No.
If a Trek show is drudgery, it's drudgery.
I have to give Discovery credit, they've taken Trek drudgery to a whole new level.
No.
If a Trek show is drudgery, it's drudgery.
It wasn't so much the writers "didn't care." Quite the contrary, attempts were made to do long term story arcs. Indeed, Year of Hell was originally pitched as a season long story arc. It was UPN that rejected the idea of long term arcs and told the writers they couldn't do a story any longer than a two-parter.One of the things I disliked most about Voyager was that even though they had a few good characters like The Doctor and Seven, and understood their value as characters, they didn't care enough about continuity to set them up in any kind of coherent arc. They would have them both take halting steps towards being more "human" and then backtrack once again if the "plot of the week" required it. Basically the characters were entirely subservient to - not even the plot - but the deadlines of the show. The writers were so focused on sharting out one tepid episode after another that they didn't even care to look back at earlier episodes that in some cases they themselves had written!
Disco's doing fine, otherwise CBS wouldn't be developing five other Trek shows.You have to do better right out of the gate. Even if you are Trek.
Especially since many shows these days are pulling the plug after the fifth season.Nowhere has anyone ever stated that the expectation is seven "standard seasons"
It wasn't so much the writers "didn't care." Quite the contrary, attempts were made to do long term story arcs. Indeed, Year of Hell was originally pitched as a season long story arc. It was UPN that rejected the idea of long term arcs and told the writers they couldn't do a story any longer than a two-parter.
Disco's doing fine, otherwise CBS wouldn't be developing five other Trek shows.
Especially since many shows these days are pulling the plug after the fifth season.
I don't understand why backstory or callbacks must be considered fanwank, as if it were an awful, negative thing. The criticism strikes me as a weak tool for the disappointed fans who wanted Star Trek: The Next Next Generation and didn't get it.
Slavery and colonialism have been massively destructive worldwide, but the black experience (s) is not solely defined by that dark history. There was lots of history before that. Racism is not the sum total of the black experience. And when rooting a person in a culture (s), it can be simple, even nonverbal things like Sisko’s appreciation for African art. Discovery already did this to some extent, though it wasn’t specific to Burnham, with their musical choices. I never thought I would hear Wycelf Jean or Al Green music on a Trek show ever, so it was great to hear their music. Burnham could reflect cultural diversity in ways like her civilian dress, some of the foods she eats, books she reads, religion, people she references, etc. For me, it’s the next step in general when it comes to diversity. To some extent, the first hurdle of just casting people of color in roles that in the past they wouldn’t get has been accomplished-not enough or in every genre-but in some ways it has. Now, I wish Hollywood would then do the work of learning and being respectful and appreciative of the unique cultural perspectives these characters might have based on their backgrounds. I always liked when DS9 did that because it showed a kind of awareness.
I also disagree that absent something massively traumatic like racism that cultures would just blend together. For one, some cultural blending happened during slavery, in part because a new culture (I’m thinking of the US specifically, but arguably throughout the African Diaspora) was created to replace the ones stripped away during the Transatlantic slave trade. And cultural mixing-to some extent-continued after slavery, during segregation, and into the present day. That being said, cultural mixing in general, absent even a horrific history, is not a given. I mean when you look at many countries today, there is some blending-maybe-but there is also a limit, and there can be push back to too much amalgamation. A lot of people tend to want to hold on to some traditions, preserve some things that make them unique.
Making Burnham culturally Vulcan was a writer-imposed limitation, though I think the writers recognized that and paired her with Tilly to get some comedy and emotion from that mismatch and to bring out Burnham’s humanity. We do see Burnham warming to Tilly and becoming her mentor and friend over the course of the season. Previous Treks understood they needed to have their Vulcan characters have someone to play off of, to either annoy them or give them a sparring partner. (Spock-McCoy; Tuvok-Neelix; T’Pol-Trip) and Discovery is doing that with Burnham and Tilly, though we might also see that to some extent with Burnham and Saru.
I think making the series about Burnham was an interesting choice that does make Discovery stand out more and I am curious to see if the writers will maintain that or turn the show over to an ensemble format. I can see why they would build the Burnham character up since she was to be the series lead. They wanted to make her an interesting character that could conceivably carry a series for several years. And tying her to Spock places her right at the heart of Trek right off the bat. And then her other accomplishments, before the war, and during it, also were meant to show-IMO-that she’s a fascinating, complex character that we want to get to know.
Aside from having McCoy in the pilot, TNG was very conscious not to be heavily referential regarding TOS until late in its third season. They wanted to establish the show as its own thing before falling back on TOS nostalgia.
That's precisely the trouble. We are shown her fall (though awkwardly), and then she is simply at point B and then at point C et cetera. She does not get herself from A to B to C to D, those things simply happen, some of it at the contrivance of Lorca, some at the contrivance of Sarek, and some at the contrivance of the writers without making sense in-universe. the movement between these points is dictated, not shown at all. Which is exactly why it "works on paper" when summed up: yes, there is a redemption arc as she falls and then she gets back. But the failure to dramatize is in the utter lack of any discernable change in the character. Some actions are different from beginning to end, some motivations shift, but mostly they simply exist. Same with the War. Describe it on paper and it sounds kind of epic, but that's not what we actually see, and barely hear about in the show itself.When you look at Burnham's arc, I'm not sure how you can say that wasn't dramatized. We saw her take a big fall and then climb her way back up.
That's precisely the trouble. We are shown her fall (though awkwardly), and then she is simply at point B and then at point C et cetera. She does not get herself from A to B to C to D, those things simply happen, some of it at the contrivance of Lorca, some at the contrivance of Sarek, and some at the contrivance of the writers without making sense in-universe. the movement between these points is dictated, not shown at all. Which is exactly why it "works on paper" when summed up: yes, there is a redemption arc as she falls and then she gets back. But the failure to dramatize is in the utter lack of any discernable change in the character. Some actions are different from beginning to end, some motivations shift, but mostly they simply exist. Same with the War. Describe it on paper and it sounds kind of epic, but that's not what we actually see, and barely hear about in the show itself.
Your point here is that it DOES work fine on paper. But that isn't dramatized. We see her act fundamentally the same on the Shenzhou and then throughout S1. This would be fine if her arc wasn't the main story of the whole season. Her circumstances change, but she acts like the same Burnham. One may "see" differences in her character, but what one is seeing is actually context shifting around a solid, and wonderfully human performance. Any notions that she has learned anything by the end of S1 are supported only by inference (and supporting extra-textual material) and not by the dramatization (in terms of writing) itself.- Once she got on Discovery she wasn't just welcomed with open arms (she really didn't want to be there at all, and took some coaxing to get her involved)...she did things and helped the crew in many dangerous situations and still not everyone trusted her.
Your point here is that it DOES work fine on paper. But that isn't dramatized. We see her act fundamentally the same on the Shenzhou and then throughout S1. This would be fine if her arc wasn't the main story of the whole season. Her circumstances change, but she acts like the same Burnham. One may "see" differences in her character, but what one is seeing is actually context shifting around a solid, and wonderfully human performance. Any notions that she has learned anything by the end of S1 are supported only by inference (and supporting extra-textual material) and not by the dramatization (in terms of writing) itself.
- The original concept for TNG -"Too Short A Season" was that it would actually BE "James T. Kirk" and not "Admiral Jameson" (Yes, they were talking to Shatner during teh concept phase, he turned them down immediately.)
In Michael Michaelian's original script, Jameson's name was Paul Jameson (though he was mentioned as having a son named Mark), and he was in his 60s and in decent physical shape. In this story, Jameson demoted himself to the rank of commander, and moved Riker away from the Enterprise-D to command his own ship, the USS Falcon. His de-ageing treatment was only meant to make him younger by two decades, but an unforeseen complication from Jameson receiving a transfusion of alien blood served to make it far more effective than it should have been. Other elements of this early script included the planet Mordan IV being under threat from a Ferengi invasion.[
That particular rumor was shot down.
http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Too_Short_a_Season_(episode)
"The Modala Imperative". And even there, when Kirk was referenced, he was referred to in the past tense.
Clayton Rohner was really bad at playing old.
The behind the scenes drama is irrelevant to whether the episodes were stand alone or arc driven.
Theey also ran out of scripts to film in that first season after TNG - "Datalore" - and were furiously scrambling to get ANYTHING they had ready to go after that point up to the end of the first season.Indeed. Good writing is good writing, regardless of serial or episodic format. We already had one TV show that had an episodic first season but was plagued with problems due to behind the scenes drama. It's called TNG Season 1.
I don't understand why some prefer episodic, a lot of it seems like wasted storytelling. I'm glad it's dying out.
I'm just interested in good stories. But the idea that only arc-based shows present details that can have payoff later on is just plain wrong.
No, actually. I just want stories were things matter. If that can be done in episodic shows great and more power to them. But, I generally see it in arc shows. So, give me that in whatever format it does.Arc-based shows have only one necessary virtue, and that's from the POV of the studio/network: they encourage habitual viewing.
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