Not exactly, no.I haven't watched Picard but I read Seven of Nine is now a vigilante? Utterly ridiculous.
Nothing warped about a moral code if people go to fight for what is right.
Not exactly, no.I haven't watched Picard but I read Seven of Nine is now a vigilante? Utterly ridiculous.
Not exactly, no.
Nothing warped about a moral code if people go to fight for what is right.
I mean, without disclosing too much she works in a lawless area to provide support to struggling people's outside of Federation jurisdiction.I suppose one could argue all moral codes are culturally relative.
Let's say that I liked Year of Hell, but seven years of that level of unrelenting misery would have been far too much for me.
Can't really comment on what they would have done with it but, if I were to create some changes along this line:If the writers and showrunners had kept to this idea and developed it, how would you imagine the story or journey diverge from what I would call the soap opera in space that Voyager became.
Given that the ship can carry programs who are effectively human in its computer, i see no reason why it couldn't develop those qualities itself.
They stuck to the limit for four seasons; they were still below 38 by then. I think S5 was when they went full TNG Lite, and stopped caring about such things.
EDIT: Check out the newspaper, which is for back when the Doctor actually was supposed to have a name...
In the Voyager book Violations, the ship is described as becoming sentient at the end of the story.
It was an idea that was't followe-up in any episode or book and now I realize why.
It coud have been an interesting concept.
So maybe stop shooting for longevity and focus on quality.
No.That's the attitude you approach for a miniseries, not major TV
No.
You always want a through line of story in a series.
I always felt that at some point they should have just ditched the whole 'get back to Earth' shtick (since the audience already knows that that won't happen for at most seven years, and would effectively end the show.) By the third season they should have just found a specific area of space to settle down and try to start their own Delta Quadrant Federation with the locals rather than just aimlessly flying around space meeting aliens-of-the-week, pissing them off, and then having to get out of Dodge while their ship is constantly being attacked and damaged (but with the damage miraculously fixed by the start of the next episode.)
Yup.Either they're incompetent idiots who can't find a way to survive over the course of 7 years (to keep the show going) or they find a way to replenish their supplies and thus the "survival" aspect no longer is a major thing and the plot has to be changed otherwise the show is over. You can't have it both ways.
Yup.
Thus arcs and limited story beats.
Not even close.So what, have them succeed, then screw up somehow so they have no choice but to go back to "Lost in Space" and scrounging, rinse and repeat for 7 years straight?
Either they're incompetent idiots who can't find a way to survive over the course of 7 years (to keep the show going) or they find a way to replenish their supplies and thus the "survival" aspect no longer is a major thing and the plot has to be changed otherwise the show is over. You can't have it both ways.
Not even close.
And we need to let go of the "7 years" bit.
We have the advantages of being nearly 30 years down the hindsight road and production regime change. Back in 95 that 7 year run was likely as baked in as the idea Voyager was a Starfleet ship.And we need to let go of the "7 years" bit.
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