Wicker Man was shite, but noit on the level of Left Behind.Wait, I didn't see "Wicker Man" or "Ghost Rider 2" anywhere on there.
And I won't hear a bad word about Ghost Rider 2. Crazy Nick was at his very best there!!
Wicker Man was shite, but noit on the level of Left Behind.Wait, I didn't see "Wicker Man" or "Ghost Rider 2" anywhere on there.
You can have Ghost Rider. I'll keep Left Behind. Thanks. At least I know what I'm getting in that film.Wicker Man was shite, but noit on the level of Left Behind.
And I won't hear a bad word about Ghost Rider 2. Crazy Nick was at his very best there!!
Alan McElroy in DSC Writing Staff:
https://twitter.com/mcelroy_ab/status/983935569322377221
Yeah, "absolute shit" sounds like a pretty accurate summary. What are the showrunners thinking?![]()
And yet, there are shows with a fraction of the budget and much better writing talent.
(Seriously, writing is never the budget-busting item in any Hollywood production. The money is just going somewhere else. If they hire crappy writers, it's because they choose those writers.)
In Hollywood?And as "diversity" goes, what really worries me is that perhaps he was hired not for his race but for his religion...
To give him the benefit of the doubt, maybe he has hidden talents and just hasn't had the right chance yet. Maybe he came in with an absolutely great story idea and won everybody over. Heck, even F. Scott Fitzgerald scripted a fair amount of schlock during his Hollywood days. Maybe we'll all be pleasantly surprised.
But yeah, that's not the way to bet.
(And as "diversity" goes, what really worries me is that perhaps he was hired not for his race but for his religion... that the producers think someone who would write a Left Behind adaptation is the sort of person who can contribute to their "science vs. faith" concept for S2. And that's not encouraging at all...)
Will this be the first black Trek writer? I think so.
And as "diversity" goes, what really worries me is that perhaps he was hired not for his race but for his religion... that the producers think someone who would write a Left Behind adaptation is the sort of person who can contribute to their "science vs. faith" concept for S2. And that's not encouraging at all...
Are they gonna be as honest about religion as TNG was? That it is a historical phenomenon, that relative to different cultures. Or will they pander to the times, rising anti-intellectualism, and the renewed post-1980s fundamentalism in Christianity and Islam? "Oooooo maybe religions are all partly true, ooooo." Rather than the reality, that they all poach myths and ethics liberally. I'm sick of hearing theological sophistry posing as actual philosophy.
Mostly because, it shouldn't be a contest.Are they gonna be as honest about religion as TNG was? That it is a historical phenomenon, that relative to different cultures. Or will they pander to the times, rising anti-intellectualism, and the renewed post-1980s fundamentalism in Christianity and Islam? "Oooooo maybe religions are all partly true, ooooo." Rather than the reality, that they all poach myths and ethics liberally. I'm sick of hearing theological sophistry posing as actual philosophy.
Thousands of religions have existed across human history. Polytheistic, monotheistic, henotheistic, animist, pantheist, agnostic and even atheistic ones. Across 300,000 years of Homo sapiens history. Non-religious people have also existed all that time.
The only reasonable way to treat a given religion is as a finite sociological phenomenon to be studied; their holy sites will one day be pushed under a tectonic plate, they are clearly and obviously ephemeral. But we already saw in season one's lamentable confusion, some pretty irrational bullshit has passed through this writer's room. I can already imagine how bad this show's treatment of 'faith' will be.
Isn't it worrying that a series from the 1960s had a more rational attitude to anthropological concepts like religion than one from the 2010s may have? Despite the fact that nobody in human history has reliably recorded anything supernatural, and, lo and behold, in the age of instant communication, nothing supernatural ever happens any more.... we are getting a writer of religious fiction doing work on Star Trek, and Star Trek exploring science vs religion, as if there is any contest.
Not in today's Hollywood, it doesn't.Oh Lord. That sounds horrifyingly plausible.
It would be nice if there was a discussion, but I am doubtful of that point.Or you bring a guy like him in to write a character, or a set of characters, so that the religious point of view on the show doesn't become a strawman as has happened every other time Star Trek has tackled this topic. It is still Star Trek, and I still want it to come down on the side of secular humanism, but I would also like for it to come to that after actually having the argument.
Like, don't get me wrong, "Who Mourns For Adonais?" and "Who Watches the Watchers?" are both great episodes. But they both present "our side" as blatantly, overwhelmingly right from frame one. Kirk vs. the Towering Tyrant, or Picard vs. the Frightened Primitive, neither of those is really addressing the complicated relationship religion has had with modernity for hundreds of years.
Or you bring a guy like him in to write a character, or a set of characters, so that the religious point of view on the show doesn't become a strawman as has happened every other time Star Trek has tackled this topic. It is still Star Trek, and I still want it to come down on the side of secular humanism, but I would also like for it to come to that after actually having the argument.
Like, don't get me wrong, "Who Mourns For Adonais?" and "Who Watches the Watchers?" are both great episodes. But they both present "our side" as blatantly, overwhelmingly right from frame one. Kirk vs. the Towering Tyrant, or Picard vs. the Frightened Primitive, neither of those is really addressing the complicated relationship religion has had with modernity for hundreds of years.
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