If there is a plausible explanation, then, to me, it is worth continuing to give the show an opportunity to explain it, rather than assuming the production team is a bunch of hacks who don't care.
I have no idea whether they care or not. But in terms of estimating their talent level, the back half of the season is making me lean depressingly toward "bunch of hacks." Like I've said, though, I'll stick around for S2 and try to be cautiously optimistic. I'm always down for a pleasant surprise!...
With respect, you have stated that viewers should expect more from a Star Trek production. The bar seems very high in terms of what makes a "Star Trek" production and how the production team should conduct themselves, including a frustration when expectations are not met, and an expectation that other audience members share that frustration.
Well, naturally I think other people
should share my opinions... that's kind of the nature of having an opinion. ;-) OTOH, I don't go around asserting that other people necessarily
do share those opinions.
Here's the thing-I want to know where my bar should be set so I can understand your point of view? As I have stated, I was highly disappointed by TNG, DS9, VOY and ENT. It took me years to warm up to some of them, and if I could discard most of them out of Trek canon, I would. I can't. That is not my job. I just don't watch them, for the most part, or, have tried to change my attitude towards them in terms of expectations.
So, respectfully, what is the standard? Also, since you have previously stated that the past 20 years have added nothing to Trek lore, why is Discovery such a bother?
Sounds like you've been setting your standards at a pretty reasonable level, then — past series have disappointed in various ways, and you judge them accordingly and don't re-watch. As a bare minimum, then, the desired standard of quality for DSC should be
better than that. It would be nice to have a show that doesn't force you to lower your expectations, no?
To be more specific, I think it's reasonable to expect the show to deliver something like what it promised — that is, a level of storytelling comparable to other high-profile, high-budget, short-run, serialized programs on streaming services and cable networks. "Prestige TV." Something that can hold its own in terms of writing quality and acting quality and visual quality compared to
Game of Thrones or
The Expanse or
Counterpart any of the other shows that have been mentioned here in the last few pages. Something that one could comfortably recommend to friends who aren't pre-sold Star Trek fans.
So far, it's not doing that.
In terms of continuity, I think again the reasonable standard is to expect the show to deliver something like what it promised — that is, a story recognizably set in the mid-23rd century of Star Trek, contemporary with "The Cage" (just a few years earlier) and TOS (just a few years later). That doesn't mean slavish imitation, but it does mean it would be nice to avoid jarring visual and narrative
discontinuities in almost every episode... enough of those and you start to wonder whether the people making this show actually care about the original at all as anything more than a marketing gimmick.
And why is DSC such a bother in particular, above and beyond the disappointments of the last 20 years, aside from the fact that it's the current show and hence the one most worth talking about? In this context, I suppose it's because at this point, it's doing actual
damage to that original setting — the one that you and I both consider Trek's gold standard — by asking us to swallow that it was substantively different from how we remember it.