After the Enterprise makes first contact, they send in the real science ships. Y'know, the ones with the pink chairs and the captain who doesn't know when to raise shields.
Of course subspace communication exists. Lots of follow ups can basically be done from people sitting in a chair in front of a computer monitor.
Thing is, while I’d love to see such a series, I suspect not enough of a general audience would stick with it — at least not without traditional TV “adventure” plots shoehorned into it (something along the lines of Earth 2?).Although I've long felt that the way Trek approaches exploration makes little sense. If you're going to explore a planet, you don't just drop in for a few days, visit one place, and then leave. Exploring a whole planet would take years or decades. I've often thought a more plausible and interesting approach would be to devote an entire season to exploring a given planet, with multiple nations and cultures and biomes and historic ruins and developing cultural conflicts and so forth, and then start over with a different planet the next season.
Perhaps if it were structured as a workplace comedy?Thing is, while I’d love to see such a series, I suspect not enough of a general audience would stick with it — at least not without traditional TV “adventure” plots shoehorned into it (something along the lines of Earth 2?).
I really liked EARTH 2. A shame it didn't get a second season.Thing is, while I’d love to see such a series, I suspect not enough of a general audience would stick with it — at least not without traditional TV “adventure” plots shoehorned into it (something along the lines of Earth 2?).
Thing is, while I’d love to see such a series, I suspect not enough of a general audience would stick with it — at least not without traditional TV “adventure” plots shoehorned into it (something along the lines of Earth 2?).
How about Bajor, we got to see various parts of it over the course of DS9.My point is that a realistically portrayed inhabited planet would have a rich enough variety of regions and cultures to sustain a whole season of storytelling -- unlike the usual fictional "planets" we see that have less cultural or ethnic variety than a single neighborhood of a major city.
I thought that was yellow...?Hey, Kzinti are pink. It's the color of FEAR.
"But, where would I find such a ship? Why am I asking you?"*
How about Bajor, we got to see various parts of it over the course of DS9.
The amount of diversity our little Planet called Earth has is crazy.Yes, the planets and cultures that make recurring appearances do get more development, although sometimes they stay pretty stereotyped. We saw various places on Bajor, but the whole planet was still portrayed as having a single planetary culture, with some regional variations. I'm talking about something that has the kind of cultural diversity Earth has, with numerous different cultures with their own distinct histories, languages, beliefs, etc. (I've tried to portray that in my Biauru stories in Analog.)
It would've been cool to see the Avian Xindi's.At least Xindus, the Xindi homeworld destroyed in the 21st century, had a vast, almost ridiculous range of native cultures since there were five (and at one point six) sentient species on just that one planet.
One of the most unique races in the franchise. I like that the Xindi were 5 different species. (6 if you count the extinct Avians... which I always found somewhat ironic. The one species that had natural flight couldn't just... fly away. Or rather, build ships to fly away. There's some dark humor in that.) A lot of story potential with that idea.
Primates are. Just ask @Jayson1Or maybe the Insectoids. They weren't exactly all about hugs, either.
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