So The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine are piss-poor?That sci-fi fans heap so much praise on B5 isn't indicate of B5's quality, but rather how piss-poor TV space opera was as of the mid-1990s.
So The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine are piss-poor?That sci-fi fans heap so much praise on B5 isn't indicate of B5's quality, but rather how piss-poor TV space opera was as of the mid-1990s.
So The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine are piss-poor?That sci-fi fans heap so much praise on B5 isn't indicate of B5's quality, but rather how piss-poor TV space opera was as of the mid-1990s.
Right, but this is a Star Trek board, with the assumption the posters are, probably, fans of Star Trek, which would lead to the follow up question: What Star Trek isn't terrible? The original?So The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine are piss-poor?
Compared to other TV dramas? Absolutely.
I realize that may not be a popular opinion here, as sci-fi fans tend to be pretty insular.
To be honest I don't think it was the first sci-fi show with decent characters - and I don't think great characterisation is something we've come to regularly expect from genre programming in the last ten years, either. Firefly's initial buzz - and I remember it because I argued against it - was largely because it was a show by the guy behind Buffy.That's why Firefly looked so good in 2002. All of a sudden you had decent characters in SciFi. That was new. Firefly wouldn't look nearly as impressive today because now we're used to good character-driven shows.
Right, but this is a Star Trek board, with the assumption the posters are, probably, fans of Star Trek, which would lead to the follow up question: What Star Trek isn't terrible? The original?
Right, but this is a Star Trek board, with the assumption the posters are, probably, fans of Star Trek, which would lead to the follow up question: What Star Trek isn't terrible? The original?So The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine are piss-poor?
Compared to other TV dramas? Absolutely.
I realize that may not be a popular opinion here, as sci-fi fans tend to be pretty insular.
TNG was a well-produced and often well-written show, but its episodic nature and largely static characterization really date it.
For instance, "In the Pale Moonlight," which is often regarded as one of the best of the series, has Sisko avoiding direct responsibility for the bad things that "had" to be done to save the Federation. He got to pawn the dirty work off on someone else. Trekkies thought this was hard-hitting stuff. In any other contemporary drama, the audience would've rightly called it a copout.
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