunity to brag about it. She also clearly views everyone around her as inferior, particularly pre-warp civilizations given her condescending treatment of the Aerore.
272* ItsAllAboutMe: Peanut Hamper cares nothing about anyone but herself. In "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", she plots to return to Starfleet, caring nothing about the safety of the people who rescued and cared for her.
273--> '''Peanut Hamper:''' I hate Starfleet! What about the needs of the ''me?!''
274* JackOfAllTrades: Exocomps have the ability to replicate any tool for any job you'd normally have on a starship, making her very useful for surgery in Sickbay.
275* {{Jerkass}}: To an extreme degree. She hates organic civilizations that are less technologically developed, she gladly abandoned her crew when they ask her to undertake a suicide mission, she was willing to use EngineeredHeroics and let both her old crew ''and'' her soon-to-be husband get wiped out so she could "save the day", and when her plans get foiled, she was going to ''call The Borg'' to assimilate everyone on the planet.
276* JerkassHasAPoint: Subverted. Peanut fumes that it was unreasonable to expect her, an ensign who'd not even been on the ship three hours, to potentially risk her life to save the crew, and this is admittedly a tall order for ''anyone''... but it's blown out of the water as the rest of her behavior shows she'd never risk her life for anyone for any reason.
277* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk: In "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", Peanut Hamper spends some time with the Aerore, grows to like her place in their society, falls in love, and even volunteers to sacrifice herself for their people. Except that it was all staged, she actually hates her fiancé and the whole planet, and if anything she's only gotten worse.
278* JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope: She starts off as little more than a selfish DirtyCoward who refuses to risk her life for the sake of the crew, but doesn't actively harm anyone and is at worst a {{Jerkass}} about it. In her return in Season 3, Peanut Hamper slips into outright villainous territory by endangering countless people for her EngineeredHeroics in order to be accepted back into Starfleet, and then trying to call the Borg to assimilate everyone when she's found out out of spite.
279* KarmicButtMonkey: Both of her appearances end with her receiving some sort of horrible fate - being stranded alone in space and imprisoned in the Daystrom Institute, respectively - but she always brings it on herself through being an unrepentantly ''horrible'' person.
280* KickTheDog: Seems to have a bad habit of doing this. It's not enough for her to just desert her post; she also has to insult all the crewmates she's leaving to die as she beams out. It's not enough for her to use and betray the Aerore; she has to publicly mock her fiancee for CryingAfterSex and then try to call down ''the frigging Borg'' on everyone in a fit of pique after her plans are ruined.
281* TheKlutz: Constantly knocks stuff over because she's designed to replicate mostly surgical tools, not stuff like an ordinary hand to grab things. In later appearances she's able to move objects around with a mini-tractor beam so she may have just been playing up klutziness to appear adorable.
282* LackOfEmpathy: She has absolutely no empathy for anyone around her. It's most strikingly demonstrated when Kaltorus - who had painstakingly nursed her back to health and stood up for her to the villagers - is crushed by rubble and she coldly ignores his cries for help in favor of fleeing.
283* LaserGuidedKarma: Her refusal to help save the ''Cerritos'' crew from the Pakleds and beaming out of the ship all the while mocking them results in her being stranded in deep space and accidentally left there by the ''Titan''. She spends roughly a year there completely alone.
284* LaughablyEvil: She's a horrible person in every regard, but her snotty and unabashedly awful personality makes her hilarious to watch while being utterly despicable at the same time.
285* LoveRedeems: Subverted and invoked. She seemingly falls in love with and almost marries Rawda, but turns out to have just been manipulating him and the other villagers all along. To add insult to injury, she even publicly reveals that he cries after sex.
286* TheMedic: She's an extremely talented doctor and surgeon, to the point that even T'Ana is impressed by her work. When stranded on Areolus, Peanut Hamper fills this role for the Aerore's village and quickly becomes a local hero because of it. Unfortunately, she ruins it all with her EngineeredHeroics, though being who she is she doesn't care a bit.
287* ManipulativeBitch: Manipulates Rawda and his village for months, then moves onto manipulating the ''Cerritos'' and the Drookmani rather than take responsibility for her actions.
288* MeaningfulName: Hamper means "to hinder". Her behavior results in her being TheLoad at best or actively dangerous to others at worst.
289* MotiveRant: After the Drookmani Captain exposes her EngineeredHeroics, Peanut Hamper goes into a rant about how she needed to restore her reputation to save her career so she wouldn't have to spend the rest of her life on a pre-warp planet.
290--> '''Peanut Hamper:''' Okay, fine, I called the Drookmani here! [[BlatantLies But it was for a good cause!]] You guys didn't want these ships and [[ItsAllAboutMe I needed a way to show that I'm a hero so that Starfleet would take me back!]] [[NeverMyFault How was I supposed to know these old ships still worked?]] I mean, they were built by ''organics!'' People who build things out of straw! What are the odds?\
291'''Rawda:''' But, Peanut-!\
292'''Peanut Hamper:''' Oh my God, Rawda, shut the fuck up. [[KickTheDog Just grow a fucking beak.]] I wasn't gonna spend the rest of my very long robotic life on a fricking bird planet.
293* MySpeciesDothProtestTooMuch: A rare {{inver|ted trope}}sion of the "see, even the bad guy aliens aren't all evil" examples usually seen from this trope. In contrast to the Exocomps first seen on TNG, who didn't speak but showed a willingness to [[TheNeedsOfTheMany sacrifice themselves to save others]], Peanut Hamper is a full-blown [[TheSociopath sociopath]]: manipulative, selfish, narcissistic, and completely devoid of empathy.
294* NatureIsBoring: She clearly takes this view. Part of the reason she hates the Aerore is that she's bored out of her skull living in the woods with no technology, alongside the fact she views herself as superior to them thanks to being more technologically advanced.
295* NeverMyFault: She absolutely refuses to take responsibility for her own actions. After stranding herself into outer space to avoid making a HeroicSacrifice, she blames the ''Cerritos'' crew for it while ignoring that it's entirely her fault. It reaches full-on [[BlamingTheVictim victim blaming]] territory when her EngineeredHeroics are discovered and she immediately blames the Areore for it because she assumed their ships couldn't work because of her own classist assumptions.
296* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: She has extremely classist attitudes towards pre-warp civilizations, looking down on the Areore for not being as technologically advanced as the Federation and repeatedly mocking them for it. She seems to move past it, but once her EngineeredHeroics are exposed she makes it clear her views on them haven't changed a bit. She also has a milder hatred [[FantasticRacism for organic life]], though it's mostly directed the aforementioned pre-warp civilizations.
297* PsychopathicManchild: She acts like a whiny, snotty teenager whenever she's not putting forth a FauxAffablyEvil facade, and by her own admission the only reason she joined Starfleet was to piss off her dad. As for the 'Psychopathic' part of this trope, she has a stunning LackOfEmpathy and doesn't give a damn about the harm her actions cause, even when people wind up dying because of the,.
298* PutOnABusToHell: She spends Season 2 and most of Season 3 stranded alone in deep space - which in-universe was an entire year - [[TheBusCameBack before returning]] in "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption".
299* RedAndBlackAndEvilAllOver: Her JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope is accompanied [[EvilCostumeSwitch her coloring changing]] from gray and light-blue to black and red.
300* RedemptionRejection: Even after Peanut Hamper's plot is revealed, Tendi still offers her one last chance to redeem herself by saving the ''Cerritos'' from the Drookmani. The Exocomp flatly refuses.
301* RidiculouslyHumanRobots: She talks like a ValleyGirl, which strongly contrasts with her robotic body (which is a roundish box about the size of a football).
302* {{Sadist}}: She takes a lot of pleasure in twisting the knife whenever she has the advantage over someone she hates. It's most notably demonstrated when, after her betrayal is revealed, she takes the opportunity to mock Rawda for his obvious grief over it and reveal he [[CryingAfterSex cries after sex]] just to humiliate him.
303* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: When Tendi asks her to board the Pakleds ship to upload a computer virus to disable it, Peanut Hamper immediately refuses rather than risk her own life and beams herself off the ship.
304* SelfServingMemory: In "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", she blames the ''Cerritos'' crew for her being stranded in space because they unfairly expected her to make a HeroicSacrifice to stop the Pakleds. Peanut Hamper of course ignores the fact that the mission to upload a computer virus to the Pakled ship was, while risky, not a guaranteed death sentence and she beamed off the ship out of cowardice.
305* ShadowArchetype: Eventually, she is revealed to be this to the main cast of Lower Decks. Like all the four protagonists, she is ''really'' good at any task she sets herself to (science, medicine, engineering, piloting, and socializing). But while all of the ensigns are willing to risk themselves for others (even Boimler, though he may be shrieking in terror while doing it) she absolutely is ''not.''
306* SmallNameBigEgo: She acts superior to everyone around her, claims to have been a big shot to the Aerore, and outright accuses the ''Cerritos'' crew of being jealous of her. If one took her boasts at face value, it would be easy to forget she's just an ensign who ruined her career by deserting in the middle of a crisis.
307* SmugSnake: She's extremely arrogant and over-confident, believing herself to be above everyone else. However, while Peanut Hamper is genuinely cunning and a good manipulator, her failure to [[DidntThinkThisThrough think her actions through]] always screws up her plans.
308* TheSocialExpert: ZigZagged. She's good at analyzing whatever environment she's in and good at tailoring a facade to appeal to whoever she's with. She acts like an upbeat CuteClumsyGirl around [[GenkiGirl Tendi]], a competent and somewhat serious surgeon around [[TheMcCoy T'Ana]], and fakes becoming TheAtoner to gain favor with the Aerore and Starfleet. Unfortunately, she never thinks far enough ahead to keep the act going and the facade always cracks under pressure.
309* TheSociopath: She is a textbook example of one. She pretends to care about other lifeforms when it benefits her, she doesn't feel regret about betraying people, she looks for opportunities to save herself or look like a hero to Starfleet, and she thinks she's superior to all organic beings. She also proves herself to be incapable of love once Rawda learns she betrayed his trust and her coldly admitting in public that he cries over anything, even after sex. She is very manipulative, but also very shortsighted and maliciously spiteful when confronted about her scheming.
310* SpecialEffectsFailure: Purposefully invoked; the original Exocomps in TNG were dangled on a fishing line that was later removed digitally. The creators explicitly asked the animators to make Peanut Hamper move like she was being dangled from a fishing line.
311* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: To Fletcher. They're both seemingly nice lower deck crew-members who reveal themselves to be selfish cowards and prove willing to screw over the crew to save themselves. Peanut Hamper does move in her own direction as a character in Season 3, mainly by proving herself as more competent and far more actively malicious than Fletcher ever was.
312* TemptingFate: After the ''Titan'' arrives, Peanut Hamper reassures herself the ship won't abandon her… unless they forget to scan for non-organic life, but "that'll never happen." It does, and she's left stranded in space.
313* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman: Subverted. In "No Small Parts", the situation with the Pakleds is tailored for her specific skill set, but she refuses to risk her own life for the sake of the crew and [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere beams off the ship]] rather than help.
314* TokenEvilTeammate: PlayedWith. She's a member of the ''Cerritos'', but she quickly reveals herself to be a selfish, cowardly {{Jerkass}} who doesn't give a damn about everyone else. However, it isn't until she leaves the crew that she sinks from simply an asshole to genuinely evil territory.
315* TookALevelInJerkass: Justified. She's much more openly abrasive and immoral in Season 3, in contrast to her being a BitchInSheepsClothing prior, but by that point she's isolated from Starfleet and living in a pre-warp civilization she sees as beneath her and has spent roughly a year stranded in space alone stewing in hatred for Starfleet. Thus, she sees no reason to play nice and put up an act.
316* UnderestimatingBadassery: During her MotiveRant, she reveals she never expected the Aerore's ships to work due to her overall low opinion of them. As it turns out, their ships are very much functional and one is able to nearly blow the ''Cerritos'' out of the sky.
317* UngratefulBastard: The Aerore accept her into their community, put up with her insults, and even reveal their deepest secrets as a culture to her. How does Peanut Hamper repay their kindness? By siccing the Drookmani on them (destroying most of their village in the process) and using the resulting conflict to her own ends.
318* VillainousBreakdown: When her plan to rejoin Starfleet is foiled, she attempts to ''contact the Borg'' and ensure everyone gets assimilated. Luckily she's foiled rather easily, but that's pretty extreme as far as ''Trek'' villains have gone.
319* VillainTeamUp: She ends up stored in the Daystrom Institute...right next to AGIMUS. Naturally, they immediately begin planning to get their revenge.
320* VillainWithGoodPublicity: In "A Mathematically Perfect Redemption", she's able to get the Aerore to view her as a hero to the point of trying to defend her from Starfleet. She ruins it with her EngineeredHeroics , which once exposed ruins her reputation (not helped by her [[{{Jerkass}} attitude]] once the jig is up).
321* WhoNamesTheirKidDude: She chose the name "Peanut Hamper" rather than use her numerical designation because she calculated it'd be a mathematically perfect name. Considering Tendi loves it, she may not have been completely wrong, although this opinion is reversed after [[ScrewThisImOutOfHere she bails out on helping to save the ship]]. AGIMUS also likes it.
322* WouldHurtAChild: Implied. The Aerore village is filled with children, but she still puts them in danger by calling the Drookmani for the sake of her EngineeredHeroics and she clearly doesn't give a damn about the harm her actions have caused for the village.
323* WouldRatherSuffer: After being stranded on Areolus for a day, she notes that while contacting Starfleet would get her arrested and sent to a penal colony, it's starting to sound ''really'' tempting due to her sheer hatred of the planet.
324* YoureJustJealous: When Freeman bluntly informs her there's no way in hell she'll be allowed back in Starfleet after her actions on Aerolus, she immediately accuses her of being jealous of her "advanced intelligence".
325[[/folder]]
326
327[[folder:Ensign Fletcher]]
328!!Ensign Fletcher
329[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fletcher_2380.png]]
330[[caption-width-right:300:''"Aliens! It's the aliens! Those frickin' aliens!"'']]
331!!!'''Voiced by:''' Creator/TimRobinson
332
333A command division Ensign, and one of Boimler's classmates at Starfleet Academy.
334----
335* AntiRoleModel: In a similar manner to Peanut Hamper, Fletcher demonstrates exactly what an ideal Starfleet officer shouldn't be. He's selfish, lazy, cowardly, an idiot, and [[NeverMyFault refuses to take responsibility for his actions]]. He eventually ends up getting fired when he tries to dump garbage into the ''Titan'''s warp core.
336* BitchInSheepsClothing: He's friendly, supportive, good at defusing arguments, and even volunteers to take on Mariner and Boimler's workload so they can attend an event. However, he's later revealed to have an incredibly selfish personality, constantly making excuses, and even throwing others under the bus to avoid taking responsibility for his own mistakes.
337* EarlyBirdCameo: Fletcher shows up in the background or in brief, dialogue-less scenes prior to his feature episode. The most notable is during "Temporal Edict" where he exhaustedly shoves a pile of cylinders into a wall compartment instead of installing them properly (though this isn't foreshadowing of his laziness as ''everyone'' was struggling to make ends meet that episode).
338* EpicFail: He gets booted off the ''Titan'' because he ''dumps trash into the warp core''.
339* {{Foil}}: To Mariner. She openly breaks rules she considers an impediment to her duty, but would never endanger the crew to benefit herself. Fletcher is just trying to cover his own ass with no regard for the consequences.
340* ItsAllAboutMe: His first instinct in any adverse situation is to duck responsibility for whatever's happening, even if doing so results in others getting hurt.
341* KickedUpstairs: Mariner spins a lie about Fletcher deliberately modifying an isolinear core into a weapon to use against the Drookmani scavengers, so he'll be promoted... and transferred to another ship, far away from them.
342-->'''Mariner:''' You know what they say. Keep your friends close, and your enemies way the hell somewhere else.
343* LethallyStupid: His misadventures in "Terminal Provocations" put a lot of people in danger, nearly getting the ship destroyed by the Drookmani. And he very nearly destroyed the ''Titan'' six days after getting transferred there.
344* LaserGuidedKarma: Without friends like Boimler and Mariner to help him, Fletcher's incompetence, selfishness, and lack of common sense get him fired and sent back to Earth six days into his posting to the ''Titan''.
345* MechanicalAbomination: The isolinear core that gets corrupted by his brainwaves quickly transforms into some kind of horrible all-consuming monster incorporating nearby machinery into itself (while repeating his dialogue from throughout the episode).
346* TheMillstone: Not only is he utterly useless, but he nearly destroys the ship by corrupting the isolinear core into a MechanicalAbomination in a moronic attempt to make himself smarter.
347* TokenEvilTeammate: For the ''Cerritos''. Fletcher acts like a nice guy, but he proves himself to be a selfish, moronic coward who's willing to put the ship at risk to save his own ass. Fortunately, he's transferred off-ship and subsequently fired before he can do any real damage.
348* TooDumbToLive: He apparently thought plugging his brain into an isolinear core would make himself smarter. Later, on the ''Titan'', he gets fired for throwing garbage into ''[[{{Antimatter}} the warp core]]''. "It all just burns up anyway!"
349[[/folder]]
350
351[[folder:Ensign Hans Federov]]
352!!Ensign Hans Federov ("Towel Guy")
353[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hans_federov.png]]
354 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
355Another lower decker who seems to use the sonic showers a lot.
356----
357* GossipyHens: He's also known as the Gossip King, and all his information is good. It's through him the main characters learn about the Cali-class being decommissioned.
358* ModestyTowel: Whenever he's seen, it's generally walking through the sleeping area in a towel.
359* RecurringExtra: Barring one scene in Season 3, his role is to just walk past in his towel, illustrating just how cramped the lower deckers are.
360* WalkingShirtlessScene: Is always seen walking around the lower deck bunks naked after leaving the sonic showers, showing off his musculature with just a towel to cover him.
361[[/folder]]
362
363[[folder:Delta Shift]]
364!!Delta Shift
365[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/delta_shift.png]]
366 [[caption-width-right:350:Clockwise from left: Karavitus (Not!Mariner), Asif (Pseudo-Boimler), Amadou (Imitation Rutherford) and Moxy (Quasi-Tendi)]]
367Another set of ensigns working the ''Cerritos'' lower decks, who work at different hours from the Beta Shift.
368----
369* AlwaysSomeoneBetter: According to Tendi they think they're so much better than the Beta shifters simply on the grounds that they ''are'' so much better.
370* BitchInSheepsClothing: Just as it seems they're being nice to their rivals, it turns out it was all a distraction so they can steal the coveted crew quarters the two squads were competing for.
371* BabyOfTheBunch: Asif is the youngest of them, apparently having been a ChildProdigy and getting into Starfleet earlier than most.
372* ButtMonkey: Asif's Boimler's counterpart, and therefore suffers just as much as he does.
373* GreenEyedMonster: "Caves" reveals this as the reason for their antagonising the Beta Shifters; For all Delta are (apparently) more competent than the Betas they get overlooked or ignored because they work the Night Shift, and no-one notices they exist -- Karavitus has only ever met the senior officers about four or five times.
374* NotMeThisTime: Mariner assumes they're behind the missing isolinear core, but they have the solid alibi that they were at the chu-chu dance at the same time as Mariner and Boimler.
375* NoNameGiven: Zigzagged. The show itself doesn't give them names in their introductory episode, but the closed captions show that Not!Mariner is Karavitus, Pseudo-Boimler is Asif, and Quasi-Tendi is Moxy. These names are confirmed in the season four episode "Caves" and reveals that Imitation Rutherford is Amadou.
376* SimilarSquad: "Terminal Provocations" shows the main Deltas are a one-to-one match for the main characters. Their Rutherford is even missing an eye.
377* SitcomArchNemesis: Starfleet may not be supposed to have interpersonal conflicts, but they're still dicks to the regulars for no reason ("Caves" reveals there ''is'' a reason, but not a good one -- jealousy; the Delta Shift crew do basically the same jobs but because they do them when the main bridge crew is asleep they get less acknowledgement to the point they've only seen Captain Freeman or Ransom a few times). Even Tendi doesn't like them.
378* TooMuchAlike: Mariner doesn't like them for reasons she can't explain, but when we see them in the flesh it's clear why; They're like the regulars, just jerkier.
379[[/folder]]
380
381[[folder:CPO Lars Lundy]]
382!!Chief Petty Officer Lars Lundy
383[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lars_lundy.jpg]]
384 [[caption-width-right:350:]]
385A transporter chief aboard the ''Cerritos''.
386----
387* CreepyGood: He's a bit of an odd fellow and gives Boimler the heebie-jeebies, but other than that he's nice enough. When Boimler accepts Lundy's invitation to sit for his oil painting class, he goes into it nervous but comes out relaxed.
388* FantasticRacism: A holographic recreation of him (based on the real Lundy's personal logs) calls Tendi a "dirty Orion".
389[[/folder]]
390
391[[folder:Badgey]]
392!!Badgey
393[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stld_badgey.png]]
394[[caption-width-right:300:''"I will ''burn'' your ''heart'' in a ''FIRE!'' Blargararagll!"'']]
395!!!'''Voiced by:''' Creator/JackMcBrayer
396
397A holographic training tutorial programmed by Rutherford. Unfortunately, he has a ''slight'' problem with emotional stability that causes him to turn homicidal the moment a Drookmani salvo causes the safeties to crap out.
398----
399* AIIsACrapshoot: It's the Holodeck. What else did you expect? In this case, it's a result of deliberate sabotage by [[EnemyWithin Rutherford's past personality]] fighting back against his implant.
400* AndIMustScream: Like [[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS6E11ShipInABottle Moriarty]], he remains conscious even when when his program is not in use.
401-->'''Badgey:''' ''[happy]'' If you need me, Badgey's here! ''[menacing]'' I'm ALWAYS here...
402* AnimateInanimateObject: He's a talking anthropomorhized commbadge.
403* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: After uploading himself into the Federation's subspace relay, he achieves apotheosis and comes to realizes the pointlessness of his revenge against Rutherford with his new hightened perspective, instead decided to go explore higher dimensions and maybe create one of his own.
404* AxCrazy: Gruesomely kills some holographic Bajorans in a scenario Rutherford programmed, then goes after his "father" and Tendi.
405* BigBrotherIsWatching: He's ''always'' monitoring comms, even when his program isn't in use.
406* BroughtDownToNormal: Disengaging the safety protocols may have made him psychotic, but it also made him bound to normal physical limitations. In the end, Rutherford and Tendi defeat him by tiring him out, then freezing him, and finally a fight to the death.
407* CatchPhrase: "Can I teach you a lesson?"
408* CrazyPrepared: Emphasis on "crazy." He already has ''three'' computer viruses ready to go to infect the Pakled ship by the time Rutherford asks him for help.
409* CreateYourOwnVillain: Regards Rutherford as his "father", which seems to be mutual.
410* CuttingTheKnot: Rutherford downloads him to his eye implant so he can infect the Pakled ship. When Badgey activates the self-destruct in an attempt to kill Rutherford, Lt. Shaxs [[EyeScream rips out the implant]] and throws Rutherford onto the shuttle to get him to safety.
411* EnemyWithout: During "A Few Badgeys More", he forcibly excises the portions of his program responsible for altruism and logic resulting in the birth of Goodgey and Logic-y, who work together with Rutherford and Mariner to try and stop the now-fully evil and insane Badgey.
412* EvilIsPetty:
413** Wants to kill Tendi simply because Rutherford likes her.
414** Refuses to infect the Pakled ship until Rutherford kills himself. When Rutherford refuses, Badgey just activates the self-destruct.
415* FauxAffablyEvil: He's cheery and friendly to a fault, all the while making gruesome death threats and trying to murder Rutherford.
416* GoneHorriblyRight: As it turns out, Badgey going from zero to serial killer in 10 seconds wasn't (present day) Rutherford's fault, it was a coding error by past Rutherford's attempts to create a black book project AttackDrone AI for Starfleet, which present Rutherford subconciously duplicated.
417* HatesTheirParent: He views Rutherford as his father. Unfortunately, due to flaws in his programming leaving him highly unstable, along with an incident where Rutherford [[PercussiveMaintenance punched him in the stomach during a long loading time]], Badgey has a homicidal hatred for him and wants to murder him. This seems to be a recurring flaw with Rutherford's AI coding, considering the same thing happens with the ''Texas''-class ships.
418* HeelRealization: After ascending to godlike power, he realizes his vendetta against Rutherford and Starfleet in general has been entirely pointless and hasn't made him any happier. Instead, he apologizes and [[AscendedToAHigherPlaneOfExistence and departs to another plane of existence.]]
419* HereWeGoAgain: Another Holodeck program that turns deadly when the safeties are off? [[SarcasmMode You don't say.]]
420* LargeHam: "Here's a tip! I AM GOING TO BURN! '''YOUR HEARTS!''' '''''IN A FIRE!!!'''''"
421* LaughablyEvil: The juxtaposition between his ridiculously cheery voice and his AxCrazy attitude is nothing short of hilarious.
422* LiteralSplitPersonality: He does this to himself twice in "A Few Badgeys More" whenever a part of him gets in the way of his revenge against Rutherford, first his good side (which forms into a sliver copy called Goodgey), and then his logical side (which forms into a copper copy called Logic-y). By the time the dust settles at the end of the episode, Goodgey is the only one left as Logic-y has been killed and Badgey has [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence Ascended to a Higher Plane of Existance]].
423* MistreatmentInducedBetrayal: He turns against his "father" after getting kicked in the gut during a slow loading period.
424* MoralMyopia: He makes it so the virus for the Pakled ship slows to a crawl right as it is nearly finished, and says it won't work until ''after'' the Pakleds kill Rutherford. When Rutherford asks why, Badgey angrily says because he [[NeckSnap snapped his neck]]. Rutherford only did that because Badgey was already trying to kill him and Tendi.
425* NeckSnap: How Rutherford defeats him in their battle to the death, even though he doesn't have a neck.
426* ObfuscatingStupidity: It's unclear if this was always the case. However after the first incident where the safety protocols were disabled while he was running he seems to have started doing this when the safety protocols are on. He seems nice and sweet when they're turned on even after the attempted murders but once they're off he shows off his more sinister side.
427* ObviousBeta: InUniverse; Rutherford shows him to Tendi even though he hasn't worked out the kinks in his programming yet. That turns out to be a bad idea.
428* PsychoPrototype: Somewhat inverted. The Season 3 finale reveals that the AI controlling the ''Texas''-class drone ships was made from the same base code that Rutherford made while working for then-Lieutenant Commander, later Vice Admiral Buenamigo. The program operating the U.S.S. ''Aledo'', U.S.S. ''Corpus Chrsti'' and U.S.S. ''Dallas'' and Badgey are effectively long lost brother [=AIs=] descended from the same father code created by Rutherford. This is further emphasised when the ''Aledo'' begins transmitting the phrase "I will burn your heart in a fire", over and over again.
429* RestrainingBolt: The holodeck safeties keep him from acting on his violent impulses. Unfortunately, those get knocked offline in his first appearance, and Rutherford has to deliberately disable them the second time to get Badgey's help.
430* RevengeBeforeReason: Taken quite literally. When Rutherford uses logic to try and talk him out of revenge, he litterally rips out his own logical side just so it will stop getting in the way.
431* ShoutOut: He's the Starfleet version of [[UsefulNotes/MicrosoftOfficeAssistant Clippy]] from Microsoft Office.
432* TakingYouWithMe: He's more than willing to kill himself if it means Rutherford will die with him.
433-->"You want me to disable their systems? Fine! I'll do it... '''EXPLOSIVELY!'''"
434* UncertainDoom: It's unclear whether his program still exists on the ''Cerritos'' after he transferred himself to Rutherford's implant (and then got blown up). His absence in Season 2 suggests he was, indeed, fully uploaded into the implant. In the Season 3 finale, the implant is shown to have survived the destruction of the Pakled ship, and Badgey is still conscious within.
435[[/folder]]

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