doubleohfive
Fleet Admiral
However true that may be, it still does not answer my question.
Not really, if a character is already deep and interesting enough to start with they don't really need a lot of development.
Plenty of character decay comes from such "development".
What makes a "fleshed out storyline"?
And what does effort matter when it still doesn't work and there still isn't any appreciation from anyone? And no, do NOT reply with a "if there's no appreciation then there wasn't enough effort" because it is VERY true that some can put a lot of effort into something and STILL not get any respect or appreciation for it.
you can work really hard on something and it can still not be your best work and it can still suck
Oh yeah? What made the VOY cast stereotypes, hm? No more than any other Trek cast.
So again there's not much they could've done aside from not use him
A "Well built" car is in the eye of the beholder.
With VOY, the "teacher" and "parents" are a bunch of dicks who just use it as an excuse of what a horrible "student" the VOY writers are and completely overlook their efforts and only see the failure without seeing ANYTHING else. In effect, really abusive parents with a sadistic teacher.
B.S.
Chakotay was about as stereotypical as you can get without being straight up derogatory (and there are plenty of people who think they managed to cross that line more than once.) All that could have made that worse was mention of his former life as a blackjack dealer at a Casino.
And that is the sort of professionalism I would expect from Trek writers; know when not to use a thing. You know who learned that lesson? DS9. They used Q once and it was over.
"Pretty" would be suggesting they do arcs.
"Hot" would be suggesting they keep Kes and lose Harry.
"if it's not good enough for you (writers) why the hell should it be good enough for me?"
Did you just call critics of Voyager "a bunch of dicks?"
to the point, no, a C- is a C- is a C- and it has nothing to do with anything but what the student produced.
I have a two pronged issue with Voyger; one is the misuse of what they had
and the other is the writing teams lack of attention to their own work and the work of other Trek writers on other shows.
Okay, name an example of a more ethnically unsound character than Chakotay if you can. I don't think there is one. You can blame Robert Beltran for being unenthusiastic, for being uncharismatic, and for seeming bored, but you can't blame him for the writers giving him a magic peace rock, failing to name the tribe he was from, or having him habitually repeat that eye-rolling mantra of his. Either way that's not the point.No more than most other "ethnic" characters in Trek. Then again, Beltran probably brought most of that on himself for being such a jerk on set.
That is all beside the point. The point of my mentioning Q was the fact that their attempt to "develop" him on Voyager was a failure. It was illustrating your point, not bringing up a new one. You might not think so but better writing and use of material actually does, generally, produce better work (be it a play, a script, a tv show, a movie or what have you.)That's more to do with the contempt the DS9 team have for TNG than "professionalism". Also, all they did was replace Q with their own omnipotent aliens. If they replicated the Prophet/Pah-Wraith conflict with a Q war and the writing was the same no one would've liked it. VOY was in a more desperate position than TNG or DS9 (more dependent on ratings than either of them) and since NOTHING else was working they had to rely on more guest characters from prior programs. The alternative was cancellation (and NOT, as I KNOW you'll say, "better writing").
****! I'm not going down that route with you again, at least not in this thread. If you suddenly think that has merit again I'll meet you in the Voyager Premise thread. But I beg you... consider what you're saying before you say it (again.)their straitjacket premise.
That's dangerously close to a premise remark but I'm going to take the bait; Voyager had every bit as much to work with (if not more) than the shows that preceded it. If they were lacking something it was creativity and self checking phrases "Is this any good" and "Should we really make this episode?"You can't really misuse nothing, and nothing is all they had to work with.
If I cant say it was ignorance and lack of professionalism you, by virtue of the logic, can't say they tried their hardest. If that was their best effort then I really am in the wrong business because I've read stuff scribbled on cocktail napkins that were more fleshed out.They tried their hardest, and whatever questionable things done were out of desperation and not simple ignorance or lack of professionalism.
Well there's a galloping shock.withers, I have to agree with doubleohfive that there is a nasty tone to your posts.
You just told me that doing so was essentially a worthless and futile effort because, without prior experience sitting in a writers room of television show, my "suggestions" would be dismissible on the grounds that they weren't from a professional. In point of fact I don't necessarily disagree with that which is why my critiques (which you so fondly refer to as vitriolic and loud) tend to focus on the approach to the show rather than specific issues like whether or not Janeway and Chakotay should have gotten together or whether or not it was wise to bring the Borg children into the mix. "Pay attention to the history of your own writing" and "exercise discretion when involving characters that were already firmly established in other shows" are my way of doing just what you asked and are different from what you claimed to be invalid and what you then asked me to do one post later.If I thought there were a way to continue this discussion reasonably I would, but you seem to have made up your mind and would simply rather complain without offering any concrete suggestions as to how you would improve upon the show.
Yes, yes- what sinister motives lurk behind the screen? *Cue Garak's theme*I'm not sure if it's deliberate or not and if so what you're hoping to accomplish. Time will tell I guess.
Well, the whole "studious, obsessive academic" type thing combined with him being played by Wang would've made it seem like an asian geek stereotype, for starters.
Also, "grow up"? How, by having him swear off women? He wasn't exactly immature to begin with. What does "growing up" entail when the show never presented him as immature in the first place?
Now, if they had started him off as some arrogant, misogynistic, semi-racist or a coward or something THEN there's more room for growth.
Like I said, if characters already have enough character to start off with, development isn't all that necessary.
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