Ok then there’s the one where they go to the racist planet and the one where they blatantly violate the prime directive by going to the aryan planet, but those seem like holdovers from the TOS days as many of the staffers were from the olden days.
But compared to DSC, season 1 of TNG was a veritable fountain of good ideas (see who I quoted there? That was a reference on the level of the kind seen in DSC).
Relating all this back to the article in the original post, I think the one thing that is missing from DSC is the sense of hope and, dare I say it, fun of exploration that comes with, well, Discovery.
and I think she created the Asgard, but was not responsible for the eventual revelation that they were "Gray" aliens).
It’s also a bad comparison because the Borg are like an existential threat, a force of nature, the Klingons...aren’t. Narratively they serve different functions.
I wish I couldI can watch DSC Season 1 multiple times over.
The scene in “farpoint” where he asks Beverley if they can be friends is some of the finest acting I’ve ever seen /sIt's Picard. I cannot get past Picard in that first season
I didn’t know that, thanks! I really need to start doing better research before posting things! Haha!I assume by the former you mean "Code of Honor," which was written by Katharyn Powers. She never worked on TOS
That wouldn’t surprise me - the bts stuff has an interview with berman where he says that they got to drool over a “bevvy of babes” when casting that episode. True Star Trek ideals it seems... (and besides I’m sure there’s a prime directive violation in that episode as the people on the planet aren’t warp capable... canon seems to go “shh we’re not going to talk about that...” in relation to that episode!)Black's proposal was for a much darker story about rebels fighting tyranny but turning out to be just as tyrannical themselves. The only bit of it that survived was the idea of instant-death punishment zones. (And I'd bet that Roddenberry was the one who suggested changing it to a hedonist sex planet.)
... so I've tried re-watching TNG three times. All three times, I couldn't make it passed somewhere in Season 1. The second and third time, I tried to give myself a leg up by starting where I stopped the last time. Still no luck. There'll be a good episode, then I'll hit one or two or three that I think are complete shit and I end up giving up again.
I wish I couldI really wanted to like it more than I do. Hopefully season 2 will do more for me.
The scene in “farpoint” where he asks Beverley if they can be friends is some of the finest acting I’ve ever seen /s
(In truth I tend to agree that Picard had some development to do character-wise!)
I didn’t know that, thanks! I really need to start doing better research before posting things! Haha!
That wouldn’t surprise me - the bts stuff has an interview with berman where he says of that episode that they got to drool over a “bevvy of babes” when casting that episode. True Star Trek ideals it seems... (and besides I’m sure there’s a prime directive violation in that episode as the people on the planet aren’t warp capable... canon seems to go “shh we’re not going to talk about that...” in relation to that episode!)
Have you found a TNG starting point which works?
In real life or in-universe? I think we’re supposed to assume that the PD was always like that in-universe, but yeh it took them til at least s2 of TNG where Data contacts that little girl whose planet is dying (which is suspiciously like the opening of Into Darkness...) to figure out that warp capability is inherent to first contact situations. And then it’s explicitly stated in the episode “first contact” and then in the film “first contact” (I said first contact way too many times there).The stuff about having no contact with pre-warp species came later.
Kor
I made it as far as the part where they accuse William Shatner of being a terrible actor and decided that was all I needed to declare the article Crap.What do you think about argument made in the piece?
In real life or in-universe? I think we’re supposed to assume that the PD was always like that in-universe, but yeh it took them til at least s2 of TNG where Data contacts that little girl whose planet is dying (which is suspiciously like the opening of Into Darkness...) to figure out that warp capability is inherent to first contact situations. And then it’s explicitly stated in the episode “first contact” and then in the film “first contact” (I said first contact way too many times there).
It never seemed to be an issue in TOS where in many cases they beam down to a primitive planet in full starfleet regalia and they just said “ah we’re travelers from a far away land”
... but at least our uniforms aren’t made out of spandex any more.
+I made it as far as the part where they accuse William Shatner of being a terrible actor and decided that was all I needed to declare the article Crap.
I will never knock Sir Stewart's performance. He worked with what he had. And, what he had at that point was an overconfident and braggadocios elitist who shot his own clone (or time loop version) to prove a point. it was all rather unsettling and left a rather odd impression on me.The scene in “farpoint” where he asks Beverley if they can be friends is some of the finest acting I’ve ever seen /s
(In truth I tend to agree that Picard had some development to do character-wise!)
The belief that only a "die-hard fan" can be a good Trek showrunner is just fan egotism and doesn't make any sense. Fans are consumers, not creators. Creation and enjoyment are opposite ends of the process and they have different requirements. I don't care how much my airplane pilot loves flying, I care how much they've studied flying. I don't care how much the chef at a restaurant I patronize enjoys eating, I care how much training they have at cooking. Fandom is irrelevant to skill. Sure, understanding the work is important, but you don't have to be a fan already to gain an understanding of a work, because you can learn. It's expected of any professional hired to do a job that they study and research and practice and learn how to do the job. Harve Bennett and Nicholas Meyer weren't Trek fans, but they researched the job they were hired for and learned everything they could about Trek before they made their movie. And most people liked how it turned out.
Indeed, it can be a bad thing for a professional to let their fandom get in the way of their work. Superman Returns was a disappointment because it was Bryan Singer making a Richard Donner fan film instead of making Bryan Singer's Superman. Steven Moffat's Doctor Who has been good in many ways, but has also suffered from the showrunner's excessive fannishness -- his glorification of the lead character, his overdependence on fanfiction-type deconstructions and continuity games, etc. Doing good professional work requires the ability to self-criticize and kill your darlings, but fandom is about feeding and pampering your darlings. So I don't want "die-hard fans" creating my shows. I want die-hard professionals creating them, so that I can be the fan.
Numerous people here have been saying all along - you cannot do justice to a popular franchise, without respecting it's original values - what else remains when they are taken out?
People like to say that TOS was darker than TNG, had more interpersonal conflict, but that is hardly the only point of the show - TOS was also a show that claimed humans had evolved past prejudice, and learned to be delighted with difference
, or had learned to treat criminality as a social disease instead of an opportunity for collective violence,
or was willing to treat the concerns of a pulsating rock creature as understandable enough to excuse the death of several colonists who had killed it's young.
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