Aww, you're a sweet guy. Thank you very much, J.I have to quote the brilliance of this:
(Believe me, you don't want to know how long it took me to compose that post.

Aww, you're a sweet guy. Thank you very much, J.I have to quote the brilliance of this:
Aww, you're a sweet guy. Thank you very much, J.I have to quote the brilliance of this:
(Believe me, you don't want to know how long it took me to compose that post.)
Eek. Decaf, Hartzilla?![]()
It's also of enourmous importance that the viewer can relate to the aliens. It's very hard to get a giant piece of rubber (or a CGI animation) to really show emotions. People will always be emotionally moved by other people.
I really hate it when there's a lighthearted breather episode whose the conflict ultimately puts the entire ship/station/crew in mortal, mortal danger, possibly resulting in the mass explosion of the ship/station/crew (yes, crew). A breather episode is fine once in a while to break up tension and pace the season, but to have something comical turn into something hazardous pretty much defeats the purpose of a breather episode while at the same renders the action unbelievably ridiculous to begin with.
I really hate it when there's a lighthearted breather episode whose the conflict ultimately puts the entire ship/station/crew in mortal, mortal danger, possibly resulting in the mass explosion of the ship/station/crew (yes, crew). A breather episode is fine once in a while to break up tension and pace the season, but to have something comical turn into something hazardous pretty much defeats the purpose of a breather episode while at the same renders the action unbelievably ridiculous to begin with.
Like TNG's Rascals? The Ferengi taking the flagship of the Federation was ludicrous in and of itself...![]()
I sort of take issue with how Trek aliens have to be extensions/embodied facets of human characteristics. I realize they're made that way, but then that sort of creation device sort of limits how one can explore that alien culture when it's story-appropriate. I think of the Ferengi and how they're expected (racism alert!) by almost all cultures to be greedy, opportunistic, and misogynistic. It took years and years just for Trek to say the Ferengi were more than those traits, and even then, Trek did so only very lightly (and somewhat poorly), and I'm convinced that it's this reliance on expected traits that made the Ferengi episodes so poor overall.
I really hate it when there's a lighthearted breather episode whose the conflict ultimately puts the entire ship/station/crew in mortal, mortal danger, possibly resulting in the mass explosion of the ship/station/crew (yes, crew). A breather episode is fine once in a while to break up tension and pace the season, but to have something comical turn into something hazardous pretty much defeats the purpose of a breather episode while at the same renders the action unbelievably ridiculous to begin with.
Like TNG's Rascals? The Ferengi taking the flagship of the Federation was ludicrous in and of itself...![]()
espeacially when their using Birds of Prey to do it.
plynch--I would point out an exception to your eyebrow rule, though. If you ever watch Garak, it's actually quite surprising how expressive he manages to be with those Cardassian eye ridges!(<--See? Even the emote agrees with me!)
Also I completely second everything that CommanderRaytas said above. As much as I like Bashir and Reed they were too stereotypical (and posh) for my liking.
Thanks. It really drives me up the wall.
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