This post actually tried to address the issue honestly. It's wrong, but still, it tried. The generalization is true, there is an element of DS9 fandom that is virulently anti-Voyager and this Voyager hate is somehow fundamental to their love of DS9. Applying generalizations to individuals is a misuse of generalizations, though.
1) Niners like change
Since they obviously wanted stuff more like DS9, this is incorrect, at least as formulated. What they wanted was something that took DS9's politics even further.
2) DS9 fans liked the premise and hated that it was abandoned
The premise of the show is not found in press releases or internet posts, but in the pilot and the first regular episode.
If you actually watch those, most of the criticisms about abandoning the premise are exposed as crazy or grossly stupid.
Star Trek actually changed television scifi. Things like Hill Street Blues, ER, Cops and Survivor changed television storytelling. Putting DS9 above things like that shows the kind of lack of critical judgment required for the hard core Niner faith.
Insofar as a special DS9 hate for Voyager goes, this is insane because Star Trek the series was the only Trek series that wasn't in some degree retrograde.
Things only got worse as we heard what the producers on DS9 went though to get their show made as well as the behind the scenes actions that made the rest of trek an unwelcome place for much of the creative staff of DS9.
In other words, DS9 fans took that insane Moore rant as gospel truth. There are very few "criticisms" of Voyager that don't mindlessly copy that idiotic tract, whether first hand or twelfth hand.
In short, most of the hostility toward Voyager had to do with the show not living up to its potential.
No one hates something for what it isn't, they hate it for what it is. Objectively, DS9, as the first Berman series suffered the most from Berman's lack of experience. DS9 didn't live up to its potential either. Most television shows don't. If a television show has a limited potential (Stargate comes to mind instantly) and lives up to it, people don't give it a shred of credit. So this just isn't true. It's just a self flattering (basically implying "I" have higher standards than you cretins,) excuse.
This post actually tried to address the issue honestly. It's wrong, but still, it tried. The generalization is true, there is an element of DS9 fandom that is virulently anti-Voyager and this Voyager hate is somehow fundamental to their love of DS9. Applying generalizations to individuals is a misuse of generalizations, though.
Wow, I did not know it was possible for someone to be both arrogant and miss the point all at the same time. To suggest that something is WRONG is to imply that you have some special insight that others lack. Given that you are clearly not anti-Voyager, your assertion is dubious at best.
1) Niners like change
Since they obviously wanted stuff more like DS9, this is incorrect, at least as formulated. What they wanted was something that took DS9's politics even further.
In other words, DS9 fans took that insane Moore rant as gospel truth. There are very few "criticisms" of Voyager that don't mindlessly copy that idiotic tract, whether first hand or twelfth hand.
[/QUOTE]In short, most of the hostility toward Voyager had to do with the show not living up to its potential.
No one hates something for what it isn't, they hate it for what it is. Objectively, DS9, as the first Berman series suffered the most from Berman's lack of experience. DS9 didn't live up to its potential either. Most television shows don't. If a television show has a limited potential (Stargate comes to mind instantly) and lives up to it, people don't give it a shred of credit. So this just isn't true. It's just a self flattering (basically implying "I" have higher standards than you cretins,) excuse.
It's fun when someone posts something that is a total and blatant contradiction to all known reality.No one hates something for what it isn't, they hate it for what it is.
Of course some things are hated for what they aren't, just as some things are hated for what they are. But this is just a semantic quibble. If you can't envision something being "something else" (what it is not), how can you have any opinion of it at all, to hate it or love it?
None of them do, since anyone with imagination can envision something better than any TV show can ever pull off. DS9 set its standards higher than VOY and the fact that it lived up to them to any degree makes it better than VOY, which set its standards to be nothing much more than old TNG scripts, dusted off and with the proper names changed.DS9 didn't live up to its potential either. Most television shows don't.
If a television show has a limited potential (Stargate comes to mind instantly) and lives up to it, people don't give it a shred of credit.
Nor should they. The first job of a TV show is to have something they are striving to achieve beyond the same old shit.
It was more UPN that screwed up VOY and ENT, less then B&B. Those guys are just easy targets by those who want easy targets.
That is a total copout. It gives Berman a weak excuse for shoddy work.
In truth, had Berman, Braga or anyone associated with the show had a genuine cohesive vision of what Voyager should be...they would have found ways to get around UPN.
for instance, Ira Behr has tlaked about the number guidelines and restrictions placed on him. He's spoken about the fights that he had with Berman over trying to push the envelope. Because, Behr was committed to making a quality show...he simply worked around the restrictions and told the stories he and his team wanted anyway.
Let us never forget that at the time, DS9 was under the exact same restriction against serialization that restricted Voyager. The difference in that the writers found ways around the restrictions to the point that the show ended up with a remarkable amount of serialization and foreshadowing.
For instance, DS9 did not just run across the Dominion and start fighting. There are hints of the Dominion scattered throughout season 2. Indeed, the Dominion's name emerged in a Ferengi comedy episode. Its only in retrospect that you see that a larger story was building despite being shoehorned into an episodic format.
That is a total copout. It gives Berman a weak excuse for shoddy work.
If it had been Ira Behr or Ron Moore who were in Berman's position, you'd agree with me over the UPN interference.
Behr, like Braga, will also fess up to what he believes he himself did wrong as a writer and showrunner, though. And frankly, unless we get counter-commentary from those who were there with Behr, then it pretty much stands. Behr also has something Berman nor Braga had when it came to behind-the-scenes gossip on their respective shows: Majel Barret to reinforce those claims.No they wouldn't.In truth, had Berman, Braga or anyone associated with the show had a genuine cohesive vision of what Voyager should be...they would have found ways to get around UPN.
Behr's a whiner who overstates what he did and how bad he had it.
DS9 set its standards higher than VOY and the fact that it lived up to them to any degree makes it better than VOY, which set its standards to be nothing much more than old TNG scripts, dusted off and with the proper names changed.
Serialization is almost always a sign of bad writing done solely to keep viewers coming back to see what happens. Even the better written shows like Dexter and Breaking Bad show the toll from serialization after only a couple of episodes.
DS9 did not improve Trek by adding serialization, insofar as it did. Anyone who wants to drivel about DS9's superior writing is claiming that Redeye Dukat in the Fire Caves is superior drama.
What passes for character development on DS9 is much the same. Redeye Dukat again stands nicely for the level of writing quality DS9 reached.
DS9 didn't have higher standards, because wanting to serialize an emo story isn't higher standards. DS9 certainly did not achieve a decent serialized story. Nor did it achieve decent character development.
DS9 fans didn't hate Voyager for not being more DS9. That's just why they didn't want to watch it. They hated Voyager because its existence said that DS9 was an artistic failure, unworthy of imitation. Their problem is that DS9 was crap.
DS9 fans didn't hate Voyager for not being more DS9. That's just why they didn't want to watch it. They hated Voyager because its existence said that DS9 was an artistic failure, unworthy of imitation. Their problem is that DS9 was crap.
(emphasis mine)
Yeah, you're doing a bang-up job proving us Niners of your superiority and our wretchedness. Because if there's one thing DS9 was panned for throughout its tenure, it was "artistic failure." God bless Voyager for showing us the way!
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When most people say that Voyager should have more secondary characters we're not talking about recurring villains, we're talking about crewmembers onboard Voyager. We're talking about Lt Carey who mysteriously disappeared, Chell who showed up once or twice, or crewman Harren who was great and I would have loved to have seen more of. We want to see Voyager as a community, not nine people who call themselves a family and seem to exclude everybody else for some reason.Story Arcs would have turned off the common joe viewers VOY was going for, a growing cast wouldn't have made sense since the show was about a small ship and not an entire quadrant (plus it would've cost too much money). This is merely the double standard VOY gets: If they HAD created recurring characters for VOY in terms of the aliens encountered, the viewers would just complain that for a ship on the move it makes no sense to run into the same aliens and it would MONUMENTALLY stupid to run into the same INDIVIDUAL characters over and over again. It's just unfair double standard at work.
I'd like to point out that I only read the famous Moore interview six months ago, long after I had come to similar (but not replica) conclusions on my own. I didn't even know who Moore was until 4 years ago when I bought the DS9 and TNG DVDs and started paying attention to the writing credits. Can everybody stop accusing everybody else of being sheep, please?In other words, DS9 fans took that insane Moore rant as gospel truth. There are very few "criticisms" of Voyager that don't mindlessly copy that idiotic tract, whether first hand or twelfth hand.
See, we agree on something again.It was more UPN that screwed up VOY and ENT, less then B&B. Those guys are just easy targets by those who want easy targets.
A small Federation starship lost alone in a hostile area of space (Kazon, Vidiians) with a mixed crew of Starfleet officers and Maquis freedom-fighters.Most of the people who think DS9 was good can't even tell what the Voyager premises are.
Oh good lords.Serialization is almost always a sign of bad writing done solely to keep viewers coming back to see what happens.
That's your opinion and you're perfectly free to have it, just don't try to pass it off as fact.Their problem is that DS9 was crap.
You do realise that Enterprise's episodic format was a critical failure, and a failure in terms of ratings, right?The sentence you bolded is not what you object to. For instance, if DS9 really was good, and Voyager really was so much worse, the return to an episodic, ship based format was indeed a rejection of DS9 artistic achievement and this would be an insult to Niner fans' artistic sensibilities. Which would be a far better reason for resenting Voyager than that wasted potential BS.
You do realise that Enterprise's episodic format was a critical failure, and a failure in terms of ratings, right?And you know what they did when B&B got desperate? They called up Ira Steven Behr, asked him to explain what he felt was wrong with the show and they eventually decided to go the serialisation route. It was still a ratings failure, but critically those final two seasons were much better regarded.
Why do you think that is?![]()
A small Federation starship lost alone in a hostile area of space (Kazon, Vidiians) with a mixed crew of Starfleet officers and Maquis freedom-fighters.
Did I get it right?![]()
When you read a book, do you like it to have chapters which tell a singular story that eventually builds to a powerful conclusion, or do you prefer the chapters to be completely unrelated and telling different stories that don't go anywhere specific? Personally, I prefer books which don't have chapters at all, but I don't think that would work with a TV series.![]()
When most people say that Voyager should have more secondary characters we're not talking about recurring villains,
we're talking about crewmembers onboard Voyager. We're talking about Lt Carey who mysteriously disappeared
, Chell who showed up once or twice
, or crewman Harren who was great and I would have loved to have seen more of.
We want to see Voyager as a community, not nine people who call themselves a family and seem to exclude everybody else for some reason.
DS9 fans didn't hate Voyager for not being more DS9. That's just why they didn't want to watch it. They hated Voyager because its existence said that DS9 was an artistic failure, unworthy of imitation. Their problem is that DS9 was crap.
(emphasis mine)
The sentence you bolded is not what you object to. For instance, if DS9 really was good, and Voyager really was so much worse, the return to an episodic, ship based format was indeed a rejection of DS9 artistic achievement and this would be an insult to Niner fans' artistic sensibilities. Which would be a far better reason for resenting Voyager than that wasted potential BS. I surmise that in fact you would agree if you had actually understood what you were reading. At a guess, you would have bolded the final statement to mark what you disagree with.
Of course, in the context of the thread which is not about DS9, the contrary assertion stands out. Ignorant posts about Voyager being TNG with the names changed are acceptable, so singling mine out make you look funny.
That's not what you really think the premise is. You actually buy into limited resources, Maquis resistance and such nonsense. I enjoy reading your reviews because they're inadvertently funny. You have extremely limited comprehension. Why do you troll...?
In a novel, if the end is screwed up, the whole novel is screwed up. On the other hand, I have enjoyed collections of short stories, such as the Foundation series, just to cite a famous example. DS9 and BSG and The 4400 and St. Elsewhere and Roseanne and practically every serialized show comes to a dreadful end. Pretending the alternative is some mythical powerful climax is just more BS.
Oh, yes you are. What's one of the central complaints over VOY's aliens... when they DID have recurring villains like Cullah and Seska it was just another negative reaction. It's just double standard wherein VOY gets hated for not doing something and then hated for doing it.
Too much money to bring back too often....Lt Carey...
Too much money to bring back.
Too much money to bring back., or crewman Harren...
Too much money...We want to see Voyager as a community, not nine people who call themselves a family and seem to exclude everybody else for some reason.
Plus recurring characters would have confused the common viewer too much who missed the intro episode for these people. Would have cost the show viewers.
Like I said, Sisko trashing the Borg all on his own with a runabout is okay. Because Sisko is from DS9 and the fandom is a-okay with anything DS9 does.
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