I rewatch DS9 for the sheer joy of it.
Or are most fans just looking for things to dislike??
Because I'm sorry..... But there's so many posts and topics about everything people find bad about Star Trek. Same shit happened when Enterprise was first aired. I don't understand really. I often feel weird when I watch the latest Discovery or Picard episode, come online, and find many reasons why I'm supposed to hate what I just watched, while I really enjoyed it.
I've suspected they enjoy it for a long time. Over 20 years. It's why I think getting into any argument with them is a fixed argument. They don't want to acknowledge anything that will stop them being able to stay angry and keep putting on an angry front. The best you can do is catch them in the act. That's also why I call it Mock Outrage.Let's not forget that even when people hate watch they are still enjoying it. People like feeling that hate because they want to laugh at how bad it is or feel vindicated about their low opinions of the show. Same reason liberals are famous for watching Fox News back in the day or the way people today keep falling for clickbait or going on twitter to rage. Who says it's not fun to be angry? It's just not the best kind of fun IMO but it's still something people enjoy on some level.
I do agree that it is a front. It's easy to be angry online. There are no consequences of note, you can log off, leave, and never face another person face to face. Even the presence of just avatars immediately removes the human element and creates the tendency to be far more severe than even at conventions. Then, it becomes almost a matter of honor to stand up for these positions no matter what.I've suspected they enjoy it for a long time. Over 20 years. It's why I think getting into any argument with them is a fixed argument. They don't want to acknowledge anything that will stop them being able to stay angry and keep putting on an angry front. The best you can do is catch them in the act. That's also why I call it Mock Outrage.
The people who are truly angry and actually believe their vitriol to level that it looks like they believe tend to flame out quickly. Figuratively and literally.
With anyone else, I like to think it's an act or a front because, otherwise, how could they possibly function in society if they acted in Real Life like they do Online?
But I think these are the worst type of fans. Their presence is toxic. Not exactly headline news that I think this.
Yup. That's why I don't watch TWOK. Those brain bugs are not worth it.Of course, the "eye screams" in Picard tend to defeat that
It was the smartest thing to do in that situation.I know a guy in real life who went into a long tirade about how the new Star Trek sucks and is bad. I'm not sure if he was talking about the movies or Discovery or what. It was that undetailed of a criticism.
My response: "Yeah, I don't know, man, I don't really watch that stuff."
Well said.Even the best of series / episodes will not satisfy everyone. IDIC and all that. Yes, I still watch (and read) Trek to enjoy myself. Had you asked me this question during Disco season 1, which I generally disliked, I would still have answered the same. Through ups and downs, it's all still Star Trek, and I love Star Trek. It's never 100% bad. There will be things I don't care fore. There will be things I actively dislike. (Hate is an emotion that only exists to waste energy.) But there will also always be things I like, even love, and there have been enough of those to keep going.
Having said that, I do feel that the newer series have changed with the times. I have not seen Picard or Lower Decks yet outside of a few YT clips, but once I can get proper access to them I certainly will. My sometime lack of enthousiasm to the new series has more to do with the fact that they will likely end up being the thing that kills the novel lines that I have loved reading for the past 20 years. So, if something must replace something else that I loved, I will try and enjoy it for its own merits. Sometimes that is hard. We have a tendency to exchange likes and dislikes when interacting as humans, on the internet or not. "Your favorite drink is coffee? Oh I hate coffee." There will be some that get a kick out of being very negative of something. For that, I can only offer a quote from my favorite movie of all time:
"In many ways, the work of a critic is easy. We risk very little, yet enjoy a position over those who offer up their work and their selves to our judgment. We thrive on negative criticism, which is fun to write and to read. But the bitter truth we critics must face, is that in the grand scheme of things, the average piece of junk is probably more meaningful than our criticism designating it so. But there are times when a critic truly risks something, and that is in the discovery and defense of the new." (Anton Ego, from Ratatouille)
So yes, I may critique something I disliked. But I will always acknowledge that somewhere out there, is a group of talented actors, writers, producers, wardrobe people, set builders, etc. who understand these things much better than I. Mistakes will always be made. To err is human. And not everything is everyone's cup of tea. But if we relish in negativity for its own sake, we only end up demeaning ourselves. If it's not your cup of tea, try the coffee. I hear it's wonderful.
Ceti eels I can stomach. Blastoneuron portolanii I can stomach. But an "eye scream"? Uh, no. Hell, knowing what Gary Lockwood had to wear in his eyes for WNM is rather hard for me to take.Yup. That's why I don't watch TWOK. Those brain bugs are not worth it.
For me, that would be The Man Trap. Or the episode of Emergency wherein a starved-for-attention kid kills himself for real. Or a certain episode of Quincy involving a child with an abusive parent, in which Dr. Quincy discovers -- just in the nick of time -- that he'd had the kid taken away from the wrong parent.That is to say, there are a few rare episodes in most series that I really don't enjoy, but still (re-)watch sometimes, because they happen to be part of the series
There appears to be a bit of brand loyalty to Star Trek that people will watch regardless.Why would I watch it for any other reason, if not to enjoy it?
I mean, I can appreciate the fear around the eyes. I've had glasses since I was 8, and a quick way to get me angry was to knock my glasses off. I do now have contacts and had to get over my own fear because my newborn kept ripping my glasses off my face. So, contacts was necessary.Ceti eels I can stomach. Blastoneuron portolanii I can stomach. But an "eye scream"? Uh, no. Hell, knowing what Gary Lockwood had to wear in his eyes for WNM is rather hard for me to take.
Then again, consider that while on the one hand, I actually prefer to be conscious and lucid, and have an unobstructed view of the monitor, while undergoing a colonoscopy (and regard the sets of pictures I was given from my colonoscopies as "vacation pictures"), on the other hand, I cannot even imagine wearing contact lenses, the mere idea of cataract surgery freaks me out, to the point where I would require a full-blown general anesthetic, and would seriously consider retirement, an intensive course in braille, and a white cane with a red tip, as an acceptable alternative to any sort of eye surgery.
It was the smartest thing to do in that situation.
I remember in 2013, someone I only sort-of knew from college asked me, "So how much do you hate the new Star Trek movie?" Referring to Star Trek Into Darkness. Now, I happened to not like that movie, but I did like the 2009 Film. So I was in this weird gray area. Whereas this guy, I took it, really didn't like either of them. At all. So I just gave a vague, cryptic, non-verbal "ehhh..." type of non-answer, then he went into it. I let him do all the talking. Then I changed the subject at the first opportunity.
Whenever I post in the TOS Forum, sometimes, I know DSC would get ripped to shreds if it were ever mentioned. So I flat-out just don't talk about it there. I dance around it if I have to. To do otherwise would be suicide. They know I'm a fan of it, but they also know I'm a TOS Fan, and I have the street cred, so we leave it alone. It's probably something anyone who's a huge TOS Fan who also becomes a huge fan (as opposed to an ordinary fan) of a Non-TOS Star Trek series has to deal with. It's like having dual-citizenship in two different countries.
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