But Discovery needed Bernham to be related to Spock.
I think Burnham and Spock didn't have to be foster-siblings. Burnham could've been raised by a different Vulcan family and it wouldn't have changed the major beats of the story. But...
They had to bring in Pike.
... yes. Once you make Burnham connected to Spock, and it's set 10 years before TOS, that brings in Pike and the Enterprise.
Pike, once he got his own show, had to bring TOS legacy characters.
Yes. If the intent of SNW is to close the gap, then TOS characters have to be brought in.
In the same vein, if Picard has to save the day, and he's retired and doesn't have the pull he used to, he has to turn to friends and people he knows... which takes us back to TNG characters. If the Crushers are in trouble and they need someone to save them, Beverly is going to reach out to the person she knows can actually save her.
Picard was an Admiral (not retired) for only four years, he was at odds with them about the Romulan Evacuation, and they let him go. When he turned to Starfleet Command for help back in S1 he was told "the sheer fucking hubris." So, he can't go to who he worked with when he was an Admiral, besides Raffi. It's safe to say those bridges were burned a long time ago. Most of the people he can turn to are who he knew from the Enterprise, Raffi, and Seven. Anyone from the Stargazer (
his Stargazer), if they're still alive, are as old as he is, as we saw.
I'm not against characters appearing again if it makes sense to the story that's being told. In
Picard Season 3, I think they justified getting the TNG characters back together. It doesn't even happen right away. It takes eight episodes to get everyone back together. Then it takes another episode to get them back on the Enterprise-D. Nine episodes. It's not like PIC Season 3, Episode 1, Scene 1, they're all back together and back on the Enterprise. It took time to get to that point and they took the time to show how that happened.
Having a Big Bad, heaps of nostalgic callbacks or an End of Civilization plot is never, ever mandatory. That's a curse from the movies.
Considering that their goal was to make
Picard Season 3 like the movies, except in a longer format, I think that's fair game. If that hadn't been their intent, then I'd agree with you. But I judge things by what they were trying to do and how well they did what they were attempting. I'm not going to fault PIC S3 for using tropes from the movies because making it like the movies was the point.
Going into the Far Flung Future, Discovery probably ditched most of their crutch, which is great. I may be wrong, because I stopped watching in at the start of year 4, so someone can confirm or refute that.
I can confirm that.
Discovery Season 4 has the absolute least callbacks of any season of Star Trek in this production era.
I think the fourth season might be my favorite. It's down to S1 and S4, both of which I really like, but for
very different reasons. I'll sort it out by the end of the re-watch I'm in the middle of in the lead-up to Season 5.
Discovery Season 3 is my least favorite season of the series but that's not because of the jump into the Far Future. It has to do with some choices I
really didn't agree with, some wasted opportunities, and they tried to do too much in too little time.
I hate the character choices of SNW, but I just accept it as someone else's version of the characters and try to enjoy it for what it is.
Similarly, I enjoy
Picard Season 3 for what it is: "TNG done in the style of a TOS Movie".
As far as SNW, how you see it is how I see it. I don't see SNW as a natural prequel to TOS and never will. I consider it a different version of the characters (if someone's going to try to pounce on the Canon Argument, don't even bother, just agree to disagree). I don't dislike the series, but it didn't hook me. I just don't care much for episodic television these days, and it's not something I've been drawn to in 20 years. Different strokes for different folks.