There's a difference between "I don't like this form of musical expression" and "this has no business existing". Not everyone understands this.You sound like my grandfather talking about music when he heard hip-hop for the first time.
There's a difference between "I don't like this form of musical expression" and "this has no business existing". Not everyone understands this.You sound like my grandfather talking about music when he heard hip-hop for the first time.
Fans don't know what they want. They care less about the setting than they think they do.
2019: "No more prequels! We want to go past Nemesis!"
2022: "The show that went past Nemesis sucks! We like the prequel!"
2023: "That show that went past Nemesis is awesome now!"
That's my take-away from what's happened recently.
Nothing's 100%. I just pointed out the general sense I'm getting from others. They don't fully reflect my own views.Since when are Star Trek fans in agreement about anything? There have always been preference battles in the fandom on any topic, TOS vs TNG, DS9 vs VOY, episodic vs story arcs, which movies are the good ones, etc.
Oh, they're not, and I don't expect them to be. The very prescriptive language I run across is more amusing than anything else.Since when are Star Trek fans in agreement about anything? There have always been preference battles in the fandom on any topic, TOS vs TNG, DS9 vs VOY, episodic vs story arcs, which movies are the good ones, etc.
IO9/Gizmodo once had an article which asked: "Is Star Trek a religion?"Since when are Star Trek fans in agreement about anything? There have always been preference battles in the fandom on any topic, TOS vs TNG, DS9 vs VOY, episodic vs story arcs, which movies are the good ones, etc.
IO9/Gizmodo once had an article which asked: "Is Star Trek a religion?"
There have been times where I've felt different aspects of Trek fandom took on the appearance of being adherents to different denominations within a single faith. Everyone likes/believes in the same starting text (TOS) but either interprets it differently or picks and chooses what extra material beyond the original they like or don't like for a myriad of "reasons."
Deep Space Nine is largely beloved now, but I remember during the 90s there were bitter takes on how it was inferior to TNG and had betrayed Roddenberry's vision of Star Trek, just as much as people rant and rave about the Paramount+ shows. It was only after people looked at DS9 for it was, and what it was attempting to do beyond TNG, that people started to re-evaluate.
- The Old Testament - TOS
- The New Testament - TNG, DS9, VOY, and ENT
- The Book of Mormon - Kelvin Universe movies and Paramount+ shows
- Apocrypha (exists between canon and not canon) - TAS
IO9/Gizmodo once had an article which asked: "Is Star Trek a religion?"
There have been times where I've felt different aspects of Trek fandom took on the appearance of being adherents to different denominations within a single faith. Everyone likes/believes in the same starting text (TOS) but either interprets it differently or picks and chooses what extra material beyond the original they like or don't like for a myriad of "reasons."
Deep Space Nine is largely beloved now, but I remember during the 90s there were bitter takes on how it was inferior to TNG and had betrayed Roddenberry's vision of Star Trek, just as much as people rant and rave about the Paramount+ shows. It was only after people looked at DS9 for it was, and what it was attempting to do beyond TNG, that people started to re-evaluate.
- The Old Testament - TOS
- The New Testament - TNG, DS9, VOY, and ENT
- The Book of Mormon - Kelvin Universe movies and Paramount+ shows
- Apocrypha (exists between canon and not canon) - TAS
Star Trek fans want something that's new and fresh and exactly like what they remember.
Stuff like this keeps getting repeated again and again and it is without merit./thread.
If the Internet had the reach back when TWOK was released we would have the same reactions and negativity as now.
Please. Read some old Best of Trek issues, or Interstat (much of which is online here), and you'll see that the only thing that's changed is that we can say this stuff on the toilet.Stuff like this keeps getting repeated again and again and it is without merit.
NuTrek is much more comparable to Star Trek 5(a movie I love) clearly not on par with past efforts.
Whether or not you want to get into subjective argument objective statements still exist.
You can use pretty basic armchair psyc and figure out that the behaviors of star fleet officers in old and nu trek's are fundamentally different.
Conscientiousness is the personality trait of being careful, or diligent. Conscientiousness implies a desire to do a task well, and to take obligations to others seriously. Conscientious people tend to be efficient and organized as opposed to easy-going and disorderly. They exhibit a tendency to show self-discipline, act dutifully, and aim for achievement; they display planned rather than spontaneous behavior; and they are generally dependable. It is manifested in characteristic behaviors such as being neat, and systematic; also including such elements as carefulness, thoroughness, and deliberation (the tendency to think carefully before acting).[1]
You can pretty much use this to describe almost every trek character we like, and you can point to neelix as examples of characters we do not like as fans.
Discovery said, yeah about that ......
You can subjectively claim that new trek is awesome, but you can't redefine the science of human behavior.
When a behavioral pattern is so incredibly hard wired into something, you can't just waltz in and remove it.
It's not. Bennett and Meyer received death threats for killing Spock. Meyer doubled down on the military feel of Star Trek over TMP's more exploratory/2001 feel. It's not without merit if you read accounts from that time.Stuff like this keeps getting repeated again and again and it is without merit.
Well, you can. People just might not like it. Let's not sit there and pretend that Discovery should be uniformly praised because I will never, ever, advocate that. However, I will state firmly that it is Star Trek, belongs in Star Trek because it explores a fundamental human experience-trauma, in a way that speaks to a lot of people, on this board alone. That makes it worth doing.When a behavioral pattern is so incredibly hard wired into something, you can't just waltz in and remove it.
However, I will state firmly that it is Star Trek, belongs in Star Trek because it explores a fundamental human experience-trauma, in a way that speaks to a lot of people, on this board alone.
Interesting. I am always fascinated by these strong visceral reactions as I don't feel that agitated by bad Trek.The only trek that really makes me want to vomit is Discovery.
Bolding mine. Back when ENT was in first run and the beginning of the Xindi arc had episodes like North Star and Rajinn which had no connection to the bigger story, we were all frustrated with the wide open episode counts leading to such filler and were afraid they really are not committing to story arcs. Absolutely nothing of value was lost when ENT's 3rd season saw an episode count reduced from 26 to 24 mid-season and further reduction to 22 for S4 led to the tightest writing in the series' run.
Even apart from that, those runs were hell for the actors, who were putting in 18 hr days.
You're just not gonna see that run for any show again and having watched foreign media long before streaming made it accessible, our model of network TV shows that run endlessly for years was a global outlier. Ask the Brits on what the BBC considers to be a season
MacFarlane being the TNG fanboy he is, who's to say that wasn't inspired by Trek too?![]()
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