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What are your controversial Star Trek opinions?

don't think we'll have B-stories focused on one of the main character's pet cat or anything like that or family issues, et

Yeah that's funny. My friends know I used to gripe about TNG by the fifth season for falling into the trap of that A/B formula. "Data's cat" is still a shorthand catchphrase for us in discussing the different eras and styles of Trek (TOS, Berman and modern).
 
Was having this discussion on another message board. I think both Picard and/or Discovery (especially) would have been much better shows if they had full 20-something episode seasons and had taken the place of the MacGyver and/or Magnum P.I reboots on CBS prime instead of being stuck on AA.

the only real downside I can see is that it would have shrunk the budgets. But DS9, Voyager and Enterprise all managed.
 
Dunno. Maybe they could have put Discovery on AA as it is but put Picard on network given that it has more name recognition.
 
The Picard Maneuver shouldn't exist as it does in Star Trek.

It probably would had been invented as a showy trick by some flyboy in 2080s Earth if not earlier, used in the Kzin Wars, and had been a classic textbook move. To say nothing of the Romulans, Klingons, and others using it and using it liberally whenever they could as it seems weapon ranges in trek are very, very small which isn't a problem by itself per se. It would be up there with Alpha Patterns and whatnot. Its whole existence is intrinstic to the nature and exploitation of FTL travel and FTL travel in trek is VERY forgiving, if slow. You can warp nearly anywhere at any time as long as you have a powered warp drive with enough fuel to keep it going. It is not mirred by gravity, doesn't have any noticeable cooldowns, or any other limitation besides you need the powerplant and warp coils or whatever to warp space around you.

It just feels like the TNG writers realized they could do this and had to shove it in as an episode but it doesn't make sense for Picard to be the namesake for it in the 24th century, it shouldn't be some 'save our skin' maneuver, it is literally going faster than light to exploit the ability to go faster than light, and it shouldn't take a rather competent officer nearly three hundred years after the discovery of FTL to bring it into being.

This is why you need to delineate your FTL systems and just have a day or two to write out the implications of your FTL system. Do you go to a different dimension? Do you fold a warp bubble? Do you use the alignment of stars to be catapulted across interstellar space? Psychic women that are one in ten billion, meaning if you want a big fleet you need to have quadrillions of people around? Do you go to hell and back? Do you suddenly just jump to your destination? Do you have to set up wormholes which may be gigantic or small but have to be pulled across by STL craft? What are the ramifications, applications, exploitation, and so on? Can you communicate or track, or be tracked or communicated with? What are the limitations? Does gravity affect the FTL system? etc, etc.
 
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The Picard Maneuver shouldn't exist as it does in Star Trek.

It's not that bad...

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Did voyage ever mention Hugh? When they were first trying to bring 7 out of the collective janeway reviewing logs of previous borg encounters and finding notes about Hugh regaining individuality would have been a nice touch

I don't believe so, but, I seem to recall in Dark Frontier during one of the Hanson flashbacks, they bring a Borg onto their ship and refer to it as three of five; Hugh's designation was "Third of five." I don't know if it's just a coincidence or if that was supposed to be him. Conversely, in that same episode, the Queen says Seven was the first drone to regain her humanity; basically ignoring Hugh.
 
This is an easy one for me, I think DS9 is pretty rubbish. It’s way overrated. I actively disliked a lot of it and thought the good bits were just okay,
 
The Picard Maneuver shouldn't exist as it does in Star Trek.

It probably would had been invented as a showy trick by some flyboy in 2080s Earth if not earlier, used in the Kzin Wars, and had been a classic textbook move. To say nothing of the Romulans, Klingons, and others using it and using it liberally whenever they could as it seems weapon ranges in trek are very, very small which isn't a problem by itself per se. It would be up there with Alpha Patterns and whatnot. Its whole existence is intrinstic to the nature and exploitation of FTL travel and FTL travel in trek is VERY forgiving, if slow. You can warp nearly anywhere at any time as long as you have a powered warp drive with enough fuel to keep it going. It is not mirred by gravity, doesn't have any noticeable cooldowns, or any other limitation besides you need the powerplant and warp coils or whatever to warp space around you.

It just feels like the TNG writers realized they could do this and had to shove it in as an episode but it doesn't make sense for Picard to be the namesake for it in the 24th century, it shouldn't be some 'save our skin' maneuver, it is literally going faster than light to exploit the ability to go faster than light, and it shouldn't take a rather competent officer nearly three hundred years after the discovery of FTL to bring it into being.

This is why you need to delineate your FTL systems and just have a day or two to write out the implications of your FTL system. Do you go to a different dimension? Do you fold a warp bubble? Do you use the alignment of stars to be catapulted across interstellar space? Psychic women that are one in ten billion, meaning if you want a big fleet you need to have quadrillions of people around? Do you go to hell and back? Do you suddenly just jump to your destination? Do you have to set up wormholes which may be gigantic or small but have to be pulled across by STL craft? What are the ramifications, applications, exploitation, and so on? Can you communicate or track, or be tracked or communicated with? What are the limitations? Does gravity affect the FTL system? etc, etc.
You're forgetting the only essential thing: It depends on the enemy not having FTL sensors. That probably doesn't happen a lot, which is why Picard could invent it at the time.

I don't believe so, but, I seem to recall in Dark Frontier during one of the Hanson flashbacks, they bring a Borg onto their ship and refer to it as three of five; Hugh's designation was "Third of five." I don't know if it's just a coincidence or if that was supposed to be him. Conversely, in that same episode, the Queen says Seven was the first drone to regain her humanity; basically ignoring Hugh.
It can't be him cause he's not Ktarian. He regained his individuality, but had not regained his humanity (if he even is human) as much as Seven had. And if Hugh was 'born' Borg and had no humanity before his assimilation, he can't regain it anyway XD
 
and it shouldn't take a rather competent officer nearly three hundred years after the discovery of FTL to bring it into being.
Earlier more "primative" warp drives might have been incapable of making such a short distance movement.
 
Earlier more "primative" warp drives might have been incapable of making such a short distance movement.

That's quite possible. Using the warp engine for a short-distance tactical maneuver probably would require a very high degree of control of both the exact amount of "warpage" of space and the exact moment it has to occur (down to the millisecond, if possible), and a long evolution of warp engines might have been required before this amount of control was achieved.

I wouldn't even be surprised if the long-standing doctrine of preferably not going into warp within a solar system was also partly due to the inaccuracy of early warp engines (and this does not necessarily conflict with other explanations such as the presence of gravity wells disturbing the warping process , etc.).
 
The Picard Maneuver shouldn't exist as it does in Star Trek.

It probably would had been invented as a showy trick by some flyboy in 2080s Earth if not earlier, used in the Kzin Wars, and had been a classic textbook move. To say nothing of the Romulans, Klingons, and others using it and using it liberally whenever they could as it seems weapon ranges in trek are very, very small which isn't a problem by itself per se. It would be up there with Alpha Patterns and whatnot. Its whole existence is intrinstic to the nature and exploitation of FTL travel and FTL travel in trek is VERY forgiving, if slow. You can warp nearly anywhere at any time as long as you have a powered warp drive with enough fuel to keep it going. It is not mirred by gravity, doesn't have any noticeable cooldowns, or any other limitation besides you need the powerplant and warp coils or whatever to warp space around you.

It just feels like the TNG writers realized they could do this and had to shove it in as an episode but it doesn't make sense for Picard to be the namesake for it in the 24th century, it shouldn't be some 'save our skin' maneuver, it is literally going faster than light to exploit the ability to go faster than light, and it shouldn't take a rather competent officer nearly three hundred years after the discovery of FTL to bring it into being.

This is why you need to delineate your FTL systems and just have a day or two to write out the implications of your FTL system. Do you go to a different dimension? Do you fold a warp bubble? Do you use the alignment of stars to be catapulted across interstellar space? Psychic women that are one in ten billion, meaning if you want a big fleet you need to have quadrillions of people around? Do you go to hell and back? Do you suddenly just jump to your destination? Do you have to set up wormholes which may be gigantic or small but have to be pulled across by STL craft? What are the ramifications, applications, exploitation, and so on? Can you communicate or track, or be tracked or communicated with? What are the limitations? Does gravity affect the FTL system? etc, etc.
I would've been pleased if Picard did the maneuver against Shinzon in Nemesis; he wouldn't had seen that coming, and neither would the audience. A definite crowd pleaser.
 
This is an easy one for me, I think DS9 is pretty rubbish. It’s way overrated. I actively disliked a lot of it and thought the good bits were just okay,

ConTROverSIAL!

I love almost everything about DS9. But each to their own.

I don’t know if my opinions are hugely controversial, mind you. I find mid-season 4 onward of TNG a real slog to get through, I don’t feel that show has aged very well.

I genuinely don’t know why any of the main characters on Enterprise were deemed interesting or compelling enough to drive the series. They just feel so bland, weak and aimless to me. I genuinely liked Scott Bakula before he was cast in Enterprise, but found Archer infuriatingly unlikeable.

Voyager barely registers on my sensors. There never felt like there any was anything about that series to sink my teeth into. It was a kind of a Trek void for me — it had all the right ingredients, but nothing seemed to coalesce into anything substantial, in terms of either character or storyline. I still think it has perhaps the greatest setup and potential of any Star Trek show, yet so sadly squandered.

That’s about the worst I can do controversy wise.
 
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TOS didn't have a stance on homophobia. None of the series really did until DSC. I understand it with TOS. I can still somewhat understand it with TNG. On DS9 and VOY, they should've tackled LGBT issues more than they (barely) did. By the time of ENT, there was really no excuse. So I'm not going to single TOS out for that. That's an issue with all Pre-Disco Trek. Even Star Trek Beyond's blink and you miss it scene with Sulu and his partner.

TOS got race right. They had blacks in positions of authority, such as Commodore Stone. And a genius computer inventor, Doctor Daystrom, was black.

Gender is the real issue with TOS. But SNW will correct that for sure. I can already tell from "Such Sweet Sorrow" and 2019's Short Treks.

When I say I think it'll be more like TOS and early-TNG, I'm thinking more it'll be story-driven. They'll run into whatever strange things they run into, with a budget where they can actually do it justice. I don't think we'll have B-stories focused on one of the main character's pet cat or anything like that or family issues, etc. They probably won't go too in-depth into interstellar politics either. They'll keep that stuff to the basics. That's what I'm picturing.

I'm not seeing a whole lot of conflict between the crew. If there is, I'm dead-sure it'll be the exception, not the rule. Pike, Number One, and Spock seem to be on the same page. "Q&A" does a good job of showing how Spock and Number One are different even if they have the same analytical outlook.

I meant more the general homophobia and sexism that was prevalent in society when TOS was made and that played it's part in how the series and its characters were created and presented (the manly men, the swooning, vain women, the hetero-normative coupling.) I didn't mean to single out TOS on its homophobia.

Focusing more on the SciFi is not necessarily a bad thing, truth be told. Except for DS9 a lot of those plots always seemed kinda tacked on. And sometimes it was to the detriment of the scifi plot.

Like that Enterprise episode where they were on a Rouge Planet....and the Episode was about everything else except that incredibly itnerestig (sincere here) Rouge Planet. Or the episode in TNG were they found a freaking Dyson Sphere...and instead the episode was about Scotty struggling to fit into the 24th century...
If we can have an episode that is actually about the exploration of a Rouge Planet or a Dyson Sphere (or insert equally interesting scifi phenomena in here) , I won't complain.
Though I do hope there will be some character episodes.

See when somebody says "it will be like TOS/the First Season of TNG" then I'm getting horror visions about a show that has episodes like the Cage, Mudd's Women, A Piece of the Action, Justice or Angel One. That is the stuff I want them to avoid in SNW. Stuff like the Enterprise Incident, Balance of Terror or something, yeah sure, bring that stuff.

On the conflict part. I mean, first I hope there will be more characters than just Pike, Number One and Spock, but even if people are on the same page, there can be conflict between them.
 
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