No frigging way I'm going to dedicate time and energy into doing 10 of each. Here's what I have to say, and it's already too much typing hahaha!:
PROS:
1. Great Casting- The regular cast continues to shine, and the "recurring guest stars" (Mount, Romijn, Peck, Yeoh, Van Sprang, etc) all hit it out of the park. The cast has enough chemistry and charisma to make you root for the show every step of the way.
2. Improved VFX- The space scenes and starship models were vast improvements over S1, and S1 wasn't "horrible" by any stretch. There were far too many static shots of the Discovery just sitting in space, not moving, in S1
3. A Non-War Arc- I liked that they set up an arc that felt more like classic Star Trek, with an unknown mystery that may or may not be a threat, and an urgent need to investigate that mystery. For a while, that old feeling of awe and wonder that only Star Trek could evoke was back and as strong as ever.
4. More Planet-Based Storylines- New Eden, The Sound of Thunder, If Memory Serves, Through the Valley of Shadows...I liked that they got off the ship and explored different environments this season.
5. Ties to TOS Backstory- I personally like that we have a series that wasn't afraid to recognize the existence of TOS and embraced adding some backstory...rather than virtually ignoring it or treating it like the drunken uncle of the franchise like the TNG era did.
CONS:
1. Poor Planning- Again, it feels like the writing team did not sit down and meticulously map out the season arc and how everything would come together from both a story and pacing perspective. It's extremely frustrating to have an enjoyable premise fail to come together at the end in a satisfying way.
2. Lack of Conviction- They came out of the gate with a premise that had MASSIVE potential to be something special and epic....an almost TMP-like arc about a mysterious potential threat that demands investigation, and a being so powerful it brings questions of faith and science into the fray to be explored. But...it's like...they just lost faith (no pun intended) in either their own ability to deliver on this and/or the audience's ability to resonate with such a story, and instead they turned it into a cookie-cutter "defeat the evil AI" plot line that I'm sure Skynet, HAL 9000 and the evil guys from The Matrix would enjoy. But, at the same time, they still had to wrap-up the arc they started involving the signals, Red Angel, and Spock...and so they cobbled together an utter mess to draw that all together. They also failed to have conviction around cutting some of the S1 characters loose. There was really no reason to return L'rell, Tyler, Phillipa, etc. but it was almost as if the producers like the actors so much, they wanted to find a way to bring them back.
3. Under-Utilized Cast- Each of the primary cast members (except Burnham) were either under-utilized or, at least, utilized in a very choppy and non-uniform fashion throughout the season. Examples would be Tilly and Saru, who virtually disappeared after their early initial arcs concluded. It was like the writers crammed very concentrated arcs for them, but then when the primary season arc shifted, they completely lost site of how to integrate them.
4. Too Much Going On- There's something to be said for simple story telling. I think sometimes modern writers mistake "complicated" to automatically equate to "quality." This season bit off WAAAAAY too much. Think about all the different elements that were involved in just one 14-episode season: Mystery Signals, Red Angel, Culber's Return, Spock, The Enterprise, Pike, Talosians, Klingons, Section 31, Time Crystals, Burnham's Mom, Evil Control AI, Saru's Evolution....I mean 1 or 2 of these would have been enough to base an entire season around....but 12-13....??? No way you can pull that off effectively.
5. Lack of Conviction, Part Deux- The final solution of time-jumping the ship 900 years into the future was so mindnumbingly perplexing to me, I still don't know what to think. I've said for years that the creators of these shows should not / would not listen to idiots like us on the interwebs to get direction on where to take the story and characters....and I've taken a lot of heat from the "TEH FRANSHIZE IS NUTHING WITHOUT US TEH FANZ!!!1!1one!" crew who disagree with my stance...thinking that they own the franchise because reasons. But, you know what, congratulations, because you all were right. They apparently DO listen to online griping and whining, rather extensively I might add...because they became so overwhelmed with fan feedback and criticism of the series that they literally threw up their hands and decided "Fuck it, let's just throw the whole thing out and start over almost completely from scratch." I don't know...It just feels really broken to me.
So, anyway....I enjoyed the ride tremendously and I still appreciate bold swings-and-misses in Trek (TFF, ENT for example) FAR more then I appreciate stale, repetitive and safe/comfortable approaches (INS, VOY for example) to the franchise. I'm still a big fan and I rank this a close 3rd in terms of my favorite series (TOS and DS9 are 1 and 2...which is pretty good company). But, I also can't help but be supremely frustrated by the massive missed potential here. I mean, you have a huge budget, an absolutely stellar cast, gorgeous sets, and a brand new streaming platform to tell amazing Star Trek stories. I can't figure out why they can't get their shit together and completely knock this out of the park.