Do BSG (2004), it's much better to binge watch than B5 (but B5 is great too)
I've seen up through mid-season three of BSG, the characters really do nothing for me.
Do BSG (2004), it's much better to binge watch than B5 (but B5 is great too)
NuBSG was good for three seasons, then absolutely fell off a cliff in the fourth. One of the things I love about B5 is that it's one of the few shows out there to do a long-term story arc and actually stick the landing.Do BSG (2004), it's much better to binge watch than B5 (but B5 is great too)
It wasn't really about the characters (who were hard to love), nor for that matter the worldbuilding (which was all but nonexistent). What made nuBSG work (when it did) were the political allegories, which it pulled off masterfully.I've seen up through mid-season three of BSG, the characters really do nothing for me.
It wasn't really about the characters (who were hard to love), nor for that matter the worldbuilding (which was all but nonexistent). What made nuBSG work (when it did) were the political allegories, which it pulled off masterfully.
I agree. To that end, I've always found Jack's line in Shades of Grey "We don't need their stuff; we do need them." to be a better Star Trek moment than a lot of Star Trek moments.Stargate SG-1 actually pulled this off great:
Additionally to Stargate Command, there was a secret "above the law" spy agency to protect Earth from aliens that operated without supervision, called the NID. They fucked up BIGLY. Regularly. They showed to be exactly as incompetent as can be expected from people that think "rules" and "laws" are for pussies. But they were a constant annoyance to the SG-1 team, because their "Must do everything to protect Earth without any regards for laws or ethics"-attitude was popular with the politicians, and they got repeatedly backed up from higher ups, only to fuck up again and AGAIN and make the situations usually worse.
THAT'S how I see Section 31 in the Star Trek universe.
While I'm certainly one to scoff at B5's quality, that's just mean.B5 inhabits the same tier for me as Andromeda or Earth Final Conflict. Never could muster up the effort to get past season 2. Conversely, DSC is my favorite TV scifi since DS9.
This post has heart. Also, 80s-hair Nancy make me melt. Every time.
Glad it worked for you, and the allegories were OK, but I couldn't sit through it without wanting to slit my wrists.It wasn't really about the characters (who were hard to love), nor for that matter the worldbuilding (which was all but nonexistent). What made nuBSG work (when it did) were the political allegories, which it pulled off masterfully
Multi quote, my kingdom for a multi quote!
But... but... but... i can't think that far aheadMulti quote, my kingdom for a multi quote!
I don't understand?? Hybrid women??
I'm still a bit confused but one can't not like Blazing Saddles, though it's been years since I've watched it. Not sure how it stands up.
The NID itself actually was supposed to be a legitimate government agency. The problem was they apparently had an extremely lax screening process for their personnel as nearly everyone in the NID was a "rogue agent." The writers eventually realized how silly this was, and had the rogue elements eventually split off from the NID and form their own organization, called "the Trust," which I'll agree was more or less a Section 31 of Stargate. Or, rather, they were until they got taken over by Goa'uld who then decided to partake in corporate espionage in a storyline that ultimately went nowhere.Stargate SG-1 actually pulled this off great:
Additionally to Stargate Command, there was a secret "above the law" spy agency to protect Earth from aliens that operated without supervision, called the NID. They fucked up BIGLY. Regularly. They showed to be exactly as incompetent as can be expected from people that think "rules" and "laws" are for pussies. But they were a constant annoyance to the SG-1 team, because their "Must do everything to protect Earth without any regards for laws or ethics"-attitude was popular with the politicians, and they got repeatedly backed up from higher ups, only to fuck up again and AGAIN and make the situations usually worse.
The NID itself actually was supposed to be a legitimate government agency. The problem was they apparently had an extremely lax screening process for their personnel as nearly everyone in the NID was a "rogue agent." The writers eventually realized how silly this was, and had the rogue elements eventually split off from the NID and form their own organization, called "the Trust," which I'll agree was more or less a Section 31 of Stargate. Or, rather, they were until they got taken over by Goa'uld who then decided to partake in corporate espionage in a storyline that ultimately went nowhere.
That show really should have ended when RDA left.
Are you fucking shitting me? RDA is the universally accepted abbreviation for Richard Dean Anderson, the show's fucking lead actor for the first eight seasons!I've watched every episode of that show, albeit a long time ago, and I have no idea what you're talking about. Who's RDA for one thing?
Oh it's not "unpopular". We know it has enough watchers to get a second season. I would use "polarizing" instead of "unpopular"
I always called him MacGyver. You mean he goes by another name?Are you fucking shitting me? RDA is the universally accepted abbreviation for Richard Dean Anderson, the show's fucking lead actor for the first eight seasons!
Me too, lol.I always called him MacGyver. You mean he goes by another name?
i am surprised with the backlash against Section 31. Everybody seemed to have loved Lorca (before he was turned into a Bond villian) and his "end justifies the means" attitude...
If there's one thing I don't like about Section 31 it's that since their introduction they've become the Star Trek universe's boogeymen in that everything shady that goes on is their doing. The novels have made Section 31 behind Kirk's mission to steal a cloaking device in The Enterprise Incident, the discovery of the Omega Molecule and subsequent drafting of the Omega Directive and the events of Insurrection. TATV even implied they were involved with Admiral Pressman and the whole Pegasus fiasco.And as I mentioned in another thread, in some future show we may find out Section 31 was responsible for blowing up Klingon moon Praxis.
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