Expo67
Captain
I remember reading in The Making of Deep Space Nine that Rick Berman's day was so hectic, no schedule could be created to document it. The guy took a lot of grief over the years, but you cannot say he didn't work hard for Star Trek.
If he had worked hard for Star Trek we wouldn't have gotten so many of years of crap (namely on Voyager and Enterprise but only because, as I understand it, Berman mostly ignored DS9.) No he worked hard to line his own wallet through the money the Star Trek name could generate, if fans hadn't gotten increasingly pissed off through Voyager's run and then Enterprise in the way both ignored their own premise, any sense of consistent "reality" within themselves then Berman would still be making money today on another series still shilling out crap.
Berman wanted things and bland as possible to make it as "sell-able" as possible. He didn't care if it was quality product just that it was product. Sort of like McDonald's, they know their food is crap and people can get a better cheeseburger in countless other places but, hey, McDonald's is everywhere and fairly cheap!
That's what Berman did to Star Trek through much of the last couple seasons of TNG and on through Enterprise, he turned Star Trek into McDonalds. And, again, this excludes DS9 which managed to pull off doing its own thing while Berman and Braga decided to do what the fuck ever episodically on Voyager.
"What? Why of course it doesn't make sense that they've lost 20 shuttles now or that this the umpteenth chance they've gotten to get home! You think we're making serious TV here?! This show is episodic it'll make sense within its own context and doesn't need to fit in with the whole, besides in syndication this might be shown before all of those other times so fuck it. Do whatever no matter how little sense it makes!"
That was Trek's biggest downfall, again thanks to B&B more than anyone else. Not taking it's own damn premise seriously and treating it as reality. If you watched an episode of some night-time drama and they did something completely off-the-wall that was out of line with everything that came before you'd be pretty upset. Why should Trek just because it takes place centuries in the future in space with aliens be any different?
Take the premise seriously.
Trekker definately echoes some of the same thoughts that I have on Berman's mishandling of Star Trek. If Berman and the execs at Paramount had been smart enough, they should have listened to the fans and done their homework. Let alone have Majel Barrett run things.