Some shows keep to their premise and adjust in series.. Voyager did not. Voyager set up a serialized premise and then used reset buttons expecting the audience to forgot and just go along to get along.
Sorry, Voyager set up a premise then ignored it. That's not any other shows or the people who watched it's fault
Every other show that VOY gets compared to had their own usage of the reset button.
I did and friends of mine too. So, no. Hearsay, of course.
So then the fault lay with TNG with creating an unsustainable premise. If they'd introduced them more like DS9 did with the Dominion, showing they were powerful but could still be killed, things would've worked out better.
Honestly, I didn't. I figure if the Voyager crew could build a Warp 7 shuttle from scratch, they could probably figure out a way to back up their EMH. After all, Zimmerman made multiple copies, so it must have been possible
Yeah well, now folks are willing to say "Okay, minor plot annoyance. I won't let it ruin the story."
Not so back when VOY was on the air.
Did that hate come after Scorpion, or after In the Flesh? Because the latter definitely made them less scary.
It started as soon as the opening scene of Scorpion aired, the sight of anyone being able to blast a Cube apart enraged the audience.
Problem is, VOY's continuity people were sloppy, indifferent, or both. Ten seconds of technobabble would have resolved all issues
I doubt any explanation would have satisfied the audience.
Kind of hard to use them to potential when the entire plot of the Borg/8472 conflict was derided from start to finish.
[quote[That's a symptom of a greater issue with VOY... the fact that the crew had the 10 mains, a couple of recurring kids, two or three junior officers who showed up now and then... and 130 nonentities.[/quote]
Beh, that's every Trek.
I think there are two fundamental problems with Star Trek: Voyager:
Probably more, Voyager's problem was that it was an incomplete show to begin with. "Lost Ship" stories aren't good for more than 2 seasons worth of stories in the first place, it's not sustainable.
For number one: The premise of the show demands serialization and interpersonal conflict. This is a show about 150 people stuffed into a tin can, about 50 of whom were in open violent rebellion against the other 100 before they were trapped. But they're already undermining their own premise at the end of "Caretaker, Part II" by having the Maquis put on Starfleet uniforms and agree to operate as a Starfleet crew.
This is one of the problems, the Maquis. And it's not the lack of conflict, it's that the Maquis aren't a good choice for it. Their big beef with the Feds was a political dispute that was no longer present in the Delta Quadrant, meaning real conflict over that couldn't last.
Now, if the other crew had been Romulans then the conflict would have made more sense and been more long lasting. REAL Ancient enemies having to work together.
Though preferably, Voyager shouldn't have been a Starfleet ship to start with. It should've been an alien ship they find on the Array and the crew should've been a small group of Fleeters and the rest being random Delta Quadrant aliens trapped on the Array when the Fleeters free them.
If the VOY writers didn't want to write the show their premise obliged them, they should have just sent Voyager home already.
They were thinking of that, it's why the Female Caretaker was brought in so early and wasted. Instead of being the main villain of the show, she showed up once and that was it. It's because the writers had no faith in the Lost Ship premise.
Now, they were partly right because "Lost Ship" isn't sustainable. But they still wasted the Female Caretaker.
You clearly don't have an understanding of what a reset button is.
A reset button is used that makes the previous episodes essentially forgotten or useless... and it's usually done with the next episode, maybe 2 or 3 more.
I'll use another example: NuBSG. After the "New Caprica" arc, they just have Apollo work out and lose all the weight he put on in like 1 episode.
Anytime Adama loses his position as Commander of the Fleet he ALWAYS gets it back, Roslin ALWAYS ends up back as President no matter what.
Take D'Argo and Chiana. In season 3, if you actually watched and paid attention, D'Argo was very much arms length with Chiana. Except for Zhaan's death, which hit everyone hard, but even he acknowledged that despite what happened between them, that scenario called for him to not leave her alone in pain, because he was also in pain with Zhaan's loss. And slowly, in season 4, he takes down his emotional walls, and they get back together at the very end of the season. That's not a reset... that is a CHARACTER JOURNEY. You know, the one thing we love watching because ACTUAL GROWTH HAPPENS.
Does he ever mention that Chiana betrayed him after that? Did either really change as a person during the breakup? No, they didn't. Whatever changes they went through had nothing to do with their separation but other character stuff with other characters.
I'll use another example, in "Crackers Don't Matter", Rygel is mad at D'Argo for trying to kill him and tells him he'll need time to deal with that. By the next episode, they're fine.
Or that episode where Crichton and Aeryn were trapped on that planet and grew old together. That got reset at the end and everyone forgot except Stark and Zhaan and neither of them mentioned it to anyone.
A lot of VOY's issues can be classified as decisions made with the intent of keeping the show running.
Yes, VOY as a premise was something better suited to coming out in 2000 or after. In 1995 on a Conservative Network that wanted a TNG clone, it wasn't a good idea.
Of course, it needed more than a "Lost Ship" plot too. That's only good for 2 seasons.