As I've said before, my real issue with Michael's crying is that anything which happens too much in dramatic fiction loses its impact over time. There's a reason we remember so well the few times Picard broke down in TNG, or that Sisko broke down in DS9 - because it happened quite rarely, which gave seeing the character a broken-down mess an added level of poignancy.
I just don't get that with Michael, IMHO. The first half of Season 1 she was portrayed overall as quite stoic - which was probably in line with her intended characterization. Then in the second half of the first they put her through the wringer emotionally, having her boyfriend try to kill her, her captain betray her, and seeing her dead mentor's face on a very different person. I honestly didn't understand the narrative point of all of this, because Michael had a very clear and well-defined arc in Act 1, from broken mess to a confident woman facing down her fears by Into The Forest I Go. They sort of regressed her as a character to get her to break once again, which wasn't anywhere near as interesting. I will say they gave me an emotional reaction, but it was more feeling uncomfortable with how much of this plot involved emotionally (and sometimes physically) brutalizing a woman onscreen. It was hard to watch at times.
After this in Seasons 2/3 they don't put Michael through anywhere near as much, but they seemed to have decided that SMG was good with crying, so they just kept writing crying scenes for her. In some cases it just didn't really work for me, because we didn't see things onscreen which really suggested she had the emotional connection needed for the tears. Like, in An Obol for Charon, she is suddenly weepy at Saru's impending death, when nothing we saw onscreen indicated they had a close friendship. Same for Airiam's literal death later in the season. Or Nhan's departure in Season 3. The work just wasn't put into making these seem like moments the character would care about, which made it hard for me to care about them.
I just don't get that with Michael, IMHO. The first half of Season 1 she was portrayed overall as quite stoic - which was probably in line with her intended characterization. Then in the second half of the first they put her through the wringer emotionally, having her boyfriend try to kill her, her captain betray her, and seeing her dead mentor's face on a very different person. I honestly didn't understand the narrative point of all of this, because Michael had a very clear and well-defined arc in Act 1, from broken mess to a confident woman facing down her fears by Into The Forest I Go. They sort of regressed her as a character to get her to break once again, which wasn't anywhere near as interesting. I will say they gave me an emotional reaction, but it was more feeling uncomfortable with how much of this plot involved emotionally (and sometimes physically) brutalizing a woman onscreen. It was hard to watch at times.
After this in Seasons 2/3 they don't put Michael through anywhere near as much, but they seemed to have decided that SMG was good with crying, so they just kept writing crying scenes for her. In some cases it just didn't really work for me, because we didn't see things onscreen which really suggested she had the emotional connection needed for the tears. Like, in An Obol for Charon, she is suddenly weepy at Saru's impending death, when nothing we saw onscreen indicated they had a close friendship. Same for Airiam's literal death later in the season. Or Nhan's departure in Season 3. The work just wasn't put into making these seem like moments the character would care about, which made it hard for me to care about them.