I'm actually happy that there are skilled writers who have the skill, will and imagination to undo some of the worst character destructions of Star Trek.
If Star Trek had been such a destructive doom crap show as some "fans" seem to want it to be, I wouldn't have watched a single second of it or bought a single book. In that case I prefer biographies about real people.
Star Trek is supposed to be a series of hope for mankind and hope for a better future, not a refelection of the dark ages of the 21th century.
Those who want a "dark show" or read similar books can watch the news or read some evening tabloid and enjoy how our pathetic political "leaders" and economists are doing their best to destroy what's left of this world or watch a nearby funeral instead.
^^
If Voyager had been such a destructive doom crap show, I wouldn't have watched a single second of it.
Star Trek is supposed to be a series of hope for mankind and hope for a better future, not a refelection of the dark ages of the 21th century.
Those who want a "dark show" can watch the news and enjoy how our pathetic political "leaders" and economists are doing their best to destroy what's left of this world or watch a nearby funeral.
As for Chakotay, Neelix and Kim, they were good characters. Voyager had the best characters of all Star Trek series. Why should any of them be killed off and be replaced by second-hand nobodies? Strange suggestions indeed.
As for BSG, it sucks! Too much of 20th-21th century losers among the characters.
I'm actually happy that there are skilled writers who have the skill, will and imagination to undo some of the worst character destructions of Star Trek.
If Star Trek had been such a destructive doom crap show as some "fans" seem to want it to be, I wouldn't have watched a single second of it or bought a single book. In that case I prefer biographies about real people.
Star Trek is supposed to be a series of hope for mankind and hope for a better future, not a refelection of the dark ages of the 21th century.
Those who want a "dark show" or read similar books can watch the news or read some evening tabloid and enjoy how our pathetic political "leaders" and economists are doing their best to destroy what's left of this world or watch a nearby funeral instead.
And in the VOY forum:
^^
If Voyager had been such a destructive doom crap show, I wouldn't have watched a single second of it.
Star Trek is supposed to be a series of hope for mankind and hope for a better future, not a refelection of the dark ages of the 21th century.
Those who want a "dark show" can watch the news and enjoy how our pathetic political "leaders" and economists are doing their best to destroy what's left of this world or watch a nearby funeral.
As for Chakotay, Neelix and Kim, they were good characters. Voyager had the best characters of all Star Trek series. Why should any of them be killed off and be replaced by second-hand nobodies? Strange suggestions indeed.
As for BSG, it sucks! Too much of 20th-21th century losers among the characters.
![]()
Kathryn Janeway is in FULL CIRCLE, as the book spans several years while she was serving in Command.
I'm actually happy that there are skilled writers who have the skill, will and imagination to undo some of the worst character destructions of Star Trek.
If Star Trek had been such a destructive doom crap show as some "fans" seem to want it to be, I wouldn't have watched a single second of it or bought a single book. In that case I prefer biographies about real people.
Star Trek is supposed to be a series of hope for mankind and hope for a better future, not a refelection of the dark ages of the 21th century.
Those who want a "dark show" or read similar books can watch the news or read some evening tabloid and enjoy how our pathetic political "leaders" and economists are doing their best to destroy what's left of this world or watch a nearby funeral instead.
And in the VOY forum:
^^
If Voyager had been such a destructive doom crap show, I wouldn't have watched a single second of it.
Star Trek is supposed to be a series of hope for mankind and hope for a better future, not a refelection of the dark ages of the 21th century.
Those who want a "dark show" can watch the news and enjoy how our pathetic political "leaders" and economists are doing their best to destroy what's left of this world or watch a nearby funeral.
As for Chakotay, Neelix and Kim, they were good characters. Voyager had the best characters of all Star Trek series. Why should any of them be killed off and be replaced by second-hand nobodies? Strange suggestions indeed.
As for BSG, it sucks! Too much of 20th-21th century losers among the characters.
![]()
Laughing at another poster's opinion is actually rude.
So good you said them twice. At least.I do at least try to come up with constructive comments.
Yeah, ST should still be commenting on black vs white ("Let This Be Your Last Battlefield"), the Vietnam War ("A Private Little War"), genetic manipulation ("Space Seed") and gender stereotyping ("Turnabout Intruder"). Forget all those current temporary trends.As for Star Trek, I stick to my opinion that Star trek should keep its original premise and don't sell out to current temporary trends. Otherwise it will lose everything it stands for and many loyal fans as well.
[/quote]Those who want a "dark show" or read similar books can watch the news or read some evening tabloid and enjoy how our pathetic political "leaders" and economists are doing their best to destroy what's left of this world or watch a nearby funeral instead.
I'm actually dissapointed. Not even an attempt to a constructive reply here.
Laughing at another poster's opinion is actually rude. There are a lot of things I find laughable as well but I do at least try to come up with constructive comments.
As for Star Trek, I stick to my opinion that Star trek should keep its original premise and don't sell out to current temporary trends. Otherwise it will lose everything it stands for and many loyal fans as well.
Why do I keep flashing on the "dead parrot" sketch in so many of these posts?
--Ted
BTW...wasn't Batman's dad THOMAS Wane?
Laughing at another poster's opinion is actually rude.
They were laughing at your slightly-edited cut-n-paste posting style.
So good you said them twice. At least.I do at least try to come up with constructive comments.
Yeah, ST should still be commenting on black vs white ("Let This Be Your Last Battlefield"), the Vietnam War ("A Private Little War"), genetic manipulation ("Space Seed") and gender stereotyping ("Turnabout Intruder"). Forget all those current temporary trends.As for Star Trek, I stick to my opinion that Star trek should keep its original premise and don't sell out to current temporary trends. Otherwise it will lose everything it stands for and many loyal fans as well.![]()
Personally I find the news highly amusing, but then again I'm strange! And to think a few world leaders and economists will destroy the world. how fucking arrogant is that, maybe civilization as we know it will cease or it will change for the better, but destroying the whole wide world, nope, not at all
Kathryn Janeway is in FULL CIRCLE, as the book spans several years while she was serving in Command.
Strange that everyone seems to "know" what I've said and what is planned...and I haven't posted a single comment. (except this one)
Ah...the Internet.
Margaret
What a nice way to speak up and yet say absolutely nothing.![]()
Well, we're talking about novels here, so that doesn't count at all.I'm sure that yo actually know that I didn't mean that Trek should remain in the 60's but keep it's premise as a show
That future looks pretty good to me, really. Great technology, good ideals, a powerful force for good unable to be taken down by anything, strong enough to take on the universe and make it a better place. That's just about the best possible future I can imagine.about a better future for mankind
Check; check.and also keep good characters and good storytelling
Why? Why must they continue to tell the same stories they already have? They already told those stories. Hell, were you upset when DS9 was announced, because it took place on a space station, and Star Trek hadn't ever told stories on a space station before? That wasn't doing things "in the way that it has [been] done" either.in the way it has done
Sell out - to give up artistic integrity for money; to let the fans dictate one's work. Seems to me like that's what you WANT them to do. What they DID was much more edgy and true to themselves.and not sell out
Man, lemme tell you. Star Trek is not "doom and gloom scenario", and is absolutely nothing like BSG.to the "gloom and doom scenario" which some fans seem to like. After all, we do have BSG and similar series for those who like that sort of entertainment.
Well, I don't think that those politicians and economists are doing much to prevent the ongoing destruction of the planet. Lot of talk but nothing more. They only seem to care about their own wallets and their own power. But that's a subject outside the TrekLit debates which could be brought up in another forum.
Let's take your comments from my perspective, just as a fun exercise.
Well, we're talking about novels here, so that doesn't count at all.I'm sure that yo actually know that I didn't mean that Trek should remain in the 60's but keep it's premise as a show
That future looks pretty good to me, really. Great technology, good ideals, a powerful force for good unable to be taken down by anything, strong enough to take on the universe and make it a better place. That's just about the best possible future I can imagine.about a better future for mankind
In order to be a better future for you, it's necessary that no one ever die? That seems rather unrealistic to me.
Check; check.
Why? Why must they continue to tell the same stories they already have? They already told those stories. Hell, were you upset when DS9 was announced, because it took place on a space station, and Star Trek hadn't ever told stories on a space station before? That wasn't doing things "in the way that it has [been] done" either.
Sell out - to give up artistic integrity for money; to let the fans dictate one's work. Seems to me like that's what you WANT them to do. What they DID was much more edgy and true to themselves.and not sell out
Man, lemme tell you. Star Trek is not "doom and gloom scenario", and is absolutely nothing like BSG.to the "gloom and doom scenario" which some fans seem to like. After all, we do have BSG and similar series for those who like that sort of entertainment.
This is basically like me saying "I wish Star Trek would stop publishing optimistic books; we have Stargate and similar series for those who like that sort of entertainment." It's a completely useless point. Star Trek shouldn't define itself by what other shows aren't doing any more than by what a vocal minority of fans wants.
So basically, your entire rant is spurious and hysterical. You don't like the stories, fine, but that's a personal preference. It has nothing to do with BSG, breaking tradition, or selling out.
Well, in a serialized narrative universe like Star Trek or comic books, I think that character deaths are more about the reactions of other character than the readers' reactions. Since the "fake death", "stunt death" deal was done more than once, serial readers are desensitized to that: when a main character dies, no one is going to buy it. But it doesn't mean that those stories are not worth to be written: we may think that Janeway (or Data, ect) may be back somewhere in the future, but the other characters do not. Exploring their reactions, and the stories that unfold from that event, can be highly interesting and entertaining.So I've been reading the various Janeway=dead threads and I'd like to ask a question. Is anyone else getting tired of 'stunt' deaths? Like, a major character dies, and it's a big thing, they're dead for a few months then a new creative team brings them back for whatever reason. Happens a lot in comic books.
In star trek, death is a joke. If killing a character is meaningless, why bother doing it at all?
Not Tucker. The producers said as much: if another season had come through, they either would have written the episode that he lived or, if it were too late, have brought him back. They only killed him off because they knew they would never actually have to do the show without him (and good thing, too - where would ENT be without it's endless Tucker/T'Pol soap opera?). It was a cheap, hackneyed and otherwise incompetant attempt at playing on the audience's emotions and trying to make a crappy finale somehow relevant. It's the very definition of a stunt death.
Janeway's death was basically like Barrymore in Scream, the stock idiot girl offed by the serial killer in the first act to establish peril, with the extra pep that it was someone famous who gets the axe (or hungry wall, as the case may be). It was a sad, transparent attempt to make the bathetic failed-epic that was Before Dishonor somehow meaningful, something that would appear serious to counteract the novel's rampant idiocy. Stunt death.
Data is a bit more complicated, because the actor felt that he was getting too old for the role, so it's partly a death due to (perceived) actor availability. The way it was executed, however, tacked on at the end of the film, failing to achieve any thematic resonance with the rest of the movie or really be affective in any fashion, certainly gives it the air of a stunt death, a ham-handed attempt to go out with a bang, to underscore the finality of the characters' various journeys.
Spock's death, more importantly than whether or not it was believed to be permanent at the time, was a genuine, heartfelt sendoff for the character which matched the film's other concerns. In no way a stunt death.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
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