Let me clarify some things. I detest the Klingon Soap Opera storylines of TNG and DS9. And frankly, the Dominion War bores me to tears.
But I like Miles and Julian, and Rom's romance with Leeta was kinda sweet, once he understood that she wasn't going to behave like a typical Ferengi wife. Quark grew on me as the series progressed, and Garak is quite an enigma, both charming and deadly (and the subtext between Garak and Bashir has inspired many a slashfic). I loved the novel Andrew Robinson wrote about him. And Vic Fontaine was a treat, since I've been a James Darren fan ever since the old Time Tunnel series.
I did manage to find something I liked about Enterprise. Porthos was cute. As for Discovery... well, the costumes Michael and Georgiou wore in the desert scenes reminded me a bit of the Dune miniseries, so that was okay. I didn't like anything else about it, but oh well. I'm quite aware that there are series I love and other people don't, so to each their own.
No, they're not. Neelix decided to give up his roaming, going-nowhere lifestyle and settled down to make a family with the Talaxian woman he met and her son. Tuvok did change, albeit not for the better (developing a neurological disorder leads to change, sometimes a profound change - just ask anyone who has a loved one who develops dementia or Alzheimers). Tom and B'Elanna married and took on the responsibilities of parenthood, and B'Elanna took some steps to reconciling with her father. Seven became more human as the seasons progressed. FFS, even Q grew up a bit.
Kim was a case of one step forward, a step sideways, two steps back, do-si-do, another step forward, major screwup, and back to square one. At least he composed some music and learned some Vulcan disciplines and logic from Tuvok.
I'll grant you Chakotay. If there could be one scene above all that I wish they'd filmed, it would have been Chakotay either doing his "a-koo-chee-moy-a" chant or starting out rambling about "there is a legend among my people" and having the entire cast, including Naomi and the Borg baby, yelling at him, "Chakotay, SHUT THE FUCK UP!"
As for Janeway, she's a lot more like Kirk than she'd ever want to admit. And the difference is that she actually destroyed the ship more times than he did.
Suffice it to say there's chunks of this I absolutely agree with (the bit about Kim and Chakotay, and everything positive you had to say about DS9, and yes, Porthos was cute) but most of this makes it clear that you and I watch
Star Trek for very different reasons.
I am a story and character man. Make those good, and you've got me. To me, long-form storytelling better serves both, as does the feeling that we're actually going somewhere with this, that there is a conclusion in mind. What's crazy is that
Voyager is literally the only
Trek series that started off with an end goal in mind and yet, to me, anyway, felt the most aimless. It was like "here's another one-hour plot that will wrap up neatly in 40 minutes, all to kill time until the last episode when we'll finally get home." Why wouldn't the entire last season be a long arc about finding a way home, it nearly not working, finally getting home only to discover that their troubles aren't over, and show us how Starfleet dealt with the mishmash crew, what they're going to do about the Maquis, Seven of Nine and the Doctor? It was just more meandering until finally the last episode finally reveals how they got home.
While I was watching
Battlestar Galactica in the years after
Trek was over, I kept thinking "This is it. This is what
Voyager should have been. If they'd just had the balls to do this kind of storytelling it might have been my favorite
Trek ever."
It seems to me that most of the irritation over new
Trek series always stems from some weird desire to make sure Gene Roddenberry would posthumously approve (he didn't even approve of much of what was produced when he actually was alive, yet we still accept it) or strange devotion to making sure everything lines up, visually and otherwise, even though it is purely fiction and never has lined up perfectly. I do understand wanting to keep the spirit of
Trek, because otherwise what have you got, but I absolutely do not think that translates into "all our heroes must be perfect all the time and there should never be a lasting conflict." I love the idea that it's always darkest just before dawn. Give us a "dark" story as long as there's hope at the end. Give us flawed characters as long as you acknowledge that this isn't how characters are
supposed to behave. Don't give me perfect automatons and expect me to be engaged. TNG only got good once the writers were able to get around Roddenberry's little rules and plus they had great actors.
What I absolutely don't want to see is the same old thing with new characters, and simple forty-minute stories that are guaranteed to wrap up at the end of the allotted time. Sure, give us "breather" episodes or give us an episodic A-plot while keeping the B-, C- and D-plots serialized, but I'm beyond tired of the same old formula. I'm not 100% pleased with
Discovery so far, but I still say it's had the strongest start of all the spin-offs and I love the long-form story that's showing us the crew forming gradually rather than already together from the pilot onward.