He isn't a co-showrunner in any of the series.Akiva Goldsman as co-showrunner
Akiva Goldsman is the co-creator of Picard and Strange New Worlds and co-executive producer/co-showrunner on Picard and Strange New Worlds.




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He isn't a co-showrunner in any of the series.Akiva Goldsman as co-showrunner
Here's my take from observing the fan base. One, fans want safe and familiar. No, I don't believe for one minute they want good stories. They want to to tickle their ears, warm their arts, and be that comfort food that Star Trek has morphed in to over the years. Now, obviously, as you say, this is going to vary from fan to fan. Bu,t what has largely been demonstrated as selling well is TOS. Having huge fan film projects recreating the era, as well as various other markers, TOS is still that familiar touchstone for fans and non-fans. So, it makes sense to go with that, rather than, as you say, just ahead 100 years and do TNG all over again.Since I like TOS and the TOS Movies, as well as the TOS characters more than anything else Star Trek has to offer, I'd say I got exactly what I wanted. I'm all for exploring that era and expanding the backstory of those characters further. In my mind, it's a heck of a lot better than yet another bump forward in time with yet another Starfleet ship doing yet another impersonation of TNG.
"The Fans" have no f-ing idea what they want. It's as splintered and diverse a group as there are humans on Earth. Trek has shown repeatedly that trying to give "The Fans" what they ask for is a fool's errand.
I think you're projecting your own desires onto what an ill-defined, finnicky, nit-picky population of people "want most." For every fan that wants something, there's a fan somewhere else who absolutely hates that. For everyone who wants to see "Star Trek The NEXT Next Generation," there's a fan who wants to totally go against the standard formula and push the envelope.
In the meantime, relax. The show has been on since 2017 and it isn't going anywhere anytime soon. And DSC has been profitable enough that CBS (who apparently "took a completely wrong approach") is continuing to produce the show at $8M a pop, and churning out a number of new series as well.
It's a shame you and other didn't get what you wanted. But a lot of people did. It happens. Life goes on.
Here's my take from observing the fan base. One, fans want safe and familiar. No, I don't believe for one minute they want good stories. They want to to tickle their ears, warm their arts, and be that comfort food that Star Trek has morphed in to over the years. Now, obviously, as you say, this is going to vary from fan to fan. Bu,t what has largely been demonstrated as selling well is TOS. Having huge fan film projects recreating the era, as well as various other markers, TOS is still that familiar touchstone for fans and non-fans. So, it makes sense to go with that, rather than, as you say, just ahead 100 years and do TNG all over again.
But, this is a duel edged sword. That safe and familiar is far more the hallmark of the Berman era, with its soothing colors, and relatively safe storytelling style. So, now we see the swing back towards TNG safety with Picard and the familiar nostalgic trappings.
Every time I see "Oh, Discovery did it wrong! No one asked for this?" I'm like, "Yeah, I watched the fan base and what they were buying. This is exactly what people were buying at the time-TOS era, more action adventure, having some nostalgia trappings."
Yeah, Admiral Clancy being grumpy and using F-bombs doesn't make the Federation a dark political union.
spoilers for Picard season 1The Federation wasn't dark at all in Picard.
But this isn't the thread for that.
It's easier to do dark stories before said events than afterwards, when the Fed was supposed to have learned from them. While we were all waiting for Vance to have some dark secret in Discovery (my favorite theory was that he was really Osyraa's lover), he ultimately didn't have any. Even Kovich was just some guy who wasn't responsible for Mirror Georgiou's deteriorating health.The Federation in DS9 had a Section 31 that wanted to commit genocide against the Founders of the Dominion and about 120 years before Starfleet hatched a plot to destroy the planet Qo'noS from within the world itself. Admiral Nechayev in TNG wanted Picard to find a way to use Hugh to destroy the Borg Collective. Starfleet and the Federation have always had a dark side dating back to the start of the Trek universe.
Admiral Cartwright and Colonel West, anybody?
I mean even in the Dominion War there was paranoia, and there admirals trying to manage the crisis. It isn't so far a stretch to see that these crises have created a lot of anxiety and fear in the operations and viewing of threats.I guess we're meant to look at this as the Federation taking a very long time to learn from bureaucratic and military-industrial mistakes due to its immense size and complexity. That's how I prefer to view how the Federation seems to be operating post-Dominion War and NEM.
I heard SF Debris put it in a way that has always informed my view of the Founders threat. Basically, the Founders are a far more serious threat to the values of Starfleet and the Federation, who rely on honesty, and trustworthiness in each other to maintain their organizations. As a collection of cultures there is a need for mutual trust to get things done. The Founders can completely un do that in a way that the Borg can't. You can see a person becoming a Borg, see them turning against you, but you don't know if the person next to you has already been turned against you. Sisko's moment with his dad is emblematic of this idea that even the closest people to us could be against us.Now, had Admiral Leyton and his co-conspirators managed to stage their planned coup and overthrow the elected government of the Federation in 2372 then the UFP could well have become dark. An authoritarian government ruled from the top by the military and imposing strict cultural limitations on its citizens to keep the Founders of the Dominion and other enemies from infiltrating and destroying it.
I heard SF Debris put it in a way that has always informed my view of the Founders threat. Basically, the Founders are a far more serious threat to the values of Starfleet and the Federation, who rely on honesty, and trustworthiness in each other to maintain their organizations. As a collection of cultures there is a need for mutual trust to get things done. The Founders can completely un do that in a way that the Borg can't. You can see a person becoming a Borg, see them turning against you, but you don't know if the person next to you has already been turned against you. Sisko's moment with his dad is emblematic of this idea that even the closest people to us could be against us.
That's not something you just recover from. Sorry to the utopist Federation.
I heard SF Debris put it in a way that has always informed my view of the Founders threat. Basically, the Founders are a far more serious threat to the values of Starfleet and the Federation, who rely on honesty, and trustworthiness in each other to maintain their organizations. As a collection of cultures there is a need for mutual trust to get things done. The Founders can completely un do that in a way that the Borg can't. You can see a person becoming a Borg, see them turning against you, but you don't know if the person next to you has already been turned against you. Sisko's moment with his dad is emblematic of this idea that even the closest people to us could be against us.
That's not something you just recover from. Sorry to the utopist Federation.
Which ignores the larger point I was making that fear of the Founders would make the Federation struggle with trust, which is at the foundation of their sense of mutual cooperation.Well, the Borg can just turn Earth into a heap of drones. I don't think the Dominion can top that.
Exactly. I get that people want to the utopian escapism of Star Trek to be unsullied by the real world but that is not how art works. But, sadly, that is how Star Trek often treats horrible things is walking it off.And hence why if the post-Dominion War Federation feels a lot more cynical there are good reasons that make sense both in-universe and in our real world.
The Federation probably lets a lot of people die that could be saved if it weren't for the generic engineering ban.If letting Riker and Troi's son die over an absurd synth ban isn't dark, what is?
Picard gave Riker an atta-boy for allowing people to die and not saving a little girl. The Federation has demonstrated time and again that it is not perfect, especially if very overreaching bans due to fears of one possible outcome. So, if that's dark, then the Federation has struggled with this for a long time.spoilers for Picard season 1
If letting Riker and Troi's son die over an absurd synth ban isn't dark, what is?
Except we have no proof in canon that the genetic engineering ban was taken to the extent that the Federation let people die over it, and proof in Enterprise that Rigellian gene therapy was used to prevent deaths: https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Rigellian_gene_therapy .The Federation probably lets a lot of people die that could be saved if it weren't for the generic engineering ban.
The Federation isn't perfect, nothing is.
Who said he got it legally? He was a terrorist.Except we have no proof in canon that the genetic engineering ban was taken to the extent that the Federation let people die over it, and proof in Enterprise that Rigellian gene therapy was used to prevent deaths: https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Rigellian_gene_therapy .
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