So social commentary? And before Kurtzman Star Trek never did that before?According to Kurtzman, it's a "mirror" to contemporary social/political issues, a phrase he used in pre-release interviews for SFA.
So social commentary? And before Kurtzman Star Trek never did that before?According to Kurtzman, it's a "mirror" to contemporary social/political issues, a phrase he used in pre-release interviews for SFA.
I think you're reading something into my post that I didn't write.So social commentary? And before Kurtzman Star Trek never did that before?
I'm reading nothing. I'm ask a genuine question.I think you're reading something into my post that I didn't write.
But I don't know why you're asking it to me, I didn't say "Kurtzman is wrong about Star Trek", "Star Trek is ____ and Kurtzman doesn't understand this", or even make a comment about the accuracy of the "mirror" line.I'm reading nothing. I'm ask a genuine question.
Idle curiosity if that statement by Kurtzman fits Star Trek from your perspective since you did quote it.But I don't know why you're asking it to me, I didn't say "Kurtzman is wrong about Star Trek", "Star Trek is ____ and Kurtzman doesn't understand this", or even make a comment about the accuracy of the "mirror" line.
Well, if you're interested, I'd say it's a very reductive description of the franchise - it feels like something recited from a project brief, more than someone with a deep passion for the franchise speaking about it from the heart. It's similar to saying "Star Trek is about optimism" in that the shape of it is notionally true, but the full picture is obviously much wider than that (and of course, in the sense that a great deal of Star Trek doesn't fit the description - the majority of episodes from any of the series aren't really offering social commentary at all).Idle curiosity if that statement by Kurtzman fits Star Trek from your perspective since you did quote it.
Curiosity of your opinion of his opinion sk we can opine about it online.
I find that preferable.that he's approaching the job of showrunner as someone who doesn't feel much personal connection to the source material.
Which suggests he viewed Star Trek as something he had to learn and recite, with a "lore" to adhere to, which I'd say is a recurrent issue with his stuff. It genuinely might have been better to have someone with zero interest in TOS/Berman-era come in and think "alright, I'll just write the best thing I can and forget the bulk of the source material, and have someone checking over it for any obvious mega-blunders".In an MTV News feature from May 2008, he again confessed, “You know, I’m a Spider-Man guy, so I grew up with comics, not sci-fi TV. When they handed me Star Trek, I honestly had to do a crash-course: watch the original series in two weeks, read some reference books—just so I didn’t butcher the lore.” (MTV News, May 2008)•
So, the biggest reason why I don't have an issue with that is because that's how Bennett and Meyer worked out TWOK.Which suggests he viewed Star Trek as something he had to learn and recite, with a "lore" to adhere to, which I'd say is a recurrent issue with his stuff. It genuinely might have been better to have someone with zero interest in TOS/Berman-era come in and think "alright, I'll just write the best thing I can and forget the bulk of the source material, and have someone checking over it for any obvious mega-blunders".
I.E. Creative ConsultantsPotentially, yeah. I don't think his lack of interest in Star Trek is the cause of any issues with the quality of his output. I do wonder about this quote, though:
Which suggests he viewed Star Trek as something he had to learn and recite, with a "lore" to adhere to, which I'd say is a recurrent issue with his stuff. It genuinely might have been better to have someone with zero interest in TOS/Berman-era come in and think "alright, I'll just write the best thing I can and forget the bulk of the source material, and have someone checking over it for any obvious mega-blunders".
It'll always be funny to me that Meyer and Braga get a pass, but certain sectors of the fandom have yet to let go of something Kurtzman said nearly twenty fucking years ago.Nicholas Meyer never watched Star Trek either. Neither did Brannon Braga, and I think Kurtzman got Star Trek better than Braga ever did.
Which is what Gene Roddenberry wanted it to be. That's when Star Trek is at its best.According to Kurtzman, it's a "mirror" to contemporary social/political issues, a phrase he used in pre-release interviews for SFA.

Kurtzman got Star Trek better than Braga ever did.
Braga? Then we're in agreement.About as well as an oiled-up armless man attempting to catch a baseball.
Uh Huh - You guys do know Rick Berman ALSO never watched an episode of the original Star Trek - and ORDERED that anyone on the writing staff who hadn't NOT START...That will teach them!
Fuck them! That will erase this era!

This is nonsense at best...a useful distraction at worst. Dalton's Bond appreciating a calm moment with Kara is not the same as Bond discussing his feelings during a shootout with mooks, a chase, the setting of a trap, et cetera (what Captain Janeway might call "crunch time"). TNG - for instance - had its moments where characters conversed about deep topics, but those occurred at the appropriate time (e.g., Deanna counseling Worf in "The Bonding"); on the bridge, during a crisis, Picard's crew were professionals.
As for what audiences want? I find it more believable that this attitude of imposing your issues on others during wholly inappropriate moments is being pushed by writers of a certain stripe.
Exactly. Tell Kurtzman to fuck off of boo is a useless gesture.Uh Huh - You guys do know Rick Berman ALSO never watched an episode of the original Star Trek - and ORDERED that anyone on the writing staff who hadn't NOT START...
(And yes, eventually he and Braga both claimed they finally did go and watch some TOS arouind the time ENT was in production)...
But yeah, I'd not mind if TNG S1, S2, and most of S^ and S7 plus ALL of VOY were erased...![]()
Hardcore fans also struggle with the whole kill your darlings thing and insist on plot armourFans will not make hard decisions on getting rid of things if it does over budget.
Berman was also very staunch about not referencing TOS, to the point where he and Ira Behr got into an argument about merely namedropping Spock in an episode featuring Sarek. Berman obviously got over that weird hang-up by S5 as the show by then firmly established itself, but it's still funny to me.Uh Huh - You guys do know Rick Berman ALSO never watched an episode of the original Star Trek - and ORDERED that anyone on the writing staff who hadn't NOT START...
(And yes, eventually he and Braga both claimed they finally did go and watch some TOS arouind the time ENT was in production)...
But yeah, I'd not mind if TNG S1, S2, and most of S^ and S7 plus ALL of VOY were erased...![]()
It'll always be funny to me that Meyer and Braga get a pass, but certain sectors of the fandom have yet to let go of something Kurtzman said nearly twenty fucking years ago.
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