Yeah, no. The characters of DIS and SNW are proud and happy to be serving on their ships. I have no idea what shows you watched, but that's what I saw.One of the common themes in nutrek is the abundance of characters who are seemingly not interested in being on the ship, in the way that would make sense in that genre. Probably because many of the writers aren't interested in the genre.
Been that way for 30 years, or how long I've been interacting with fans. Some fans just enjoy that argument and see that as discussion, or are not use to the idea of debate.There's no discussion any more
The idea that there's something for everyone to enjoy, is just like wow.
I like Star Trek: The Original Series// Star Trek: The Next Generation/ Star Trek: Deep Space 9/Star Trek: Enterprise /The Expanse/For All Mankind/Raised by Wolves/Dune/Blade Runner/Alien/Orville/OT Star Wars/ Star Wars: Endor/ Space Above and Beyond/Babylon 5/ Starship Troopers/ Stargate SG-1/ Stargate Universe / Classic Battlestar Galactica/ Farscape/ Reimagined Battlestar Galactica / Caprica
And nutrek is basically unwatchable. It's not even an Independence Day like guilty pleasure. And I'm not like some anomaly, there's a massive number of people in my boat. We'll watch anything space related if it delivers and this show doesn't for people like me.
Nutrek for me and a massive number of people is basically a mix of an afternoon soap opera, and a high school drama. I mean that quite literally, I see these shows at their absolute bests being a lower tier version of "The 100", even the 3rd season picard which I like, is basically a soap opera version of TNG.
Star Trek has massive pull with me, and many in my peer group. We'll watch anything and have tried to watch nu trek and it's always the same thing.
Nu Trek for me isn't just star trek, it's something that doesn't even fit under the umbrella of all the shows I listed above. And yet people still come back with you don't like it because it's diverse, it's new whatever. If I like pretty much anything, hard to make that argument.
To you, to my gay friends they're basically gay wesley crushers.
Nutrek fans remind me of gay conversation therapists ironically. So convinced that some conversion is just around the corner, and just fundamentally oblivious to how uninterested some people are. Like it's not a "a small group of people aren't interested" it's more "this entire nutrek entity clashes with several or most aspects of my identity and being". When I see the STD crew, I see the cast of clerks 4, and not the fun people either.
You were born with a certain personality and emotional orientation, great but stop trying to pretend more trek fans are interested in seeing people cry than they actually are.
I don't like crying, emotions and soap opera features in a story. It just makes me uncomfortable and emotionally tired. I get some are indocxtrinated to believe it's because people like me are macho and aren't open to our feelings, and it's just not based on science.
It doesn't feel forced to you, to me the hair of pike is telling. It feels like "I'm really focused on big important things, and by the way I spend 30 minutes a day on my hair". It's like someone going to a coffee shop, buying one $1.25 cookie ever 2 hours, so they can't get kicked out of the shop. They aren't interested in the product they just want to occupy the room.
so they'll give Discovery another chance. It won't be their favorite, but they'll say, "It wasn't as bad as I thought it was!" Same thing happened to Enterprise.
This isn't about them being the focus of the story. It's about representation. White, straight males exist. In the 90's there was blowback because they put a black man or a white woman in charge of a ship. They just existed and did their jobs and had stories about all facets of their lives.The allegory is obvious but I thought the message about the differences they are fighting about being so subtle that outsiders didn't even notice them, was well done.
Obviously Discovery didn't closet anyone, but you'll also notice the gay, trans, and NB characters didn't face any prejudice either. Why? Because it doesn't make any sense in the setting. So if you want to do a story about LGBT discrimination you've got to do something else. The easy answer is Planet of the week has some LGBT inhabitants, and they face discrimination. But then you are just back to the standard TNG "Humans now know better" trope. And what is even the point of doing an alien LGBT discrimination story on Trek if the exact same story could be done on a regular 21st century TV show without forehead makeup? There is no point in doing it unless you can frame the issue in a fresh way and try to make someone who doesn't already agree with you think about it in a new way.
Think about some of the other obvious allegorical stories and see if they are still Trek, or even entertaining if you remove the sci-fi-ness. Does "The Hunted" work if Danar just has PTSD and not super soldier skills?
TOS presented a forward-looking, though troubled reality, where social ills such as racism (Boma to Spock in "The Galileo Seven", Stiles to Spock in "Balance of Terror", the obvious issues seen in "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield", Spock's not-so-rare condemnation of humans in a way that read as distaste for a race, etc.) were alive and well, enough for Kirk to call Stiles out for what specifically motivated the latter's constant verbal attacks against Spock.I disagree. TOS was showing us a better world. More like a idealized version of what 60's people thought a better world would look like.
So much more meaningful than Picard pompously pontificating about having "a more evolved sensibility."
Kor
Exactly. LGBTQ people aren’t an issue that needs to be addressed, they’re people who shouldn’t be excluded from Trek because it makes certain people uncomfortable. The way Stamets, Culber, Adira, Seven and Raffi are handled is light years beyond anything Berman era Trek did. I hope they’re just the start of a bright future for LGBTQ representation in Trek.This isn't about them being the focus of the story. It's about representation. White, straight males exist. In the 90's there was blowback because they put a black man or a white woman in charge of a ship. They just existed and did their jobs and had stories about all facets of their lives.
Now the gay characters are getting to exist in Star Trek. Like they do in real life. And that people are unhappy that they're just existing is saying a lot about the people unhappy about it.
Although I will agree that TV being far less restrictive nowadays is making many allegorical stories obsolete. But I think that's a good thing. If something in Discovery makes you uncomfortable, ask yourself why.
It wasn't a decision the writers made. While filming the episode Stardust Rag City, Jeri Ryan and the actress who played Bijayzal made the decision themselves to interpret the relationship the two of them are said to have had in the past as a romantic one and played it that way. Likewise, while filming the finale, Jeri Ryan and Michelle Hurd decided to play that scene as though there was an attraction and potential romance developing between Seven and Raffi, which the season 2 writers picked up on and wrote the characters accordingly in that and the third season.What *actually* made the writers of Picard decide to make Seven a Gay character?
I like the bit around the 1:20 part of that video where they show a Star Trek internet forum. Which totally isn't similar to any that might actually exist.![]()
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Indeed. Often, TNG characters blathered on about how "evolved" they were, sounding like they lived in a dreamland populated by people with no life experience, hence their pampered belief that everything/one should follow the model they adopted.
I guess what's different now is that there is so much Star Trek that there can be a section of the fanbase that just doesn't feel they have to engage with anything that gives the whiff of "Well, I just know this is going to suck." (I'm not saying that everyone who hates Discovery has never seen it. Lots of people have. And there are people who hate SNW who have seen the show and they will simply have to live with their wrongness.)
To the original topic, though, I don't recall a time when it was "TOS vs. TNG" or "Niners vs. everybody". There was never an Us vs. Them mentality among the fanbases that I recall.
I'm the flip side of you, Star Trek-wise. I don't like ENT, but I'm a huge fan of DSC.Oh, I recall it quite vividly. Especially as a huge fan of DS9 during its original run.
I remember the posts, on this board, mocking people who liked Enterprise ("Alien space nazis? A++++++!")
With all the hate Enterprise got back in the day, it's mystifying to me seeing people react with joy when references to it are dropped in present-day Trek. But happily mystifying, nonetheless.
Right now, I feel very disappointed by Discovery. My wife and I were binge-watching seasons 3 and 4, but I had to stop halfway through season 4 because we were too frustrated with the weepy, emotionally-driven stories that just rang hollow. I threw my hands up at Zora saying she's just happy to be seen. But now it's cancelled at season 5, and I feel badly for the people who DO enjoy it (I know they're out there). It might not be my cup of tea, but that doesn't mean it detracts from everything else in the Trek sphere.
I just wish more people had that mindset.
That almost sounds like diversity of opinions.. It might not be my cup of tea, but that doesn't mean it detracts from everything else in the Trek sphere.
Which still hasn't been actually described.
Just stated vaguely as a feeling. Since this isn't qua
But that's not everyone's experience. Star Trek is about the human adventure (to borrow a phrase from GR) and people not enjoying their job, not wanting to be there is something a part of it and I welcome it.
Because people do things they don't want to do. That's part of humanity.
But, I don't want it. I want to learn about these characters, their struggles, their ups, downs, hopes, and dreams and fears. And nu Trek delivers that, and some fun stories and space adventure all in one. Reminds me of TOS in various ways.
It doesn't.And this goes back to the point if you're describing something that doesn't need to be in space why does it need to be in space?
It's really tone-deaf to call a show with six LGBTQIA characters "STD". Especially when the preferred acronyms are DSC or DIS and no one refers to Voyager as STV or Enterprise as STE. We all know why it's really being called STD. To taunt the show and fans of it. Especially after this many years, when it's clear it's almost exclusively used by people who either dislike or outright hate the series. It makes it even worse when fans of the show have made it clear that they see it as derogatory.And then I watch STDs and it's been turned up to 11.
I think he's self-projecting what he feels onto the show itself.Yeah, no. The characters of DIS and SNW are proud and happy to be serving on their ships. I have no idea what shows you watched, but that's what I saw.
The thing with enterprise it's consistent. Like there's a massive part of season 1 and 2 that is absolutely hot dirty diaper garbage.Oh, I recall it quite vividly. Especially as a huge fan of DS9 during its original run.
I remember the posts, on this board, mocking people who liked Enterprise ("Alien space nazis? A++++++!")
With all the hate Enterprise got back in the day, it's mystifying to me seeing people react with joy when references to it are dropped in present-day Trek. But happily mystifying, nonetheless.
Right now, I feel very disappointed by Discovery. My wife and I were binge-watching seasons 3 and 4, but I had to stop halfway through season 4 because we were too frustrated with the weepy, emotionally-driven stories that just rang hollow. I threw my hands up at Zora saying she's just happy to be seen. But now it's cancelled at season 5, and I feel badly for the people who DO enjoy it (I know they're out there). It might not be my cup of tea, but that doesn't mean it detracts from everything else in the Trek sphere.
I just wish more people had that mindset.
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