"Downgrading" his role to the conn officer might help with that, yes he'd still have all his abilities and would still be on away missions as needed, and have his stories about trying to understand humanity, but in a less senior position then he could be shown to grow a little more and develop over time.Swapping with Data is an intruiging possibility, certainly; you could argue, as much as we all love Data and Brent Spiner, the character was possibly given too much prominence.
Data was captain of the Sutherland in "Redemption II." That was a very big "next step" for him, career-wise.Two, Data (well liked as well) didn't get to take the next step in his evolution, except briefly under Ed Jellico.
As far as I see it there's two main problems with Worf:
1) That basically his whole character revolves around how Klingon he is. With Troi it ridiculous how little we actually learned about Betazed and its culture. Worf had the opposite problem: he. never. ever. shut. up. about. Klingon. crap. And the bulk of his plots involved Klingons or Klingon "culture" It's basically the same as Chekov in the original series who wouldn't shut up about Russia.
2)How silly and one-note the Klingons were in 90s Trek. Their whole culture was about battle/blood/war/death and pain. And even a guy like Worf who was raised by humans has be absolutely in love with all of it.
So I think Worf would need to have more to his character that isn't connected to being a Klingon.
Data was captain of the Sutherland in "Redemption II." That was a very big "next step" for him, career-wise.
Arguably, his biggest next steps were not in the advancement of his Starfleet career but rather the ways in which he progressed in his personal journey to become more human. He fathered a child in "The Offspring," and he found a mother of sorts in "Inheritance." He began experiencing the emotions in "Descent" that he had been denied in "Brothers," a process that was fully realized in the films. And he pushed the boundaries of his programming in various episodes throughout the series, such as in "The Most Toys" and "Clues."
Exactly what I was getting at. The focus wouldn't been so much of a problem if TNG Klingon culture had some actual depth to it, some contrast and variety, not just head-bashing, honour-or-death war fanaticism. The really annoying bit is that their hypocrisy regarding honour had potential, but I don't think it was ever realised. Why did no-one ever ask what honour actually meant to Klingons? Why didn't Worf, who was better placed than most to?
Ezri and Worf have a great conversation about Klingon society in which she calls out this hypocrisy.
Ezri and Worf have a great conversation about Klingon society in which she calls out this hypocrisy.
That's why I love Ezri--she says what I feelAnd that's just one of the reasons why Ezri absolutely rocks.
But it's just one conversation, set against episode after episode that doesn't exploit or addresses that hypocrisy.
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