If they changed the premise that hamstrung them way too often, maybe. The "Always moving" thing crippled them in a lot of ways.
No, I wouldn't, and do not presume to speak for me.
I look at characters the same way I look at the series. I remove the top 5 best moments/episodes and the bottom 5 moments/episodes and see what I have. Janeway, on the whole, seems to follow the series. I found it mostly uninspiring, mediocre, forgettable. Things that do not even bring feelings of dislike or hate. I tend to especially remember the good shows and the bad ones. I could start Voyager all over again, because I've mostly forgotten it. I cannot say that about the other series except Enterprise. But, then, I remember quite a bit about that series for it was mostly bad.
Now, if you rate a captain on the basis of their interaction with Q, then Picard wins it all. They should have left Q out of the other series. It just didn't work. I still find those episodes of TNG with Q the most entertaining.
I commend you for your admission that you have largely forgotten about Voyager. I think many posters here have forgotten Voyager or have gone through a single viewing a decade or so past. This unfamiliarity, however, doesn't prevent them from drawing the usual inane conclusions about Janeway being "schizophrenic" or worse (if they truly understood what the term meant, they would realize how uneducated they sound in applying it to her). I would suggest that many posters should return and watch the series through before they draw conclusions based on a viewing that is incomplete or not clearly remembered.![]()
You do realize that was intended as playful banter?
We know that Picard had a background in archeology and commanded the USS Stargazer for a twenty-plus year exploration mission prior to TNG. We know from TNG that he is a fairly decent strategist and that he created the 'Picard Maneuver' to save his crew from a (at the time) unknown assailant. Plus we've seen that Picard is also a capable diplomat, something that would come in handy.
People have a hard time with Janeway because she often comes across a schizophrenic. Let's not forget the fact that she had no problem rewriting the history of billions to save a single person.
I don't think anyone who says "Voyager could have been the best" really understand just how limited the show's premise really was.
There is a great big assumption there--that they would have been able to use the array to get home. The caretaker said it took too much effort and energy for him to do it in his condition, so who says that Voyager's crew could have done it without his help? All she really did was keep the array out of the hands of the Kazon, because the odds were against their being able to successfully send themselves home.
The Kazon reinforcements would have arrived before they got the Array working, and they wouldn't have survived the next attack. So it was either "blow up the Array now and run" or "stay, fight and probably lose so they get the Array AND our ship's tech."
I don't think anyone who says "Voyager could have been the best" really understand just how limited the show's premise really was.
If they weren't insignificant then there wouldn't have been complaints by the audience whenever they did anything big or awesome or epic. Since that's what happened, we're left with the notion that they couldn't do anything epic without it being criticized. Thus, insignificant.
They can cure the Vidiians? They're too important.
They can arrange a meeting with all the Kazon leaders? They're too important.
They stop the Krenim timeship? They're too important.
They can stop the Borg/8472 war? They're too important.
And so on. How the heck is the show supposed to work if they can't DO anything?
Nevermind that Farscape had the fate of the Galaxy be in the hands of some random human who fell through a wormhole and no one cares.
If they weren't insignificant then there wouldn't have been complaints by the audience whenever they did anything big or awesome or epic. Since that's what happened, we're left with the notion that they couldn't do anything epic without it being criticized. Thus, insignificant.
They can cure the Vidiians? They're too important.
They can arrange a meeting with all the Kazon leaders? They're too important.
They stop the Krenim timeship? They're too important.
They can stop the Borg/8472 war? They're too important.
And so on. How the heck is the show supposed to work if they can't DO anything?
Nevermind that Farscape had the fate of the Galaxy be in the hands of some random human who fell through a wormhole and no one cares.
Farscape? Huh? How did Farscape get into this topic?
So you're basing their insignificance on a bunch of wussy whiners who didn't like that they could actually handle themselves rather than limp home with nothing but defeat and failure? Maybe those people who didn't like the show should have turned it off and gone outside and had a life instead of watching it and disliking everything they do. Talk about foolish! What kind of person CHOOSES to watch a show they dislike? People who aren't even intelligent enough to not watch a show they clearly despise are hardly worth the weight of their opinions. If they liked it but had a few issues, that's one thing. But if all they did was find flaws and reasons to dislike it, then they should have not watched the show. That's what wise people do.
I like you.
The premise is that a bunch of people on a small, insignificant ship are thrown to the other side of the Galaxy. Even though the same thing happened to Kirk and Picard with both returning home easily, these guys can't (an early sign of incompetence).
The premise says they will never have any support, meaning no one will EVER help them in ANY way because it would violate the premise. Doing so is a betrayal of the premise and unforgivable.
The crew is made up of two groups who are nominally opposed, but really don't have enough in the way of differences for it to have any impact on the show.
Since they are just one tiny insignificant ship with an insignificant crew (no one famous, no "chosen ones", no God-Humans, no Flagship personnel) nothing they do can be of any real importance on the Galaxy or the Delta Quadrant's well-being because doing anything would make them too important for one tiny insignificant ship.
And since they're always moving they can never stay in one place without getting complaints no matter the reasoning, meaning they'll never be able to introduce recurring characters or give their new aliens the time they need to be better developed. And since the crew are all alien to the Delta Quadrant they have no connection to local affairs meaning there's no dramatic potential there either.
Being an insignificant tiny ship also means they can't introduce anyone tough because a tiny insignificant ship can't beat anyone, so the only option is to constantly run away like spineless cowards from everything. See folks being attacked by space pirates? Well too bad, we're too insignificant to do anything so we'll just run off and let innocent people get slaughtered because we're too chicken-sh*t to try anything.
That is the premise of Voyager.
You sure do like to try to put words in other peoples' mouths an awful lot. But fine, I'll play.So it's okay for Crichton on Farscape to break down, it's okay for Adama and Roslin to break down, but it's not okay for Janeway to break down.
Ain't double standards fine?
Yeah - like me. My critique of Voyager is not playful banter. (The Internetz are seriouz bizness.Sorry that I took it differently than playful banter. My bad. I've seen so many attacks on Voy and Janeway that I just took it that way.
Anwar seems to be having part of his argument with voices only he can hear, so I, at least, understand your confusion. He also can't seem to decide whether he is defending Voyager or trashing it.Farscape? Huh? How did Farscape get into this topic?
See? This is the sort of thing that can be taken as not playful banter. Rude. Also, calling other posters names is frowned on around here.So then we agree that these fools are irrelevant? Yes?
We can't even assimilate them because they would add flaws to our perfection. Maybe we can keep them for spare parts in emergencies? Or would the parts be equally imperfect? The brains would have to be tossed as they are clearly not capable of higher functioning.
Well, the premise said that they wouldn't have any support for their missions like the other shows did. That means no one at all would be helping them, and anytime they did get help it was a premise violation.
The 8472 thing is what I mean, fans consider that episode the beginning of the Borg decay as villains because it was shown that there was at least one species out there that can hurt them. That VOY was able to do ANYTHING in that story is just another strike against the show.
In TOS they were a special exploration crew on a rare ship that there were only 12 of and had a special half-breed Science Officer. In TNG they were the flagship and had the elite crew, in DS9 the Captain was a Holy Icon to an entire civilization (as well as the importance of guys like Odo). VOY had no one of equal importance in their crew nor was their ship of any importance either.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.