Do you feel your TIN MAN script may have been ''soothed'' or ''de-conflicted'' when it became part of TNG, or did it more or less fit their requested formula?
I'd enjoy a series that went back to the episodic exploration style of storytelling, but I wouldn't want it to be quite as light and silly as Orville.
I always find it funny to see people react so negatively to the Orville.
How should people react to knockoffs in the age of prestige television?
The genre doesn’t matter. With something like Better Call Saul, you’re watching one shot after another and you can see the writers trying to make each one count, avoiding every obvious move they could think of. If you start to think an arc will go in one direction, it goes in a different one. And they don’t need to reimagine a thing: we know where the pieces will fall a few years later in the timeline, but until then this boat will be steered there precisely in a series of unexpected microsteps.
I always find it funny to see people react so negatively to the Orville.
I hope it is a “lighter” show, given how “heavy” Discovery and Picard have been. Maybe not as silly as the Orville like you say but lighter for sure.
Mixed with the occasional stand alone, this strategy can work well for Trek.Nothing remotely like ENT's first two seasons is a workable strategy for any show.
Perhaps something like the 4th, with several 2 and 3-part stories? That way we can do TOS-style, but afford more depth.
I prefer episodic to these constant end of the Federation/Universe stuff. I do not mind threads carrying over from episode to episode, but that should mostly be side dishes. Not the main story.
And yes, solicit stories from professional sci-fi writers.
The whole point of having multiple shows is to appeal to different parts of fandom. Make an episodic, exploration based show. Pike, Number One, and Spock. Throw in an Andorian or Telurite (am I spelling that right?). Go.
I just posted somewhere on this blog an excerpt from an interview with Brannon Braga. He is part of the production team often "blamed" (if that's the right word) for the storytelling in Voyager. Some fans expected a less episodic series... some say "year of Hell" should have lasted a whole season, for example. Braga goes on to say Ronald Moore favored this, but the studio said no. The studio wanted a virtual reset button at the end of each show.
Well, I surely didn't want "Year of Hell" to last a year. It was a great story, but dragging it on for 20 episodes... well I don't think so.
Series these days have some sort of crappy formula for serialized story telling... Start a serialized plot, the first couple of episodes of the season deal with that plot, then several episodes don't... around sweeps time a couple more episodes deal with that plot, then several episodes don't, then the last couple of episodes at the end of the season do, that inevitably lead to the cliff hanger.
I HATE this. Maybe these shows do need a serialized plot thread one in a while.. but if you're going to do what I just described above, I'd rather the episodic plots. In fact, I prefer them most of the time.
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