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Berman-era v. TOS Pacing: What do you think?

Was the "unrelated subplot" a later development in the show?

I don't think the subplot was usually unrelated; it generally tied in to the main plot at some level and sometimes proved the key to its resolution, it was just more focused on character development.

Samaritan Snare -- with the Enterprise dealing with the Pakleds and Picard dealing with surgery -- was in Season 2. Other well-known examples include The Host (introduction of the Trills), The Most Toys (the crew comes to terms with Data's apparent demise), Hollow Pursuits (Reg Barclay), The Measure of a Man (Picard's past with the JAG officer), Force of Nature (a Data-Spot subplot), and quite famously Yesterday's Enterprise (Yar's subplot) and The Best of Both Worlds (Riker's rivalry with Shelby). That's a very abbreviated list, and I have the feeling a lot of those are from Season 3 or later.

Thanks. It's all lost in the mists of my memory. The ones I saw a week ago seemed unrelated, but I might not have been paying enough attention.
 
Definitely. I breezed through a TOS rewatch about a year ago, but couldn't manage more than half of TNG. It was slow motion Trek in comparison (and also incredibly bland, character and plot-wise)
The most highly rated show in the ST franchise. And unlike STXI, TNG is still being watched and discussed.
 
Keep in mind that TOS only had three Central Characters, and that was on a good day. A lot of the time it was just Kirk and Spock as the Centrals.

It's inherently easier to tell a single story when you have such a small cast (also, in TOS the Trio were also Freudian Archetypes of the Id, Ego and Superego which makes the interactions easier) without needing any B or C plots. Not so when you have a larger ensembles of 7 or more characters.

So if it's down to the pacing and lack of other plots, TOS had it easier due to the smaller cast and said cast also being designed to operate as one whole "Freud" unit vs TNG and Beyond's larger ensembles.
 
I must be the odd man out, here. I grew up watching TOS for years before TNG ever came out. I've seen many episodes from both series multiple times. However, after I took a decade-long break from Trek, I came back to the series and I found that I could watch almost any TNG series and find something I enjoyed about it, but more than half of TOS episodes were now too tedious for me to finish. I think it's because I would remember the 'twist' or resolution of the stories and entire episodes were just build-up to that. In TNG, the character stories could still be interesting even if the main plot was planet-of-Romans silly.


Also, the soap-opera nature of TNG really gave us a lot of fodder for Youtube edits.
 
Definitely. I breezed through a TOS rewatch about a year ago, but couldn't manage more than half of TNG. It was slow motion Trek in comparison (and also incredibly bland, character and plot-wise)
The most highly rated show in the ST franchise. And unlike STXI, TNG is still being watched and discussed.

The original series, aired in the three network era, had much larger ratings (even when it was in last place) than any other Trek series.

The '09 movie of course is still being watched (I've seen it on TV regularly) and discussed (we've got a whole forum here devoted to it and the recent sequel).

Which is not to rip on Star Trek: The Next Generation. I have the first season on Blu-Ray and have seen the entire series at least four times.
 
Definitely. I breezed through a TOS rewatch about a year ago, but couldn't manage more than half of TNG. It was slow motion Trek in comparison (and also incredibly bland, character and plot-wise)
The most highly rated show in the ST franchise. And unlike STXI, TNG is still being watched and discussed.
If you're gonna get all offended by my opinion, I'd like to point out that, in addition to what Harvey pointed out, there's a new TOS movie coming in 2016. When's the next TNG movie?:devil:
 
Definitely. I breezed through a TOS rewatch about a year ago, but couldn't manage more than half of TNG. It was slow motion Trek in comparison (and also incredibly bland, character and plot-wise)
The most highly rated show in the ST franchise. And unlike STXI, TNG is still being watched and discussed.

I'd point out that there's 178 episodes of TNG and that Star Trek 2009 is two-hours long.

There's obviously a lot more TNG to actually discuss. But then there's the fact that without the remaster I doubt there'd be very much traffic in the TNG forum at all. A discussion of TNG's consensus best episode has generated 23 replies in more than a week since the first post.
 
On Topic, I gotta say the pacing in TNG and, too often, the rest of Star Trek was fabulously frickin' terrible! Especially compared to the best of the original show!

Constantly we got the A and B story in TNG, a 'tradition' that continued in the later series that, frankly, was piss poor writing. Write one story or get out. Two half hour stories is a cop-out and just terrible. Hated it, every time.

One thing that always bothered me was that, during an emergency, a red alert, characters might go from one place on the ship to another and, in TOS they would run, but in TNG they would walk. I'd actually jump in frustration! Hurry the smeg up!!!

When TNG actually had a tight story I'd love it, but they far too often settled for this formula of A and B stories and characters seemingly barely aware of immanent destruction as they strolled along and spit out exposition. Drove... me... nuts.

imho. Of course. :)
 
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B5 spoiled me on the A / B / C plot thing - but there it had continuity. The separate arcs kept several balls in the air, and often a B or C arc turned into the A plot in a few episodes. I prefer that, frankly, as the series is then a continuing saga, instead of a collection of syndicated episodes with no theme. Some TNG eps should have been run this way, IMO. The Child would have been so much more convincing if Deanna had turned up pregnant halfway through the season, and had the child near the end. When Q lost his powers, that should have been the B or C plot for several episodes.
 
Constantly we got the A and B story in TNG, a 'tradition' that continued in the later series that, frankly, was piss poor writing. Write one story or get out. Two half hour stories is a cop-out and just terrible. Hated it, every time.

TOS didn't have to do B and C plots because they only had 3 central characters (and that's on a good day, sometimes it was just Kirk and Spock) with everyone else as background characters who didn't really matter (aside from the guest stars/guest villains). It's inherently easier to write a single story about 2-3 people than it is to write one about 7-8 people with all characters represented equally.
 
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That's a good point, but it doesn't make for a better story I reckon. If both stories followed a theme and came together, that would validate and create a cohesive story. But that rarely happened. I can't think of an example in TNG right now but I'm sure it happened a couple of times. Though, it should have happened all the time, in my humble opinion. ;)
 
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That's a good point, but it doesn't make for a better story I reckon. If both stories followed a theme and came together, that would validate and create a cohesive story. But that rarely happened. I can't think of an example in TNG right now but I'm sure it happened a couple of times. Though, it should have happened all the time, in my humble opinion. ;)
Depends on what you're writing. In B5, where it fed continuity, multiple arcs per ep was a good device. In syndicated writing, A & B arcs should be used more sparingly, and often complementing each other, or else contrasting, rather than disconnected. For example, the Ep with the Hathaway, Weasel's science experiment was a B-plot that fed the A-plot.
 
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You're making excellent points. I just never watched B5. 'Cause I'm a snob. lol

It's clear B5's story telling was effective and J. Michael Straczynski certainly wasn't anyone to sneeze at. He was writing all this while the TNG crowd was splitting up scripts to different writers and creating these A and B stories (cause it was easier with 9 characters? How many characters did B5 have? Yea, I see) that had nothing to do with each other. I think I'd have to say, B5 out did TNG in this regard even if I wasn't a fan. So, point taken my friend. :)

Of course we all know that DS9 stole more than a little from B5, especially as it went on. And too it's benefit. I don't mean plot, but just style and, more importantly, writing. Or am I wrong?
 
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You're making excellent points. I just never watched B5. 'Cause I'm a snob. lol

It's clear B5's story telling was effective and J. Michael Straczynski certainly wasn't anyone to sneeze at. He was writing all this while the TNG crowd was splitting up scripts to different writers and creating these A and B stories (cause it was easier with 9 characters? How many characters did B5 have? Yea, I see) that had nothing to do with each other. I think I'd have to say, B5 out did TNG in this regard even if I wasn't a fan. So, point taken my friend. :)

Of course we all know that DS9 stole more than a little from B5, especially as it went on. And too it's benefit. I don't mean plot, but just style and, more importantly, writing. Or am I wrong?

Well, B5 had the advantage of having one single mind behind everything who knew what he wanted to happen. JMS always knew where he wanted the series to go.

With TNG, it was the same as TOS: Basically just the random adventures of these guys with no greater plot. That's not a bad thing, personally.
 
TOS didn't have to do B and C plots because they only had 3 central characters (and that's on a good day, sometimes it was just Kirk and Spock) with everyone else as background characters who didn't really matter (aside from the guest stars/guest villains). It's inherently easier to write a single story about 2-3 people than it is to write one about 7-8 people with all characters represented equally.

True, but in some ways this worked against TOS because Chekov, Uhura Sulu and Scotty never seemed really fleshed out, or had normal lives because they always focused on the Big Three.

On the other hand, TNG dedicated some episodes around almost all the characters, like Geordi, Worf and even Tasha Yar.

This fleshed out the characters a little more, plus they are some the best episodes of the series.

Focusing on the Big Three gave TOS, at times, a one dimensional feel to it.
 
It's inherently easier to write a single story about 2-3 people than it is to write one about 7-8 people with all characters represented equally.

I think this was a huge flaw of TNG. If there wasn't something for Geordi to do in a given story then he just needed to be left out of it. They always crammed all seven characters into an episode and it weakened the show.
 
I think BillJ makes a great point, but, there's something in the back of my head telling me that having many characters as the cause of this fractured storytelling, or perhaps just a way to deal with it, doesn't add up. Other stories manage with just as many characters or more, why not TNG? Firefly had, what, nine major characters and it didn't have this problem, did it?

I wish I had some interviews with the writers on hand so we could see what they said about all this, then perhaps we'd gain some insight?
 
Serenity did have this problem, though. If you haven't seen the series, half the main characters are ciphers.
 
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