There is a profound passage from Piller in the final pages of the book when he's summing up his experiences and what he's learned from his career:
"There’s a new kind of action writing in Hollywood that I simply don’t know how to do. It begins - even before a word is put down on paper - with identifying “set pieces”, big self-contained action moments that are thrilling and memorable, and then finding some way to string all your set pieces into a coherent narrative. The theory is that audiences are really coming for the “eye candy” -- to see how we’ve filled the screen with awesome visuals and special effects. Set pieces sound great in pitches and make for good coming attractions but in my opinion, this approach almost never results in a good movie because it abandons the fundamental demands of story-telling."
Reading this makes me even more sad that Piller is gone... perhaps he could have continued pushing Hollywood to focus on stories "about something" as opposed to all the drek we get now. Then again, maybe it's better that he didn't live to see what mainstream, big budget movies have quickly become... and I wonder, based on his feelings above, what he would have thought about JJ's Star Trek...