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Rewatching Voyager

I wonder if this had something to do with the fact that Dawson directed part 2. She said she didn't like directing and acting in the same episode so she might have had some of their scenes cut or something. But now I wonder if they were even aware that tom and b'elanna were together or not. I imagine that they were together when they went down to the planet but maybe they got separated and the people in the hospital didn't know.

But they had all that high-end medical tech. It would take a simple scan or DNA test to see who the child's father was.

Almost everyone has that 'one' thing that grates at them when it comes to certain episodes. This just happens to be mine when it comes to Workforce. They contrived a situation so Tom and B'Elanna would 'find' each other again.

And where were Naomi and Icheb?
 
But they had all that high-end medical tech. It would take a simple scan or DNA test to see who the child's father was.

Almost everyone has that 'one' thing that grates at them when it comes to certain episodes. This just happens to be mine when it comes to Workforce. They contrived a situation so Tom and B'Elanna would 'find' each other again.

And where were Naomi and Icheb?
I get what you're saying. There's no real reason to separate them other than the cuteness of them finding each other and still being drawn to each other.

I would hope that Naomi ended up with Sam
 
Ok so I downloaded this episode (and several others) and really enjoyed hearing the process of how the story came to be. I find myself really liking their original idea and wishing that had happened. I think that would have been really interesting to see it in early season 3 when B'Elanna was already beginning to have feelings for Tom, then she falls for this Klingon who ends up betraying her, in the end when she had to choose who to shoot it would have been really dramatic. I need a good fanfic author to make this happen LOL
 
I always thought Measure of a Man was the better episode when it came to AI rights (although the basic theme of the two episodes was different) but I really enjoyed the Doctor/Tom going back and forth at each other in the holodeck. I also like that we finally got to see an 'evil' version of Torres since Dawson was not able to be a part of Living Witness.

I was reminded a lot about Living Witness watching Author, Author, especially with Janeway. Also, I didn't notice this before, but that was Dawson without the Klingon make up. That was kind of cool.
 
Ha, I just watched "Author, Author"...

And I found myself seriously irritated with the scene in which Harry is talking to his parents. Did they really have to embed every asian stereotype into Harry? Good lord, 7 whole seasons of it!
 
Ha, I just watched "Author, Author"...

And I found myself seriously irritated with the scene in which Harry is talking to his parents. Did they really have to embed every asian stereotype into Harry? Good lord, 7 whole seasons of it!
My parents act exactly the same way
 
Ha, I just watched "Author, Author"...

And I found myself seriously irritated with the scene in which Harry is talking to his parents. Did they really have to embed every asian stereotype into Harry? Good lord, 7 whole seasons of it!


But where would TV and Film be without sterotypes, using sterotypes isn't unique to VOY.
 
Human Error

This episode is heartbreakingly frustrating. One thing I've always wanted in Voyager was the possibility that Seven would become Annika again, or just another step to become more human than Borg. This episode introduced the Chakotay/Seven relationship but it really didn't bother me. I loved the scenes in the holodeck, with Seven in a starfleet uniform, or the hair is down, or her being able to laugh and have personality. Yes, Seven is unique, but individuals are all unique. We all have quirks that make us human. What Seven was was kind of that middle between human and borg. Also, I love Jeri Ryan as an actress, and listening to her give interviews and I always loved when we got to see that personality on screen, in episodes such as this, Unimatrix 0, and The Killing Game.

Also, I have a question. The cortical node was the thing that caused the fail safe right? Well, in Imperfection, she got Icheb's Node and Icheb is a lot younger than Seven. Why would this new cortical node have that same fail safe, if that said node was not at full development. Maybe I'm just asking a confused question, but those last 5 minutes really made this episode not all that great. It's really a frustrating missed opportunity that I never forgave Voyager for.
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I've got one more episode to go and there are three episodes I saw tonight that I really don't feel like talking about. In the interest of fairness and time, I'm going to talk about those episodes just generally as the series is starting to wrap up.

Friendship One, Natural Law, & Renaissance Man

There's a reason why I'm putting these episodes together. It basically forces me to ask the question, Why? We're at the end of the series, we've waited 7 years for the crew to get home, and I've always said and I will always say, they should be home by now. These episodes just aren't memorable at all, and we should be in that stretch where the crew should be on earth and we should see some kind of aftermath to getting home. All those questions the series posed such as What happens to the Maquis, What happens to the Doctor, will Seven of Nine adapt on earth? These questions deserved an answer because they were posed as the series went on. Instead we got the death of Carey, who we haven't seen except for one episode since Season 1. Natural Law feels like Tattoo retold only much more boring. Renaissance Man decides to be a comedy in the penultimate episode of the series and we see the annoying Pig people again from Tinker Tenor, Doctor Spy. Again, to summarize these three episodes, what's the point?

Homestead

There's a very specific reason I kept this out of the three from this specific Season 7 disc. This episode was great, and Neelix got a heck of a send off. The crew comes to an asteroid field and finds a Talaxian colony. It's interesting that there is a Talaxian colony this far away from Talax, but I'm going to give this episode the benefit of the doubt. We meet some great characters in Dexa and Brax and you can say the main plot is also a social commentary on bullying. What I like about this episode though, and what I've liked about Voyager as a whole, is it's heart is in the right place. We get some great scenes with Neelix helping these pacifists and it all leads to a very touching ending. The little meeting between Janeway and Neelix was very nice, but that wasn't the highlight of the ending. What was was Tuvok doing a little dance. Tuvok and Neelix's relationship on Voyager has been turmoil at best and I think they respected each other even though Tuvok didn't show it. What Tuvok did here, makes episodes like Tuvix, Riddles, and any time Tuvok was annoyed at Neelix more worth it. This is the type of conclusion I loved and it's a shame the rest of the crew didn't end up getting this treatment, but I'll save that for the finale. Still, what we got in Homestead was a very nice goodbye to a very well written character. Was Neelix annoying? Sometimes, but like I've said all thread long, when it was a serious role, Neelix was one of the most fascinating characters on the show.
 
I've got one more episode to go and there are three episodes I saw tonight that I really don't feel like talking about. In the interest of fairness and time, I'm going to talk about those episodes just generally as the series is starting to wrap up.

Friendship One, Natural Law, & Renaissance Man

There's a reason why I'm putting these episodes together. It basically forces me to ask the question, Why? We're at the end of the series, we've waited 7 years for the crew to get home, and I've always said and I will always say, they should be home by now. These episodes just aren't memorable at all, and we should be in that stretch where the crew should be on earth and we should see some kind of aftermath to getting home. All those questions the series posed such as What happens to the Maquis, What happens to the Doctor, will Seven of Nine adapt on earth? These questions deserved an answer because they were posed as the series went on. Instead we got the death of Carey, who we haven't seen except for one episode since Season 1. Natural Law feels like Tattoo retold only much more boring. Renaissance Man decides to be a comedy in the penultimate episode of the series and we see the annoying Pig people again from Tinker Tenor, Doctor Spy. Again, to summarize these three episodes, what's the point?

Homestead

There's a very specific reason I kept this out of the three from this specific Season 7 disc. This episode was great, and Neelix got a heck of a send off. The crew comes to an asteroid field and finds a Talaxian colony. It's interesting that there is a Talaxian colony this far away from Talax, but I'm going to give this episode the benefit of the doubt. We meet some great characters in Dexa and Brax and you can say the main plot is also a social commentary on bullying. What I like about this episode though, and what I've liked about Voyager as a whole, is it's heart is in the right place. We get some great scenes with Neelix helping these pacifists and it all leads to a very touching ending. The little meeting between Janeway and Neelix was very nice, but that wasn't the highlight of the ending. What was was Tuvok doing a little dance. Tuvok and Neelix's relationship on Voyager has been turmoil at best and I think they respected each other even though Tuvok didn't show it. What Tuvok did here, makes episodes like Tuvix, Riddles, and any time Tuvok was annoyed at Neelix more worth it. This is the type of conclusion I loved and it's a shame the rest of the crew didn't end up getting this treatment, but I'll save that for the finale. Still, what we got in Homestead was a very nice goodbye to a very well written character. Was Neelix annoying? Sometimes, but like I've said all thread long, when it was a serious role, Neelix was one of the most fascinating characters on the show.
Interesting.
I like these episodes - surprise, surprise :D - but if I found any of them slightly annoying, it was exactly HOMESTEAD.
I thought it was bad enough they had got rid of Kes. One of the worst decisions in my book. Even worse, they brought her back the way they did - for no reason really. FURY was a direct insult for both the actress and for the fans.
Then we get to the end of the show, where there's a main character who we have been sharing seven years with on screen - just like with all the others - and the creators of the show suddenly decide to get rid of him two episodes before the finale? Who has such wacky ideas? Now to me, this is on par for dumbness with FURY.
Yes, Neelix's farewell was emotional - I well up every time. Yes, it was a great Tuvok-Neelix episode. Yet, I just can't understand the point of it all. Who came up with this? I mean if Ethan Philips had wanted to get out of the show, that would have been fine. Robert Beltran did, they never let him go. It seems Neelix wanted to stay. Then you throw him out only to bring him back in the last episode for thirty seconds? Pathetic ...

To a lesser extent, the same goes for FRIENDSHIP ONE. Killing off a recurring character who we practically never saw after the first season? My friends who were watching the show with me for the first time didn't even remember any more who he was. At least everybody remembered Seska in SHATTERED. Sort of.

What I do agree with is that NATURAL LAW didn't add much to the series. However, like I've mentioned a few times before, this was an episode that was really like the first few seasons, showing that the producers were running out of ideas for Seven so they recycled ideas from the beginning of the show.

If there was something I could have done with on NATURAL LAW was a vague hint of Seven and Chakotay getting together in ENDGAME. But on that episode, they behaved like normal - I, at least, never observed any particular attraction between them. Might the idea of Seven and Chakotay getting together in ENDGAME have entered the producers' mind in the last minute? I wouldn't be surprised.

As for RENAISSANCE MAN, I like that episode. It would have been wiser to have it like a season or so earlier but I think that the episode on its own is a very interesting and entertaining one.
 
What's strikes me as funny is that RENAISSANCE MAN is the only time we see the doctor using his superhuman strength (owed to his lack of muscle fatigue and ability to tap into the ship's power reserves to feed the force-fields that were his actual muscles) and his ability to be completely weightless and to walk on ceilings. It's strange given the several times when those abilities would have been useful...
 
Then we get to the end of the show, where there's a main character who we have been sharing seven years with on screen - just like with all the others - and the creators of the show suddenly decide to get rid of him two episodes before the finale? Who has such wacky ideas? Now to me, this is on par for dumbness with FURY.
Yes, Neelix's farewell was emotional - I well up every time. Yes, it was a great Tuvok-Neelix episode. Yet, I just can't understand the point of it all. Who came up with this? I mean if Ethan Philips had wanted to get out of the show, that would have been fine. Robert Beltran did, they never let him go. It seems Neelix wanted to stay. Then you throw him out only to bring him back in the last episode for thirty seconds? Pathetic ...

You do realize it was the end of the series right? He wasn't being written out. His character arc came to an end. Big difference from when Lien was actually written out of the show and replaced by Jeri Ryan.

What's strikes me as funny is that RENAISSANCE MAN is the only time we see the doctor using his superhuman strength (owed to his lack of muscle fatigue and ability to tap into the ship's power reserves to feed the force-fields that were his actual muscles) and his ability to be completely weightless and to walk on ceilings. It's strange given the several times when those abilities would have been useful...

Yeah that was weird.
 
I didn't mind those episodes but like others it was where they were placed. Renaissance Man would have been ok earlier in the season.

Friendship One I can sort of give a pass to. It gives the sense that they are getting closer to home. They are in touch with Starfleet....and Tom's skills as a medic have certainly improved! He delivered that premature baby.

One thing I hated in Friendship One was pregnant B'Elanna wanting to go on the away mission to a planet covered in toxic waste because it's stupid...and then Tom and Joe talking about being protective fathers. I could see her lamenting the fact that she wasn't able to go...and then Tom and Joe talking about fatherhood in general terms but the way they did it was a real disservice to the character.

Neelix leaving..I didn't mind. In the books he is the Federation's 'contact' in the Delta Quadrant.

Endgame...is just sort of there.

I always thought Shattered should be the episode right before Endgame...
 
You do realize it was the end of the series right? He wasn't being written out. His character arc came to an end. Big difference from when Lien was actually written out of the show and replaced by Jeri Ryan.
Well .. no matter how you phrase it, the fact of the matter is that they threw out a main character two episodes before the end (to bring him back in the last episode). I find that a very dumb decision.
 
Endgame

Here we are, the final episode of Voyager. I have to confess I've always had a strong hate for this episode, at least before tonight. I didn't like Admiral Janeway changing the timeline because Seven was going to Die. I hated the Chakotay/Seven relationship, and when I first saw this episode I was so mad that the final scene of the series that I had followed for 7 seasons was the ship just going to earth. We got no aftermath, no what happened to the Maquis, no what happened to Seven of Nine. It felt like everything in the series that came before this finale ended up being irrelevant because this finale ended up rewriting Voyager and slapping the fans in the face.

With that being said, I always come into this episode with a bit of consternation. However, having the chance to rewatch this entire series this year, I have to admit there are things about Endgame I really do like. For one, Tom and B'elanna finally having their Baby was a very lovely scene. I also liked seeing Meral Paris in Starfleet, and the toast To the Journey with Kim saying "Maybe it's not the destination that matters, maybe it's the Journey" is great. I've started to realize that if there was something Voyager was great at, it was it's heart. I think when all is said and done, Voyager's heart was in the right place and if you were a fan of this series and this journey with this family, than you might feel proud of the final result. They got home, Tom and B'Elanna had their baby, and we end with Voyager being escorted back to earth by the ships led by the pathfinder project.

As for the main plot with Admiral Janeway, I still don't like that aspect. We know Janeway violates the temporal prime directive a lot, but this time I do think she's gone too far. Not only does she change the past, but she introduces new technologies that the federation is not ready for. I really hope they destroyed all that new armor and tech, but somehow I doubt it. However, that wasn't the worst thing about this episode for me. The worst (And I think it was everyone's worst) was Chakotay and Seven. I don't know what this was, but it felt like we weren't actually watching the Chakotay or Seven character on screen. Chakotay was playing all lovey dovy with some lame ass dialouge and catch phrases, and Seven didn't feel like Seven. I could buy this if the writers actually gave me a reason to buy it, but it was a relationship that squandered the two characters and I really do feel bad for Beltran and Ryan that that happened.

Well that does it for the Voyager rewatch. This is a series I really do like, despite it's flaws, because I like the characters, I like how these people came together as a family, and I do think there was change. I hear a lot of people talk about how only Janeway, Seven, and The Doctor changed, but I think Tom and B'Elanna have to be in that list too. Tom went from a convict drunk to a married man who had a daughter and had reconciled with his Father. B'Elanna went from an angry maquis to Chief engineer and someone who learned to control her angry feelings and become the great mother she will be. Do I think Voyager is the best series? No. I probably rank it as my least favorite of the 5 live actions, but I still really liked it. I did a rewatch of Enterprise last year, and The Original this year and gained a much better appreciation for Enterprise and then the original is something I've always had respect for.

In terms of Voyager though, thanks everyone for reading along and following this thread with me. I really enjoyed watching Voyager again and talking about it with you all. It's been fun. :)

Now time to do a rewatch of DS9.
 
Endgame

Here we are, the final episode of Voyager. I have to confess I've always had a strong hate for this episode, at least before tonight. I didn't like Admiral Janeway changing the timeline because Seven was going to Die. I hated the Chakotay/Seven relationship, and when I first saw this episode I was so mad that the final scene of the series that I had followed for 7 seasons was the ship just going to earth. We got no aftermath, no what happened to the Maquis, no what happened to Seven of Nine. It felt like everything in the series that came before this finale ended up being irrelevant because this finale ended up rewriting Voyager and slapping the fans in the face.

With that being said, I always come into this episode with a bit of consternation. However, having the chance to rewatch this entire series this year, I have to admit there are things about Endgame I really do like. For one, Tom and B'elanna finally having their Baby was a very lovely scene. I also liked seeing Meral Paris in Starfleet, and the toast To the Journey with Kim saying "Maybe it's not the destination that matters, maybe it's the Journey" is great. I've started to realize that if there was something Voyager was great at, it was it's heart. I think when all is said and done, Voyager's heart was in the right place and if you were a fan of this series and this journey with this family, than you might feel proud of the final result. They got home, Tom and B'Elanna had their baby, and we end with Voyager being escorted back to earth by the ships led by the pathfinder project.

As for the main plot with Admiral Janeway, I still don't like that aspect. We know Janeway violates the temporal prime directive a lot, but this time I do think she's gone too far. Not only does she change the past, but she introduces new technologies that the federation is not ready for. I really hope they destroyed all that new armor and tech, but somehow I doubt it. However, that wasn't the worst thing about this episode for me. The worst (And I think it was everyone's worst) was Chakotay and Seven. I don't know what this was, but it felt like we weren't actually watching the Chakotay or Seven character on screen. Chakotay was playing all lovey dovy with some lame ass dialouge and catch phrases, and Seven didn't feel like Seven. I could buy this if the writers actually gave me a reason to buy it, but it was a relationship that squandered the two characters and I really do feel bad for Beltran and Ryan that that happened.

Well that does it for the Voyager rewatch. This is a series I really do like, despite it's flaws, because I like the characters, I like how these people came together as a family, and I do think there was change. I hear a lot of people talk about how only Janeway, Seven, and The Doctor changed, but I think Tom and B'Elanna have to be in that list too. Tom went from a convict drunk to a married man who had a daughter and had reconciled with his Father. B'Elanna went from an angry maquis to Chief engineer and someone who learned to control her angry feelings and become the great mother she will be. Do I think Voyager is the best series? No. I probably rank it as my least favorite of the 5 live actions, but I still really liked it. I did a rewatch of Enterprise last year, and The Original this year and gained a much better appreciation for Enterprise and then the original is something I've always had respect for.

In terms of Voyager though, thanks everyone for reading along and following this thread with me. I really enjoyed watching Voyager again and talking about it with you all. It's been fun. :)

Now time to do a rewatch of DS9.
Hey, hey ... I agree with everything you said about ENDGAME (would you believe it?).
I guess everyone knows by now what an avid fan of this show I am and how I love everything Janeway says or does but ENDGAME was even too much for me.

It would have been bad enough if Janeway hadn't given a damn about the timeline because she wanted the save the whole crew. This in itself would have been very un-Janeway. But to do it just to save her grilfriend Seven of Nine (and partly Tuvok, although I've always felt he was the token crew member to be saved) was much too much for me. This is NOT the Janeway I've got to know and not the Janeway I love. Of course, people might explain it how this was Admiral Janeway and not Captain Janeway but the fact of the matter is that it was Janeway and she made a horrible decision. I was always able to relate to all her decisions, including TUVIX, SCORPION and all the major ones that she gets criticized for - but this ENDGAME was an un-Janeway episode for me.

The whole thing was made worse by all that talk about family. Yes, it's true that family has always been Voyager's forte. It's also true that the whole series has been revolving around this topic - after all this is what makes us viewers want to watch the next episode. It was just fitting that the last episode should be about family.
But, and this is a big BUT: wasn't it hypocritical to talk about family so much and then change the timeline to bring them home when their family was deficient, to say the least? If she wanted to bring her family home, couldn't she have gone back a few episodes earlier to save Carey, for example? Couldn't she have gone back a few years earlier to save Kes? Couldn't she have gone back to the point when they lost their very first member (probably CARETAKER) and save everyone?
Don't get me wrong, going back to CARETAKER and "undo" seven years of everything a la horrible Enterprise would have been a dumb decision on the part of the producers. But from Janeway's point of view? Wouldn't it have made a lot more sense after all that talk about family? Also, in that scene which everybody likes in the Briefing Room, am I the only one who is missing Neelix? If there ever was a character whose most important (=only) function on that show was to keep the family together, it was Neelix. And where were the others, Naomi and Samantha Wildman, Icheb, Chel and everyone else?
Disappointing at the least.

I didn't mind C/7 so much although the idea really came out of nowhere. But .. and again, for me this is a big but...
For Seven years we have a family show, largely driven by the friendship between Janeway and Chakotay. Although they never become boyfriend-girlfriend in the strictest sense of the word, the chance always hangs in the air. We see them in so many situations when this is the case and even if they are technically not a couple, you can always feel that they are there for each other, that Janeway can count on her First Officer despite their occasional conflicts, etc.
Now, in this situation, wouldn't the two main characters have deserved more than a few forgettable lines about a rejected invitation to lunch? Couldn't they have given them some lines with more substance, like Janeway saying to Chakotay that "we've been through a lot and we had our differences but if you're together with me on this, this is our chance to really get everyone home" - or something similar. Didn't they deserve a better treatment?

Other than that ... I've reconciled myself to ENDGAME over the years. This, after all, is my favourite show of all time so I'm not going to let my fun be ruined by an ending that is lacking to say the least. For me, ENDGAME would have been the best if they hadn't made it back at all (something to do with the female Caretaker for example). Then we wouldn't have got all that crap in the relaunch books, most notably that the Delta Quadrant can be reached within two and a half hours with slipstream technology. My God, the very idea!

BTW, @tomalak301 fyi, in the relaunch books Starfleet will oblige Voyager to get rid of all the modifications so the ship will be transformed back into a regular Intrepid-class ship. Which, again, is I think a dumb decision since anything pre-ENDGAME could have come in handy later - but there you go.

Dear tomalak, thank you for this thread. I really liked coming here (practically on a daily basis). Like I said earlier, I think you make a great group leader so again I would like to encourage you to start another group on Voyager - if not now, then at a later time. You surely have one follower already ... :)
As for DS9, I'm not that keen on that show. However, since it is the second best of all the Trek shows in my book, I might pop in occasionally.
If you decide to do a rewatch of StarGate SG-1 one day (this is my second favourite show after Voyager), please let me know.
Cheers!
 
Dear tomalak, thank you for this thread. I really liked coming here (practically on a daily basis). Like I said earlier, I think you make a great group leader so again I would like to encourage you to start another group on Voyager - if not now, then at a later time. You surely have one follower already ... :)
As for DS9, I'm not that keen on that show. However, since it is the second best of all the Trek shows in my book, I might pop in occasionally.
If you decide to do a rewatch of StarGate SG-1 one day (this is my second favourite show after Voyager), please let me know.
Cheers!

Thanks @Thomas Eugene. I haven't seen Stargate SG-1 but maybe one day I will watch it. As for doing another thread in here, maybe but I'm not really good at creating threads. I did this one mainly because I was rewatching the series and I did something similar for the original earlier this year. Not sure if I will do a rewatch thread for DS9. I might but I was realizing with this one as we got closer to the end, I just wanted to keep continuing watching to the end. We'll see.
 
Endgame

Here we are, the final episode of Voyager. I have to confess I've always had a strong hate for this episode, at least before tonight. I didn't like Admiral Janeway changing the timeline because Seven was going to Die. I hated the Chakotay/Seven relationship, and when I first saw this episode I was so mad that the final scene of the series that I had followed for 7 seasons was the ship just going to earth. We got no aftermath, no what happened to the Maquis, no what happened to Seven of Nine. It felt like everything in the series that came before this finale ended up being irrelevant because this finale ended up rewriting Voyager and slapping the fans in the face.

With that being said, I always come into this episode with a bit of consternation. However, having the chance to rewatch this entire series this year, I have to admit there are things about Endgame I really do like. For one, Tom and B'elanna finally having their Baby was a very lovely scene. I also liked seeing Meral Paris in Starfleet, and the toast To the Journey with Kim saying "Maybe it's not the destination that matters, maybe it's the Journey" is great. I've started to realize that if there was something Voyager was great at, it was it's heart. I think when all is said and done, Voyager's heart was in the right place and if you were a fan of this series and this journey with this family, than you might feel proud of the final result. They got home, Tom and B'Elanna had their baby, and we end with Voyager being escorted back to earth by the ships led by the pathfinder project.

As for the main plot with Admiral Janeway, I still don't like that aspect. We know Janeway violates the temporal prime directive a lot, but this time I do think she's gone too far. Not only does she change the past, but she introduces new technologies that the federation is not ready for. I really hope they destroyed all that new armor and tech, but somehow I doubt it. However, that wasn't the worst thing about this episode for me. The worst (And I think it was everyone's worst) was Chakotay and Seven. I don't know what this was, but it felt like we weren't actually watching the Chakotay or Seven character on screen. Chakotay was playing all lovey dovy with some lame ass dialouge and catch phrases, and Seven didn't feel like Seven. I could buy this if the writers actually gave me a reason to buy it, but it was a relationship that squandered the two characters and I really do feel bad for Beltran and Ryan that that happened.

Well that does it for the Voyager rewatch. This is a series I really do like, despite it's flaws, because I like the characters, I like how these people came together as a family, and I do think there was change. I hear a lot of people talk about how only Janeway, Seven, and The Doctor changed, but I think Tom and B'Elanna have to be in that list too. Tom went from a convict drunk to a married man who had a daughter and had reconciled with his Father. B'Elanna went from an angry maquis to Chief engineer and someone who learned to control her angry feelings and become the great mother she will be. Do I think Voyager is the best series? No. I probably rank it as my least favorite of the 5 live actions, but I still really liked it. I did a rewatch of Enterprise last year, and The Original this year and gained a much better appreciation for Enterprise and then the original is something I've always had respect for.

In terms of Voyager though, thanks everyone for reading along and following this thread with me. I really enjoyed watching Voyager again and talking about it with you all. It's been fun. :)

Now time to do a rewatch of DS9.

Personally, I feel like we've been cheated of a good ending.
 
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