But, but, but...
For the sake of brevity, let's just say that I don't share or agree at all with your viewpoints.But when you strip it down, it's basically an adventure drama set in space. You can attach all sorts of other attributes and window dressing to it, but at it's core, that's what it is.
No...that's just the medium that the original Trek set it in. It has always been about the human condition and exploring us - humanity. It is not just some adventure drama set in space.
It's actually exactly what I'm talking about--a mix of standalone and multi-episode stories.
....no. You said TOS/TNG did that. They did not really do any multi-episode ideas except for the occasional two parter. I'm talking about how it was done in B5, Farscape, or "nuBSG" as you call it. I don't mean an occasional two parter. I mean one episode leading into the next. Not reset buttons every end episode.
Um...yes. That's what I mean. Multi-episode stories...but a lot more than the random two parter. They all had a theme, but each episode did not lead into the other.
Except the other Trek shows didn't make it a point to say "OMG!!! Our ship is alone and lost in this dangerous unexplored area of space!" The others were business as usual in the Alpha Quadrant. The Delta Quadrant was the same thing.
Um ok?
The civilizations that lived there looked exactly like anything you'd find in the Alpha Quadrant. That is my point.
Sure it is. It's the society they come from.
That is the equivalent of someone walking around my neighborhood and saying "now I understand the society that exists in this state." Them walking around Starfleet HQ or visiting Earth Spacedock is not exposing us to their society.
It's not "just." It's showing other aspects of that fictional universe, to see other Starfleet crews and Federation worlds.
...no it is not. The point is that if you are going to show other facets of life in that universe, it can be done better and not solely from the view point of Earth.
The point, which got seriously derailed, is that Earth does not need to be shown for another show. And the old episodic formula has been done to death. Why can't one Trek show go beyond that?
You're forgetting that Nero was a very immediate threat. In order to figure out how to engineer a reliable time portal from the Red Matter (if at all possible), he'd need time - something that Earth and the Federation did not have. 47 Klingon ships and 7 Federation ships had already been destroyed and Nero was hovering right over Starfleet HQ when Spock boarded the Jellyfish. I'd say stopping Nero by any means ASAP was the logical option.Okay, King Daniel, fair enough that Spock didn't actually build the "Jellyfish" to be a time machine. But it became one, and quite obviously so, and it strikes me as going against the grain of the character to not have him consider how that happened and whether he could use that to save billions of souls, before deciding rather illogically to use it in another Impulse Act of Revenge and kill a few hundred. (For an emotionless character, we have two films where Spock could have been played by Sally Field.)
But to do things like that they'd have needed to know the location of the Romulans on the Narada, and they didn't. When they beamed from Titan to Earth orbit, Scotty thought ("If the design of the ship makes any sense at all") he'd be beaming Kirk and Spock into an empty cargo hold. They materialized on the bridge, surrounded by Romulans. As when used earlier from Delta Vega to Vulcan, Scotty materialized inside the coolant system and almost died.But I shouldn't stray too far from the topic, lest the moderator call me out. You do have a point, Daniel, in that throughout the franchise is sprinkled the ingredients with which any character can make a Magic Reset Button. And if the characters were smart enough to realize that fact... well, then, any jeopardy or danger they're put in, or any negative consequences they would ever have to face, would be reversed. Which could threaten to make the entire series somewhat pointless if handled poorly enough.
That said, I think it's ridiculous for any writer to saturate an episode or movie with ingredients for all sorts of Magic Reset Buttons (e.g., transporting between any two points in space including inside warp bubbles, tossing a teaspoon of red matter into space resulting in instant time/space wormholes, etc.), and then to force the viewer into accepting that the only reason the characters don't open their eyes and use these devices as Magic Reset Buttons, is because they're too stupid. It's not good storytelling to create magic plot devices for the express reason of moving the plot along and advancing the jeopardy, and that for unexplained reasons can't be used to simply resolve the whole issue (e.g., instantly transport Nero off the Narada and onto the Gorn homeworld).
Eh, I consider myself as truer fan as any and they don't bother me so much. But as you've read, I'm pretty good at excusing most of them - to my threshold of acceptability, at leastModern Trek viewers are modern sci-fi viewers, and their expectations have been raised since 1967 or 1987. Some of the silly bits that you've parodied in your videos (like the two-minute elevator ride from deck 1 to deck 2, which had me howling on the floor) are places where the seams are showing in a program that we all love anyway and have learned to laugh at and forgive. It's these glaring inconsistencies in the modern version of the product, which I believe make true fans wish they have those two-minute, eight-foot elevator rides back again.
DF "I'd Pay Money to See That Turbolift as a Six Flags Ride" Scott
But in "Yesteryear"...But how would Spock know that?Plus, the prime timeline is still there. Spock merely arrived in one that had split away from the one we're used too.
From his experiences in Yesteryear and GOTEOF he would have every reason to believe that Nero's actions resulted in near two centuries of the Prime Timeline being destroyed.
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Of course I want a return to the original prime timeline. Not out of nostalgia, but because there is a lot of open ground there.
My problem with the idea is that, aside from longtime fans, no one would care and it could serve to just confuse people.
Personally, I wouldn't mind, but since we've made the switch already, I'd rather just stick to the new timeline. Besides, we can still watch the older stuff !
Why the Enterprise couldn't beam Spock and Khan from the flying garbage truck at the end of Into Darkness (because they were moving too much, or something like that) when in the prior movie Chekov beamed Kirk and Sulu out of terminal velocity free fall over Vulcan, on the other hand...
Odds are, we each have a different interpretation of what Star Trek is. If one of us was suddenly given carte blanche to produce our own version of the show, there would be tens of millions of fans telling us how stupid we were.
I think this is very true. If I was in charge of Trek, there would be many, many unhappy people. No doubt whatsoever.
One has to remember, though, that Star Trek was created to be mass entertainment that a wide variety of people can enjoy. Calling those who may appreciate it just for its action-adventure aspects as "the drooling mass audience" and "low brow" reeks of elitism, something that Trek never was.I'm a fan of the prime universe for multiple reasons -- the main one of which is that it gave us something to aspire to. The new universe is designed to appeal for the drooling mass audiences who care nothing of big ideas, plausible (albethey fictional) technologies, or characters that actually work to earn their status, etc.
I understood that on ST09's opening day; in the bathroom of the movie theater, listening to two teenage street thugs who could hardly construct a coherent sentence, talk about how surprising it was that this new Star Trek was actually good. "And yo, man, that was hot when they was blowin up the black hole." I remember thinking in exactly that moment that Trek was truly and completely doomed.
That said, I think that NuTrek is well suited for the big screen. It's hard to derive 100s of millions of dollars in sales from Trekkies alone. But on television, I don't think this universe can carry its own weight. Real fans looking for more than a fun moviegoing experience will never tune in long term. For a long-running series, it will need to appeal to folks that enjoy a rich history and a wealth of ideas that produce many stories. And, sorry to say so, that's not going to happen with the new low-brow Trek universe.
I'm a fan of the prime universe for multiple reasons -- the main one of which is that it gave us something to aspire to. The new universe is designed to appeal for the drooling mass audiences who care nothing of big ideas, plausible (albethey fictional) technologies, or characters that actually work to earn their status, etc.
I understood that on ST09's opening day; in the bathroom of the movie theater, listening to two teenage street thugs who could hardly construct a coherent sentence, talk about how surprising it was that this new Star Trek was actually good. "And yo, man, that was hot when they was blowin up the black hole." I remember thinking in exactly that moment that Trek was truly and completely doomed.
One has to remember, though, that Star Trek was created to be mass entertainment that a wide variety of people can enjoy. Calling those who may appreciate it just for its action-adventure aspects as "the drooling mass audience" and "low brow" reeks of elitism, something that Trek never was.I'm a fan of the prime universe for multiple reasons -- the main one of which is that it gave us something to aspire to. The new universe is designed to appeal for the drooling mass audiences who care nothing of big ideas, plausible (albethey fictional) technologies, or characters that actually work to earn their status, etc.
I understood that on ST09's opening day; in the bathroom of the movie theater, listening to two teenage street thugs who could hardly construct a coherent sentence, talk about how surprising it was that this new Star Trek was actually good. "And yo, man, that was hot when they was blowin up the black hole." I remember thinking in exactly that moment that Trek was truly and completely doomed.
That said, I think that NuTrek is well suited for the big screen. It's hard to derive 100s of millions of dollars in sales from Trekkies alone. But on television, I don't think this universe can carry its own weight. Real fans looking for more than a fun moviegoing experience will never tune in long term. For a long-running series, it will need to appeal to folks that enjoy a rich history and a wealth of ideas that produce many stories. And, sorry to say so, that's not going to happen with the new low-brow Trek universe.
^Partly true. But it's not elitism. It's about raising the bar. If you want to talk about Trek's roots, lets go back to the Cage which featured women wearing pants and acting in professional roles and positions; and was rejected for having too cerebral of a concept. And though TOS was less ambitious and a lot more campy, it too pushed the envelope to challenge audiences to think with commentary on culture, race, religion, politics, and more. Star Trek aspired to be something the network and censors would never allow and inspired audiences to dream.
How the world would you know the reading habits of any Trek fan, much less the "new target market"? Most people don't bring books to the movies. (I do, though)I'm sorry if it comes across as elitist of me to enjoy entertainment that exercises a few neurons -- which Star Trek, in most cases, did -- and to lament the lowering of the bar in this new rebooted universe. One would think you'd, particularly, understand that, Mr. Cox; In all my years as a fan, I never saw many of Star Trek's new target market walking around with the latest sci-fi book tucked under their arm.
Why the Enterprise couldn't beam Spock and Khan from the flying garbage truck at the end of Into Darkness (because they were moving too much, or something like that) when in the prior movie Chekov beamed Kirk and Sulu out of terminal velocity free fall over Vulcan, on the other hand...
Pretty easy.
Kirk and Sulu were moving in one direction at a constant rate of speed, so it would be easy to calculate where they would be when. Spock and Khan were moving all over the barge in an unpredictable way.![]()
Lower brow than Joe Piscopo and Data making spastic noises on the holodeck in "The Outrageous Okuna"?Shikarnov said:[snip]...the new low-brow Trek universe.
I'm sorry if it comes across as elitist of me to enjoy entertainment that exercises a few neurons -- which Star Trek, in most cases, did -- and to lament the lowering of the bar in this new rebooted universe.
Hmmm.... I still don't quite buy it, they probably could have beamed the whole barge up.
Or Janeway and Paris "de-volving" into lizards?Why the Enterprise couldn't beam Spock and Khan from the flying garbage truck at the end of Into Darkness (because they were moving too much, or something like that) when in the prior movie Chekov beamed Kirk and Sulu out of terminal velocity free fall over Vulcan, on the other hand...
Pretty easy.
Kirk and Sulu were moving in one direction at a constant rate of speed, so it would be easy to calculate where they would be when. Spock and Khan were moving all over the barge in an unpredictable way.![]()
Hmmm.... I still don't quite buy it, they probably could have beamed the whole barge up. Maybe the Enterprise's targeting scanners were damaged during the Vengeance attack, or something.
Lower brow than Joe Piscopo and Data making spastic noises on the holodeck in "The Outrageous Okuna"?Shikarnov said:[snip]...the new low-brow Trek universe.![]()
Personally, I watch Star Trek to be entertained, not to make people think I'm smart.
Lower brow than Joe Piscopo and Data making spastic noises on the holodeck in "The Outrageous Okuna"?Shikarnov said:[snip]...the new low-brow Trek universe.![]()
LOL. You got me there. But in my own defense, I did acknowledge that the prime universe didn't always provide food for thought, just that it did in most cases. With 28 seasons and 10 movies, there's plenty of nonsense.
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