Since you are well into season 6, did you enjoy the opening 6 episodes where Dukat and Weyoun reign over DS9? I was disappointed with much of season 6; I felt the writing wasn't up to DS9's usual standards. I remember thinking that much of the stuff between Dukat, Demar, Kira, Odo, and Dukat's daughter was melodramatic, yet, the season felt anticlimactic after Sisko and the Federation retook the station. One episode, the Red Squad episode, "Valiant", just makes me cringe the acting is so bad. "Profit and Lace" was also bad but its worth watching to see Quark in a dress. My favorite episodes from season 6 were "Rocks and Shoals", "Statistical Probabilities", "The Magnificent Ferengi", "Waltz", "His Way", "Far Beyond The Stars", "Change of Heart", "In The Pale Moonlight", "The Sound of Her Voice", and the finale, "Tears of The Prophets", which set up season 7 with a bang.
Well.... You see.
Yeah, I kind of liked the episodes with Dukat and Weyoun at DS9/Terek Nor and our Starfleet guys at the Starbase from Star Trek II doing things, mostly because I find Dukat to be an interesting character and I like the somewhat "arc" he goes through in the series and the death of his daughter is a touching and dramatic moment. But it's muted a bit by "comedic" moments like Weyoun clapping his hands together and going "Well, time to pack!" when it was obvious that they lost the station and Starfleet was back in control of it. It was a bit too much of a...
"Slapsticky?" "Vaudeville-ian?" thing for such an otherwise serious series of episodes and series in general.
I scantly remember the episode "Valiant" and it not being... "Good." And I'd almost agree that "Profit and Lace" is "underrated" and "better" than people give it credit for. Not by much, but it's a humorous episode, but mostly because I find "gender swap stories" to be usually interesting and fun. (Though P&L dug a bit too much into female cliches, but I guess we don't entirely know how Female Ferengi behave considering we only ever met, what, two or three in the entire franchise? The one living as a male, and Moogie? So actually two?
So, eh, who's to say what Ferengi female hormones do to a Ferengi Quark's age.
The "Jack Pack" is a great group and wish we got more of them than the two episodes we get them in the series.
"Far Beyond the Stars" is good, but mostly just for the different setting and the actors being out of makeup and being different characters. In the end, I'm not "entirely" sure what we're supposed to get from the episode and the racism aspects just feels slightly out of place here, which plays to a problem I have with a scene later in the series.
(When the crew has to carry out a holosuite game to "save" the casino/Vic program and Sisko refuses to participate at first because the program too much cleans up the racial mentality of the 1960s (the period the program is set in.) Maybe Sisko's experience in FBtS played a bigger part in that, but it just seems really odd that in this "perfect" 24th century with humanity having finally grown up and things like racism is no longer a thing (at least for humans) that someone would be so bothered by the "washing" of things in a fictional program that's supposed to be more about an atmosphere and experience than it is a historical record of how things were 400 years earlier.
Today I get people being upset when this part of our history is glossed over because we still have these problems, so ignoring them is not helpful. By the 24th century? I think everyone would be over it and see what's in the past as being the past.
The bigger thing with my pause in the rewatch and with DS9 in general is just that it doesn't feel like Trek, and it's the problem it seems Discovery has too and why I'm not looking forward to the slated Picard series.
Trek is supposed to be about this hopeful, bright, future where man has grown up and acts for the betterment of society.
Wars and shit are going to happen, sure, but there are times when DS9 just feels too dark and "gritty" and to much like a future I wouldn't want to be in, as opposed to what we see in TNG and TOS. I mean, Bashir actually considers the notion that the Jack Pack is right and that the Federation is set to lose the war and we're looking at generations of oppression and misery.
It just doesn't "feel" right. For me.
But, I'll continue the series when I get settled in my new place.
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