24 is not the same - its is designed to be a non-soapish show with different paced show with a logical step by step beginning to end
Could someone give me an operating definition of "soapish"? I'm not quite sure what this is supposed to mean, beyond a type of programming that jimbtnp2 doesn't like. I'd guess that it means shows that aren't really about how the characters solve the problem-of-the-week, but that's just a guess.
Objectively, it would mean any show which carries its story forth from week to week. It would also include shows which focus on interpersonal relationships. BSG is very soapish by the first definition, somewhat soapish by the second ("Unfinished Business" suffered mightily for it).
However, the way most sci-fi fans use it in reference to BSG, it is simply a put-down, a way of equating the dramatic form and tropes of soap operas (as delineated above) with the overwhelmingly poor quality of most soap operas. It's a poor argument--tv drama improved vastly when serious dramatic shows (
Hill Street Blues and, to a lesser extent,
St. Elsewhere) adopted the objective definition of soap opera while largely jettisoning the craptacularly bad elements. By contrast, the true nighttime soaps of roughly the same period--
Dallas, Dynasty--did not. As such, they are remembered as campy, dumb fun by those who liked them, garbage by those (like me) who did not.
This hybrid form of serious drama has been the genre of the vast majority of critically praised dramatic shows that have come since:
The Sopranos, Six Feet Under, The Wire, The West Wing and, yes,
BSG, to name but a very few.
Of course, it's not so hard to see another layer to the "soap opera" put-down: the original BSG was straight up boy's adventure, where two dashing heroes (three, if you count Boomer--it's a stretch) swashed and buckled to their hearts content, father knew best and women existed to either be two-timed or die. NuBSG has literally feminized Starbuck and Boomer and, in Laura Roslin, given us a mother who often knows better than father (as he often knows better than she), not to mention the Sixes, Threes and Eights among the Cylons. When people deride BSG as a soap opera, they are really calling it "womanish." By implied extension, they are calling its male fans "sissies."
Gotta go,
Evita's coming on.