It had the best single actor of any ST series.
Ah now, I wouldn't consider Colm Meaney to be a TNG guy.

It had the best single actor of any ST series.
• Great drama has conflict among it principal characters and TNG did not.This doesn't have to be a bad thing.
It's a bad thing because it made TNG a weaker drama series. Most of the interesting drama came from them dealing with the "alien of the week" and not among the principal characters. This made the show a flat dramatic series compared to most television--then and now. And, when compared to sci-fi shows like BABYLON 9, DS9, FIREFLY, BSG, etc., there is no comparison. These shows are much more exciting and mature as drama/science fiction series... at least to me.
It also made TNG a false, fabricated and untrue TV series. I don't believe man, given his nature, will ever develop to get along to the degree implied in TNG. TOS preached peace and getting along, but it was beleivable. Not TNG. Roddenbery took it too far. Even the gods and the angels--according to myth--have conflicts among themselves. Not so in TNG universe? Please.
• TNG ran 7 years and produced only 4 out of the seven years of quality television (Season 1,2 and 7 sucked!).Maybe 1st did, but season 2 and 7 definitely didn't sucked.
And every, every St series had at least one season that "sucked".
Guess it's just a matter of opinion, but the consensus among a lot of TREK fans is season 1 and 2 sucked and season 7 was weak. I'm not the only one who sees this.
Yes, every TREK series had weak seasons, but DS9 and TOS had less bad seasons (percentage wise), hence one of the many reasons I rank both over TNG. I rank TNG three on my list, which is not bad.
They all had a ship and a crew, but they were very different in many other ways.
Different, but not significantly different. TOS was and is the best of the ship-based series. It and it's characters just define what TREK is all about. It is more significant in cultural terms. TNG just copied it, but never suplanted it. It appeared it might for a while (to some) --thanks to TNG high rating in the 80s, but as the dust settled, when people think of STAR TREK, it's TOS that comes to mind first. TNG ratings were inflated and false because: 1) it was the only science fiction game in town at the time and, 2) TOS characters were getting old at the movies and TREK fans were itching for more TREK. TNG just filled that void. If Paramount would have retired TOS characters at the movies and given us new actors playing TOS characters on TV, the ratings would have been even greater as a TREK TV series than TNG! TREK would have been hugh!!! Then, they could have brought that TV series to the movies. TREK would be in better shape than it is right now.
That is not true, Picard is one of the greatest ST characters ever. He is better known than any DS9, VOY or ENT character. And he is definitely not sexless (Vash, Bev, Anij...).
Picard just bored me. He only functioned as an authoritarian figure and little else. Sure, there were minor threads to his character, but nothing mammoth. A few women thrown in--Vash, Bev, Anij--to make him appear sexual, just seemed pretentious and contrived. A gimmick that just wasn't sincere or meaningful. Stewart was wonderful in the role and did the best he could, but the character was just one-note to me. Though Sisko was played by an inferior actor, he was FAR more interesting as a character. Perhaps, it's a personal thing. And for the record, I do not judge things as great based only on popularity or how well known they are.
Deja Q.
Deja Q was too hammy an episode for me, but was amusing. THE TROUBLE WITH TRIBBLES and A PIECE OF THE ACTION from TOS; THE HOUSE OF QUARK and TRIALS and TRIBBLE-ATION, plus a host of funny DS9 episodes, just blow TNG out the water in this area. There were funny moments in TNG--though the "fish out of water" jokes concerning Data, got old pretty fast. The shows actors and characters just lacked the versatility and dimensions of TOS and DS9 to pull off comedy and sustain it.
Maybe other characters were weaker, but Picard, Data and Riker definitely grew. They had interesting relationship. The whole cast had a great chemistry. And they had bigger success than any other ST series.
Slight growth, yes, but not significant growth from any of the characters, including Picard, Data and Riker. Data came close, but given all the episodes devoted to him, the growth of his character was too little, too late, and very simplistic.
Compare TNG chemistry to TOS. TOS had far less episodes than TNG, far less, yet did more in building chemistry among it's characters. Not even a comparison to me. One thing that makes me happy about STAR TREK 11 is we will get more stories of TOS crew. TOS--which IS STAR TREK--has less stories than any TREK series, and that needs correcting.
I haven't watched Babylon and Firefly, but Buffy and DS9 are not better than TNG. BSG is neither, and it's much more drama, than a sci fi show. The X Files are the best series ever.
It would be silly to argue opinion as to what is the best. I simply state my opinion that all the shows I mentioned are better. I DO maintain that DS9, BABYLON 5, THE X FILES, BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER, FIREFLY and BATTLESTAR GALACTICA (remake) were, and are, superior dramatic / sci-fi series than TNG in terms of mature, adult, realistic drama, and contain more interesting drama overall. You are joking that BSG is less than a sci-fi series because it contains real drama... right?
It had at least one great film and big success (FC), and 2 were pretty good. Only Nemesis is a big failure. ENT was the one that was cancelled. And TNG opened the door for DS9 and every other series because of its success. DS9 ratings were always dropping, too, despite that "real drama and quality".
TNG failed as a movie series. If NEMESIS was TNG only failure, why wouldn't Paramount ignore it and continue making more TNG movies? Because they could see it wasn't working. Only super-TNG fans couldn't see it and still don't. Only one artistic-commercial success out of four. That's all. That's terrible. When it was bad it didn't work. When the TOS movies were bad, they still clicked, if only from the direction of those great characters and the actors who played them. The presence and characters of TNG just didn't have the magic, legendary and universal appeal of TOS. Paramount made the right decision by returning the TREK movie series to it's best possibilities: Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scotty, Uhura, Sulu, and Chekov.
TNG, building off the success, popularity, foundation and frame that TOS created and laid down, made it possible for DS9 to exist and I am grateful for that. TNG was a good show, no doubt about it. It just didn't have that lasting appeal to cross the threshold of legendary popular culture. TOS did. DS9 didn't either. It wasn't trying to.
DS9 took TREK in a direction that the producers should have followed: building, exploring and expanding the STAR TREK universe by giving us details of that fictional world in action. We know very little of the Federation, Star Fleet, Earth, Mars and the other planets in our solar system, commerce, politics, how religion applies in the TREK world, etc. For the most part, all we ever saw were star ship adventures--VOYAGER, ENTERPRISE and TNG movie series. The fact that all these series were bad didn't help.
During this period, only DS9 offered quality TREK. I liked DS9 because it got away from star ships (in part) and exploring. It pointed the way, the direction, TREK should have gone.
One of the biggest mistakes TREK made was regurgitating star ships, captains and space exploration. We should have seen more TREK TV series covering other areas of the STAR TREK world. That's what made DS9 so vital to TREKs future. A pity the franchise didn't go in that direction. So many TREK fans just seem to want the same stuff over and over again.
In retrospect, I wish DS9 would have been able to have several years alone as a TREK series. With TNG floundering at the movies, the quality of DS9 could have been seen and appreciated. Glutting TREK the way Paramount did, hurt DS9 and the franchise in greneral. DS9 got lost in the shuffle. I think the franchise would have fared better if this had not happened.
Yes. DS9 ratings dropped (so did TNG in later years) for a host of reasons: Changing viewing habits, TREK exhaustion and over-saturation, competition from other quality sci-fi series (something TNG never faced), etc.
What's interesiting or not, is in very big part a matter of opinion.• A good test of a show, franchise, movie, etc. and/or it character's is if it can be interesting, even if it is bad. TOS could do this, both as a TV series and a movie. TNG could not.
I find TNG always interesting, and TOS too, while DS9 was always boring.
You have a right to your opinion, but "always" boring? If you found DS9 "always" boring, then you are either not being honest, just didn't get it, being unfair, being close mined, or over-stating. Come on. There is no way I can believe it always bored you.
Over-stating a little bit. I like some episodes. I believe Trials and Tribble Ations was my favourite.You have a right to your opinion, but "always" boring? If you found DS9 "always" boring, then you are either not being honest, just didn't get it, being unfair, being close mined, or over-stating. Come on. There is no way I can believe it always bored you.
Sucked is a hard word. I agree that season 1 was bad.Guess it's just a matter of opinion, but the consensus among a lot of TREK fans is season 1 and 2 sucked and season 7 was weak. I'm not the only one who sees this.
I don't really agree. And then TNG would never existed, which would be such a shame.If Paramount would have retired TOS characters at the movies and given us new actors playing TOS characters on TV, the ratings would have been even greater as a TREK TV series than TNG! TREK would have been hugh!!! Then, they could have brought that TV series to the movies. TREK would be in better shape than it is right now.
Neither do I.And for the record, I do not judge things as great based only on popularity or how well known they are.
It's a bad thing because it made TNG a weaker drama series.
Deja Q was too hammy an episode for me, but was amusing.
That success was principally due to the guest actor though.
Generally true, but Worf had some good lines and actions that made me laugh out loud.
Like when he realized he, along with every one else, has been transformed into on of Robin Hood's men, he says to Picard, "I protest! I am NOT a Merry Man!" (BTW, thankfully Worf had actually heard of Robin Hood, and didn't need to ask anyone who he was.)
And in an homage to Animal House, Worf snatches Geordi's instrument that he had been playing badly, smashes it, and says, "Sorry."
RR
You're talking about Q-Pid not Deja Q,
Different, but not significantly different. TOS was and is the best of the ship-based series. It and it's characters just define what TREK is all about. It is more significant in cultural terms. TNG just copied it, but never suplanted it. It appeared it might for a while (to some) --thanks to TNG high rating in the 80s, but as the dust settled, when people think of STAR TREK, it's TOS that comes to mind first.
TNG ratings were inflated and false because: 1) it was the only science fiction game in town at the time and, 2) TOS characters were getting old at the movies and TREK fans were itching for more TREK. TNG just filled that void.
If Paramount would have retired TOS characters at the movies and given us new actors playing TOS characters on TV, the ratings would have been even greater as a TREK TV series than TNG! TREK would have been hugh!!! Then, they could have brought that TV series to the movies. TREK would be in better shape than it is right now.
Stewart was wonderful in the role and did the best he could, but the character was just one-note to me. Though Sisko was played by an inferior actor, he was FAR more interesting as a character. Perhaps, it's a personal thing.
It would be silly to argue opinion as to what is the best. I simply state my opinion that all the shows I mentioned are better.
TNG failed as a movie series. If NEMESIS was TNG only failure, why wouldn't Paramount ignore it and continue making more TNG movies? Because they could see it wasn't working. Only super-TNG fans couldn't see it and still don't. Only one artistic-commercial success out of four. That's all. That's terrible.
When it was bad it didn't work. When the TOS movies were bad, they still clicked, if only from the direction of those great characters and the actors who played them. The presence and characters of TNG just didn't have the magic, legendary and universal appeal of TOS. Paramount made the right decision by returning the TREK movie series to it's best possibilities: Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scotty, Uhura, Sulu, and Chekov.
TNG, building off the success, popularity, foundation and frame that TOS created and laid down, made it possible for DS9 to exist and I am grateful for that. TNG was a good show, no doubt about it. It just didn't have that lasting appeal to cross the threshold of legendary popular culture. TOS did. DS9 didn't either. It wasn't trying to.
DS9 took TREK in a direction that the producers should have followed: building, exploring and expanding the STAR TREK universe by giving us details of that fictional world in action. We know very little of the Federation, Star Fleet, Earth, Mars and the other planets in our solar system, commerce, politics, how religion applies in the TREK world, etc. For the most part, all we ever saw were star ship adventures--VOYAGER, ENTERPRISE and TNG movie series. The fact that all these series were bad didn't help.
During this period, only DS9 offered quality TREK. I liked DS9 because it got away from star ships (in part) and exploring. It pointed the way, the direction, TREK should have gone.
One of the biggest mistakes TREK made was regurgitating star ships, captains and space exploration. We should have seen more TREK TV series covering other areas of the STAR TREK world. That's what made DS9 so vital to TREKs future. A pity the franchise didn't go in that direction. So many TREK fans just seem to want the same stuff over and over again.
Yes. DS9 ratings dropped (so did TNG in later years) for a host of reasons: Changing viewing habits, TREK exhaustion and over-saturation, competition from other quality sci-fi series (something TNG never faced), etc.
You have a right to your opinion, but "always" boring? If you found DS9 "always" boring, then you are either not being honest, just didn't get it, being unfair, being close mined, or over-stating. Come on. There is no way I can believe it always bored you.
Why does Sci-Fi all of a sudden have to have all this drama incorporated into it? Was TNG trying to be 24? I don't think so. There could have been a little bit more drama in the sense that the crew had to butt heads a little on important issues (like the Prime Directive), I agree with you this far. But to have Sisko/Kira like fits of anger for no reason other than the fact that the characters are assholes, then give me bland and dramaless anyday of the week.• Great drama has conflict among it principal characters and TNG did not.
I think the limited budget hurt them in this area, they had to do a lot of tame stories simply because the budget wasn't there to do high packed action sequences.• TNG ran 7 years and produced only 4 out of the seven years of quality television (Season 1,2 and 7 sucked!).
DS9 "forged" territory by becoming just another derivative drama that could have been anywhere, with severe overacting and severe self importance. The soapish angle was the nail in the coffin for that show.• TNG is a rip-off of TOS (like VOYAGER and ENTERPRISE). Only DS9 forged new territory in the TREK franchise.
So because the Captain didn't stick his dick into every alien babe he's not "cool", yeah, ok, and in the series he did have several romances, which BTW were far more realistic than Kirk's "showing the alien babe of the week what 'love' was".• A one-note, dimension-less, sexless character as captain. (Though played by a fine actor!)
Trek humor is HORRIBLE HORRIBLE HORRIBLE!! Man, you being a DS9nite should know this from watching those horrid Ferengi episodes!!! The only character who was even remotely funny in any of the series was Data, and he was funny in a natural and not forced way.• Could not do humor like VOYAGER and ENTERPRISE, and like them, produced no classic comedy episodes in the TREK canon or science fiction in general.
This might be the ONLY thing I somewhat agree with, and the characters did grow somewhat, but not tremendous amounts.• Had flat, white-bread characters that didn't grow.
TRANSLATION: Didn't scream and yell and get on someone else's throat every 2 minutes.• Had characters with very little charisma and passion.
It's hard to top the big 3 in TOS, and that's simply because Leonard Nemoy played the quintessential Vulcan, and McCoy was a great foil to him. Kirk kind of just sat in the middle of their little spats and took a jab here and there at either one of them. DS9 only felt like an ensemble later on in the series, and obviously the war is going to do that, push you closer to those you trust. TNG had great ensemble though, I would say about the same as DS9, they just didn't get that many chances to show it.• Lacked the character/actor interaction of TOS and the broad, ensemble feel and success of DS9.
Why is this important?• No great dynamic between captain and first officer, unlike many TREK and similar type of story franchises, TV shows, movies, novels, etc.
For drama yes, for Sci-Fi, not so sure. Babylon 5 did quite well, but had some very cliched stuff going on, like all the "shadow doomsaying" and practically any scene with telepaths. The other shows built on totally different premises. nuBSG I wouldn't even call Sci-Fi, it's full on Drama with a few sprinkled Sci-Fi elements in it.• Already surpassed as great quality sci-fi and real drama by DS9, BABYLON 5, THE X FILES, BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER, FIREFLY and BATTLESTAR GALACTICA (remake).
What do the movies have to do with the Series?? Were any of the TOS movies even remotely close to the Series? I would say only TMP was, and it's not exactly on everyone's favorite lists now is it?• Monumental failure as a movie series which showcased all the TV series weaknesses and demonstrated it a good TV series, but not as superior as the above mentioned series.
Again, what do the movies have to do with the Series??• Failure of movie series--along with VOYAGER and ENTERPRISE--almost and quite possibly did destroy TREK franchise.
If you like the science and exploration angle, plus the idea that we can grow out of our infancy, then you would find it very interesting. Just because YOU are not interested in those things doesn't mean it wasn't interesting.• A good test of a show, franchise, movie, etc. and/or it character's is if it can be interesting, even if it is bad. TOS could do this, both as a TV series and a movie. TNG could not.
That's not TNG's fault. Every decade has gone thru phases. The 60's has it's own "cowboy style". The 70's that "flower power style". The 80's had the "new age style", the 90's had that "contemporary complacency" style, and of course, now in this decade it's the "realistic gritty drama" style. So just because TNG wasn't "gritty and realistic" doesn't mean it was bad quality, it was simply following it's pattern for the decade.• TNG had no competition from quality science fiction (unlike DS9). This produced a warped sense of it's success--both quality and commercial.
I still rather watch TNG than X-Files, or Buffy, or Angel, or even nuBSG. I like those shows, but they are not as good as TNG for what I like. Stargate maybe comes close, but then again Stargate pretty much stole everything from TOS and TNG and flashed it a lot more.• Viewing the TV series now, 2008, it already looks dated, soft and tame.
Ah, no. TOS only feels like it's own style because it stands out so much from what can be done today. Go and watch the original Battlestar, or even Lost in Space, and you'll find the same style that now it's so radically different, it feels "classic". TNG is not at that point yet.• Poor production design and FX. TOS had this problem too, but, it took this weakness and created it's own style, feel and made it it's own. Not TNG.
Ah, yeah right. The whole point of the ship is that it's an exploration vessel. It's not supposed to be dinghy and cramped. It's supposed to be comfortable and spacious to live in. Are you one of those people that hate the "AGT upgraded Enterprise D" when that upgrade gave you what you wanted, a fanboy warship.• Bridge of the ship looks like a hotel lobby and not a bridge on a ship. Dreadful and almost laughable decision. The exterior shape of the ship made it look like a "toy" traveling through space and not a mighty star ship.
Fact: Your statement is true about ENT and VOY...definitely not TNG.
DS9 was too gritty for my tastes, though I generally like gritty. Since it's set in the future however, I was looking for a little more optimism, some faith in our own evolution, this is what TNG and TOS showed, or so I think.
Interesting. Out of the gritty DS9, the Federation, Romulans and Klingons were allied with a common cause. It would be the TNG that would revert the Romulans to be cold war aliens once again and apparently a new TOS movie.
A young Ferengi saw the Federation and in particular Captain Sisko as a role model and ultimately joins Starfleet. Watching TNG would anybody have seen that coming? Or on Voyager where Harry Kim was "warned" about the Ferengi at school.
Bajor after half a century of occupation would later form a peace treaty with it's former oppressors and a former Bajoran terrorist would one day help Cardassia reclaim its independence.
For all that is said against DS9 it has its moments of hope and unity.
Hah hah that must be some good ganga you're smokin' there dude:
Why does Sci-Fi all of a sudden have to have all this drama incorporated into it? Was TNG trying to be 24? I don't think so. There could have been a little bit more drama in the sense that the crew had to butt heads a little on important issues (like the Prime Directive), I agree with you this far. But to have Sisko/Kira like fits of anger for no reason other than the fact that the characters are assholes, then give me bland and dramaless anyday of the week.• Great drama has conflict among it principal characters and TNG did not.
I judge a Trek show by whether I would like to live there if given the chance. TNG is the only place I've love to be in.
.
Battlestar Galactica continually depresses me with how stupid both humanity and the Cylons have become as the series grinds on (and also I guess by default, badly written),
Lilith wrote--
TNG did have Hugh
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Didn't say TNG ratings weren't hugh. I speculated that TREK ratings could have been even greater with TOS characters who were icons, even at that point in time.
TNG did have Hugh
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Didn't say TNG ratings weren't hugh. I speculated that TREK ratings could have been even greater with TOS characters who were icons, even at that point in time.
DWF wrote--
It was nominated for a Best Drama Emmy in it's final year so I don't think everybody could agree with you there.
Probably done to quill a lot of criticism from the media that TNG had never been nominated. They were being political, as some award shows are, and essentially threw TNG a bone, cause the seventh season was pretty weak. That's one of the many reasons I don't like award shows or use them to judge quality--especially the Oscars, Emmy's and Grammy's. Lots of great art gets ignored. THE WIRE is just a magnificent TV series and you would think it has the plaque or something the way it gets treated at Emmy time.
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