Wading in the shallow end of the brain pool.
Not only that, but it was a clip show, on a show that only had a limited 2 seasons of material up to that point, where they are using the clips as actual memories Riker is having, which is even more stupid, because they need the "memories" to provoke strong emotions from him.
At one point, the intention is to provoke feelings of arousal from him, & because of a lack of options, we only get a few clips of some babes he flirted with over 47 episodes, instead of the fact that we already know he'd had an incredibly passionate, years long relationship with Deanna, he'd be able to draw from for that![]()
Plenty of shows had clip shows early on. "The Golden Girls" instantly springs to mind regarding both the fact their first was before its second season finale and the sheer frequency of them throughout its 7-year run.
The Berman era of Trek didn't do backdoor pilots per se, but there was certainly a great deal of setup for DS9 and Voyager sprinkled throughout TNG (and later DS9).Plenty of shows had clip shows early on. "The Golden Girls" instantly springs to mind regarding both the fact their first was before its second season finale and the sheer frequency of them throughout its 7-year run.
I'm just glad that TNG had fewer backdoor pilots, though if there's a way to get fewer than zero, I'm all pointy ears.![]()
The Berman era of Trek didn't do backdoor pilots per se, but there was certainly a great deal of setup for DS9 and Voyager sprinkled throughout TNG (and later DS9).
The Berman era of Trek didn't do backdoor pilots per se, but there was certainly a great deal of setup for DS9 and Voyager sprinkled throughout TNG (and later DS9).
Given that Trek had abominations like Threshold, Profit and Lace, Code of Honor, and These Are the Voyages to its name, I don't see why Shades of Gray (an OK episode for what it was) gets such hate.
I don't know about why other tv shows used clip shows, but in TNG's case, thanks to the writers' strike and other production difficulties, the clip show was all that they could do or they'd lose another slot.
Really. An 80's era sitcom called "Punky Brewster" was once scheduled to run after football games, if I remember right. Because they could run long, the writers created a handful of 15-minute episodes that they could run when there wasn't time to run the normal 30. If you just call SoG a 30-minute TNG episode, it's actually a pretty good story.Take out the clips and what's left isn't terrible. Indeed, exploring a new planet, with dangerous life being encountered, is the sort of thing TNG needed to do more often instead of the glorified taxi service the show delved into more often. There's a genuine sense of foreboding and danger in the presentation that really hits the spot in "Shades" that's genuinely undeserving of the hate.
I think SG-1 (I can't speak for other shows) established that clip shows are much more tolerable if they're also episodes that serve greater purposes within the series. If "Shades of Gray" ever had any relevance to events that followed, it might be more fondly remembered.
I really didn't like SG1 clips shows, and they were far too frequent. It's why I'm more tolerant of Shades of Gray in that they tried to tell a narrative with the clips and the different emotions. SG1 felt like filler.I think SG-1 (I can't speak for other shows) established that clip shows are much more tolerable if they're also episodes that serve greater purposes within the series. If "Shades of Gray" ever had any relevance to events that followed, it might be more fondly remembered.
I really didn't like SG1 clips shows, and they were far too frequent. It's why I'm more tolerant of Shades of Gray in that they tried to tell a narrative with the clips and the different emotions. SG1 felt like filler.
I'm surprised you think that, since SG-1's clip shows often advanced the storyline in significant ways, like in "Disclosure." They weren't great episodes, since they were still clip shows, but at least there was an attempt to make their frame stories relevant.
I'm surprised you think that, since SG-1's clip shows often advanced the storyline in significant ways, like in "Disclosure." They weren't great episodes, since they were still clip shows, but at least there was an attempt to make their frame stories relevant.
I haven't watched them in a number of years in fairness, so I may have forgotten some detail.
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