^There was also a lot of talk about the show being darker and grittier and whether Gene Roddenberry would have approved. I remember reading letters in the official Star Trek fanclub magazine, run by Dan Madsen, where fans complained that Rick Berman was breaking away from Gene's vision.
^There was also a lot of talk about the show being darker and grittier and whether Gene Roddenberry would have approved. I remember reading letters in the official Star Trek fanclub magazine, run by Dan Madsen, where fans complained that Rick Berman was breaking away from Gene's vision.
DS9's decline throughout it's entire run dealt with the blow of competing with other Trek shows which were catered far better than it. TNG was the gold star series and was running on all cylinders in the 6th season when DS9 debuted it's mid season run, and VOY was the tentpole to launch a legit network. IMO the stories became very cookie cutter after season 4 and lacked the depth of 3 dimensional facets it once had.Actually, it's very mannered and old-fashioned - like Trek in general, to this day.
DS9's premiere episode was possibly the single highest rated episode of any of the Trek spinoffs. It understandably declined some from that high in the following weeks, quickly fell behind TNG and then continued a steady decline in viewership throughout its run.
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They didn’t have a full season guarantee. At first it was only a 13 episode deal, and if those didn’t fly, they would be added to the TOS package. That’s why the stardates in Season 1 for “The Big Goodbye” make no sense. TBG was the finale episode of the first 13 by production number (“Datalore” was the first of the second half), but it’s stardate is 41997.7, placing it chronologically after “The Neutral Zone”’s 41986.0 date, even though Yar is alive, and even assumes Command at one point in TBG.
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