Give it some time. Maybe it will just be mediocre for two seasons and then suddenly become awesome. It's been known to happen.
Only if
someone grows a beard!
Seriously, now that I've seen the pilot, I agree. A little rough, very Trek-derivative, but enjoyable. My feeling is that this was an attempt to get back to the promise of TOS, without all the baggage that's accumulated in the last 50 years. I think it will find its own voice, and prove no more a Trek ripoff than Trek ripped off
Forbidden Planet. (Krell? Krill? Hmmm...)
I liked it a lot more than I thought I would, but I went into it without believing it would automatically suck.
That should be
and, not but. I think pre-premiere doubt made some people too critical. I also went in with an open mind and liked it overall.
There's a demarcation between situations that call for sarcasm and situations that call for seriousness. Orville has no such demarcation, so the serious scenes end up having no seriousness.
IMHO this is a weakness I've noticed in MacFarlane's writing generally, and perhaps the weakest part of what I saw. That being said, humor in serious situations can sometimes be realistic - as in "should we be talking about this?"
Once other writers kick in, we might be pleasantly surprised to see the show hover between "Tribbles"-style humor and the general fun of TOS.
The story was as one dimensional as it gets, with an ending that was so obvious that I thought for a second it was a setup for something...less obvious.
Without revealing the spoiler, I disliked the way the ending violated the laws of conservation. However, it's not like we haven't forgiven such things in the past.
Honestly, I haven't seen "The Outcast" in many, many years and certainly not since I've become better aware about transgender issues. I wonder how I would take it now.
I haven't seen it in entirety since it was first on - and then I took it to be a metaphor for acceptance of homosexuality, not a direct commentary on transgender issues, which were not big in the public consciousness - and I didn't like it then. I couldn't bring myself to watch it when it was on a little while back. I remember it as not being very forceful in its supposed message of acceptance.
I will reserve judgement on
The Orville's Very Special Episode, but if it manages to make some people in the audience even
think seriously about transgender issues for the first time, I'd consider that a success.