Good, let it die

Good, let it die
Even if we ever get a post-Nemesis series, if it knew what was good for it, it would ignore this rule along with all of Roddenberry's other grand ideas. I want love instructors made canon more than I want another series where no conflict is a rule.
I fully expect the Prime Directive to be a focal point of several episodes. That's a big point of turmoil.Agreed on the conflict part, it is the very essence of drama. However, a non-interference policy towards lesser developed species is extremely relevant to what is going on in our world now and I hope they still deal with it in some way and neither ignore, hide behind, or oversimplify it.
"The answer can be found in Roddenberry’s Box. I happen to like the box. A lot of writers don’t. In fact, I think it’s fair to say, most writers who have worked on Star Trek over the years would like to throw the box away. [...] I began to learn how Roddenberry’s Box forced us as writers to come up with new and interesting ways to tell stories instead of falling back into easier, familiar devices."
The 'no conflict rule' was a product of the TNG era. the TOS era had no such rule (and was better for it.)So EW is reporting that DSC won't follow the old (very old) "no conflict" rule.
The article is kind of funny because it forgets that DS9 also threw out this rule back in the 90s and they're reporting on this as if it's a newfangled approach in Star Trek.
Nevertheless! Still thought I might post it because the debate about the "Roddenberry Ideal" still goes on, although I think most Trekkies are perfectly fine with conflict between the Starfleet characters. Correct me if I'm wrong, of course.
This article also confirms DSC will be serialized. Not sure if that had been previously confirmed. Basically it looks like they're taking their influence from DS9, BG, stuff like that.
You know what else Star Trek would be better off ditching, this bizarre idea among the fans that the franchise was all about reinventing the wheel and being a philosophical thesis on the future of humanity and its place in the stars. That's what TNG is about, and to a certain extent, Phase II/TMP.I go with Piller here: Removing the Roddenberry Box from the story structures is a bad decision for Star Trek. The writers do not complain about this rule because it causes bad stories, they only complain about it because it makes earning their paycheck much harder. It's about their core interest of making earning money under the Star Trek brand easier by avoiding that rule that forces them to think outside the box of the usual (space) drama.
And viewers who are frustrated about that Box don't like it, because it challenges their own views. Most Star Trek viewer don't like to be challenged, so they dismiss this aspect of Star Trek: "I want characters to behave like I behave every day. How dare you reflect me in a negative light! I dream about punching people in the face that piss me off, so I want to see characters on the screen that punch others in the face when they are pissed off."
I am one of the consumers who got mainly interested in Star Trek and its story telling because of this Roddenberry Box. I only clicked with Star Trek because of TNG, because this Box made it a different unique show unlike any other before and after it. The farther a series tried to steer away from it (DS9 or the TOS movies), the lesser I cared about it.
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