I was thinking of the current streaming model of 10 episodes per season for Star Trek and the arguments on both sides of the issue, with some wishing we had the longer seasons of old and others claiming that it cuts out a lot of the so-called "filler" episodes, and what would constitute "filler" episodes in this instance.
Just as a thought experiment, I began to think about the the episodes themselves, and the larger story and character arcs therein. What would "lean-and-mean" Next Generation* seasons look like if reduced to 10 episodes while still trying to honoring the larger character and story arcs involved? Just to make things more difficult on myself, I decided to try to honor established future continuity as well on this list. I suspected from the start that some seasons would be easier than others. Painful cuts will abound.
*Trying to do this with my favorite Star Trek, Deep Space Nine, would be an absolute lost cause. far too much serialization.
Season 1
1-2 Encounter at Farpoint obviously is the necessary origin story for our 10 episode season, introduces Q, and current streaming models would probably break it down into two episodes just at syndication models did. Not the best that the Next Generation has to offer, but that's the first season in a nutshell.
3 The Last Outpost introduces The Ferengi, and is also a strong Riker episode.
4 Where No One Has Gone Before introduces The Traveler and begins Wesley's arc.
5. God help us, Haven. Introduces Lwaxana and her relationship with Deanna.
6. DataLore, of course introduces Lore
7. Heart of Glory. First strong Worf episode.
8. The Arsenal of Freedom. Great episode for Geordi as well as giving us what are now our first hints of chemistry between Picard and Crusher.
9. Skin of Evil. RIP, Tasha.
10. Conspiracy now serves as our season finale, even if that particular cliffhanger was never picked up on.
The Neutral Zone may have originally served to reintroduce the Romulans and lay the first hints of Borg incursion, but those are minor points in an otherwise underwhelming episode that never really served as a strong season finale in the first place.
Well, that's a lean and mean 10 episodes, and there was only one real clunker in the bunch. Painful cuts? As a matter of fact, yes. The Big Goodbye, not only for its introductory holodeck malfunction tale but for it's adorable interplay between Picard and Crusher. Curse you, Haven!
Also-- Hide and Q. Not the strongest Q episode to be sure, but any interplay between Patrick Stewart and John Delancey is pure gold.
Okay, this is taking more thought time and thought then I originally imagined it was going to and this is only the first season, which I thought would be easy, so I'm going to do each season in a separate post. Please tell me what you think. How would you break down the seasons? Would you just jettison Lwaxana altogether? Believe me, I considered it.
Just as a thought experiment, I began to think about the the episodes themselves, and the larger story and character arcs therein. What would "lean-and-mean" Next Generation* seasons look like if reduced to 10 episodes while still trying to honoring the larger character and story arcs involved? Just to make things more difficult on myself, I decided to try to honor established future continuity as well on this list. I suspected from the start that some seasons would be easier than others. Painful cuts will abound.
*Trying to do this with my favorite Star Trek, Deep Space Nine, would be an absolute lost cause. far too much serialization.
Season 1
1-2 Encounter at Farpoint obviously is the necessary origin story for our 10 episode season, introduces Q, and current streaming models would probably break it down into two episodes just at syndication models did. Not the best that the Next Generation has to offer, but that's the first season in a nutshell.
3 The Last Outpost introduces The Ferengi, and is also a strong Riker episode.
4 Where No One Has Gone Before introduces The Traveler and begins Wesley's arc.
5. God help us, Haven. Introduces Lwaxana and her relationship with Deanna.
6. DataLore, of course introduces Lore
7. Heart of Glory. First strong Worf episode.
8. The Arsenal of Freedom. Great episode for Geordi as well as giving us what are now our first hints of chemistry between Picard and Crusher.
9. Skin of Evil. RIP, Tasha.
10. Conspiracy now serves as our season finale, even if that particular cliffhanger was never picked up on.
The Neutral Zone may have originally served to reintroduce the Romulans and lay the first hints of Borg incursion, but those are minor points in an otherwise underwhelming episode that never really served as a strong season finale in the first place.
Well, that's a lean and mean 10 episodes, and there was only one real clunker in the bunch. Painful cuts? As a matter of fact, yes. The Big Goodbye, not only for its introductory holodeck malfunction tale but for it's adorable interplay between Picard and Crusher. Curse you, Haven!
Also-- Hide and Q. Not the strongest Q episode to be sure, but any interplay between Patrick Stewart and John Delancey is pure gold.
Okay, this is taking more thought time and thought then I originally imagined it was going to and this is only the first season, which I thought would be easy, so I'm going to do each season in a separate post. Please tell me what you think. How would you break down the seasons? Would you just jettison Lwaxana altogether? Believe me, I considered it.
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