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Trek Returning to TV in 2017!

Oh, I'm sure some diabolical mastermind is working on it as we speak.

Hopefully pumpkin spice flavoring will be scarce by the 24th century, even if it's replicated.
 
So, Stock Tip of the Century would be, "stock up now?"

Been really enjoying your insights and Posts lately! Love that I can still learn so much about this Thing! Huzzah to your ST and other knowledge and wit! :bolian:
 
I don't understand the panic over the issue of whether the new series will be set in Prime or Nu universe. If it's a series set between TOS and TNG, with a new ship and a new crew, the ONLY way you'll be able to tell if it's Prime or not is by whether Vulcan still exists. And either way, the writers will be creating new characters, new stories, new aliens. And old aliens and ships (and continuity) will be tweaked and updated - just as they have been throughout Star Trek's history.
 
What do people think of Star Trekian humanism - that it can't handle the "real world" or something?

That's the impression some people might get from watching the background for 24th century humans. A lot of it seemed very tamed in order to show how far humans advanced.

Very little beer, soda, tequila, but lots of tea. Very little contemporary sounding music, but lots of classical music.

TNG would only go as far as do analogy episodes about things like the freedom of same sex relationships, but not show it.

Sisko didn't want to participate with a recreation of a 60's casino, and it irked some people, because it was never considered something like that could happen in Trek.

Beverly dumped a Trill she was deeply in love with after the new host turned out to be a female, although her explanation seemed a little shaky.

That particular era kind of insulated and sugar coated certain things about humans living in the 24th century.

One thing Trek 09 got right was what a 23rd century club/bar might look like.

It had the flashing lights, loud club music. People drinking hard core alcohol.

It looked real, alive and interesting.

A TNG bar would have had just jazz music, be calm and quiet, etc.

So, you can get the impression that Trek sort of avoided elements of the real world in favor of super ideal world.

The 24th century did seem a little too cultured and civilized at times. If nothing else, the new movies did bring a much-needed dose of rock-and-roll to what was starting to feel a little bit too much like chamber music.

It's worth remembering that, utimately, STAR TREK is not about life in a peaceful utopia. It's about danger and dilemmas on the Final Frontier, beyond the boundaries of the Federation.

As Q put it in his very best speech, space is wondrous, but it's not for the timid. You have to expect a bloody nose once in a while.

I'm sure Captain Kirk would agree. :)
 
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What do people think of Star Trekian humanism - that it can't handle the "real world" or something?

That's the impression some people might get from watching the background for 24th century humans. A lot of it seemed very tamed in order to show how far humans advanced.

Very little beer, soda, tequila, but lots of tea. Very little contemporary sounding music, but lots of classical music.

TNG would only go as far as do analogy episodes about things like the freedom of same sex relationships, but not show it.

Sisko didn't want to participate with a recreation of a 60's casino, and it irked some people, because it was never considered something like that could happen in Trek.

Beverly dumped a Trill she was deeply in love with after the new host turned out to be a female, although her explanation seemed a little shaky.

That particular era kind of insulated and sugar coated certain things about humans living in the 24th century.

One thing Trek 09 got right was what a 23rd century club/bar might look like.

It had the flashing lights, loud club music. People drinking hard core alcohol.

It looked real, alive and interesting.

A TNG bar would have had just jazz music, be calm and quiet, etc.

So, you can get the impression that Trek sort of avoided elements of the real world in favor of super ideal world.

The 24th century did seem a little too cultured and civilized at times. If nothing else, the new movies did bring a much-needed dose of rock-and-roll to what was starting to feel a little bit too much like chamber music.

It's worth remembering that, utimately, is not about life in peaceful utopia. It's about danger and exploration on the Final Frontier.

As Q put it in his very best speech, space is wondrous, but it's not for the timid. You have to expect a bloody nose once in a while.

I'm sure Captain Kirk would agree. :)
And grinning the whole way through.
 
On TNG their original concept was that the crew were going to all lay on couches on the bridge & there would be no buttons or controls. They didn't do that because it wasn't workable on a dramatic TV series to have the crew lounging about with nothing to do with their hands.

And because they were in danger of disappearing up their own asses.

Fortunately they got their act together later on.
 
The JJTrek bar scenes were refreshing! :techman:

I recently re-watched The Ascent (DS9), and the interaction between Odo and Quark felt real, rather than "evolved". :bolian:
 
So TNG is being thrown under the bus? Again?

Yep. Arguably the most successful Trek, getting ragged on. Again.

Check this out:

I think the characters were mostly so bland that middle of the road episodes of TNG ended up being mostly forgettable.

Like someone else said, I'm sick of characters having to be angst ridden.

That, I think is the one big strength of season one TNG. It seemed they spent more episodes "out there" exploring. Where as later seasons got caught up in milk runs and politics a little too often. You barely got the sense they spent any time on the frontier.

Yep, exactly how I felt. S1 is under-appreciated.

That, I think is the one big strength of season one TNG. It seemed they spent more episodes "out there" exploring. Where as later seasons got caught up in milk runs and politics a little too often. You barely got the sense they spent any time on the frontier.

I would actually like to see more exoplanet colonies, either Human or other Federation species, that the new ship and crew are exploring and supporting. I think that would be interesting to see.

I came to TNG late, and didn't really appreciate it, but the more I watched, the more the Klingon political scene seemed to take over. It was fine at first, but it grew old after a while. Seeing more diverse situations and not the same old fighting between Klingons and [blank] species would be nice.

As a kid, I often couldn't wait for Klingons to appear, but looking back on TNG, what happened to Klingon culture was boring, and those seem much weaker episodes. Ronald D Moore wrote most of that stuff, and while I like his work on other things, it was under him that they became so banal. The politics of Sins of the Father and Redemption, etc, are not particularity compelling in hindsight.

As I get older, I would also like to see more in the way of exoplanets, discovery, etc.

What do people think of Star Trekian humanism - that it can't handle the "real world" or something?

That's the impression some people might get from watching the background for 24th century humans. A lot of it seemed very tamed in order to show how far humans advanced.

Very little beer, soda, tequila, but lots of tea. Very little contemporary sounding music, but lots of classical music.

TNG would only go as far as do analogy episodes about things like the freedom of same sex relationships, but not show it.

Sisko didn't want to participate with a recreation of a 60's casino, and it irked some people, because it was never considered something like that could happen in Trek.

Beverly dumped a Trill she was deeply in love with after the new host turned out to be a female, although her explanation seemed a little shaky.

That particular era kind of insulated and sugar coated certain things about humans living in the 24th century.

One thing Trek 09 got right was what a 23rd century club/bar might look like.

It had the flashing lights, loud club music. People drinking hard core alcohol.

It looked real, alive and interesting.

A TNG bar would have had just jazz music, be calm and quiet, etc.

So, you can get the impression that Trek sort of avoided elements of the real world in favor of super ideal world.

They didn't avoid it though. It was a conscious choice. Even the intellectual tastes people had were a unabashed argument in favor of education.

We know alcohol and tobacco are harmful carcinogens, and are responsible for numerous cancers, from facial cancer to cancer of the colon - recently people are beginning to recognize that alcohol (long considered "safer") may even be the worse. TNG wanted to show a society where people did the rational thing, and banished these industries - where people no longer felt the need and recognized they had a medical problem. A radical position even today.

I don't know what show people here were watching, but TNG remains radical, in my eyes, and I can't see what you are all seeing - we are looking for different things I think, and therefore seeing what we want to.

The 24th century did seem a little too cultured and civilized at times. If nothing else, the new movies did bring a much-needed dose of rock-and-roll to what was starting to feel a little bit too much like chamber music.

It's worth remembering that, utimately, STAR TREK is not about life in a peaceful utopia. It's about danger and dilemmas on the Final Frontier, beyond the boundaries of the Federation.

As Q put it in his very best speech, space is wondrous, but it's not for the timid. You have to expect a bloody nose once in a while.

I'm sure Captain Kirk would agree. :)

You can risk your life and get a bloody nose without being a hard drinking cigar smoker, however. Wasn't TNG trying to show people could have this attitude, without ascribing to traditional mores of macho risk takers? Judging by the amount of vegan, environmentalist, mountain climbing, entrepreneur, poly-maths today, maybe he was ahead of the times.

And, for those who think TOS was not radically utopian or progressive like TNG, recall Kirk saying "we no longer consider crime a choice, but a disease - we no longer punish the ill". Radically utopian now, as it was in the late 60s - I still to this day watch the popular media argue in favor of destroying prisoners and criminals; the masses in my country favor reinstating the death penalty, and I occasionally hear the uneducated in my workplace arguing "we should cut off their [insert relevant body part]"
 
Like someone else said, I'm sick of characters having to be angst ridden.


There's a difference between having chemistry between the actors and being angst ridden.

I'd watch Shatner, Nimoy and Kelly take turns reading from a phone book.

You can risk your life and get a bloody nose without being a hard drinking cigar smoker, however. Wasn't TNG trying to show people could have this attitude, without ascribing to traditional mores of macho risk takers? Judging by the amount of vegan, environmentalist, mountain climbing, entrepreneur, poly-maths today, maybe he was ahead of the times.

I'd say pride and a bit of machismo are at the heart of Picard rejecting Q's offer.
 
So, Stock Tip of the Century would be, "stock up now?"

Been really enjoying your insights and Posts lately! Love that I can still learn so much about this Thing! Huzzah to your ST and other knowledge and wit! :bolian:

Thanks, man. :) I appreciate those kind words.

Being a geek who's slipping deeper and deeper into senility helps.
 
So, Stock Tip of the Century would be, "stock up now?"

Been really enjoying your insights and Posts lately! Love that I can still learn so much about this Thing! Huzzah to your ST and other knowledge and wit! :bolian:

Thanks, man. :) I appreciate those kind words.

Being a geek who's slipping deeper and deeper into senility helps.

Hill? What hill?! I don't remember any---

Yaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

:D
 
I think the characters were mostly so bland that middle of the road episodes of TNG ended up being mostly forgettable. There was a certain chemistry between Shatner, Nimoy and Kelly that made even the most terrible TOS episodes watchable numerous times.

I've probably seen, "And the Children Shall Lead" a dozen times. Easy.
I never got into TOS, having grown up on TNG. That said, "Mirror, Mirror" having launched an entire genre's worth of cliches and tropes is still a much stronger episode than any of DS9's MU shows, one or two of which were quite good.
It probably has a lot to do with the characters, who in TOS were a lot more certain of who they were.
Case in point is Kirk in WNMHGB, vs. Picard in Q Who, and their actions concerning a potential enemy.

Shatner, Nimoy and Kelley are arguably the most inspired and effective lead casting in the entire history of the franchise, and I'm somebody who adores and respects actors such as Stewart, Brooks, Bakula and Frakes. TOS may have had the smallest budgets, the most limited resources and the campiest execution but it often felt magical, even when the episode left a lot to be desired. The characters drew you in and you felt like you were watching family members, not just shipmates.
This may be why I can't seem to get into STC or NV; they just don't have the same chemistry as the TOS actors.
 
I don't want to talk to you no more, you empty-headed animal food trough wiper! I fart in your general direction! Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!
 
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