Janeway?
The five year mission thing was never mentioned in TOS proper, just in the opening monologue. It's mission was a mix of various assignments not exclusively exploration. Even it's encounters with Klingons were limited to handful.For a show that was meant to be about a big mission to head toward the final frontier, all three Enterprise's did spend a lot of time visiting star bases and federation colonies, rendezvousing with other ships, and carting the politicians and top brass around.
Archer probably did it the least, funnily enough. At least in the first few seasons.
Not on an Enterprise.Janeway?
Simple: it does permanent damage to the user.Transwarp beaming, making starships mostly unnecessary for the Trek universe, would be like something for us that disrupts every transportation and shipping industry on Earth (such as the invention of a rudimentary transporter with global reach).I really don't get the transwarp beaming either? We currently have more than one way to move people and goods around the globe. The airplane didn't replace the boat, car or train.
The airplane didn't replace the boat, car or train because there are efficiencies of cost per mode, logistics of the quantity to ship, and large physical constraints for each mode. Airplanes require vast resources of property and support and so forth. Transwarp beaming, or transporters in general, appear to need no support on the receiving end, no special medium (water, air of adequate density, rails, roads), and can be directly targeted to any specific location appropriate to the person or package with no additional secondary modes of transport involved.
That was easy (all of that without single drop of rum).
Pretty much the whole last season of Enterprise took place a stone's throw away from Earth. But at least it was consistent in that regard. It seemed intentional that way.
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.
-- 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.
If you watch the pilot episodes of TNG, VOY or ENT you can dive right into, without needing to have ever seen any episode of previous Star Trek before.
To completely understand Star Trek into Darkness you need extensive knowledge of plot points from episodes and movies more than 30 years ago...
They should rather spend the money for the fanmade Star Trek Renegades
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/145553614/star-trek-renegades-episodes-2-and-3
than creating a new series for which the fans have to pay.
If you watch the pilot episodes of TNG, VOY or ENT you can dive right into, without needing to have ever seen any episode of previous Star Trek before.
To completely understand Star Trek into Darkness you need extensive knowledge of plot points from episodes and movies more than 30 years ago...
I understand this thinking. One gripe I had with STID was that a lot of stuff-- Section 31, Khan, The Klingons, were all mashed together and quickly.
And if you weren't that familiar with TOS or TWOK you wouldn't know what the hell they were talking about.
But then again, isn't all that bad. Sometimes I think we were cheated out of a good Dominion war movie because of that thinking.
For a show that was meant to be about a big mission to head toward the final frontier, all three Enterprise's did spend a lot of time visiting star bases and federation colonies, rendezvousing with other ships, and carting the politicians and top brass around.
Archer probably did it the least, funnily enough. At least in the first few seasons.
I'd suggest that the nods and winks would have been fine if the quality of the writing and acting was better. Season 1 was mediocre for me, S3 was overall between "watchable" and "ok".One of the selling points of ENT seemed to be that you didn't have to know the four or five previous Trek series nor see the movies to watch and enjoy it. As a Prequel it didn't hurt if you'd seen the other shows and movies, but since it was technically and from a chronological perspective the first chapter of the Star Trek story a deep knowledge of lore and history wasn't supposed to be that important.
One can have debates over whether that marketing strategy was even remotely successful or not given the heavy nods and references to those other series and films and the show's low ratings, but there you go.
I'd suggest that the nods and winks would have been fine if the quality of the writing and acting was better. Season 1 was mediocre for me, S3 was overall between "watchable" and "ok".One of the selling points of ENT seemed to be that you didn't have to know the four or five previous Trek series nor see the movies to watch and enjoy it. As a Prequel it didn't hurt if you'd seen the other shows and movies, but since it was technically and from a chronological perspective the first chapter of the Star Trek story a deep knowledge of lore and history wasn't supposed to be that important.
One can have debates over whether that marketing strategy was even remotely successful or not given the heavy nods and references to those other series and films and the show's low ratings, but there you go.
*shrug*
Indeed. I wanted to like it, and I liked quite a few episodes. But definitely it wasn't the canon that hurt that show, it just looked tired. Maybe a year off after VOY and a whole new production team would have changed how things went. Maybe this new series will be what Enterprise wanted to be
They should rather spend the money for the fanmade Star Trek Renegades
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/145553614/star-trek-renegades-episodes-2-and-3
than creating a new series for which the fans have to pay.
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