They didn't. Just where these conversations invariably go.Out of curiosity, where did they mention “Mary Sues” or “SJWs” anywhere in the review? I don't remember hearing anything like that.



They didn't. Just where these conversations invariably go.Out of curiosity, where did they mention “Mary Sues” or “SJWs” anywhere in the review? I don't remember hearing anything like that.
I very much agree with all their observations. I don't agree with their opinions.
I mentioned on another forum (when I was discussing why I don't enjoy - even don't understand - fanfic) that I'm fundamentally a Dolyist, not a Watsonian. I'm really not concerned in the slightest with trying to find within-canon explanations for how things make sense. I'm much more interested in works of fiction from a writerly perspective - trying to figure out authorial intent. This means I just don't really get immersed in fictional worlds - I'm always casting a critical eye about trying to figure out how things were actually slapped together.
This thread is filled with hate against people above 30 or 40 (agism) which is not only unfair, but also extremely naive. Being above 30 or 40 means you have watched so much sci-fi (if you were always a sci-fi fan) that you become EXTREMELY critical and picky about what you watch.
it’ll work until it doesn’t.
This thread is filled with hate against people above 30 or 40 (agism) which is not only unfair, but also extremely naive. Being above 30 or 40 means you have watched so much sci-fi (if you were always a sci-fi fan) that you become EXTREMELY critical and picky about what you watch.
Sure, they weren't perfectly technically correct in their criticism but they were spot on about what made the new Star Trek incarnation mediocre and forgettable.
If I were to make a tl;dr of it I'd say the show tries too much to be "THANOS, THE TV SERIES". In other words we live in an era that the money people consider it a cash cow to spam more and more Star War-esque Capeshit-esque war stories that are mostly fighting sequences and the story is extremely banal, artificial, on the surface.
The sad part is, the movie scene itself has become extremely stale and repetitive (it sounds unrelated but it's the same culture). e.g. we are being spammed EVERY SINGLE MONTH with a new cookie-cutter movie about superheroes that could in theory be a solid 8 or 7 out of 10 if it were alone in the year but when it's happening every single month it becomes banal, repetitive, and its flaws are magnified.
I don't think it really has been working. It's just that the way CBS All Access' business model works, Discovery can get by being a "loss leader" for a while. It's in too-big-to-fail territory as CBS feels they have to keep doubling down because they have nothing else to fall back on as a tent-pole.
If they were losing that kind of money, they'd back down on Star Trek and go with some other revival of an old property in a heart beat. Or they'd shockingly go with something new. I know Discohaters lay awake at night salivating and dreaming of failure scenarios for the show, but this is one of the weaker arguments. It lost all validity when they went all-in on a five show deal.I don't think it really has been working. It's just that the way CBS All Access' business model works, Discovery can get by being a "loss leader" for a while. It's in too-big-to-fail territory as CBS feels they have to keep doubling down because they have nothing else to fall back on as a tent-pole.
They could have easily flipped to Twilight Zone and dialed back Star Trek, letting it fade in to the background.If they were losing that kind of money, they'd back down on Star Trek and go with some other revival of an old property in a heart beat. Or they'd shockingly go with something new. I know Discohaters lay awake at night salivating and dreaming of failure scenarios for the show, but this is one of the weaker arguments. It lost all validity when they went all-in on a five show deal.
There is evidence for both sides. We are filtering according to our beliefs.Look, I get it, you've drunk the kool-aid, but don't for a moment think there aren't signs that that Discovery is a failure.
This thread is filled with hate against people above 30 or 40 (agism) which is not only unfair, but also extremely naive. Being above 30 or 40 means you have watched so much sci-fi (if you were always a sci-fi fan) that you become EXTREMELY critical and picky about what you watch.
Sure, they weren't perfectly technically correct in their criticism but they were spot on about what made the new Star Trek incarnation mediocre and forgettable.
If I were to make a tl;dr of it I'd say the show tries too much to be "THANOS, THE TV SERIES". In other words we live in an era that the money people consider it a cash cow to spam more and more Star War-esque Capeshit-esque war stories that are mostly fighting sequences and the story is extremely banal, artificial, on the surface.
The sad part is, the movie scene itself has become extremely stale and repetitive (it sounds unrelated but it's the same culture). e.g. we are being spammed EVERY SINGLE MONTH with a new cookie-cutter movie about superheroes that could in theory be a solid 8 or 7 out of 10 if it were alone in the year but when it's happening every single month it becomes banal, repetitive, and its flaws are magnified.
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I'm 35. No, it doesn't. And disagreeing with people doesn't make it agism. This post makes no sense.
There is evidence for both sides. We are filtering according to our beliefs.
Without hard numbers from CBS and their budget we'll never know the full story. The fact that they are throwing more money at it means they have confidence that it isn't a failure.
By all means, believe what you will. I'll just watch Star Trek.
ETA: A general musing-is there some benefit gained by insisting Discovery is failing? As long as the show is produced why not enjoy it?
Can't we just dislike something because we dislike it?Because if I can prove it is failing (which nobody can given the objective evidence in hand at the moment), my distaste for it is justified and my position vindicated.
This thread is filled with hate against people above 30 or 40 (agism) which is not only unfair, but also extremely naive. Being above 30 or 40 means you have watched so much sci-fi (if you were always a sci-fi fan) that you become EXTREMELY critical and picky about what you watch.
Sure, they weren't perfectly technically correct in their criticism but they were spot on about what made the new Star Trek incarnation mediocre and forgettable.
If I were to make a tl;dr of it I'd say the show tries too much to be "THANOS, THE TV SERIES". In other words we live in an era that the money people consider it a cash cow to spam more and more Star War-esque Capeshit-esque war stories that are mostly fighting sequences and the story is extremely banal, artificial, on the surface.
The sad part is, the movie scene itself has become extremely stale and repetitive (it sounds unrelated but it's the same culture). e.g. we are being spammed EVERY SINGLE MONTH with a new cookie-cutter movie about superheroes that could in theory be a solid 8 or 7 out of 10 if it were alone in the year but when it's happening every single month it becomes banal, repetitive, and its flaws are magnified.
You can be those things without being cookie cutter or about super-heroes. Marvel didn't invent it.Actually I wish DIS would be more like those "cookie-cutter movies about superheroes", because they are generally well written and entertaining. Especially Marvel gets it right. A nice mix between seriousness and humour, likeable characters and interesting stories.
Actually I wish DIS would be more like those "cookie-cutter movies about superheroes", because they are generally well written and entertaining. Especially Marvel gets it right. A nice mix between seriousness and humour, likeable characters and interesting stories.
It's not a 100% of the time either, or even 50% of the time. What it comes down to is how people connect with the characters. If you don't connect with the characters (like what happened to me as the Marvel films wore on...ugh, "Civil War." Forget it) then engaging with the material is very difficult. Discovery is no different.I couldn't disagree more. I have no time in my life for generic overblown CGI-o-ramas about people in tights and capes fighting off the bad guy of the week.
Different tastes I guess.
Can't we just dislike something because we dislike it?
Actually I wish DIS would be more like those "cookie-cutter movies about superheroes", because they are generally well written and entertaining. Especially Marvel gets it right. A nice mix between seriousness and humour, likeable characters and interesting stories.
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