Okay, just finished the show, and I have to say, I don't get all the hate directed at "These Are The Voyages." I actually really enjoyed it. It may have been unnecessary to frame around Riker and "The Pegasus," but I have to admit I enjoyed seeing Jonathan Frakes and Marina Sirtis in their roles again. If they were going to do a TNG holodeck episode, I think it would have simply made more sense for it to be more of a history lesson than being focused so specifically around a single episode of TNG. I think the episode did a great job displaying the most important points of the series, and I especially liked the focus on Trip and T'Pol. The episode, more than anything, was about friendship, and I really liked that.
There are too many plot holes for TATV to even make sense to me, which is why I dislike it so much to the point that it makes me angry. I don't usually care about TV episodes; if it sucks, it sucks and I move on. But this is one of the rare times I felt like the writers thought the audience was stupid and wouldn't notice obvious stuff. Stuff that could have been fixed had they revised the script instead of just dusting it off. Among them:
Why was there no Tactical Alert as established in Singularity?
Why didn't Trip even try to make a plan with Archer (as in Andorian Incident, where we saw they could communicate pretty effectively using mirrors and sign language)?
Why was Trip's only option a suicide run when we know from Terra Prime that he could McGyver his way out a tough spot?
Why after 10 years were Reed and Hoshi and Mayweather more concerned about their bad seats than the fact that Trip had just died?
How the heck could the alien ship catch up with Enterprise at warp and nobody noticed it docking or even getting close enough to transport?
Plus, how the heck does this whole hologram exercise even relate to Riker's Big Decision?
I'm no fangirl, but stupid stuff like that makes me mad. There are other parts that I do like, so this isn't blanket hateration, and I don't even mind that they killed Trip. My FF button gets a workout, though, so when I do watch TATV, it's about twelve minutes long.
As for the infamous Gazelle Speech, the analogy works for me. I don't think it's meant to be a Picard-esque lecture, but just a genuine moment of trying to get the Vulcans to get where he's coming from.