This sounds eerily like the lynch mob that was forming when SG:A was announced. And by the end of the first season, some of those same people were eating their words.
That's funny, the first season of SG:A that
I watched was pretty much a rehash of the same crap that Stargate had been doling out for years, with a few interesting notions (Poisoning the Well) that were dropped, as per usual. The main attraction of S1 was the same as for the show's whole run: Shep.
I'll cut Stargate some slack when they give me reason to believe the writing will be anything other than the same old tired approach we've seen before. That would require radical changes in the producers and writers on the payroll. I'd say the current crop is out of ideas, except that I don't think they ever had any ideas that were worthwhile. Hacks, all of them.
If I were in charge of Stargate, I would fire every last person with "producer" or "writer" in their job title and bring in some folks with a proven track record of interesting ideas and the ability to execute them. Grab them from various interestingly written sci fi or action series -
BSG, The 4400, Lost (if any of that crew are up for grabs). The
Terminator and
Prison Break writers will soon be looking for employment, that's also a good source for talent.
There are plenty of shows being cancelled for reasons other than that the writing stinks. There's no shortage of writing talent out there looking for jobs.
The idea that the current Stargate hacks might try to ape the BSG style of storytelling fills me with equal amounts of dread and glee - well, mainly glee. It will be a train wreck but at least not a boring one. It could be comedy gold.
I wasn't aware of a fandom that was vocally against SGA from the start
They weren't, not compared with the usual kvetching that accompanies any new show. Stargate was only starting to really wear out its welcome when SG:A debuted.
When they first mentioned the Ancients, this great race of the people who seeded our galaxy, had an alliance with other aliens, it seemed so grand and big to me. But everything we've seen of the Ancients in Atlantis seems so small and puny.
The Ancients have rarely been any good. They were an intriguing notion when we didn't know anything about them, but seeing them has destroyed their mystique. The more we know, the dumber they look. The problem is that they are depicted in the hokiest manner possible: bad actors reciting terrible dialogue while standing around stiffly wearing costumes straight outta TOS.
The
one time they were reasonably good is when they were potrayed by Mel Harris and George Dzundza. You need actors of outstanding caliber to compensate for writing based on tired cliches. Which is why I'm generally enthusiastic about seeing Lou Diamond Phillips in the cast - the only way to salvage Stargate is to find great actors who will work cheap because they aren't young and pretty enough for mainstream Hollywood anymore. That way at least something is working in the episodes.
I'll give Universe a try though, I'm itching for something new now that Galactica is gone.
This is why I'm fearful/gleeful that SG:U will end up coming off as a terrible parody of BSG - they'll be trying to appeal to the Frakheads. I can already imagine how well that's gonna work out.
I haven't seen anything that indictates some threat bigger than the Goa'uld, Ori, Replicators or the Wraith existing on Universe.
I'd be happy if they'd come up with a villain who isn't laughable, like that bunch you just cited. The entire Stargate franchise has yet to invent a villain that is credible, interesting, and based on anything but tired cliches cribbed from other sci fi. I'm happy to give them another shot at it, but their track record doesn't inspire confidence.