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DS9 -- How serialized was it really?

KelisThePoet

Commander
Red Shirt
My answer is not much, and that's not a criticism, because I don't like what gets called "serialization" these days. I always heard that DS9 was the serialized show, Star Trek's soap opera, so I didn't make an effort to see it, and when I finally got the chance, I was pleasantly surprised by how episodic it is.

The obvious exceptions to my observation were the last nine episodes of the series, the first six episodes of Season 6, and arguably the three "Circle" episodes of Season 2. Apart from those, the episodes typically told stories that resolved themselves in one or two parts, and from episode to episode, the focus shifted to different characters, giving the series variety. And one of my complaints about so much serialized TV on today, by contrast, is the lack of variety in the episodes, the way they all blur together in theme and focus, a problem compounded by the fact that individual episodes never structurally end. They just stop playing when the 42 odd minutes or so of show time are up. Deep Space Nine episodes were more structured, even when they were a part of something larger.

Yes, there were consequences for the characters from episode to episode and season to season. Sisko got a promotion (though this wasn't the only Trek series with a rank change). Odo courted Kira and Dax courted Worf (plenty of that kind of thing in other Trek shows). The major antagonist groups and characters were handled with an artful consistency, as was the period of time during which Odo lost his shape shifting abilities. But if this is "serialization," it's serialization of a different (in my opinion preferable) kind to diffuse plots that stop midstream and get picked right up when episodes begin and end, sometimes punctuated with the most manipulative of soap operatic devices, the cliffhanger.
 
It might be more accurate to say it was semi-serialised and arc based. Shows like SG-1 where also semi-serialised and arc based. It's about finding the balance between episodic and full on serilaistion.

I agree, definitely arc based. DS9 wasn't totally serialized, but it definitely was moreso than the other Trek shows at the time, and much of TV for that matter. I'd say the 6th and 7th seasons were serialized, whereas seasons 3 - 5 were more episodic arcs than serial in format.

But the 6th and 7th seasons still had their breathers, which worked just fine. I look at Agents of SHIELD and while I find that show enjoyable and kind of serialized like DS9, I do wish they would take some breathers, too (it's okay to show them relaxing as a team once in awhile, or get caught up in a mission that doesn't mean impending doom for the world).
 
I think your notion of breathers is helpful in defining the difference between Deep Space Nine and other shows that try multi-episode arcs. Take the fourth season of Enterprise for a contrast. It had two- and three-episode stories (arcs, if you like). It even had a few single-episode stories thrown in between the longer stories. What it never had was individual episodes interspersed in the middle of its multi-part stories (like breaks or breathers, if you will). By contrast, Deep Space Nine would tell a story about something (often a structurally well-defined story in one episode), like the Maquis, Kai Winn gathering power, Odo losing his ability to shape-shift, or whatever. Then we'd get two, three, sometimes many more episodes about something completely different before the same topic was picked back up for another, artfully related story in another structurally well-defined episode. Sometimes, in addition to using single-episode breathers, the series alternated its episodes between several different running arcs, as another way to keep the stories varied.
 
I would argue that it was highly serialized, just in a manner that is different from other types of serialization. Episodes, though they might have looked like stand-alones, were tweaked in order to push the series as a whole in one direction or other.
 
It was like Farscape. You had your self contained episodes but the big picture was serialized. It's my preferred format for tv shows.
 
I feel like arc-based is the right way to describe it. Kinda like how Law and Order: SVU does it. Episodes can stand alone for the most part, but characters develop and stories can dominate multiple episodes.
 
As others have said, DS9 was semi-serialized.

The original post makes it sound like the only serialization within DS9 are the episodes that are explicitly designated as "multi-parters." But that is not accurate. DS9 doesn't work like that.

Rather, DS9 works by putting many serialized threads into episodes that are not explicitly linked to other episodes as "multi-part" stories.
 
I'm not sure I'd call those links ("threads," if you will) between episodes, "serialization." I'd just call it consistency. A semantic distinction, perhaps, but the point is that unlike the installments of so many current "serialized" shows, Deep Space Nine episodes can be enjoyed on their own and on their own merits.
 
I'm not sure I'd call those links ("threads," if you will) between episodes, "serialization." I'd just call it consistency. A semantic distinction, perhaps, but the point is that unlike the installments of so many current "serialized" shows, Deep Space Nine episodes can be enjoyed on their own and on their own merits.
Behr and Wolfe would very deliberately placed information in episodes with the intention of using it in the future. That's far more than "consistency."
 
To me that's the definition of "consistency." Or at least, following up on the plan is "consistency." I suppose, making the plan in advance is "foresight."
 
Very serialized for the 90s, very episodic for the 10s.

Compared to innovators like Hill Street Blues and St. Elsewhere, which predate even TNG, DS9 was hardly "very serialized" for its time. It was more serialized than TNG, surely, but that's about as far as I'd go. The Berman era shows were never that innovative in terms of narrative or style, honestly.
 
There's nothing innovative about serialization. It was done on television since the medium's inception, and before that, there were serializations of novels in literary magazines.
 
The series is more rewarding if you watch it in order, even the early, episodic shows. There's far more character development over time on DS9 than in any other Trek series.
 
It might be more accurate to say it was semi-serialised and arc based. Shows like SG-1 where also semi-serialised and arc based. It's about finding the balance between episodic and full on serilaistion.

I agree with you that DS9 is best describe as arc based. The vast majority of episodes are standalone but there are threads in many episodes that connect events or make references back to previous episodes.

There's nothing innovative about serialization. It was done on television since the medium's inception, and before that, there were serializations of novels in literary magazines.

Very true but sci-fi television largely stuck with the episodic format until the 00s.
 
Well, I know for a fact that Doctor Who was serialized in the 60s, 70s and 80s. I'm not enough of a television history buff to name any other serialized science fiction programs off the top of my head, but I bet they exist.
 
Well, I know for a fact that Doctor Who was serialized in the 60s, 70s and 80s. I'm not enough of a television history buff to name any other serialized science fiction programs off the top of my head, but I bet they exist.


I think other Sci-i shows which had some serialisation are .


Blake's 7
The Prisoner
 
There's nothing innovative about serialization. It was done on television since the medium's inception, and before that, there were serializations of novels in literary magazines.
Yes, but more often than not of the "Luke and Laura" variety. What was happening more in the late 90s was that television shows were using the series as a long form, whether that meant telling a singular story or multiple overlapping stories, to develop theme and character. To that extent, DS9 (certainly in its last two years) was much closer to The Sopranos than most episodic televion.
 
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