That is Lord Terry's goal. Us mere mortals dare not question it.Wouldn't that make Lord Terry a somewhat... hubristic person? He's assured in his knowledge that 90's Trek is best Trek, so to hell with everything else?
That is Lord Terry's goal. Us mere mortals dare not question it.Wouldn't that make Lord Terry a somewhat... hubristic person? He's assured in his knowledge that 90's Trek is best Trek, so to hell with everything else?
That is Lord Terry's goal. Us mere mortals dare not question it.
Is he? How special.Wouldn't that make Lord Terry a somewhat... hubristic person? He's assured in his knowledge that 90's Trek is best Trek...
About as much as anyone. What, you think you're all recycling and driving EVs?My generation don't fuckup the environment
For all the joking that's going on about the alleged deification or ennoblement of Terry Matalas, there is a gap in the market for a Michael Chabon to finish season 1 plotlines petition, a Gretchen Berg / Aaron Harberts glorious restoration petition, a petition for Akiva Goldsman to be recognized for his singular contributions to the franchise, or one to anoint Michelle Paradise the next Michael Piller...
I try to constructively engage with some of the more opinionated posters here for better or worse. I'm just too used to interacting with people in real life to get into online pseudonymous combat. At least this BBS is far more open than prominent corners of Reddit.Some have proven that they can't handle even mild criticism of the other Nu Trek shows and seasons....and it's funny.
Yeah I heard about that during their latest live stream. RMB joked about that being done with Michelle Paradise a month or two back, so John Logan is at least a much better candidate. And a John Logan / Terry Matalas mashup wouldn't be the end of the world. The main question for that would if Kate Mulgrew and Jeri Ryan have been able to bury the hatchet and reconcile. The later shouldn't have to tolerate an abusive work environment again.On the flip side, I don't know if you heard this. Popcast mentioned it in their latest video. They've heard Kurtzman originally wanted to do Star Trek: Janeway before the success of S3, with Mulgrew in tow. John Logan as EP. Sounds like it thankfully fell through.
There's also the allegory of this season representing the Star Trek franchise as a whole.
Matalas' perspective (shared by many) that the best of Star Trek is the 90s era. The quality peak of the franchise is the Last Generation (the 90s). The Berman era.
Therefore the modern era looking back to the past for direction and salvation. Ignoring Discovery, LD, SNW, Pro, and to an extent the earlier seasons of Picard.
For all the joking that's going on about the alleged deification or ennoblement of Terry Matalas, there is a gap in the market for a Michael Chabon to finish season 1 plotlines petition,
a petition for Akiva Goldsman to be recognized for his singular contributions to the franchise,
or one to anoint Michelle Paradise the next Michael Piller...
Some have proven that they can't handle even mild criticism of the other Nu Trek shows and seasons....and it's funny.
I think you're quoting the wrong person.Why so defensive?
To be fair, I'd be saying the exact same thing about SNW...So I should just accept popularity without thinking?
Leave your brains at the door everyone. The popular thing to do!
And it's cutting it close for my comfort. Pike is the only saving grace, the hook if you will, that really draws me back. But, that is because Pike has always been my favorite captain until Robau.To be fair, I'd be saying the exact same thing about SNW...
The Borg were hopelessly belligerent and needed to be neutralized. No one created that problem but the Queen. The analogy doesn't work with the Borg, as even if Janeway hadn't introduced the pathogen, they'd still have attacked Earth.Janeway poisoning the Borg, Picard agitating them over and over... as an allegory, it holds up perfectly for older people saying the youth of today are terrible because they struggle with the problems they themselves created.
I think it's arguable how "feel-good" the ending actually is, since it's only positive from the perspective of the audience's view of the TNG characters, for them and their families.One thing Picard Season 3 has in common with Star Trek VI is that both start off looking like they're going to be harder-edged, then -- after about the middle -- they start to back off from that more and more until they get to the feel-good ending.
I thought Star Trek fans were against showing the emotional side of things? If this were a Disco episode and it did dwell on the people who lost loved ones or the emotional trauma of the young people forced to commit murder against their will, everyone would be all "stop the crying, this isn't what Star Trek is supposed to be!"I think it's arguable how "feel-good" the ending actually is, since it's only positive from the perspective of the audience's view of the TNG characters, for them and their families.
In universe, once you get past everyone connected to the TNG cast, the ending is actually pretty grim, just not Earth destroyed grim. A significant amount of Starfleet's ships have been destroyed and their crews murdered. And the survivors are probably traumatized to various extents, especially the younger members of Starfleet whose hand was forced to kill their superiors.
If you start thinking about it, while Raffi is getting the call from her son reconciling their relationship after what's happened, there are God knows how many other families getting calls that their loved ones are dead, or a young Starfleet Lt. calling their parents crying that they were a Borgified drone that was mind-raped.
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