They weren't favorites of mine, either.
Yeah, we know. We're just messing with you.Just reminding you that we do have a sense of humor.
But just seeing it being wiped out officially would be a small victoryAlas it probably exists in too many places to entirely delete it from history. There's undoubtedly still gobs of copies of Stephen King's "Rage" still out there too, despite the author's determination to get rid of it.
You're absolutely right about that. I must admit that I found him a bit moody in season one which affected my then opinion of him.No great surprise. No other captain grew and evolved the way he did.
Personally I'd rather seen that they developed Harry than dump him or kill him off. He did have potential.Agreed. Sorry to say, given their determination to inflict humiliation on Garrett Wang and stagnation on his character... Harry Kim was a much better choice for elimination. And Chakotay takes the silver, given how little he was used later on.
I agree on your comment about Kes and Seven. There was room for both in the seriesDisagree. Sorry. Given their determination to eliminate Kes, this was probably about as good a way to do it as any.
Or never left. She and Seven could have been had some interesting scenes together.
Yeah, if they were going to write off Kes, I feel "The Gift" was a pretty good way to do so. It's organic to her character development to this point, and the one thing I'm recalling that kind of undercuts it is that Kes basically leaves the minute Seven arrives, which betrays the out-of-universe string-pulling.
Kim leaving, OTOH...I don't know of any way they could have done that and made it feel organic (I'm punning a bit, since 8472 'assimilating' him was pretty organic, so to speak...).
When that alien gives Kim his life on Earth he was owed, just have Kim...decide to accept it. He then tells everyone on Earth what happened to Voyager and he becomes a Recurring character working to help Voyager get back from the Alpha Quadrant side.
That episode where Barclay is working on a Holo-Voyager to get them back? Replace him with Kim.
I have to state hat I actually like Favorite Son.This is a small piece of why so much of the criticism of Voyager is justified. The link here involves studio interference, though I'm fairly certain Berman and Braga weren't helpful; I expect the "someone gotta be duh ensign" stupidity was theirs.
When Nog needed a change in direction, the writers were allowed to have him make one. When Bashir's character was foundering, the showrunners brought in his genetic enhancement, his spy games, and his recruitment by S31. When a Voyager character was in trouble, an effort was made to salvage him... and look what happened.
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Star Trek: Voyager Cut A Huge Harry Kim Twist, Says Garrett Wang
Harry Kim's big season 3 twist was cut.screenrant.com
The only thing I did find ridiculous was just that plot about Harry being a Taresian, his embryo inplanted in his mother and that he once was bound to return to Taresia.
Harry should have developed in the same way, from "young Ensign Kim" to a skilled Starfleeet officer and who would have earned a promotion for that.
This is a small piece of why so much of the criticism of Voyager is justified. The link here involves studio interference, though I'm fairly certain Berman and Braga weren't helpful; I expect the "someone gotta be duh ensign" stupidity was theirs.
Conflict of values, the disgrace to his family, the incompatibility between cultures?When it comes to Nog, his development took off in an unexpected way but still a realistic scenario when he decided to join Starfleet. I mean, why not?
Conflict of values, the disgrace to his family, the incompatibility between cultures?
Other than that, no reason for Nog to join Starfleet.
Tongue slightly in cheek, but seriously it was unexpected, and definitely not how the character started out, especially with the Ferengi in DS9. Voyager never took that risk.
Nog didn't want to end up like his father, not uncle. But agreed, it makes sense and there are real life examples of that.Unexpected, true, but we do see things like that in real life. Also, he does give an 'intrinsic motivation' - he doesn't want to end up like his uncle, but to do something with his life (and apparently he felt he could do what it was he wanted better in Starfleet than in the Ferengi Alliance).
Nog didn't want to end up like his father, not uncle. But agreed, it makes sense and there are real life examples of that.
I also think, in a subtle way, being best friends with Jake gave him another role model to emulate... Ben Sisko. With his own father, Nog saw how purposeless his life could end up. With Jake's dad, he saw how full of purpose it could be.
That's another thing, VOY's crew should have had more Delta Quadrant aliens in it to start with.
I think it would've been interesting if alien crewmembers had joined the ship along the way, travelling with them for a while until they reached their own destinations, but I can't see many volunteers signing up to take a trip to the other side of the galaxy that they probably won't live to see the end of.
Yeah, but the Protostar was fast enough to get people to Earth while they were still a child! You make a fair point though.You might be surprised. Some DQ aliens could be wanting a fresh start, snd see the Federation as a golden opportunity. Look at the young officer who escaped the quadrant as a child, and aided Janeway near the end of Prodigy's first season.
I wouldn't know about that.You might be surprised. Some DQ aliens could be wanting a fresh start, snd see the Federation as a golden opportunity. Look at the young officer who escaped the quadrant as a child, and aided Janeway near the end of Prodigy's first season.
They could be refugees wanting to get away from the DQ and didn't care where they went, or someone on VOY got killed because of them and they wanted to make it up by serving on the ship and leaving home, stuff like that.I think it would've been interesting if alien crewmembers had joined the ship along the way, travelling with them for a while until they reached their own destinations, but I can't see many volunteers signing up to take a trip to the other side of the galaxy that they probably won't live to see the end of.
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