Man, Guy Gardner is pushing all my buttons today.
Pulaski was a great character who had a number of fine moments on TNG. I like that she wasn't afraid to stand up to the captain, and that she was enough of a bon vivant to drink the Klingon Death Tea while Worf read her love poetry.
They did it and you know it.
And now onto my defense of Neelix. I'm going to split this off from my deep admiration for Ethan Phillips, which I've talked about before. Let's look at the character of Neelix.
We learn why Neelix is who he is in "Jetrel." While he was off catting around, his entire family was killed. He's got a tremendous load of survivor's guilt, which he sublimates into a need to a) be useful and b) be loved. He was unable to save his family and, one suspects, feels guilty that he wanted to spend time away from them. He might even feel on a purely emotional level that it's his fault they're dead, that if he had been there he might have been able to save them (he couldn't, but that's besides the point).
So he gloms onto Kes, who is a stand-in for his sister. He feels the need to love and protect her, but there's some ambiguity on both their parts about making this a romantic relationship. That's why, other than his jealousy/envy of Tom Paris, a risk-taker who threatens to put Kes in danger should he sweep her off her feet, there's not much of a romantic vibe to the Kes/Neelix dynamic.
Then, in a bigger sense, he gloms onto the Voyager family, where it continues to be very, very important to him that he be a Really Useful Engine. Most guys in his situation would be content to put in their 8 hours, but he just needs to be needed.
This is really clear in his last episode. He doesn't leave Voyager because he doesn't love everyone anymore. He leaves because he realizes that none of them need him anymore. This crystallizes in the NaomiWildman scene.
On the other hand, as Tuvok told him, the Talaxians did need him. So, true to himself, he went where he was needed.
When you get behind the butt-crack face and the goofy outfits, he was actually one of the most psychologically complex characters on the show who had a real arc.

Pulaski was a great character who had a number of fine moments on TNG. I like that she wasn't afraid to stand up to the captain, and that she was enough of a bon vivant to drink the Klingon Death Tea while Worf read her love poetry.
They did it and you know it.
And now onto my defense of Neelix. I'm going to split this off from my deep admiration for Ethan Phillips, which I've talked about before. Let's look at the character of Neelix.
We learn why Neelix is who he is in "Jetrel." While he was off catting around, his entire family was killed. He's got a tremendous load of survivor's guilt, which he sublimates into a need to a) be useful and b) be loved. He was unable to save his family and, one suspects, feels guilty that he wanted to spend time away from them. He might even feel on a purely emotional level that it's his fault they're dead, that if he had been there he might have been able to save them (he couldn't, but that's besides the point).
So he gloms onto Kes, who is a stand-in for his sister. He feels the need to love and protect her, but there's some ambiguity on both their parts about making this a romantic relationship. That's why, other than his jealousy/envy of Tom Paris, a risk-taker who threatens to put Kes in danger should he sweep her off her feet, there's not much of a romantic vibe to the Kes/Neelix dynamic.
Then, in a bigger sense, he gloms onto the Voyager family, where it continues to be very, very important to him that he be a Really Useful Engine. Most guys in his situation would be content to put in their 8 hours, but he just needs to be needed.
This is really clear in his last episode. He doesn't leave Voyager because he doesn't love everyone anymore. He leaves because he realizes that none of them need him anymore. This crystallizes in the NaomiWildman scene.
On the other hand, as Tuvok told him, the Talaxians did need him. So, true to himself, he went where he was needed.
When you get behind the butt-crack face and the goofy outfits, he was actually one of the most psychologically complex characters on the show who had a real arc.