Oh god, how good would it be if they managed to cast Martin Sheen in the next Star Trek film?!!
Then we must celebrate with Pink Squirrel Suzys!"DS9 and VGR fans reach a concordat via the West Wing"![]()
Hater!It couldn't be more wasted than it was in B5's "River of Souls".
As for Kirk being a Captain, he was only at the Academy for 3 years (as in, he wasn't even an Ensign yet) and his heroics made him a Captain before he graduated even. That's what I didn't like. I can buy Spock as a Commander already because he's always been older than Kirk.
Hater!It couldn't be more wasted than it was in B5's "River of Souls".
As for Kirk being a Captain, he was only at the Academy for 3 years (as in, he wasn't even an Ensign yet) and his heroics made him a Captain before he graduated even. That's what I didn't like. I can buy Spock as a Commander already because he's always been older than Kirk.
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What does it matter if the outcome was the same?Hater!It couldn't be more wasted than it was in B5's "River of Souls".
As for Kirk being a Captain, he was only at the Academy for 3 years (as in, he wasn't even an Ensign yet) and his heroics made him a Captain before he graduated even. That's what I didn't like. I can buy Spock as a Commander already because he's always been older than Kirk.
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Anwar has a point. If Nero could get lost for 20+ years then the character of Kirk could have served on other ships before ending up on Enterprise. He could have been a survivor of the Farragut and warned Pike about the attack before Enterprise arrived and the movie could have continued on as it did.
Bringing up Han Solo becoming General tells me you're missing the point.It does matter. If you are going to make anyone captain then what is the point of having a chain of command if someone can jump over several ranks to become captain.
Gene Roddenberry went to a lot of trouble to make Star Trek as "real" as possible for a sci-fi show and had the original Kirk serve on several ships gaining experience before he became captain of the Enterprise.
If your going to just make someone captain than you might as well change the name of the show to Star Wars where Han Solo went from Captain Solo to General Solo in Return of the Jedi.
As for this DS9/Voyager thread, it is incredible that after these two shows have been off the air for about 10 years and people are still arguing over which show is better and which fans are right and wrong. Can't we all just agree to disagree? Trek is big enough to include everyone, or as the Vulcans like to say IDIC.
I can understand why you haven't read the entire thread, but if you do, you'll find sweetness and light a-plenty. Why, we practically had a group hug a few posts back.
Thanks for the correction.Exodus the TOS Enterprise carried around 430 I believe..not 100.
1) Niners like change
I submit to you that many DS9 fans, like myself, were looking forward to Voyager when it was announced. The show we were told to expect was a show about two crews with opposing viwepoints having to learn to work together to survive a lonely trip across the galaxy. The additional key being the lonely trip. Early announcements made note of the struggles they would experience getting across hostile space with limited resources and no allies. That sounded GREAT. It was new and different for Trek. It was not just another show set on a ship. That unfortunately is not what we got.
2) DS9 fans liked the premise and hated that it was abandoned
This is without question the biggest complaint from DS9 fans. Voyager was not the show we were promised. Instead of the promising concept that was pitched to the audience...we got a retread of TNG. There was very little that was genuinely new about the series. The Maqui element was lost from the very begingin. The resources problem gradually disappeared. Instead of people struggling to get home, we got people talking a leisurely cruise across the galaxy (a cruise not all that dissimilar to that of the Enterprise). That increasingly pissed off ALOT of would be fans.
3) DS9 changed expectations of storytelling
Not only did Voyager repeat most of the premise of TNG, it consciously seemed to abandon the storytelling innovations introduced on DS9. While DS9 was giving viewers drawn out plots with intricate arcs, and ever expansive cast of characters, and stories that emphasized the ensemble feel of the show without anyone being ignored (including ALOT of fleshed out secondary characters, Voyager was giving us exactly what we had seen on TV for the previous 30 years. It was back to episodic stories where nothing changed, there were no consequences, few secondary characters, and most of the cast was snubbed in favor of an elite few.
In essence, Voyager was retrograde TV. Storytelling had simply become more complicated, yet Voyager was telling stories that would not have seemed out of place in 1987 or even 1966. Simply put DS9 fans expected more and actually got less.
In short, most of the hostility toward Voyager had to do with the show not living up to its potential. DS9 fans can and do accept some of DS9's shortcommings, but the overall opinion is that the show rarely missed a chance to push the envelope and definately lived up to much of its potential. That the creators of Voyager seemed to consciously dumb down the show. That made it less appealing overall. That the producers did not respond to criticisms and refused to take chances just annoyed the general fanbase.
That this attitude seemed to permeate that rest of late Trek only made things worse. The producers kept making the SAME mistakes over and over again. So the last few movies sucked, Voyager was a disappointment, and Enterprise from the very begining seemed determined to repeat Voyager's mistakes...went along way to angering the fans of DS9. 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. That goes a long way toward explaining why Voyager gets such a hard time. It marked the begining of the sharp decline in quality that corrupted the rest of Trek until its ultimate demise.
1) Niners like change
2) DS9 fans liked the premise and hated that it was abandoned
3) DS9 changed expectations of storytelling
In essence, Voyager was retrograde TV.
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 short, most of the hostility toward Voyager had to do with the show not living up to its potential.
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.
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.
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
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.
[/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.
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