The most critical are always just the loudest.It’s amazing how much reading people’s opinions on these message boards actually saps my joy for watching these episodes sometimes.
The most critical are always just the loudest.
Look at the ratings result to see what the majority really thinks.
It’s amazing how much reading people’s opinions on these message boards actually saps my joy for watching these episodes sometimes.
Pretty much, yeah.No, I know...but it’s just so relentless sometimes.
Honestly, I even find it hard to watch the show live and enjoy it, because I find myself thinking “oh...THIS is going to make people bitch and moan” or “oh boy, all the usual suspects are gonna have a field day with THAT” or whatever...instead of just happily enjoying the story like I usually would.
It’s one of the reasons I find myself posting in this forum far less than I usually do this season. It just feels like Groundhog Day sometimes.
Beyer's first episode was a bit different, but this one displays some of the same flaws as Stardust City Rag over on Picard. The most obvious of these being small quadrant syndrome, where characters show up in inexplicable places just because of "rule of cool." Also the peppering of the episode with little bits of deep dive Trek trivia that no one but the most hard-core Trek fans will pick up on.
I can see that being something people desire in a Trek novel I suppose, but that's not what I watch Trek for.
This thread is particularly bad for some reason, despite the high rating in the poll.
Most bizarre of all is seeing that some people are ranting that the episode is anti-Semitic because they equate Vulcans with Jews (which I’d never before heard in 30 years of being a Trek fan). Some people just go out of their way to hate things, and if they can’t find anything to hate they’ll make something up. It’s sad. Fans suck the joy out of things these days. Maybe they always did, I dunno.
Yeah. Prime example- “Ok everyone, we get it...promoting Tilly isn’t optimal. Is there anything else anyone would like to discuss?”. This thread is particularly bad for some reason, despite the high rating in the poll.
Most bizarre of all is seeing that some people are ranting that the episode is anti-Semitic because they equate Vulcans with Jews (which I’d never before heard in 30 years of being a Trek fan). Some people just go out of their way to hate things, and if they can’t find anything to hate they’ll make something up. It’s sad. Fans suck the joy out of things these days. Maybe they always did, I dunno.
Beyer is not my favorite writers on the current Trek shows. I find her episodes mostly meh. This one was better than most.
But I do agree that Trek is becoming more and more insular. It no longer goes out and finds new stories, new races but instead just gives us the same species wrapped in fancy new packaging.
And the shows spend more time connecting the dots than exploring the final frontier.
On that note, I was thinking that the show could've given Burnham more of a reason to figure out the Burn if it was tied somehow to finding her mom. Now there's something personal in it for her.
The whole situation with Tilly reminds me of how everyone overreacted to the tardigrade. The writers would have known that tilly would have been a controversial choice among the fan base and i don't think the choice of tilly as acting xo was done on a whim. I'm keen to see where it goes.
In fairness Discovery would also be criticised if it was just continually introducing new races. That's what happened with Enterprise, 'why haven't we heard of the xindi', 'why haven't we heard of the hostile aliens that drain adrenal fluid from people', 'why didnt tng mention the mazerites' were all criticisms i saw back in the day.
So the Vulcans are now Palenstinians?Maybe I’m just ignorant, but I don’t even remotely know how they are equated with Jews?
Is it because the Romulans were displaced and chose to share the ancestral home with the remaining Vulcans with some tensions between them?
If Discovery weren’t timelost, this would be insane. But if that were the case, new officers would be a dime a dozen and ready to jump in. However, Discovery isn’t in the 23rd century anymore, and they’re still strangers in a strange land. On top of that, Tilly has been the heart and soul of this crew, the moral center, the geekiest geek in a ship full of geeks. In a lot of ways, she’s the perfect person to run the day-to-day of this particular ship and this particular crew.
As I mentioned just last week, Sylvia Tilly is far more experienced and capable than anything a command training program could teach her. She does the right thing every time, and most importantly, when everyone else has been breaking down amid chaos, she’s been blooming.
So fans can imagine a metaphor not present but can't imagine a scenario why Tilly might be chosen as XOI prefer Vulcans-as-Jews over Ferengi-as-Jews. Nimoy, I recall, had alot to say over the Jewishness of the Vulcan species, and it is an interesting take when done right.
That said, I don't see anything specifically written into the Ni'Var scenes as a take on Israel-Palestine. You always have to kinda squint to see any resemblance with Judaism in the first place, but you pretty much have to close your eyes and imagine if you want the Romulans as the Palestinians and any other choice sort of stretches out the metaphor into nonexistence.
To be fair, both of those characters got quite some flak from the fans, especially in the first few years.Coming from Star Wars, I find that a lot of the criticism of Burnham and Tilly could easily apply to Ahsoka Tano or Ezra Bridger
It’s a big galaxy.She runs around openly doing Jedi things in the Mandalorian without even a mention of Luke Skywalker.
Luke's importance is diminished severely because Ahsoka was running around during the original movies and apparently helping Luke out was beneath her time (as far as we know so far).
please no. I’m really glad they didn’t go the Burn-ham way.On that note, I was thinking that the show could've given Burnham more of a reason to figure out the Burn if it was tied somehow to finding her mom. Now there's something personal in it for her.
No, I know...but it’s just so relentless sometimes.
Honestly, I even find it hard to watch the show live and enjoy it, because I find myself thinking “oh...THIS is going to make people bitch and moan” or “oh boy, all the usual suspects are gonna have a field day with THAT” or whatever...instead of just happily enjoying the story like I usually would.
It’s one of the reasons I find myself posting in this forum far less than I usually do this season. It just feels like Groundhog Day sometimes.
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