I have no interest in going over your opinions on the Star Wars movies again. But the first episodes anyone saw of TOS was Man Trap and Charlie X.
So? Those aren't the stories people remember. They remember the great ones. "Amok Time", "Mirror, Mirror," "The Wrath of Khan"...
Also, an important thing to keep in mind is that, when it comes to characters, Iconic ≠ Great. Cupid - y'know, the baby with the bow and heart-shaped arrow - is without doubt an
iconic character in pop culture, but is he a great one? Not that I know of. Of course, characters can be iconic
and great - and, thanks to his distinctive look, behavior, and primary actor, Spock, whether or not one considers him great, is certainly iconic.
Now, given that she's the star of the sequel trilogy, with the mammoth Disney and
Star Wars machines behind her, Rey (as well as Finn, Kylo, etc.), is pretty much iconic by default. Hell, every nerd knows Captain Phasma's name;
she's iconic, too, even though there's exactly nothing to her character in
TFA/
TLJ. Same goes for Snoke. Doesn't necessarily make any of 'em great, though.
Aso, this approach absolutely fucks the entire TNG cast. Actually, it screws nearly all of the franchise. Star Trek has a ‘getting two genuinely good episodes in a row’ problem.
Who said anything about good stories needing to be consecutive? You seem to be lashing out willy-nilly here.
I’ve also got issues with ‘characters’ apparently being seperate from ‘story.’ That’s like saying ‘the flour can only be as good as the cake batter.’
You
do seem to have issues with that, because I'm arguing characters
aren't separate from their stories. You can put the world's finest flour in some cookie dough, but if the dough's eggs were bad, and the resulting cookies therefore also bad, does it really make sense to single out the flour as a strong point? If one is trying to score points on identity politics, maybe.
I like Rey as a character, and would like to see her character
become great by being in a great story. But I certainly haven't seen that yet.