To me, as a writer, it's surprising that so many laypeople see it as a "disappointment" when one idea is replaced with another
Except Superman, there can only be one kind of Superman.

To me, as a writer, it's surprising that so many laypeople see it as a "disappointment" when one idea is replaced with another
Your point ignores the crux of what I'm saying.
So let me rephrase it, if after Barry Allen appeared on Arrow when the Flash series was commissioned they at the last minute switched to Don Allen, don't you think that would be a slightly disappointing protagonist choice to fans of the Flash?
Legacy heroes are fine and all, and of course you can do great and interesting stuff with it, but this was supposed to be Vixen's first major exposure in live action, and it turns out it won't be the Vixen it will be a Vixen.
I agree. Some of us still think it was a poor decision to bring Barry back in the first place.I imagine Wally West fans could've been thrilled.![]()
I too was disappointed with the changing of Ro to Kira, ultimately it was the actress decision not to play the part that caused it. However in my imagination, Ro quit Starfleet and joins the Bajoran military. While serving on DS9 with Sisko, she has a spiritual awakening after a run in with the prophets. However with that said, I'm actually glad we got Kira instead of Ro. I liked it so much, I named my daughter Kira.I think those changes were for the better in both cases. They ditched Locarno, not just for creator-rights reasons, but because they decided Locarno had been too unrepentant and wasn't ultimately a redeemable character. And Ro wouldn't have worked as well as Kira because Ro was a Starfleet officer, meaning she would've been required to obey Sisko's orders. Sure, she wasn't above questioning orders, but actually defying them would've cost Ro her job in short order, so she wouldn't have been able to be as strong a foil for Sisko as Kira was. Also, Ro didn't believe in Bajoran religion, so she wouldn't have been as effective a contrast to the Starfleet characters in that respect either.
To me, as a writer, it's surprising that so many laypeople see it as a "disappointment" when one idea is replaced with another, as if that were some kind of failure. On the contrary, it happens all the time in creativity; the first stab at an idea is rarely the best one. Even if you're required to abandon an idea for reasons beyond your control, it can still give you an opening to come up with something even better. Because the more obstacles you face, the more creative you have to be to get around them -- so in a creative field, obstacles are opportunities, not failures. (I mean, heck, George Lucas's plan A was to get the movie rights to Flash Gordon. When that didn't work, he made up Star Wars instead. Was that a disappointment?)
I get your point, I was just making a joke about Barry being your example.Your point ignores the crux of what I'm saying.
So let me rephrase it, if after Barry Allen appeared on Arrow when the Flash series was commissioned they at the last minute switched to Don Allen, don't you think that would be a slightly disappointing protagonist choice to fans of the Flash?
Legacy heroes are fine and all, and of course you can do great and interesting stuff with it, but this was supposed to be Vixen's first major exposure in live action, and it turns out it won't be the Vixen it will be a Vixen.
I imagine Wally West fans could've been thrilled.![]()
I too was disappointed with the changing of Ro to Kira, ultimately it was the actress decision not to play the part that caused it. However in my imagination, Ro quit Starfleet and joins the Bajoran military. While serving on DS9 with Sisko, she has a spiritual awakening after a run in with the prophets. However with that said, I'm actually glad we got Kira instead of Ro. I liked it so much, I named my daughter Kira.
I disagree with Christopher on this. Yes, things worked out with Kira on DS9 but they could easily have also worked with Ro Laren. The stories would have been different but who's to say they would not have been better.
Also Paris was basically Locarno anyway--wasn't the name changed because the producers didn't want to pay royalties to the writer of the original episode in which he appeared?
I already said that was part of the reason. But as I also said, the producers of Voyager are on record as saying that the key difference they saw between Paris and Locarno -- the one insurmountable reason that they were not the same -- is that Locarno was unrepentant, that he was not basically a good person at heart. He was responsible for getting a friend killed, and he never stepped forward to take responsibility for it -- and worse, he bullied his teammates into not taking responsibility for it. He never redeemed himself, never admitted he was wrong, and that made him a bad guy. Tom Paris did come forward. He hid the truth at first, but finally he stepped up and admitted he was at fault for the fatal accident and he took his punishment, because he was basically a good person at heart.
It's the same thing I said before -- replacing a first draft with something else is not a bad thing. Sure, maybe they could've used LoCarno, but he would've had that taint of irredeemability about him, and it wouldn't have worked as well. After all, he was created to be the bad guy of "The First Duty." So he wouldn't work as well as a good guy in Voyager. So it was an improvement to go for a second draft, a version that was changed just enough to work better as a lead character.
I thought Nick did take responsibility -- sole responsibility, in fact, so his teammates like Wesley got just a slap wrist and allowed to become officers.
Nick was arrogant, but surely this experience changed him.
He was from the colony that the Federation left to the Cardassians when the borders were realigned. The border realignment was the principal reason for the formation of the Maquis.Wait, what was Chakotay's link to TNG?
I don't think your analogy of a first draft works in these cases. This is not a case of writing a draft and then improving upon it. The producers didn't just change something because it didn't work in the first place--they changed it because of circumstance.
I remember back in college, a student production of the Pirates of Penzance was performed. The players spent months rehearsing and then during the performance week a bad bug made many members of the cast sick. The main lead and the understudy were both down for the count. So they brought in a guy from the chorus the play the lead, but he wasn't a tenor so he couldn't sing the group songs. At the beginning of the play he was presented with his Pirate manual (the text of the play). Another guy who could sing was brought on to play the janitor. He would just walk around stage with a mop until he took over for the lead in the songs. It was creative, funny, and a hit with the audience but it was a change made due to circumstance, not to improve the play.
I thought Nick did take responsibility -- sole responsibility, in fact, so his teammates like Wesley got just a slap wrist and allowed to become officers.
It kinda reminds me of how JMS had to re-structure Babylon 5 to replace Sinclair with Sheridan.... it seemed to work out fine in that case. Hopefully it will here too.
Christopher, I'm not saying that what you are saying is essentially incorrect. The point is that change because of circumstance is hugely different than change because of artistic intent.
The other point is that you can't say that DS9 and Voyager worked out better, because none of us know that.
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