It was TOS with the furniture rearranged and a new coat of paint.They xeroxed it though. Wasn't a common complained about first season TNG that they ripped off TOS a lot of the time?
It was TOS with the furniture rearranged and a new coat of paint.They xeroxed it though. Wasn't a common complained about first season TNG that they ripped off TOS a lot of the time?
During TOS S1 the set dressers put a lot of TOS models (like the Type F Galileo Shuttle, and TOS style Constitution Class models with slightly different nacelles) and props in the background of briefing room /recreation area shots.They xeroxed it though. Wasn't a common complaint about first season TNG that they ripped off TOS a lot of the time?
They xeroxed it though. Wasn't a common complaint about first season TNG that they ripped off TOS a lot of the time?
They xeroxed it though. Wasn't a common complaint about first season TNG that they ripped off TOS a lot of the time?
I posted upthread a look at DSC's first season episode-by-episode to see how much the show actually leaned on TOS but it's as if I might as well have typed nothing. Not disputed but hand-waved instead. Hand-waved outright I might add. Possibly because if posters looked at what I said, they're worried I might actually be right. I might actually have a point. And that they might be making over-generalizations.
I even wonder if it matters if DSC does anything completely different or completely the same to some. If it's "too different" then "It's not Star Trek! STD sucks!" If it's too the same it's "Why can't they do something new!"
DSC does have its own identity it's just that the people who don't like the series say, "I don't like the characters!" "I don't find them interesting!" "Michael Burnham isn't Spock's sister!" What about Lorca? What about Stamets? What about Tilly? What about L'Rell? What about Ash Tyler? What T'Kuvma? What about Culber? What about Georgiou? What about Cornwell? What about anyone else?
What about the fact that the Mirror Universe story isn't the same type of story that was done in the other series?
What about the fact that the lead of the series is so unconventional? What about the fact that some people who are complaining about the series complain that it doesn't like Star Trek? The fact that they think it feels like something else means that it has an identity of its own even if it's one they don't like.
DIS seems to go the full alienating role without trying to play expectations - only to fully backtrack later and have their new generic white-man lead for S2.
I'm not sure what I think of Pike as the Captain in S2. But, effectively, it seems like people prefer generic white guy leading Discovery off into fun space adventures! When this is what they prefer I question how much "new" they (not you) actually want.
Voyager ran into new races all the time, being in the Delta Quadrant
I posted upthread a look at DSC's first season episode-by-episode to see how much the show actually leaned on TOS but it's as if I might as well have typed nothing. Not disputed but hand-waved instead. Hand-waved outright I might add. Possibly because if posters looked at what I said, they're worried I might actually be right. I might actually have a point. And that they might be making over-generalizations.
I even wonder if it matters if DSC does anything completely different or completely the same to some. If it's "too different" then "It's not Star Trek! STD sucks!" If it's too the same it's "Why can't they do something new!"
DSC does have its own identity it's just that the people who don't like the series say, "I don't like the characters!" "I don't find them interesting!" "Michael Burnham isn't Spock's sister!" What about Lorca? What about Stamets? What about Tilly? What about L'Rell? What about Ash Tyler? What T'Kuvma? What about Culber? What about Georgiou? What about Cornwell? What about anyone else?
What about the fact that the Mirror Universe story isn't the same type of story that was done in the other series?
What about the fact that the lead of the series is so unconventional? What about the fact that some people who are complaining about the series complain that it doesn't feel like Star Trek? The fact that they think it feels like something else to them means that it has an identity of its own even if it's one they don't like.
I'm not sure what I think of Pike as the Captain in S2. But, effectively, it seems like people prefer generic white guy leading Discovery off into fun space adventures! When this is what they prefer I question how much "new" they (not you) actually want.
Voyager ran into new races all the time, being in the Delta Quadrant. When I think back to that series it reminds me that running into new races and new temporal anomalies doesn't guarantee it's always going to feel like something new.
Yeah. If there is one thing about the cast I would have made different, is I would have added a generic straight white guy right from the beginning. A William Riker / Mile O'Brian / Tom Paris / Chris Tucker - kind of guy.
Because lets be honest: Watching television is also a bout representation. That's why I think it's AWESOME everything becomes more inclusive - from Black Panther and Wonder Woman on the big screen to Burnham leading a Trek show.
But the truth is also, a majority of the people actually watching Star Trek (and genre in general) are still white dudes. So - purely from a marketing standpoint - I think it should have been clever to give them a character to identify with straight from the beginning as well. He doesn't need to take center stage. And, in fact, I think having a "generic" leading man in more of a side-role actually would allow for much more interesting story possibilities than he would have if he had to conform to the "leading man"-type of role for the entire run. But from a marketing standpoint - there should have been someone like that present. And I mean not as a secret badguy like Lorca. Just as a character for identification
Voyager also kinda' run as a continuation of TNG. I think it should have taken a bit more of a middle-ground, of trying a bit more creative new things, while not being that different like DS9 was. But in retrospect that's hairsplitting - It makes sense for a spin-off show of a very popular show to be very similar: CSI: New York is not going to be that drastically different from CSI. And they clearly were successfull with it: VOY ran relatively smooth for seven seasons, even if it never eclipsed TNG during that time.
The problem was IMO that they tried to do the same thing again with ENT. That show should have been very different right from the start - despite being set in a more familiar setting again, the time was ripe for a new way of storytelling.
I hope Pike is gone fast. He’s a Trek history Easter egg, about to be come fanwank. He’s well cast and it gave the trailer some buzz, but nothing interests me less than a return to sixties square jawed hero captain. Even Kirk wasn’t that. I suspect most Trek fans of longstanding don’t actually give a monkeys about having a white male lead, particularly of the traditional kind, as it’s not really somethimg as prevalent in Trek as some make out. The only time we really had it, the show got cancelled.
I'm not against Pike being there, though I'll be disappointed if the only purpose he serves is to be fanwank.
So, whilst it may be fun to have him there for a bit, he needs to be sent back to enterprise fairly fast.
Riker and particularly Tom Paris exemplify this, particularly in the later seasons of their respective shows. Tom is even used as the entry point in the pilot, our introduction to the ship and crew is his introduction, but he is nowhere near being the actual lead in Voyager. But he’s there, and it works. Anyone arguing Voyager is not representative is on something...it’s the most diverse crew in Trek and didn’t neglect anyone, overall.
I hope Pike is gone fast. He’s a Trek history Easter egg, about to be come fanwank. He’s well cast and it gave the trailer some buzz, but nothing interests me less than a return to sixties square jawed hero captain. Even Kirk wasn’t that. I suspect most Trek fans of longstanding don’t actually give a monkeys about having a white male lead, particularly of the traditional kind, as it’s not really somethimg as prevalent in Trek as some make out. The only time we really had it, the show got cancelled.
Well, if the Discovery continues to have revolving door of captains and this is (among other things) way to connect story with Spock... I would say, yes,main point of Pike is massive fan-service that will be major part of Season 2.I'm not against Pike being there, though I'll be disappointed if the only purpose he serves is to be fanwank.
Actually the same with Riker on TNG: In "Encounter at Farpoint" Picard was actively debating with Q, that's what everyone remembers about it. But the Farpoint story - and also the introduction to the ship, where all clearly a Riker story. The only outlier is DS9, where they didn't really had a white-man-leading-type guy in between their ranks, but they made a good job of making Sisko archetypically identifiable.
I want him to stay for most of the season. But not much longer. I generally like the idea of the Discovery having multiple different Captains before they ultimately settle on Burnham. Having one secretly evil one, then a square-jawed classic one, and then maybe someone unconventional for S3 - and THEN Burnham taking command - actually makes the show interesting and unique in the Trek company. I'd like that. Has a naval-novel "rising through the ranks"-feel to it, and it also allows for us to compare different leading styles and show a clear development of show.
Yeah, but the whole season could take place over a couple days or a week. I think the old: one TV season equals one in universe year template is gone.
I think the rise through the ranks happened on Shenzhou though. So it’s difficult to do now. And Saru is the fan favourite for the chair (which would actually work, has been set up, and would be something new for Trek. *warning the following joke is cynical and may offend DSC hardfans, but is a joke* which means of course it won’t happen.) and it’s about time Starflet actually promoted from within. These guys know the ship. That’s always the point in the ship shows. The ship is their home. Which is something that also needs working on in DSC. The Disco is the first ship that feels too much like a workplace. Stamets cares about his mushroom farm, but everywhere else feels like an office or business hotel. No one lives in that ship, apart from maybe Lorca. When you think of the other ships the traditional ‘she’ just rolls of the tongue. That’s not happening for me with the DSC, and that’s unusual. Even the NX had some soul and element of care from the crew, maybe the Defiant on DS9 also lacked a personality, but it wasn’t the home, and even that ship had its moments. As our main setting, the Disco is surprisingly soulless given every episode happens there basically. The Shenzhou had more going on...and that was bizarrely treated indeed.
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