When an opinion is dressed up as "irrefutable", you can guarantee the next person will refute it!
I think DS9 had a stronger cast of characters by a country mile and is a more rewarding once you engage with that but TNG's relatively simple cast of characters within a smooth family ensemble probably has a greater mass appeal.It's interesting to see people say TNG had stronger characters than DS9 because I feel the opposite is true. Almost all of DS9's main cast have compelling personal conflicts from the get-go, and many of the side characters do too. As much as I love TNG, I don't feel that was one of it's strong suits.
I think DS9 had a stronger cast of characters by a country mile and is a more rewarding once you engage with that but TNG's relatively simple cast of characters within a smooth family ensemble probably has a greater mass appeal.
I'm kind of minded of Worf and O'Brien on DS9 fondly reminiscing about the days on TNG rescuing Picard from the borg and so on. And this simplicity contrasted with the complexity of the times they were living in on DS9.
TNG - families and children, DS9 for adults
Sorry I mean that was my perception at the timeThey were all aiming for the same audience.
Being set in a stationary place gave viewers the feeling of a place where nothing much happens (maybe they should've had the Defiant from the start), and the pre-production buzz talked extensively about it being a 'darker and grittier' Star Trek, which may also have turned some away.
I had read it was going to be gritty, but it never felt as gritty as I expected. I still don't get that feel. I now appreciate that the story is told from the point of view of Starfleet, which isn't gritty, running a base near a gritty war-torn country. Now I watch it and imagine the planet being a series green zones where the provisional gov't has authority and other places where xenophobic religious extremists run things on brute force and informal structures the Bajora had to use to survive under the occupation. We hear about gritty, but we don't see that much.- grittier feel not what people expected based on TNG so may have tuned out
I felt like this when I saw it, but I liked it much more when I re-watched it 10 years later. People develop a lot of mumbo-jumbo, and it really stands out when you're in a foreign place where the mumbo-jumbo is different from your culture's. People adopting literal interpretations of religious stories is common in war-torn places with low education. The whining and anger makes since when you consider it starts less than one year after a brutal occupation.Here are some reasons:
1. Season 1 of DS9 is quite bad for the most part.
2. Season 1 tries to clone TNG.
3. Season 1 features heavy amounts of extremely aggravating, incessant whining from Bajorans, including Kira who is perhaps the most annoying/worst offender.
4. The pilot is extremely boring.
5. The pilot is based on a weak premise of very poorly developed wormhole aliens.
6. Season 1 also features heavy amounts of Bajoran religious mumbo-jumbo, which is only slightly less annoying than their constant whining.
7. By the time DS9 moved away from most of those problems, most people didn't know because they had stopped watching.
Here are some reasons:
1. Season 1 of DS9 is quite bad for the most part.
2. Season 1 tries to clone TNG.
3. Season 1 features heavy amounts of extremely aggravating, incessant whining from Bajorans, including Kira who is perhaps the most annoying/worst offender.
4. The pilot is extremely boring.
5. The pilot is based on a weak premise of very poorly developed wormhole aliens.
6. Season 1 also features heavy amounts of Bajoran religious mumbo-jumbo, which is only slightly less annoying than their constant whining.
7. By the time DS9 moved away from most of those problems, most people didn't know because they had stopped watching.
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