3) They all watched SGU rabidly.
So, they're not really hurting the ratings then are they?

This is all too familiar, those extremely vocal, dissatisified fans will habitually watch the series to complain about it!
Mr Awe
3) They all watched SGU rabidly.
Much of the hate just plain comes down to they don't want something that doesn't depend on the humor and breezy plotting of SG-1 and Atlantis.
It was always the humor and general light touch of SG-1 (at least) that made the mediocre writing and general lack of ambition of the Stargate franchise tolerable. Once they surrendered that to the notion that they could and should attempt Drayma they were screwed - there's no evidence at all that this bunch has anything grand to offer.
Last year before Google updated typing in "Stargate Universe" in the search parameters brought up suggestions of "SUCKS" first and second and least 5 other pejoratives.
I think they've done what they set out to do and I think Brad and others have SORELY underestimated them.
Coming from 6 Years of Professional Customer Service I am impressed at what they accomplished in just one financial year.
***Everything Irvy just said***
The premise of SGU, being stranded and suffering hardships, sealed its fate. This is not a dramatically interesting premise, especially in a scientifically illiterate show.
Last year before Google updated typing in "Stargate Universe" in the search parameters brought up suggestions of "SUCKS" first and second and least 5 other pejoratives.
I think they've done what they set out to do and I think Brad and others have SORELY underestimated them.
Coming from 6 Years of Professional Customer Service I am impressed at what they accomplished in just one financial year.
Give the people what they want?
The customer's always right?
Probably not
http://positivesharing.com/2006/07/why-the-customer-is-always-right-results-in-bad-customer-service/
The premise of SGU, being stranded and suffering hardships, sealed its fate. This is not a dramatically interesting premise, especially in a scientifically illiterate show.
Let's take Star Trek as a parallel example. Voyager was an attempt to just change the actors, change the ship, change the premise of the back story a bit, but otherwise it was the same format that Star Trek had always been. Heroic crew arrive at planet, meet the locals, some stuff happens, the bad guys are unmasked, the bold and righteous crew save the day in the nick of time, there may be a recalibration of the deflector dish involved, and we end with a heartwarming display of crew morale to close.
It's my understanding that a general feeling was that Voyager was one too many trips to the well, and that the show never dealt satisfyingly with the harsh realities of being stranded alone on the other side of the galaxy, and to think that it would still be going boldly with a shiny "just out of stardock" spring in it's step week after week was just unbelievable. Giant gouges were taken out of that ship on a weekly basis, but every week there she was, perfect as the day she rolled out of space dock. Power was on a minimum, but there was always enough for the crew to use away at the holodeck willy nilly, creating entire villages for the crew to get drunk in and have a dance with a holographic paddy. The dangerous and "bad" Maquis just shrugged their shoulders at the end of the pilot and put on Starfleet uniforms for the remainder of the show, with one of their most headstrong and anti Starfleet members as the chief engineer. And let's not even mention what they did to the Borg.
Television endorses the reset. Episodic series are easier to follow..
Fans are the biggest complainants against strictly reseting every episode, yet shows like BSG ENT and SGU have shown that the opposite is more toxic to ratings. The only shows to walk the
fine line between episodic and serial is Alias, DS9 and Babylon 5 and they were supposed to be masterplan shows that allowed for occasion familiar reset that didn't keep casual viewers in the dark. They have yet to be emulated.
Television endorses the reset. Episodic series are easier to follow..
Fans are the biggest complainants against strictly reseting every episode, yet shows like BSG ENT and SGU have shown that the opposite is more toxic to ratings. The only shows to walk the
fine line between episodic and serial is Alias, DS9 and Babylon 5 and they were supposed to be masterplan shows that allowed for occasion familiar reset that didn't keep casual viewers in the dark. They have yet to be emulated.
Are you saying Enterprise was highly serialized? I don't know that I would agree with that.
The thing with SGU is that it hasn't been about anything other than getting home until the last episode and it took 27 episodes to find out what the show is about. And honestly, nothing in this show has positively surprised me aside from Scott, Chloe, and Eli being stranded at the end of Lost and do you know what happened? They returned in the first ten minutes of the next episode. Nothing on the show has been all that surprising or that puzzling in the way the writers intended; most of the time things make you wonder if the writers have any idea how to make competent choices in their writing.Saquist, there are many people out there who want something a bit more from their entertainment than the black hat wearing bad guy getting punched on the nose by the immaculately dressed and smiling good guy. Good story telling isn't about who you love and who you hate, it's about engaging you, making you think, making you dream. If all you want to experience is my guys against those guys, watch sport. I hear there's entire channels dedicated to them.
If you watch SGU and think it's about getting them all back home, safe and sound, then really, what's the point? If you think SGU should be another clone of SG1, then please, give yourself a good slap. I love SG1, but I've watched it. I don't want to see another bunch of guys do the same things over again, I want a new story, still existing in the same fictional universe, but a different story, with different people. I don't want a rehashed formula, I want to be surprised, I want to puzzle over what could be happening next, rather than see it coming a mile off.
Saquist, there are many people out there who want something a bit more from their entertainment than the black hat wearing bad guy getting punched on the nose by the immaculately dressed and smiling good guy. Good story telling isn't about who you love and who you hate, it's about engaging you, making you think, making you dream. If all you want to experience is my guys against those guys, watch sport. I hear there's entire channels dedicated to them.
If you watch SGU and think it's about getting them all back home, safe and sound, then really, what's the point? If you think SGU should be another clone of SG1, then please, give yourself a good slap. I love SG1, but I've watched it. I don't want to see another bunch of guys do the same things over again, I want a new story, still existing in the same fictional universe, but a different story, with different people. I don't want a rehashed formula, I want to be surprised, I want to puzzle over what could be happening next, rather than see it coming a mile off.
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