Yes, realistically, our Galaxy is huge and there would be more stars to explore than the Federation could probably hope to visit in its entire lifetime.
But in Star Trek, the've already visited every quadrant and made the Galaxy feel so small that I felt like it would be best to not pretend that's not the case. Realism aside, they've made the Milky Way too familiar and boring through over-exposure. Humanoids with bumpy heads populate every single quadrant.
What you get from exploring a new galaxy is:
- It's a catchier hook - a "high concept". You can advertise/sell the show easier if you say "the Enterprise begins a new age of exploration in a brand new, unknown galaxy - the Andromeda Galaxy" than if you say "Starfleet explores a backwater of the Delta Quadrant that Voyager missed". It's about the concept of frontierism and exploration, not realism.
- You get to use the conceit of combining all the resources of a Galaxy (The Milky Way) on a grand endeavor - a mission of exploration and discovery. It forces disparate cultures to work together, through tensions and competing values and objectives. It reflects our modern world where we find ourselves having to work with China and Russia and the European Union struggles to hold itself together. It's more reflective of the modern political climate.
- You get a fresh start in a new Galaxy. You can get away from the budget-driven conceit of every alien having to be humanoid (so much so that they had to make the episode "The Chase" to explain how all the Humanoid species were related and seeded here). Yet, because we still have all the old Milky Way species, we can continue to use them on the show, too. But they're not the aliens anymore, they're us, in all our wonderful variety. It makes our surrogates more diverse (reflecting our own modern diversity) while allowing the aliens to be *truly* alien.
- We get to see a real frontier story, more like TOS. In my series arc, the Enterprise is the first ship in Andromeda, but this is not Voyager. During the course of season 1, Starbase A-1 is being constructed, and by the end of the first season, 2 more ships will join the Enterprise (including one captained by a descendant of Kirk who feels like the Enterprise should have been her ship).
Choosing to explore Andromeda wasn't something I just did because it seemed more dramatic. I did it because I felt like it could take Trek in a new direction, let it grow, let it build off of what came before, and let it recapture some of its original "wagon train to the stars" spirit.
But in Star Trek, the've already visited every quadrant and made the Galaxy feel so small that I felt like it would be best to not pretend that's not the case. Realism aside, they've made the Milky Way too familiar and boring through over-exposure. Humanoids with bumpy heads populate every single quadrant.
What you get from exploring a new galaxy is:
- It's a catchier hook - a "high concept". You can advertise/sell the show easier if you say "the Enterprise begins a new age of exploration in a brand new, unknown galaxy - the Andromeda Galaxy" than if you say "Starfleet explores a backwater of the Delta Quadrant that Voyager missed". It's about the concept of frontierism and exploration, not realism.
- You get to use the conceit of combining all the resources of a Galaxy (The Milky Way) on a grand endeavor - a mission of exploration and discovery. It forces disparate cultures to work together, through tensions and competing values and objectives. It reflects our modern world where we find ourselves having to work with China and Russia and the European Union struggles to hold itself together. It's more reflective of the modern political climate.
- You get a fresh start in a new Galaxy. You can get away from the budget-driven conceit of every alien having to be humanoid (so much so that they had to make the episode "The Chase" to explain how all the Humanoid species were related and seeded here). Yet, because we still have all the old Milky Way species, we can continue to use them on the show, too. But they're not the aliens anymore, they're us, in all our wonderful variety. It makes our surrogates more diverse (reflecting our own modern diversity) while allowing the aliens to be *truly* alien.
- We get to see a real frontier story, more like TOS. In my series arc, the Enterprise is the first ship in Andromeda, but this is not Voyager. During the course of season 1, Starbase A-1 is being constructed, and by the end of the first season, 2 more ships will join the Enterprise (including one captained by a descendant of Kirk who feels like the Enterprise should have been her ship).
Choosing to explore Andromeda wasn't something I just did because it seemed more dramatic. I did it because I felt like it could take Trek in a new direction, let it grow, let it build off of what came before, and let it recapture some of its original "wagon train to the stars" spirit.
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