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A few things to discuss about Kes

Yes. But its ratings were low during its run. People didn't really start appreciating it until well after it ended.
But at least the ratings were stable and it did create a solid and loyal fanbase.

To quote a rock musician I once interviewed. "Better to have 200 loyal fans than 10 000 who abandons us for the next musical trend".

While I agree with you in general, remember that we're both playing Monday morning quarterback, and we don't have all the information. If the choices were "make TNG lite or get canceled", it's expected that they chose the option that got them a paycheck
That's right. Unfortunately the big hotshots only cared about ratings and money themselves, people with calculators instead of brains and wallets instead of souls. Such people have no feeling for the artistic or constructive, they only care about money and in the long run they lose because their greed gets in the way forconstructive thinking and it all leads up to a productthe fans will abandon.

It's the same in the music business. How many good bands and artists haven't been wasted because of greedy managers and stupid record companies who have tried to steer the bands and artists into something commercial and lightweight, thus alienating the real fans of the band's original music.

The best is when the hotshots simply leave the creative people to do what they want. That's why bands like Beatles and Rolling Stones where so big. They were left alone to do what they could do best and everyone won something because of that, the bands, the record company and the fans.

The only really repulsive element was how they treated women. And it could easily have been stated that there was a groundswell of females who were demanding more equitable treatment. Instead of having Ishka change everything single-handedly, make her and Pel two voices in an increasingly loud chorus, onr the male establishment could no longer ignore. Not revolution, not transformation, but evolution.
A good suggestion. In the long run, greedy females would have been accepted in the Ferengi society as much as greedy males and it wouldn't have affected foundations of the Ferengi society that much.

But as for the Ferengi, I've always assumed that Rom wasn't the right leader for them. He was a tecnician, not a politician.

In the long run, he would be too weak and would sooner or later be overthrown by someone ruthless type, like Brunt who would restore most of the old Ferengi ways of life.

I agree totally. Where we disagree is that I don't believe sacrificing a character for the good of the story is necessarily a waste.
It might depend a lot of the circumstances and which character who is wasted.


It wouldn't even be that hard. Trying to write a Janeway story would be crazy difficult because many of her actions contradict many others, so writing a proper character dossier would be hard. Harry, with far fewer contradicting actions, is easier to get a handle on.
I agree on that.


I did the same. The main cast member I envisioned was Weyoun 9. And, because I sometimes will save a character I like same way you will, he was handled by Sloan 2.
Great idea! Sloan was another character which they wasted for no reason or benefit at all.
What they should have done is to come up with a Section 31 series shortly after Voyager with Sloan as main character or one of the main characters.

Everyone likes The Vortas! :techman:


Problem is, it was the people who were supposed to be doing the firing who were messing things up. Like Rick "let's just make another Dax" Berman and Brannon "someone gotta be duh ensign" Braga.

When the blind leadeth the blind, get out of their way!
That's the main problem with it all. berman and Braga wouldn't have solved the problem because they were the problem.

And when those who could have dumped Berman and Braga were the same greedy calculators as I described in a comment above, the road to destruction was set.

Fortunately, in a weird chain of events DS9 did flourish because those in charge of that show were left to do what they wanted to do while the greedy guys were keepping their eyes on TNG and what would supposed to be "the next TNG" while the constructive people who ran DS9 could be creative and do what they were good at, at least most of the time.
 
What they should have done is to come up with a Section 31 series shortly after Voyager with Sloan as main character or one of the main characters.
It's bizarre that you often refer to the new trek shows as 'doom and gloom', but then advocate for a series about a rogue secret agency that operated outside of federation law and attempted genocide.
 
To quote a rock musician I once interviewed. "Better to have 200 loyal fans than 10 000 who abandons us for the next musical trend".

I like that musician's attitude. :techman:

That's right. Unfortunately the big hotshots only cared about ratings and money themselves, people with calculators instead of brains and wallets instead of souls. Such people have no feeling for the artistic or constructive, they only care about money and in the long run they lose because their greed gets in the way forconstructive thinking and it all leads up to a productthe fans will abandon.

It's not always greedy hotshots. Sometimes, it's people who just want to keep themselves and their people employed. And to do that, they have to give the people what they want.

It's the same in the music business. How many good bands and artists haven't been wasted because of greedy managers and stupid record companies who have tried to steer the bands and artists into something commercial and lightweight, thus alienating the real fans of the band's original music.

It's been going on for a long time. Elvis Presley was victim of such a manager.

A good suggestion. In the long run, greedy females would have been accepted in the Ferengi society as much as greedy males and it wouldn't have affected foundations of the Ferengi society that much.

The whole "naked and submissive women" business had its birth in a practically throwaway line in TNG S1.

But as for the Ferengi, I've always assumed that Rom wasn't the right leader for them. He was a tecnician, not a politician.

In the long run, he would be too weak and would sooner or later be overthrown by someone ruthless type, like Brunt who would restore most of the old Ferengi ways of life.

Had the Nagus still been an autocrat, probably. Under the modified system, the Nagus might have been more of a figurehead.

It might depend a lot of the circumstances and which character who is wasted.

True. With characters in your own stories, whom no one else is going to use, you have free reign. With characters in a greater fandom, like Star Trek, you want to think before killing one off. Especially in a non-Trek fandom where people actually stay dead.

Great idea! Sloan was another character which they wasted for no reason or benefit at all.
What they should have done is to come up with a Section 31 series shortly after Voyager with Sloan as main character or one of the main characters.

It could scarcely have been worse than what they came up with.

Fortunately, in a weird chain of events DS9 did flourish because those in charge of that show were left to do what they wanted to do while the greedy guys were keepping their eyes on TNG and what would supposed to be "the next TNG" while the constructive people who ran DS9 could be creative and do what they were good at, at least most of the time.

Ironically, DS9 was the overlooked series, so it got to do what it wanted. And as you said, that worked out well for it. It had competent showrunners, and didn't need the powers that be sticking their nose in its business.

It's bizarre that you often refer to the new trek shows as 'doom and gloom', but then advocate for a series about a rogue secret agency that operated outside of federation law and attempted genocide.

Well, considering that the Dominion introduced itself through mass murder, created a race that was genetically designed to worship the founders and kill indiscriminately, tormented a planetary population with a horrific disease, and attempted a genocide of its own against the Cardassians... I'm not exactly shedding tears about S31 taking a potshot at them.

My version of S31 as recurring characters was a bit more comedic, largely because it featured S31 salvaging a Dominion cloning facility, so it created its own version of Weyoun.
 
Well, considering that the Dominion introduced itself through mass murder, created a race that was genetically designed to worship the founders and kill indiscriminately, tormented a planetary population with a horrific disease, and attempted a genocide of its own against the Cardassians... I'm not exactly shedding tears about S31 taking a potshot at them.
Sure, Jan. I'm sure if new trek was fine with genociding an enemy you would absolutely have a problem with it. But that isn't the point, i am trying to make. It's hypocritical to call new trek 'doom and gloom' and claim it isn't star trek while advocating for a potential series about an organisation that went against everything the Federation stood for.
 
The way I see it, the Federation is like a vast organism, and Section 31 is like its digestive terminus. It's nasty and gross and no one likes to talk about it... but it serves an essential purpose.
 
It's bizarre that you often refer to the new trek shows as 'doom and gloom', but then advocate for a series about a rogue secret agency that operated outside of federation law and attempted genocide.
But it don't have to be that way.
It could be something more like NCIS.

And I suppose that you've never seen a James Bond movie.

And even with the worst possible scenario, it still wouldn't be so much "doom and gloom" as DSC, PIC and the NuTrek movies with its overall gloomy scenarios, long torture scenes and depressive stories where whole planets are been blown to pieces, not to mention planets who are and have been very important för Star Trek as such

I like that musician's attitude. :techman:
Yes! He was right!

It's not always greedy hotshots. Sometimes, it's people who just want to keep themselves and their people employed. And to do that, they have to give the people what they want.
And then they end up giving people what they don't want!

It's been going on for a long time. Elvis Presley was victim of such a manager.
Yes indeed. And not the only one.

The whole "naked and submissive women" business had its birth in a practically throwaway line in TNG S1.
That's correct.

Had the Nagus still been an autocrat, probably. Under the modified system, the Nagus might have been more of a figurehead.
But someone like Brunt might try to change that too.

True. With characters in your own stories, whom no one else is going to use, you have free reign. With characters in a greater fandom, like Star Trek, you want to think before killing one off. Especially in a non-Trek fandom where people actually stay dead.
That's right.

It could scarcely have been worse than what they came up with.
No, it could actually have been interesting.

Ironically, DS9 was the overlooked series, so it got to do what it wanted. And as you said, that worked out well for it. It had competent showrunners, and didn't need the powers that be sticking their nose in its business.
Those in charge of DS9 were probably happy about that nbecause they got the opportunity to create something good and interesting.

Well, considering that the Dominion introduced itself through mass murder, created a race that was genetically designed to worship the founders and kill indiscriminately, tormented a planetary population with a horrific disease, and attempted a genocide of its own against the Cardassians... I'm not exactly shedding tears about S31 taking a potshot at them.

My version of S31 as recurring characters was a bit more comedic, largely because it featured S31 salvaging a Dominion cloning facility, so it created its own version of Weyoun.
I can agree on that.

It's also a reason why I find the scenario in In The Pale Moonlight realistic and acceptable. If I had been in charge of a country or a planet which was threatened by a ruthless and genocidial enemy, i would have done exactly what Sisko did in that episode.

You just have to look at what happened to Cardassia at the end of the war and what happened to the people on the planet in the Teplan system in the episode The Quickening to see what could have happened to the Federation planets if the Dominion had won.

Preventing that was necessary, even if the methods to do so weren't so nice.

The way I see it, the Federation is like a vast organism, and Section 31 is like its digestive terminus. It's nasty and gross and no one likes to talk about it... but it serves an essential purpose.

Even free and democratic societies have intelligence organizations whose methods aren't always using nice or even legal methods.
 
It could be something more like NCIS.
This might be one of the most ludicrous and hypocritical comments I have ever read on the BBS. I'm sure a series about an agency that is willing to commit GENOCIDE and regularly conducts assassinations and tortures people will be exactly like NCIS. I'm sure they'll have some wacky goth girl and a guy named ducky as well.

Like what planet are you on? Do you actually know what genocide is?
 
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