What I was quoting made it seem like they were ignoring what LD and Prodigy were doing. Yeah moving further in the 25th century is good while LD and Prodigy are just after Voyager, but I was under the impression that LD and Prodigy were not moving trek forward, which was wrong.
I think the idea that "moving
Star Trek forward" is literally tied to what year it's set in, is a mistake.
Star Trek may have had one "present" from 1991 to 2001, but that time is over. There is no one "present" in
Star Trek, and a series does not "move
Star Trek forward" by being set in one year or another year.
Star Trek is moved forward when a series achieves artistic success.
Strange New Worlds moved
Star Trek forward when it proved successful at synthesizing
Original Series-style episodic action/adventure storytelling with modern television conventions of characterization, visual effects, and production design.
Picard moved
Star Trek forward when it successfully combined classic
Next Generation characters with the modern Prestige Television format.
Lower Decks moved
Star Trek forward when it was able to synthesize the conventions of the adult animated situation comedy with the conventions of
The Next Generation in a way that was affectionate rather than mean-spirited.
Prodigy moved
Star Trek forward when it combined the conventions of older children's animated adventure series (such as
Avatar: The Last Airbender) with the
Star Trek setting, figuring out how to introduce
Star Trek as a franchise to younger audiences that may be almost completely unfamiliar with it.
Discovery moved
Star Trek forward when it depicted a world where trauma is understood as the common experience that it is, where mental health is understood to be a routine part of life; it also expanded upon
Deep Space Nine's legacy of serialized storytelling through a modern lens, deconstructing those elements of Roddenberrian Utopianism that were actually toxic and then re-affirming those elements of Roddenberrian Progressivism that were genuinely positive and hopeful, and all through the lens of characters from communities that are today marginalized.
Every Star Trek
series on the air today has been able to step outside of the boundaries of the storytelling conventions that inhibited
Star Trek from growing and evolving in the 1990s while remaining respectful of and affectionate towards that legacy. They have
all moved
Star Trek forward, and it did not matter whether they were set in 2256, or 2401, or 2380, or 3189, or 2384, or 2259.
They've chosen to follow the same standard that Kurtzman has employed for all his streaming shows, which is one heavily centered around a season-long mystery.
There was no season-long mystery in S1 of
Lower Decks. There was an extremely minor season-long mystery in S2 and S3, but to say that
Lower Decks is centered around that mystery is really stretching it. There was no season-long mystery at all in S1 of
Strange New Worlds. The mystery of
Prodigy was solved about two-thirds of the way through the first season. There was no season-long mystery in the first season of
Discovery; the Ash and Lorca subplots were prominent but not season-long, and they didn't dominate everything in those episodes.
In other words, contemporary
Star Trek has used a combination of season-long mysteries, mysteries that last part of a season, and completely episodic storytelling. Which is how it should be.
Honestly, I was never a big fan of this, because Star Trek is not really a mystery-oriented franchise.
It's literally a franchise about exploring strange new worlds. There have always been, and will always be, mysteries to investigate. That's pretty intrinsic to the idea of a science-fiction series about exploration.
PIC season 1 didn’t have its showrunner replaced, neither did DSC season 3.
The post-production process for both
Picard Season One and
Discovery Season Three were disrupted by the outbreak of the COVID pandemic, as was the overall production process for
Picard Season Two.
I hope he is successful but I stand firm that Star Trek (as devised) was never meant to have stories told in this manner.
Star Trek is not and has never been only one thing. From the very beginning, it has always been a format that encompassed multiple genres -- from the whodunit mystery of "The Conscience of the King" to the slapstick comedy of "A Piece of the Action" to the romantic melodrama of "The City on the Edge of Forever" to the dark action of "The Doomsday Machine."
I'm okay with a season-long mystery arc as long as it's well-planned and has a satisfying payoff.
The Kelpian crying over his mommy causing the 'Burn' as the season-long mystery....
Having lost my grandmother about a year before
Discovery Season Three aired, and then losing my mother about seven months after
Discovery Season Three finished...
... It spoke to me very deeply. A story about a son's grief tearing the galaxy apart? Yeah, I'm invested. That means something to me. That's a story worthy of artistic respect.
Well, the way trends work, the next era is a direct reaction to the last. So the 2030s will be very anti-20th Century.
We're already seeing nostalgia for the Aughts, which is just...
astonishing as someone who was a teenager and young adult in that decade. Terrible decade. Nobody should feel nostalgia for the Bush Era.