Star Trek wasn't "creatively exhausted". Rick Berman and Brian Bragga
For someone who alleges to only care about factual accuracy, you sure have a way with butchering names. Who the hell is "Brian Bragga?"
Star Trek wasn't "creatively exhausted". Rick Berman and Brian Bragga
Star Trek wasn't "creatively exhausted". Rick Berman and Brian Bragga
For someone who alleges to only care about factual accuracy, you sure have a way with butchering names. Who the hell is "Brian Bragga?"
That's some food for thought, though. If VII releases poorly, it could mean bad things for space-operatic television.
You can watch his interview for the Academy of Television on YouTube (three parts), although I don't think it will give you the inside scoop you want. Although he has a reputation, he is actually rather reserved when in comes to telling franchise secrets, defending the franchise. Still a good listen.
Otherwise, I enjoyed the interview. A lot of things I'd heard before, some new. Rick Berman again comes across like a bit of a dick. I feel at this stage that the guy deserves right of reply. He should write a book from his perspective. I'd read his take on the inside story of nineties Trek.
I'd love more perspective, but I'm not holding my breath. I am reminded that it was Braga, not Berman or Behr, who spilled the beans abount the contentious meeting conerning Enterprises's season 3.That's some food for thought, though. If VII releases poorly, it could mean bad things for space-operatic television.
I think there's zero chance it won't make a metric fuck-ton of money, but whether it will be a critical success remains to be seen.
You can watch his interview for the Academy of Television on YouTube (three parts), although I don't think it will give you the inside scoop you want. Although he has a reputation, he is actually rather reserved when in comes to telling franchise secrets, defending the franchise. Still a good listen.
I shall! Thanks for the tip. I don't see him as the tell-all kind, if nothing else he's relentlessly professional. His recent interviews for the TNG Blu-rays were more frank than anything else I've read or heard from him, so perhaps there's more to come.
I'm sure most of those people forgot, or else never knew, what a different beast TNG was in its first two seasons.That second part is absolutely valid. Like, damn. Over the years I've brought seven close IRL friends/exes (ha) and at least twice as many online friends into the DS9 fold, and half of them have all started off by telling me they had distant memories of watching it early in its run only to drop it like a hot potato because it was so boring and tedious.
Otherwise, I enjoyed the interview. A lot of things I'd heard before, some new. Rick Berman again comes across like a bit of a dick. I feel at this stage that the guy deserves right of reply. He should write a book from his perspective. I'd read his take on the inside story of nineties Trek.
This is one thing I will miss about DS9 and VOY not coming to blu ray, the special features talking about what life was like in the 90s behind the scenes of the Star Trek boom. One of the things I appreciated on the TNG special features sets (especailly season 1) was Berman's perspectives. It seems like he's become the whipping boy of the franchise and deserved or not, I would read kind of an autobiographical book written from him expressing his side of things.
No, but it does cut right to the heart of the issue.I'm sure most of those people forgot, or else never knew, what a different beast TNG was in its first two seasons.That second part is absolutely valid. Like, damn. Over the years I've brought seven close IRL friends/exes (ha) and at least twice as many online friends into the DS9 fold, and half of them have all started off by telling me they had distant memories of watching it early in its run only to drop it like a hot potato because it was so boring and tedious.
I'm not sure that ``yeah, this show is boring and tedious, but this other show you liked was boring and tedious six years ago too'' is the most effective bit of rhetoric you might deploy.
No, but it does cut right to the heart of the issue.I'm sure most of those people forgot, or else never knew, what a different beast TNG was in its first two seasons.
I'm not sure that ``yeah, this show is boring and tedious, but this other show you liked was boring and tedious six years ago too'' is the most effective bit of rhetoric you might deploy.
TNG didn't have the most stellar start (which the ratings chart everybody loves does show), but as the show got better and better so did the ratings. People gave it a chance because it was Star Trek.
Funny thing is, DS9's "Emissary" had the highest rating of any Trek episode, according to the chart. That right there shows that it wasn't the concept of DS9 that ran people off, but the execution. There began the massive divebomb Trek took, at least as far as Nielsens were concerned.
No, but it does cut right to the heart of the issue.I'm not sure that ``yeah, this show is boring and tedious, but this other show you liked was boring and tedious six years ago too'' is the most effective bit of rhetoric you might deploy.
TNG didn't have the most stellar start (which the ratings chart everybody loves does show), but as the show got better and better so did the ratings. People gave it a chance because it was Star Trek.
Funny thing is, DS9's "Emissary" had the highest rating of any Trek episode, according to the chart. That right there shows that it wasn't the concept of DS9 that ran people off, but the execution. There began the massive divebomb Trek took, at least as far as Nielsens were concerned.
Pretty much; why the first two seasons of DS9 and VOY were wildly inconsistent, and not in a good way, has always been a mystery.
Creatively? I think both team leads pretty much made it clear in some of the interviews. They were fumbling around with no real idea what to do with what they had. They were throwing ideas at the wall until something came together. Even the Dominion stuff was basically cobbled together between seasons from disparate stuff.
Voyager in particular always saddened me, as I felt it should have been the first Trek show to start out completely serialized. The conflict between Janeway and Chakotay would have been ripe. You could even have members of the starfleet crew consider joining the Maquis. I would have had Janeway be the XO initially, and have the CAPTAIN die. Before leaving Starfleet Chakotay would have been a commander, and that way the two would be butting heads over who should really be running things. They harmonized the situation way too fast in the pitifully small number of episodes dealing with all that.
There are many other layers to consider there too. The acquisition and decline of resources, some members of the crew literally losing their mental stability from being so far from home.
Instead of Neelix, I would have had some of the Maquis fill in his role, being as they were all about fighting for survival and such they would be invaluable and coming up with new ways to feed the crew, and deal with the hostile threats of the delta quadrant in new and interesting ways. There's many other things that they could have done to really use what they had, and make the show about something. In this case, two different methodologies, and ideologies forced to come together, and the resulting conflicts and harmonies that would arise in having to make do with a pants-fillingly dangerous and unknown corner of the galaxy. An ongoing struggle, nothing pat or easy. No reset button.
Pretty much; why the first two seasons of DS9 and VOY were wildly inconsistent, and not in a good way, has always been a mystery.
Creatively? I think both team leads pretty much made it clear in some of the interviews. They were fumbling around with no real idea what to do with what they had. They were throwing ideas at the wall until something came together. Even the Dominion stuff was basically cobbled together between seasons from disparate stuff.
Voyager in particular always saddened me, as I felt it should have been the first Trek show to start out completely serialized. The conflict between Janeway and Chakotay would have been ripe. You could even have members of the starfleet crew consider joining the Maquis. I would have had Janeway be the XO initially, and have the CAPTAIN die. Before leaving Starfleet Chakotay would have been a commander, and that way the two would be butting heads over who should really be running things. They harmonized the situation way too fast in the pitifully small number of episodes dealing with all that.
There are many other layers to consider there too. The acquisition and decline of resources, some members of the crew literally losing their mental stability from being so far from home.
Instead of Neelix, I would have had some of the Maquis fill in his role, being as they were all about fighting for survival and such they would be invaluable and coming up with new ways to feed the crew, and deal with the hostile threats of the delta quadrant in new and interesting ways. There's many other things that they could have done to really use what they had, and make the show about something. In this case, two different methodologies, and ideologies forced to come together, and the resulting conflicts and harmonies that would arise in having to make do with a pants-fillingly dangerous and unknown corner of the galaxy. An ongoing struggle, nothing pat or easy. No reset button.
And it's happening again. Got a Roku mainly so I and the kid (17-year-old female crazed Trekkie -- a Niner btw) could watch through ENT. It's been months and we're not through S1. Not. That. Compelling.
I hear everybody say it gets better (after three years!). We'll see.
[cue Pon Farr music from Amok Time]
It is as it always has been. And as it always shall be. Thee [sic] watches all the episodes in order or thee has done it wrong. Kroykah!
All I am saying is that there should be some solidarity among Star Trek actors
Like Shatner and Takei?
People are people, they have their opinions, opinions which may differ from other people's opinions.
So Marina Sirtis has a relatively negative opinion of Enterprise compared to TNG. Fine. As long as she doesn't have a negative opinion of people who feel positively about Enterprise (which she neither said out straight, nor implied in that interview), then it's no big deal. She also made a comment on the fading numbers for my favourite Trek, DS9 over its run, following a big start, which I'm not irked by, because it's patently true. DS9 never did TNG numbers.
Unless you want celebrities to sign contracts that prohibit them from espousing opinions and behaving in ways that will offend the fanbase (pop idols have to do that in Japan BTW), then you have to accept that humans will be human.
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