Why is better writing never an option in such poles?Either way, with better writing.
Why is better writing never an option in such poles?Either way, with better writing.
Why is better writing never an option in such poles?
Honestly, if you're willing to sacrifce quality to get more of something, I'll never understand where you're coming from in terms of mindset. (The 'you' is not directed towards OP, just a general 'you'.)
I personally think ST's greatest resource is its characters and its stories, so even if it had to go back to 1990s special effects & CGI, I'd be ok with that, because you can always expect better development from a book of 26 chapters than one which has 14 (to make a comparison).
This is simply wrong - it's always down to the skill of the writer. There is no real relationship between depth and length - (having read the thread I'm still not clear what you mean by in-depth beyond screen time).
If we take your novel example - we'd eliminate:
* A Christmas Carol
* Mrs. Dalloway
* The Great Gatbsy
* The Yellow Wallpaper
* The House of Mango Street
But a long-term series has different dynamics, and I'm just arguing for the same breathing room that past ST series had,
I can't really say about Season 2 yet until I've seen the whole thing beyond it looks like the change in showrunners showed a bit more than I thought it would. I thought they'd stick to the same basic outline, but it looks like Alex Kurtzman and Michelle Paradise wanted to do something else and had to fit it around what was already there. So they either must not have liked what Berg and Harberts wanted to do, or they changed it out of spite. "We're not going to do what you wanted to do after the way you treated everyone!" Perfectly normal, human reaction if Berg and Harberts were as horrible behind the scenes as it looks like. "We don't want to credit you for any of your ideas after you leave, so we won't use them!" That is STRICTLY speculation on my part.
I wonder how much the arc changes have to do with not wanting to pay fired showrunners?
I mean, if they continued with Berg/Harberts' arc, would they get story credit for some episodes? Still be listed as executive producers?
But a Short Treks episodes with Airiam as the focus would've been great.
At this point it looks like Tilly's Short Trek was pointless. I would have much preferred one focusing on Airiam and Tilly's friendship. Might have made me care a heck of a lot more when Airiam died.
Anyway, regarding the main question. I don't think longer seasons are needed per se. At the same time, I really strongly disagree with the idea that a shorter season means by definition higher quality episodes or a lack of "filler." I mean, you could assuredly cut out half of most Voyager seasons and nothing of value would have been lost. But despite DS9 often having some stinkers, I really think there are a lot
I think my ideal system would be to abandon the idea of "seasons" entirely quite honestly. I've noticed that Netflix tends to now release a lot of kids shows with very small seasons (like six episode chunks) which come out multiple times per year. Something like the following would be a good setup for Discovery I think:
I would like this system because it would eliminate the artificiality of a "season" - which is an antiquated broadcast notion. Instead they can write each arc to be exactly as long as it needs to be in order to tell that story, then move on to the next thing.
- Five-episode arc
- Break
- Three standalone adventures
- Break
- Eight-episode arc
It's a question related to funding, ultimately. With finite resources to produce a show, would you rather see stellar special effects or more in-depth stories? I personally think ST's greatest resource is its characters and its stories, so even if it had to go back to 1990s special effects & CGI, I'd be ok with that, because you can always expect better development from a book of 26 chapters than one which has 14 (to make a comparison).
In contrast, Discovery moves very fast.
I get the exact opposite feel from the show. Especially when comparing it to other modern drama. It feels slow and tedious. Which is a damned trick to pull off when they have so many balls in the air.
?!? Seriously? Granted, I get the sense we watch different shows.
Not including DSC, what I've watched in the past five years that's serialized:Possibly? I'm watching Hell on Wheels right now, and it feels like they accomplished more with their characters in the first ten episodes than Discovery has in 25 (26?) so far.
Possibly? I'm watching Hell on Wheels right now, and it feels like they accomplished more with their characters in the first ten episodes than Discovery has in 25 (26?) so far.
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