But Jake wasn't like that in the 1st 2 seasons; he was a decent and productive character. Even in the 3rd season where the writing angle came about, it still seemed his character would grow. For me, something more useful to Sisko's journey and the rest of the series.Jake was always kind of meh. I didn't love him or hate him, he was just there.
But Jake wasn't like that in the 1st 2 seasons; he was a decent and productive character. Even in the 3rd season where the writing angle came about, it still seemed his character would grow. For me, something more useful to Sisko's journey and the rest of the series.
The stories told with Jake in the beginning didn't make him unlikeable, The Vistor - a fourth season episode made the character pathetic, but by the end of it there's a path to make young man become a strong one. It's something these two characters can work on as the journey continued on. The fifth season episode wasn't interesting to me, he does ended up doing a heroic thing, I never saw Jake as a coward - the episode felt out of character and totally random. Were viewers ever interested in what Jake was writing and did the writing on the series made it a staple point for the series? No. What Jake writes if the path is to be a writer should've had some impact to Sisko's journey because they came on board the series together.I would say it's the opposite. He was "just there" in the first two seasons. You'd get random "Jake and Nog are doing mischief on the promenade" or "Jake and Nog are on a double date" or "Benjamin and Jake are talking about Jennifer" scenes. None of them very riveting. Worldbuilding if you're feeling generous, filler if not.
In later seasons, he didn't get many episodes, but he got some very strong ones. Like the two I already mentionned: The Visitor and Nor the Battle to the Strong.
In the 90s? It's hard to say. However, contemporary viewers have asked Behr and Wolfe directly what Anselm was about, and Wolfe himself felt the need to identify what his career would have been like in the documentary.Were viewers ever interested in what Jake was writing and did the writing on the series made it a staple point for the series? No.
Jake was coming out of his quarters one day when a bunch of Bajoran teenagers caught him and began throwing eggs at him.
"Ow! Stop it!" Jake shouted. "Quit egging me!"
The oldest of the teens laughed. "Well, who should we egg?"
Jake's reply: "EGG NOG!!"
![]()
![]()
More serious, though... who would have liked it if Jake and Ezri had wound up a thing, instead of her and Bashir? I think they would have been a very cute couple, and it would have put Sisko in an interesting position...
I think Nog would go for it.
I don't believe Jake and Ezri could be an item. How many teens when they starting thinking about romance think about their parents' co-workers, even if they are somewhat close in age?
I don't believe Jake and Ezri could be an item. How many teens when they starting thinking about romance think about their parents' co-workers, even if they are somewhat close in age?
I didn't care about the pairing of Bashir and Ezri because the chemistry wasn't there; there was this THING to match people up on DS9, and most of it fell flat IMO. As for Jake, I would've like to see more development on Mardah and where that relationship could've gone. There was a lot there to make Jake likeable.I'm not saying it was ideal. Indeed, it's the fact that Ezri WAS one of Ben's co-workers that makes it an interesting notion.
Bashir/Ezri was just boring. The way they had it happen showed that the writers knew no one cared about the pairing.
I would rather that pairing because in a sense Ezri was finding herself like a young woman should, the same for Jake who of course was a young man. I agree this approach is interesting to me because it puts the Jake character back into relevance and be involved into stories where Ezri was. Ezri would've been better off connecting to characters her own age range than the older men and women on board the station. Bashir was just wrong.Because it was so conventional. An Ezri/Jake ship, and all the conflict that would likely have come with it, would have required some screen time.
Since they didn't have that time, the "safe" (i.e. boring) pairing was what they went with. But would anyone have really cared if it hadn't happened?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.