The notion that everyone is entitled to their own opinion shouldn't be controversial... but it is.
No it isn’t.
The notion that everyone is entitled to their own opinion shouldn't be controversial... but it is.
It's worth noting that the same showrunner (Jeri Taylor) was responsible for the last season of TNG and the first 3-4 seasons of Voyager - which all tended to have the bland, soap-opera esque vibe.
The biggest I keep going back to is the simple fact that none of these shows were written with the malicious intent off ascribed to the show runners. They are, after all, trying to run a business and keep the show on the air in order to make money.I find it hard to be sure how badly some of these oft-reviled people truly did. After all, their main mission was not to write quality material, it was to keep ratings up.
Although in the case of the ENT finale... killing off the arguably most popular character does come off like a 'f-ck you' to Manny Coto by Berman and Braga, whose leadership that season was widely viewed as the best season of the show.
In the end, Star Trek is a business. I do think it would be helpful to fans to keep that in mind when raging against the production machine
While we can definitely question their sanity in allowing certain ones to be made in the first place ("AND THE CHILDREN SHALL LEAD", "PLATO'S STEPCHILDREN", "Sub Rosa", "LET HE WHO IS WITHOUT SIN...", "PROFIT AND LACE", "FURY", "THESE ARE THE VOYAGES..."), I don't think we can say any were made with hatred.
Although in the case of the ENT finale... killing off the arguably most popular character does come off like a 'f-ck you' to Manny Coto by Berman and Braga, whose leadership that season was widely viewed as the best season of the show.
It's clear that Berman and Braga didn't even spend the 45 minutes to watch "The Pegasus" that it would have taken to realize that Riker couldn't and didn't spend all this time on the holodeck figuring out what to do about his problem.
It's also clear that they feel badly about how it came out. Berman has said as much, and I've seen Braga on stage more than once apologizing for it, saying that he has yet to live down "making the nicest guy in Hollywood" (Bakula) angry at him. And there's still bitterness amongst the cast over the ending, save Connor Trineer, who was very happy to be so relevant to the episode.
I do, and that's why I typically only do so in matters of abject stupidity. Going from 38 torpedoes to infinite torpedoes is fine... if you explain how it happened. Trying to sneak it past us is an insult.
I would add "Code of Honor" and "Threshold" to that list.
It's not the first. Consider the conversation between Harry and Janeway in "Nightingale". Imagine you've been inundated over the season break with letters from annoyed fans demanding to know why Tom got his rank back and Harry's still an ensign. Do you...
A. Accommodate them.
B. Ignore them.
C. Shoot a scene that basically gives them the middle finger.
But you know what would have solved that? Have the Riker/Troi scenes take place on the Titan, or even the Enterprise-E. It would work as a hidden story of a situation we never got to see, AND you wouldn't need to try (and fail) to make both Frakes and Sirtis look 11 years younger.
I think the salamanders were the best part of Threshold, at least that was so whack it made me laugh. Could have been a memorable camp/nonsense episode if the rest of it wasn't so utterly effing boring.
Agreed. It would have taken almost nothing to put that situation somewhere else or to make that situation more relevant to what they were actually watching. I think it came down to B&B wanting to ride the coattails of a beloved episode.
That said, I don't even know how much that would have helped, because, really, there's not a lot of meat in it either way. Riker and Troi's dialogue is thin and it's the same with the rest of the cast. There's no real sense from Archer, etc. of the...enormity of what's happening around them, and very little in the way of conveying what these people mean to each other.
I have not seen TATV since it aired, and I have no reason to ever go back to it. "Demons" and "Terra Prime" are everything TATV is not and serve as a far better bookend to "Broken Bow."
I think its absolute biggest sin was that it did literally nothing to convince anyone NOT to do a warp 10 jump and just go home.
I mean, The Doctor reversed even the advanced changes that Janeway and Paris endured. Go home, cure the crew...then just be home.
A beloved episode that neither of them wrote. ("The Pegasus" was written by Ronald D. Moore.)
TATV is a terrible episode anyway... nothing can really save it. Maybe if it was not the series finale and didn't take place during "The Pegasus", it could have improved.
Navigation was the problem.
Moore was always a better writer than either of them.
In my opinion, removing it from the Pegasus time period eliminates a lot of difficulties with the time frame and compressing in to a lot of Pegasus' events. The other side is how the Riker/Troi story intersects with the story told. It honestly struggles to feel relevant to Riker at all, which is a big problem. Plus the time jump from the last episode...Maybe if it was not the series finale and didn't take place during "The Pegasus", it could have improved.
"The Visitor" is clichéd, cringeworthy, and otherwise generally awful. I guess I should at least give it props for lampshading the first by literally beginning on a dark and stormy night.
I will say, though, that Brannon Braga might the most imaginative writer of the bunch. His obsession with time travel notwithstanding, his concepts were really great and when he was on point, he was really on point.
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