- The lack of plants. How many plants did TOS or TNG have? DS9 & VOY together showed about the same amount of plants, though at least Voyager had hydroponics for a while. Maybe replace the baseball on Sisko's desk with a plant. Make the Jem'Hadar wear bowl-shaped helmets with little patches of moss or plants growing in the bowl, some kind of symbolic gesture of their devotion to the Founders or something. In keeping with nuBSG, make all Jem'Hadar wear cocktail dresses.
That there was still a fanbase and audience for both to spite what those online say. "Transformers 2" had to have repeat viewings to make the money it did. The studio heads are even aware that folks paid to see it just to join the haters online to talk about it, which is stupid beacuse if you pay into it then you're supporting it.It certainly inherited a large share of that audience, but yes, it got a fair amount of eyeballs. So did Transformers 2. Your point?![]()
Really?... Again and again, you choose not to debate any of Moore's arguments, yet continue to piss on him and offer up diversions.![]()
Prove me wrong, then - try critiquing Moore's points without pissing on a different tv show. Try seeing if your arguments are worth anything on the merits of their reasoning alone.![]()
What's the point in bitching and being bitter over a production you had nearly nothing to with? It's like complaining about a meal after you've nearly finished the plate.
Voyager had multiple REALLY GOOD and Smart Episodes that were excellent throw back to the writing style of TNG.
...
But compared to DS9 it was Einstein.
BSG has incredible continuity throughout the run.
I'm not an expert in the CGI of Voyager era, but if they had to render a ship that has taken damage in an episode, why can't they reuse that model for the next episode? It shouldn't cost (much) more. Or did Voyager never show the ship after its damaged?
This doesn't apply to DS9 because that's a station where nobody is forced to be at.
Ron Moore actually followed his own advice with BSG. You might recall a few sets where things were changed or made more personal as the series went on. Memorial Wall and the pilot briefing rooms come to mind.
Seven of Nine's Costume / Six
The problem is that she dresses very provocatively while nobody else seems to notice. That's doesn't ring true.
Six (and the rest of the cylon) do dress provocatively on occasion, but that's usually for a reason.
Sexuality
He doesn't want sex for the sake of seeing sex on the screen. Its just a bit unrealistic for people who are supposed to be stuck on a ship for 70 years to not start families. In the seven years, there were only two (real) pregnancies. One of them was conceived before the show, and the other was born at the end. That just seems strange.
For fun, why don't we apply many of those suggestions to DS9:
- More sex. Yes, let's make sure every late series episodes has Kira or Odo recount some of their sexual escapades or Sisko pass time by talking about 'delivering cargo' to 'Kasidy Yates' freighter'. Or give Star Trek all the dignity it had with Worf & Dax having sex in the turbolifts or Jeffries tubes. Maybe in his quest to better understand solids, Odo could turn into a Cardassian vole and have sex with another vole to understand those biological drives and impulses in solids, and perhaps to frame Quark for health & sanitation violations.
- More casual outfits. Like the female Cylons, all Changelings should go nude. Have Dax in a revealing outfit. Retcon Trills to be like Goa'uld symbiotes. Dax could emerge from Jadzia's navel and tell stories to Sisko like Quaddo or whatever from Total Recall instead of Jadzia telling those stories to Sisko. Maybe Sisko, to symbolize his dual role as Starfleet commander and Bajoran emissary wear a shirt/pants from the Starfleet uniform and a pants/shirt from a Bajoran religious outfit. Since Sisko started to get cool when he channeled Hawk, maybe he should have been allowed to wear a trench coat and shades when he commanded the Defiant. Activate tinted windows, err the cloaking device!
- The lack of plants. How many plants did TOS or TNG have? DS9 & VOY together showed about the same amount of plants, though at least Voyager had hydroponics for a while. Maybe replace the baseball on Sisko's desk with a plant. Make the Jem'Hadar wear bowl-shaped helmets with little patches of moss or plants growing in the bowl, some kind of symbolic gesture of their devotion to the Founders or something. In keeping with nuBSG, make all Jem'Hadar wear cocktail dresses.
- More drama. DS9 didn't have enough drama. Turn it up 10-fold, have every character bicker with everyone, make sure characters have well-developed reasons for hating everyone- even Sisko with O'Brien, Garak with Dax, Dax with Quark, Odo with Bashir, etc. Make it so the viewers know more about who and what they hate than who they even are.
Ah, now let's take some of his recommendations for Voyager. let's start with some smaller points.
Chakotay isn't just Maquis, he's a Native American. He could fully embrace his heritage by wearing a Native American outfit from the back closet of TOS leftovers around there. Maybe he could wear a feather headdress, 3 feathers to denote his rank as commander. For upping the drama, have him not just maintain the stance of a hostile, spiteful rebel, but have him also heap centuries of guilt on the white man, err, woman and her black servant, who "traded his race's chains to help the white man oppress other races". Liken various gestures Janeway does for the Maquis as smallpox blankets, liken B'Elanna's Chief Engineer status as collaborating with their oppressors, liken their quarters to trailers on the reservation.
Everyone could dress like they are schemers from the mirror universe... except Seven, she has to wear a Borg burka, out of self-imposed shame for all the millions she helped to assmiliate into the Borg and her hesitation to be a fully independent individual. To show character development, as she becomes more comfortable in non-collective/cult life and feels more like an individual, she can shift outfits every season following a curve on how much is covered up with Middle Eastern women's attire, ending up with a loose shawl or something. In fact, Voyager didn't have enough conflict and scheming. Just lift how the aliens saw it in "Living Witness" and make the entire series like that.
And lets have them talk about what it's like being so far from home in 2 out of every 3 episodes. We should of had Kirk & the Enterprise moan about being so far from home on some of their deep long range expeditions. Remember, the Enterprise was exploring deep space part of the time and Enterprise-D was away from 'home' for almost a full year in Season 1.
Better continuity. There should have been more minor mentions of other races encountered or events, but Voyager's nature made it hard to have active continuity from anything outside of the ship/crew. The ship is speeding along at warp 6.whatever and did many huge jumps from Seasons 4 to early Season 6. They left behind every race far beyond the horizon except for the Borg, and later on, the Hirogen. Voyager did keep Paris an ensign for a while and locked him up for 30 days in the brig.
Less Maquis integration. While I agree it was glossed over a little too much, I think what people dreamed of went too far. What did people want, them to conspire to take over the ship every other episode, commit acts of sabotage? We got 2 traitors from the Maquis and 1 murderer. I think people forget they were former Starfleet in many cases and being entirely removed from the source of their conflict, the Federation-Cardassian treaty & DMZ and on the far side of the galaxy in uncharted space with some hostile enemies. It made their differences with Starfleet seem insignificant, and Voyager was the only ship home and their only kind out there (minus Amelia Earhart & Tackleberry). Their desire for looser interpretation of Starfleet policy to find ways back home was done in "Prime Factors". 2 of the senior staff were Maquis, the #2 and the Chief Engineer. One of their own was literally the one propelling them towards home, and Ayala was a prominent security officer and the stand-in for Tuvok on the bridge (he should have been given more a voice, given a Garak level guest-star/recurring role though).
More damage. Yes, like DS9 had that. "To the Death"'s damage didn't linger, and I think another episode damaged the station and that didn't linger. Damage from "Civil Defense" miraculously was fixed by the next episode. All those lists of war dead were nameless people from around Starfleet, not actual cast members. All his criticisms are a case of pot meet kettle.
Cycling this back to the original topic... Something to remember is Star Trek was a franchise that attracted viewers from little kids to adults. How many of us first started watching Star Trek when we were kids? I know from reading criticisms of Stargate Universe that Stargate too had a family sci-fi atmosphere to it too, as many Stargate franchise fans felt after seeing the pilot's closet sex scene that they didn't feel comfortable letting their young children watch this with them like they did Atlantis or SG-1. Sex on tv is often meant for the viewers/ratings, not for artistic reasons. It also lobs off the younger part of a demographic, especially when the demo reaches into childhood age, and part of a franchise's lifeblood is being able to hook new viewers at a young age. Baseball is the same way. To boost the ratings, we don't see MLB have some of their players show themselves getting to first/second/third base with their girlfriends or wives. And all that bickering is just the equivalent of going in circles. People want to watch a story go somewhere, not just rehash the same grievances over and over again. For example, Odo-Quark set the mood, it didn't become the defining plot of the episodes.
What?!? You need to! Immediately.I haven't seen BSG, so...
I am somewhat stunned at the thought that someone in the universe believes Voyager was a better written show than DS9.
And to the level of Einstein? Gah.
I honestly think "Emissary" was the best opener of any Trek show, myself...
Isn't Parralax the one where they decided that metaphors can come true? hardly a "smart" ep...
I think Caretaker needed some revisions personally, or maybe expanded into a 3-parter or a mini-series before the show proper.
One major change: Have it be that it was the Caretaker's own power that brought Voyager to the Delta Quadrant, and when he died so did all hope of going home.
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