Seems like a pretty pathetic waste of time to me. Dwelling on something you hate can't be good for you.I think people don’t really care what the Klingons are doing. It’s more fun to complain about their stupid new look.
Seems like a pretty pathetic waste of time to me. Dwelling on something you hate can't be good for you.I think people don’t really care what the Klingons are doing. It’s more fun to complain about their stupid new look.
But the Internet thrives on hate.Seems like a pretty pathetic waste of time to me. Dwelling on something you hate can't be good for you.
And the internet is a toxic place where hate turns into death threats and actual violence. Personally I'd like to talk about the show itself without having to wade through a ton of shit about how it's not in the prime universe or every other complaint that boils down to "I don't like how it looks because it's different". I hate that "being a fan" now requires you to just hate the product, no one is forcing to watch it. You're literally paying to see something you claim to hate. You wouldn't pay to make yourself throw up, why do this?But the Internet thrives on hate.![]()
I honestly find it odd to obsess over "why" the Klingons look differently. They just changed the design because they wanted to. It's not some complicated story because Klingons aren't real beings who are supposed to look a certain way. They're part of a show and the show wanted them to look differently. This isn't a historical drama, it's a scifi show. Just relax and accept it.
Can't we just talk about what the Klingons are doing?
And the internet is a toxic place where hate turns into death threats and actual violence. Personally I'd like to talk about the show itself without having to wade through a ton of shit about how it's not in the prime universe or every other complaint that boils down to "I don't like how it looks because it's different". I hate that "being a fan" now requires you to just hate the product, no one is forcing to watch it. You're literally paying to see something you claim to hate. You wouldn't pay to make yourself throw up, why do this?
This!!!Those two things are about the show though. It’s look and feel. To not expect fans to discuss the continuity and design of a Trek show is...unrealistic.
And is the world so polarised That having a negative view of these things is now hate? Hate and violence?
Hyperbole.
A person can hold different views to another, and disagree with another, without it being hate, or justify hate against them for holding those views. Sure..sometimes it’s gonna, sometimes opinions are repellant and need to be challenged in the hope of change. Buts there’s ways of challenging. But every time someone holds a different view? Humbug.
New Klingon stuff is overall rubbish. It’s ok for me to think that. It doesn’t mean I hate the show, or that it’s ok to berate me for that.
Michael Burnham, overall, is a bit rubbish. It’s ok for me to think that. It doesn’t mean I hate the show, or am some crazy misogynist racist dude, and it doesn’t mean it’s ok to berate me for the opinion.
You might love the Klingon redesign, this doesn’t mean you love everything about the show, it doesn’t mean I can attack you for liking it.
You might love Burnham, this doesn’t mean you love everything about the show, etc etc.
It’s Trek. Fans will have opinions based on Trek.
Or more simply: the standard operating procedure of art is 'be artistic.'
You’d be wrong.I think people don’t really care what the Klingons are doing.
The rumour was that they followed older traditions, which was partly true for T’Kuvma’s group.It’s a shame the rumour of them being ancient Klingons wasn’t true.
I'll probably get a trolling warning just for trolling. Well predicted, Carnac.This!!!
Be careful, you may get a trolling warning for presenting a rational argument..
I probably will for just saying that. So sensitive these days on here. So hyperbolic when sensibilities are challenged. Fan interest isn't down just from the lackluster and divisive show, its also due to toxic defenders of it, in media, boards, and blogs. Same is true now for Star Wars and Doctor Who. EA Battlefield 4, Marvel comics sales, DC's Legends of Tomorrow, Supergirl, and more. Its like the entertainment industry as a whole said, lets screw with the genre, put out a product only a fraction want to see, then attack the fans for not liking it, and double down on it..
then they're (modern studios) like "wait? Where are you fans going? Bah! You're just Misogynist, racist, bigots anyways, the show isn't made for you, You're a horrible person, you should like what we're doing! Hey Vox, Vice, comic book websites, blogs, NYT, The mary sue,Twitter, YouTube, yahoo news, back us up here, call those fans out!"
Attacking the fans, we'll shame them back! Oh wait, why are sales down? Why are traditional fans losing interest?
IDK, could it be the constant attacks for voicing an opinion? Maybe...?
This is the side of the argument, they never acknowledge or like to bring up. Attacking the fans, drives them further away.
By simply referring to fans they disagree with as "haters" they then don't have to address real fans concerns, and argue on the merits. A common tactic it seems now to be.
You'd have to ask them.But isn't writing every bit as much of an art as design? Why are some folks so hung up on the look being okay for revision because it is "art", but not the story?
Totally agree with this. The producers of DSC were clearly aware of this going in as well as I seem to remember (although I’m happy to be corrected) that they discussed canon issues and that they would deal with them quite early on - around the time they announced it as a prequel.To not expect fans to discuss the continuity and design of a Trek show is...unrealistic.
Sadly the word “hate” seems to have become so diluted now that it has semantically expanded to include ‘a comment that is negative in any way or that contradicts the popular and/or prevailing opinion in any given situation’. I don’t think this definition has made it into the OED yet, but language change is determined by mass use.And is the world so polarised That having a negative view of these things is now hate?
Totally agree with this. Incidentally I was accused of preferring a cis white male over a female poc as a lead in a Star Trek show earlier in this thread because I made the innocuous suggestion that Picard was a more popular character than Michael. The leap in logic from what I said to what that person inferred was enormous. That poster didn’t want to debate me, discuss why I thought Picard was more popular than Michael, or challenge my ideas in any way - other than to imply that I was a sexist racist. Even the defence of my post (which came from some other posters as well I was happy to see) was met with silence from the original poster and I think the moderators too. There’s a massive difference between legitimate criticism of a character - like Michael, and I’m happy to provide criticism of her character for anyone who actually wants to debate it with me, but it will all be based on my own opinions which stem from watching DSC - and saying that they hate Michael (and by extension DSC) because she’s female or because she’s a particular ethnicity. Criticising Michael or DSC does not automatically constitute “hate”. I completely agree that it’s *not* ok to berate someone for expressing the opinion that Michael is a bit rubbish. I also think she’s a bit rubbish. I still hope she gets on my nerves less in s2.Michael Burnham, overall, is a bit rubbish. It’s ok for me to think that. It doesn’t mean I hate the show, or am some crazy misogynist racist dude, and it doesn’t mean it’s ok to berate me for the opinion.
Edit: basically, when working on Trek, an ‘artist’ should want to make Star Trek. .
Sometime you have to blow up the computer-god or holy book to get things moving again.
Sometime you have to blow up the computer-god or holy book to get things moving again.![]()
Heh ...Quite. I was saying in another thread recently (I think it was that crazy Size Argument™ one, of all places, but the discussions here bleed together a lot, I find) that it reminds me of watching Bob Ross on PBS when I was a kid. He would get to a point where I would think: "That looks fine just the way it is." And then he would slap some whopping great smear or gob of dark paint right smack in the middle of it that would cover up some part I liked. And I'd for a brief moment think: "WTF? He just ruined it!" But then he'd add something else, and then more, and gradually but surely it became beautiful once again, even though it was now a rather different image than what I had anticipated at the outset, and one that I might not have chosen to paint over the initial "early draft" version, had I been the painter myself. And he would frequently address this explicitly as being part of the whole point—and indeed the whole joy—of the exercise. I'm paraphrasing here, but he would basically say: "Don't be afraid of ruining it...there are no mistakes; it can be whatever you want it to be."
Just go with it, say I. Let them follow whatever artistic vision or ad hoc course they may choose, and try to relax and enjoy the ride, seeing where it all goes. You may like the picture when it's done, or you may not. But do give them a chance to paint it first before judging, eh? And as Yoda might say, don't be afraid to unlearn what you have learned in the process.
-MMoM![]()
But isn't writing every bit as much of an art as design? Why are some folks so hung up on the look being okay for revision because it is "art", but not the story?
This is especially true for a paid gig.
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