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Spoilers Strange New Worlds jumps the shark... ("Subspace Rhapsody")

All the various crew... of various species, who most likely don't have the same dances... dancing in unison and synchronicity. Along with 'dancing' starships.

"Subspace Rhapsody" being a musical was already bad enough, but DANCING WITH THE STARSHIPS?

Just way past the point of ludicrous.
A Fistful of Datas ends with the Enterprise flying off into the sunset. At least "dancing" starships can be explained as fancy flying maneuvers. How does one even have a sunset in space?
 
Or that Happy Days lasted for 6 more seasons after that happened?

:lol:
And one more season after the original theme song mix was abandoned, truly the series' greatest crime of all.

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Lots of autotune and the songs didn’t do much for me.
I didn't notice any

Autotune (although it wasn't called that when first used, has existed since 1979).

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This album made use of a couple of technical innovations which gave it a unique sound. "I Pity Inanimate Objects" contained a distinctive vocal treatment in which the notes are seemingly obtained by altering the pitch of pre-recorded voices. In an interview for The Idler magazine in 2007, Kevin Godley explained how that song was realized:

Recently, I played I Pity Inanimate Objects from Freeze Frame and I remembered how and why we actually did that. The idea was driven by a new piece of equipment called a harmoniser. It's used in studios all the time these days as a corrective device to get performances in tune, but this early version came with a keyboard. You could put a sound through a harmoniser and if you wanted an instrument or voice to hit a certain note that it hadn't, you could play that note on the keyboard. So we got to thinking, 'Let's forget about singing for the moment. What happens if I vocalize these words in a monotone - do an entire song on one note - and get Lol to play my vocal on the harmoniser keyboard?' That was the experiment. It worked pretty well. Predated Cher's digital gurglings by a few years. I don't know where the lyric came from. Maybe because the harmoniser was inanimate.[3]
 
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