And that's all entirely subjective, and I disagree, and I will just leave it at that.The difference with Kirk and Burnham is Kirk is just more interesting to follow.
And that's all entirely subjective, and I disagree, and I will just leave it at that.The difference with Kirk and Burnham is Kirk is just more interesting to follow.
But was Michael really that much more focused on than Kirk was in TOS?(he was the focus character most of the time,he was usually in the right, always won and all the positive characters either loved him or learned a lesson about how mistaken they were not to love him) And I mean on DS9 Sisko was the Emissary and eventually revealed to be the literal Christ Child of the Prophets, hand crafted to be the savior of Bajor and the whole Alpha/Beta quadrant, imho that's not any less "super-special" than the revelations about Michael.
I agree that the DISC writing sometimes quite bad, especially in Season 1 (especially because I'm really tired of 'Mystery Box' shows) but even with Michael being the lead, characters like Saru, Stamets, Tilly and Pike were given their prominence and triumphs and allowed to have their lives and interests outside of Michael.
The difference with Kirk and Burnham is Kirk is just more interesting to follow.
"I just don't like Burnham, Tilly, and Saru as much as Kirk, Spock, and McCoy." I like both sets of characters for different reasons. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy have been deified. When you deify characters, no one else is going to measure up, so we have to move passed that. I did.Burnham though doesn't really have two characters that work nearly as well as Spock and Bones.
They haven't been about anything you're interested in. And I'm surprised you didn't say "intellectual weight of TNG". I thought you were a TNGer.Also the stories just lack the intellectual weight of TOS because they have not been about anything.
Believe me, once the Trump Presidency is OVER, the less that reminds me of it, the better. So DSC not aggressively addressing Trumpism is going to be a plus in my column. Anything that's all "Trump this! Trump that!" is going to be instantly dated once this joke that's gone on way too long is finally over.The show has tapped dance around things like Trumpism
As I've said before, I'm not too broken up about it. I think religion should be left up to interpretation instead being told to us "this is what it is!" If they're not going to do it right, I'd rather they not do it at all.and for 5 seconds it looked like it would be about religion
It's offered enough so that we've had certain posters on this board (not you) complain about it non-stop and, if they're not outright about it, they'll dress it up as "SJWs!" or "Mary Sue!"and while the show is told from a feminist gaze it doesn't really seem to have much to offer even on that front, more better shows have done.
I wish someone would tell me what a "Mary Sue" is
I'm almost frightened to ask
Thanks
So it's open to interpretation ?
I still don't understand the "trope"
Yes.But was Michael really that much more focused on than Kirk was in TOS?
I always found Tilly and Saru as good counterpoints to Burnham.
Its not the same as Kirk, Spock and McCoy but that's OK. Star Trek needs to stop that.
Because its living in the past, something Trek does enough off.Why?
ENT definitely felt like it was trying to at first. I'm not saying its always done but I don't think its the gold standard either.Also, It did. Years ago. It only ever fell back on the triumvirate approach
Hell, Enterprise was being a bit too obvious about replicating the TOS triad, given like TOS their own triad consisted of the Captain, the Vulcan, and the Southerner. For that matter, they were trying to replicate the general TOS formula with the cast, what with an officer from the UK and, here they try to be clever and do a little role reversal, black helmsman and Asian communications officer to contrast TOS's Asian helmsman and black communications officer. Phlox is the only one without an obvious parallel in the TOS cast.ENT definitely felt like it was trying to at first. I'm not saying its always done but I don't think its the gold standard either.
"I just don't like Burnham, Tilly, and Saru as much as Kirk, Spock, and McCoy." I like both sets of characters for different reasons. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy have been deified. When you deify characters, no one else is going to measure up, so we have to move passed that. I did.
They haven't been about anything you're interested in. And I'm surprised you didn't say "intellectual weight of TNG". I thought you were a TNGer.
Believe me, once the Trump Presidency is OVER, the less that reminds me of it, the better. So DSC not aggressively addressing Trumpism is going to be a plus in my column. Anything that's all "Trump this! Trump that!" is going to be instantly dated once this joke that's gone on way too long is finally over.
As I've said before, I'm not too broken up about it. I think religion should be left up to interpretation instead being told to us "this is what it is!" If they're not going to do it right, I'd rather they not do it at all.
It's offered enough so that we've had certain posters on this board (not you) complain about it non-stop and, if they're not outright about it, they'll dress it up as "SJWs!" or "Mary Sue!"
They got to you. Didn't they?As for TNG I do like it. It has the most nostalgic value but I think DS9/TOS are the best shows and TNG is a close third.
If any of these fit the stories they want to tell on any of these series, then I wouldn't mind seeing those issues tackled.But you also have other things to explore. Climate Change, Cancel Culture, Police Brutality, Systemic problems in the justice system and even online hacking which would have been inspired by the Russia stuff but it goes beyond Russia. The whole system is fragile and can be brought down by a bunch of nerds with time and resources.
Or could take more of a Daniel Jackson arc, with being unprepared/overwhelmed/unskilled for combat in the beginning but over time gets to grips with it more and more--though a Starfleeter should always be looking for a way to think or talk their way out of bad situations and not resort to pew pew.Might not be great at action scenes but this is why I compared her to Rodney McKay on Stargate as the type of series lead she could be.
Ah well, I haven't seen anything beyond those two and a half episodes so maybe she isn't. But still, she did remind me a bit of that short story anyway. And a bit of Sybok 2.0.Mary Sue's do not mutiny, start wars with Klingons, nor rescue dictators from Mirror worlds. Wish folks would stop spouting that crap
Or could take more of a Daniel Jackson arc, with being unprepared/overwhelmed/unskilled for combat in the beginning but over time gets to grips with it more and more--though a Starfleeter should always be looking for a way to think or talk their way out of bad situations and not resort to pew pew.
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