Again, different audience and dynamic. Perhaps VOY is condemned because TNG had already done it and done it better. VOY claimed to be something new and never fulfilled that claim.
Maybe. Which means Berman was right again when he said they should've waited.
Right, which means the production team must be prepared to do something with it. This is no fault of the audience, who keeps getting blamed.
They were rushed into production and hassled by Network interference the entire show. They were in a much tighter spot than past Treks.
Doubtful.
They have no one to blame but themselves for hating every single alien species the show presented right from inception.
Why? As has been my argument, just because it was done a certain way doesn't mean it had to be that way.
It's always been done that way, because it's the only real effective way to do it in Trek.
Again, it doesn't have to be that way, regardless of what was done. Also, the Borg were pre-established as a threat. VOY just didn't know how to use them effectively.
It's the audience's fault for refusing to accept that a single alien species existed that could do any damage whatsoever to the Borg.
I'm afraid I don't follow. If a show sets up a premise as being different than previous iterations of Trek and does not follow through, then I'm not going to enjoy the show.
Well, the premise really wasn't all that different from Past Treks. Only difference was that they took an inherently limited plot and stretched it out 6 years too long.
I've yet to find any data indicating substantial displeasure beyond a decreasing interest in Trek as a whole.
Decreasing interest as a whole, which was aided by the audience hating everything VOY did.
Dark Frontier was a poor attempt. Perhaps a bigger build up would have helped that matter.
Maybe if they had cannon fodder and the audience didn't hate them sticking around in one area long enough to flesh it out...
Not the audience's fault.
Yeah, it was. For not accepting VOY doing what all other Treks did.
TOS was a western in space, while VOY, as previously established, was a lost ship trying to get home.
VOY was "Lost in Space: TNG". And that show didn't work out either.
Not according to any material I have read, including Berman's own quotes. So, either he is lying or deluded.
I disagree, but even if he was it doesn't change that Moore and Behr are whiners who think they had it worse than they really did.
I'm not either.
?
VOY's characters maintained the status quo, and did nothing that would create an emotional hook beyond the superficial. Some were thinly sketched and little was done to fix that. Again, for me, if I don't have a connection to the characters, then it is difficult for me to enjoy a show.
Regardless of audience feedback, VOY did little to make a change in its characters that mattered. So, if it doesn't matter, why should I care?
Like I said, trim the cast. Smaller casts are easier to write and keep track of. Xena and Hercules were on at the same time as VOY and both did fine with only 2 main characters.
It also makes it easier to do Secondaries and Recurring characters, cause with a smaller main cast you won't risk forcing a Central out of their screentime.