I did one. Look carefully... 

I'm in doubt between "niners will eat you" and "double standard".I did one. Look carefully...![]()
Q Who worked because they were just a plot device introduced by the real villain of the piece, Q.
Best of Both Worlds worked thanks to Locutus and the personal matter of involving Picard.
Scorpion worked due to the 8472 and the personal touch with Seven.
The Borg don't work when they are the true villains and there's no personal touch.
I'm in doubt between "niners will eat you" and "double standard".I did one. Look carefully...![]()
They worked both ways, the Borg were intended at the point to be the next Big Bad of TNG after the abject failure of the Ferengi as a villain. They were not purely intended to be a plot device, they were thrilling in their own right.
In my opinion, Locutus never seemed to be controlling the Borg, he was merely their mouthpiece. The Borg queen however was clearly in charge of the Borg, and that is why I and many others do not like her.
I can only speak for myself, but I found Seven to be grating in Scorpion Part 2. I don't consider Scorpion Part 2 to be one of the best Borg episodes, only Part 1.
I disagree, I think that is when they are at their best. That's why I find Regeneration to be the best Borg episode since Scorpion, they were a faceless force of nature again.
At least six of the characters I listed were considered part of the secondary cast, possibly seven but I'm unsure of the situation involving one of them. The secondary cast on BSG weren't treated much differently than the 7 listed in the opening credits, characters like Tigh and Tyrol had more material than some in the "main cast".
And so what if some of them had outlasted their usefulness? Voyager had plenty of characters like that, Chakotay, Kim and Neelix being the obvious three. They could have been killed off with very little impact upon the show.
Only if it was written badly, if you have good writers then you can provide solid reasoning for the mutiny, and it wouldn't have to be a straightforward Starfleet/Maquis split either. In my past suggestions about a mutiny I had Chakotay siding with Janeway, with Torres or Tuvok leading the mutineers.
That was the plot resolution while I was talking about the character resolution. The plot resolution is easily open for debate, I can see how many people wouldn't like that, but I think the character resolution was spot on.
Good gods...![]()
Yes, I'm smug, and I'm unbearable,
If you want this to end then you're just going to have to end it yourself, like you said you would a few posts back.
All the episodes that the VOY Haters hate that had the Borg in them as an actual antagonist. They even started hating the ones with the personal touch (the Queen episodes) so even THAT was a limited option.
The secondary cast on BSG weren't treated much differently than the 7 listed in the opening credits, characters like Tigh and Tyrol had more material than some in the "main cast".
Yeah, like how O'Brien confused the hell out of people on TNG.Because it would've cost more, and it would've confused the viewers who missed past episode and wouldn't know who the recurring characters were. And they would've considered the Equinox survivors to be too irredeemable to want to write about.
If he's the guy in engineering working with Torres? Does this need to be explained?And what if they missed the first episode with Carey? They wouldn't know who he was in the later episode.
Skip the credits. They'd still know that the guy with the tattoo was a guy who worked on the ship.Kim and Chakotay are the ones with their names in the opening credits![]()
O'Brien became a regular on another show
Your capacity for omniscience never ceases to astound. TNG's ratings did rather better than VOY's and episodes like "The Wounded" were pretty well recieved. People liked the 'why's he so important' character.then the audience would be "who is this guy? Why's he so important?" and turn off the TV.
Skip the credits. They'd still know that the guy with the tattoo was a guy who worked on the ship.
Not talking about that. I'm talking about O'Brien on TNG. While on TNG, O'Brien was exactly the sort of secondary character we're discussing here, so he's a pretty good example of how to execute it in a highly episodic series.
That he was made a main character on DS9 was in recognition of his popularity and his success as what was initially a very, very minor role.
Your capacity for omniscience never ceases to astound. TNG's ratings did rather better than VOY's and episodes like "The Wounded" were pretty well recieved. People liked the 'why's he so important' character.
In an episode where Chakotay does very little (there are more than a few of these), the hypothetical viewer may not know that he's the XO or that he's a prominent member of the cast. It's very unlikely he'd know that Chuckles is a Maquis.Skip the credits. They'd still know that the guy with the tattoo was a guy who worked on the ship.
Because he's the XO, has his name in the credits and appears in a prominent role in most of the series. That's different from some random guy who shows up in the middle of the 1st season or whatever.
Could have but wasn't. And O'Brien wasn't always an extra prior to this point - he sat in on the poker game in "The Measure of a Man", for example, and had a few bits and bobs of dialogue. It meant something, though, that he was a guy who was there.And again, until "The Wounded" he was basically just some extra who could've been played by anyone. And even then the Wounded stuff could've been done by any random guest star and no one would've complained, like Stiles in TOS' "Balance of Terror".
It'd have some value for those who regularly watched the show. Which was the whole point of bringing Carey back for "Friendship One" - if you actually had to have seen VOY in its earliest seasons for his appearance here to be relevant at all. Having Carey guest for a couple of episodes each season as one of the engineers would never have confused casual viewers and would have been a nice continuity nod for VOY's weekly watchers. It was something VOY did do, just rather erratically - Vorik is another example, disappearing for years at a time before popping in to remind people he's not dead. Chell would be another one - one appearance in the first season, and then again... in the seventh.And would it have meant anything to the people who missed his prior episodes or were confused by his appearance? No, because it's just the same to them as having some random redshirt die off.
Point is, until O'Brien became a regular on DS9 he didn't really become a real character.
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