Although I'm old enough to have been a Trek fan since before Next Gen, I'm first and foremost a Niner. Despite loving TOS and TNG, and liking at least some of Voyager and Enterprise, I'm somewhat over the Boldly Going 'planet of the week' thing. We've had an awful lot.
It's the more serialised, more political DS9 that I'm hoping to see something of in Discovery.
Me, too. Like, I literally could have typed this post without changing a word.
That's exactly what I don't want.
I guess the question now is what are we even arguing about? You have fewer misgivings about the show than I do!I don't understand why not jumping on a bandwagon has become so wrong.
![]()
It's really tough to get away with the "you're another" dodge when called out. Try something different, please.
I have an opinion of what I see. I have no ax to grind here.
I'm generally, from TNG forward, pretty excited about any new Trek - I've been called a booster from time to time myself, especially as regarded Enterprise.
I don't care if a new production changes everything. In fact, I rather prefer it.
I don't give a fuck about canon. I consider it trivial. If they recast Spock or Kirk as a woman, I'd be interested.
I'm not protective of older productions and shows, although I have strong preferences among them (TOS first and always).
You can reboot the hell out of Trek and I'll look forward to it. If you did a gussied-up version of TOS with the same sets and costumes - I'd be real skeptical of the success of that, but I'd love it (I've worked on a fan film or two).
I flat-out love the Abrams movies, all three of them. I'll fight it out with all comers on that one.
I like all the Discovery cast I've seen. I like the look of the Klingons. I like the spaceship models. I'm not in love with the sets and costumes.
I was extremely positive about this series until we started seeing, you know, content - people talking, moving images, music, etc.
Now I'm more skeptical. Because I respond to what they show me.
Oh, don't worry - this series will be a huge success for CBS. I can almost guarantee that. Most Trek fans will come around.
So what the fuck are you so defensive about?
I'm not sold. I actually enjoyed Orville as more of a "Trek" than I think I will DIS.
The thing is, if enough people decide "It's not what I wanted so I won't watch", they'll never get the series they do want. Same with if they say "I want it to be on regular TV instead of CBS AA so I won't watch". That doesn't mean CBS will put it on regular TV. It means they'll just take it away.I think it's interesting...because the direction the series has taken definitely wouldn't have been my first choice. It may not have even been my 3rd or 4th choice...
But that doesn't prevent me from being excited and enthusiastic about new Star Trek. I'm going in expecting it to be good. If it is not...I won't watch it past S1 probably...but I'll certainly be giving it every opportunity to prove me right!
Oh, trust me - YEARS from now it'll be on some U.S. cable network (SyFy, TNT, etc) - and if it bombs that will happen sooner than later as CBS will want to squeeze whatever profit the can.The thing is, if enough people decide "It's not what I wanted so I won't watch", they'll never get the series they do want. Same with if they say "I want it to be on regular TV instead of CBS AA so I won't watch". That doesn't mean CBS will put it on regular TV. It means they'll just take it away.
Well, we don't know yet if we will like Discovery. I'm gonna watch, and if I don't like, I'll quit. Not immediately; like I've done with every Trek series, I'll see if I get a sense that there's potential, and that the series is gonna live up to that potential, but after a while if I don't see that happening, I'll drop out.You also shouldn't support something you dislike just on the very, very unlikely chance it might lead to something you do like. It almost never happens. In fact, I can't think of one time that did happen. Every time a franchise hit bottom but got better that I can think of it didn't improve because fans all watched the thing they disliked and hoped for something better.
The style and tone seem pretty different from that stuff, and while the designs are pretty similar they're different enough that I think it's clear this isn't just more of the same.The "edgiest" part of Discovery I have seen yet was the TV-MA rating
But yeah, apart from that? It wouldn't look too different from the Rick Berman/Brannan Braga late VOY/early ENT-version of DS9.
I love serialized story telling. Don't get my wrong I still enjoy episodic stuff like the other Trek shows, and crime dramas like the NCISs (although they get pretty serialized at times), I prefer serialized stories. They're just able to get a lot deeper into the stories when they aren't limited to just one hour.That's exactly what I don't want. A serialized show has never held my interests long term (it always feels like there is a ton of padding going on), and Deep Space Nine didn't either.
It is funny the difference between these threads and the ones on The Orville. Even those threads are light and breezy.
To each their own but seriously, serialization can lead to padding? Really?
No, sir. It's serialization (shows designed to be binge-watched) that leads to tight, focused storytelling.
Maybe we define padding differently, because for me it's when we get episodes that don't really matter to larger story. TNG and VGR didn't really have enough of a larger story for there to be padding in them. VGR did have a bit more of an arc than TNG, but it was such a lose arc that there really was no need for padding.TNG and VGR had padding, and lots of it. If I were to excise every episode of those series that literally contributed nothing to character development, story direction or the Trek mythos as a whole, I'd probably have about three seasons left (combined).
Well, we don't know yet if we will like Discovery. I'm gonna watch, and if I don't like, I'll quit. Not immediately; like I've done with every Trek series, I'll see if I get a sense that there's potential, and that the series is gonna live up to that potential, but after a while if I don't see that happening, I'll drop out.
But we'll cross that bridge when we come to it.
IDK - I stuck with TNG over what I considered the mostly terrible first two seasons (each had a couple decent episodes, but nothing that made me go "Wow! Great" -- until the TNG third season episode "Yesterday's Enterprise" and the the TNG third season cliffhanger of: "Best of Both Worlds"You also shouldn't support something you dislike just on the very, very unlikely chance it might lead to something you do like. It almost never happens. In fact, I can't think of one time that did happen. Every time a franchise hit bottom but got better that I can think of it didn't improve because fans all watched the thing they disliked and hoped for something better.
IDK - I stuck with TNG over what I considered the mostly terrible first two seasons (each had a couple decent episodes, but nothing that made me go "Wow! Great" -- until the TNG third season episode "Yesterday's Enterprise" and the the TNG third season cliffhanger of: "Best of Both Worlds"
And I stuck with it because of (up to that time) it had been 12 years since TAS was on TV when TNG premiered and 18 years since the original TOS had been cancelled, so yeah, I was hoping we'd eventually get some Star trek I considered 'good' back on the air, and it started after two years of mostly crap (IMO).
I tend to agree. Yet I would support something I was lukewarm about if it made a difference to the long term prospects of the franchise. That is I wanted new Trek to be post Voyager and it is not. So I'm interested enough in Discovery to watch it but if it also adds to the momentum of interest in Trek in general, I can hold onto some pathetic hope it might help in a minor way to getting things going in a more forward (timeline) direction.You also shouldn't support something you dislike just on the very, very unlikely chance it might lead to something you do like. It almost never happens. In fact, I can't think of one time that did happen. Every time a franchise hit bottom but got better that I can think of it didn't improve because fans all watched the thing they disliked and hoped for something better.
No, not really. (I was 24 in 1987.) The late 1980ies early 1990ies was when the:I thought TNG Season 1 and 2 had just enough good episodes to justify watching, although I saw them long after they aired (since Season 1 aired on TV when I was -3 years old and Season 2 when I was -2) but between them you still get episodes like Encounter at Farpoint, The Battle, Datalore, Q Who, etc. Plus I think it had more decent elements overall. It was also a time with less on TV to watch and channels seemed more willing to keep a show on the air. So, yeah, watching crap basically never gets you something good. TNG got good because one albatross around the neck of the show died and another left left, it was basically random chance and not support from the fans or fans desperately hoping for a better show that made TNG great.
The crossover we don't deserve or need.So Discovery and Orville are battling to the death, Discovery is stepping on Orville's throat but Seth McFarlane croaks out "Martha!" and Soneqa Martin-Green starts yelling "Why are you saying that name?!?" and they end up best friends and form the Justice League.
"6 days, Colonel. God created the world in 6 days...of course, God wasn't surrounded by a bunch of flakes."We've known for over a year that it doesn't work that way, so either pay for it, or don't complain because nothing is going to change in six days.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.