I did not imply you or others are "too dumb" to appreciate TNG.
I got some mod notifications to review this thread, and especially your posts within it, with regards to whether they crossed the line into Trolling.
Trolling is an interesting concept for moderators to assess. Unlike Flaming or Spamming, which are relatively clearcut, trolling requires a certain degree of judgement in deciding whether controversially phrased or otherwise inflammatory remarks are being posted with the intent of having an honest discussion or with the intent of trolling.
My assessment is that you have a uniquely didactic posting style. As the responses of others indicate, whether intended to be so or not, it comes across as obnoxiously condescending to others, not to mention as having a massive chip on your shoulder about what is correct and what is not.
I tend to have a fairly optimistic view of people's nature, and think most people come here to discuss rather than to troll. In that light, I prefer to believe that you're not trying to troll and genuinely didn't anticipate how your comments were likely to be taken.
If that's the case, it's also the case that you would take on board some constructive feedback on your posts. My feedback is that if you want to continue posting in such a didactic manner, you need take
exceptional care with your language in order to not inadvertantly insult other users while you expound your point of view.
Your opening sentences in an earlier post discussing viewers "ignorance & sloppy thinking" is a clear example where any reasonable person with a different opinion would feel very insulted indeed on reading them. A different phrasing of that paragraph would have allowed you to make exactly the same absolutist statements without risking that direct implication about board users.
As I said, I'm willing to see whether your future posts show a difference now that you've had this lengthy explanation of why your posts sail very close to the Trolling wind. As a mod, I'd emphasise that I don't care what your posting style is, or whether you agree/disagree with others... I only care that it doesn't become Trolling. Your posting style makes it much more
likely that people will take offence, so if you want to continue that style, you should take great care with language to avoid that outcome.
If you don't, I will only be able conclude that you don't actually care if your statements cause widespread offence. That makes them deliberately inflammatory, and therefore Trolling by this board's rule.
As I've taken great care to spell these implications out in such explicit detail, I hope you realise that my degree of leeway in granting benefit of doubt to future borderline cases of Trolling is now well & truly exhausted.
First of all, the "ignorance and sloppy thinking" phrase is misleading and out of context. As I clearly have articulated in several posts, by "ignorance" I was not using the colloquial form of "ignorant" as an epithet for "stupid" (in fact, I eschew colloquialisms) rather, in context it was clear that what was meant was only that the the posters under discussion were not
knowledgable about nuances of drama. That is they are "ignorant" of the nuances and subtleties of Stewart's and Spiner's acting, which is why (under that theory) they naturally prefer less subtle, less skilled roles like Q and Wesley. This view is articulated further in my post here,
http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=6001261&postcount=84 , where I specifically spell out ways to help viewers who have been missing so many nuances of TNG how to learn to appreciate those nuances. Similarly, "sloppy thinking" is a term directed against viewers who casually watch episodes in a careless manner, without due attention to nuances of acting, plot, and form (see the post above). As an example of sloppy thinking, one user claimed that "Pen Pals" was a great Picard episode, despite my explaining that the scene where Picard allows Pulaski to call Worf a "coward" only because Worf does not want to violate the Prime Directive is inconsistent with this being a great Picard episode. (See
http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=5983759&postcount=14 ) . The poster is evincing "sloppy thinking" in ignoring (literally ignoring, never even responded to my post) that key scene in the episode and its ramifications.
It is also perhaps misleading context that your original post was prefaced by quoting my denial that I had called users "dumb," as that quote could suggest there is some argument to be made that I had. There is not. I had done nothing of the kind: to say a user is
not knowledgeable about a particular area, or is thinking sloppily about it, is not similar to calling that user "dumb." For example, I am ignorant about gymnastics, but that does not imply or suggest or connote I am dumb. If I were to say I disliked some gymnast, and if someone knowledgeable about gymnastics told me that the gymnast was actually superb and I was ignorant of nuances in her performance but that if I learned to understand those nuances, I would appreciate her performance, it would be illogical for me to be offended. To say a person is "ignorant" about judging acting is no more like saying he is "dumb" than to say he is "ignorant" about judging gymnastics.
Suppose it were true that users who like Wesley, dislike Inner Light, and think Pen Pals is a great Picard episode are, in fact, simply not watching episodes carefully as they could be and are not knowledgeable about the nuances and subtleties of drama. Let's call that hypothesis "A".
Now, if "A" were true, then stating "A" could not in itself be improper. So your only objection to stating "A" in that case would be the form in which it is stated, which you suggest could be incendiary. It is possibly arguable that if the only support for "A" given were that users with a particular viewpoint were "ignorant" then that would be trolling. But in fact, throughout all my posts I was careful to support my claims. I carefully articulated why episodes like Pen Pals were inconsistent with Picard generally; why Wesley was not a good character, and why Stewart (and Spiner) were great, subtle actors utterly unlike those portraying Q and Wes. I also gave, in the post cited, specific exercises that viewers can do to improve their ability to recognize acting nuances. Finally, looking at all my posts together, I have demonstrated the advantages in watching episodes closely by making specific, interesting observations about characters - for example, noting the key eye movements in the model building scene, or the stoop in Inner Light, or the quietness in Measure of a Man, or the Harrison reference, or the Owl Creek reference, among many others.
Thus, if hypothesis A is correct, there is nothing wrong with my posts.
Now, if A were in fact not correct, then you would have a point, since I would be spending so much time defending an incorrect position. But surely it is clear, just looking at the posts, the difference in the level of analytical depth and understanding of TNG that my posts evince compared to the detractors'. I specifically state exactly what is good or not about each performance I am talking about, exactly how something does fit or does not fit into the episode and the series. The detractors almost invariably begin and end their analysis with semi-articulate comments about what they "like" or "don't like". If asked to articulate why, nearly always all they can say is that "I have a right to my opinion." Look, if my detractors really had an argument, they would have actually raised, and not just made their conclusory, information-free, comments repeatedly. So that alone should tell you that the probability that hypothesis A is incorrect is very small.
Here, this is supposed to be a Wesley thread. I've stated exactly and precisely why Wesley was a bad character. Now where, in all this huge thread, can you find ONE POST where someone says specifically why Wesley was a GOOD character? The people who think he is a good character just don't analyze drama in depth or rationally, they only react emotionally - and that's a touchstone of superficial viewing. So even without proving hypothesis A, you can get a very clear sense of its likely correctness just by looking at the way its detractors argue their case.
The surrealism here comes from the fact that most people know when they are not experts something. But not here!
In my gymnastics example, if I posted on a gymnastics message board, and my whole gymnastics analysis was that I liked some performances and not others, and someone said "watch this video to learn more about gymnastics because you are ignorant about gymnastics" I would say (if I were interested in gymnastics) "well, thanks for the advice" or maybe "sorry, no time to watch that video." I would not insult the poster's maturity, accuse him of being a troll, and try to get him banned. By contrast, for some reason a vocal portion of posters here seem utterly convinced that their opinions are based on sophisticated analyses of acting, plot and form, (even though they never actually post any such analyses) - but when someone says: "here is how to spot nuances you are overlooking" - they get deeply offended.
I will concede that I do not treat people ignorant about drama as dispassionately as I might. But it's people ignorant about drama, people who demand overacting and logic-free plots, who basically control most of television and have insured the cancellation of TNG and the almost complete lack of decent TV shows on the air for the last few decades. I actually don't particularly enjoy being reduced to watching twenty-year-old TNG episodes for the 50th time - but there is literally nothing else on. And the reason there is nothing else is because of these unsophisticated viewers, these "Q was a great actor" and "Inner Light was dull" viewers. So understandably I'm rather peeved, and I have a right to be - they're a big part of the reason TV is such a wasteland.