I never realised that, but it certainly goes some way to explaining why season three drops the Kazon and everything else like a stone, and the show makes a definite shift towards being a TNG clone. The first two seasons weren't great, but I think they made more attempts to keep a continuity, especially over the Kazon/Seska arc, and there are references to supply shortages and replicator rations, which disappeared after the third season. Once that didn't really work, they had another go at relaunching the show in season four, with Seven of Nine.
But that wasn't planned, the original idea was that Unity was to be the only Borg episode in season 3 and the season would end with Year of Hell, Part 1. Braga and Menosky wrote the script for YoH but then Braga had the idea of introducing a Borg crewmember and he brought it to Berman whose genius came up with the idea of a "Borg babe". Braga and Menosky then hastily wrote Scorpion, Part 1 to facilitate the introduction of a new Borg character and the death of Harry Kim. Plans changed, Kes was written out instead of Harry and in the fourth season Braga and Menosky rewrote the script for Year of Hell to include Seven.There was an arc on season three and that was the preparation for the events in Scorpion. The Kazon were left behind and gradually we got more Borg things coming up until the big (and legendary) boom.
Well it's rather a moot point seeing the show ended up running for seven years, but according to Stephen Edward Poe's behind the scenes book "Vision of the Future", Voyager's future during its second year was very much up in the air, and as a result, the writers did Cold Fire so they had the ground ready if the show was cancelled.
Perhaps most tellingly, the people considering canning the show were apparently the producers.
I never realised that, but it certainly goes some way to explaining why season three drops the Kazon and everything else like a stone, and the show makes a definite shift towards being a TNG clone. The first two seasons weren't great, but I think they made more attempts to keep a continuity, especially over the Kazon/Seska arc, and there are references to supply shortages and replicator rations, which disappeared after the third season. Once that didn't really work, they had another go at relaunching the show in season four, with Seven of Nine.
But that wasn't planned, the original idea was that Unity was to be the only Borg episode in season 3 and the season would end with Year of Hell, Part 1.There was an arc on season three and that was the preparation for the events in Scorpion. The Kazon were left behind and gradually we got more Borg things coming up until the big (and legendary) boom.
Or so the legend goes.
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