Probably but that's after the fact armchair quarterbacking. Who was available to do the job on time and under budget?They weren't doing their job and should have been replaced.
Probably but that's after the fact armchair quarterbacking. Who was available to do the job on time and under budget?They weren't doing their job and should have been replaced.
Honestly, they did actually do a decent job during the time Kes was in the series. Some of it wasn't good but most of it was acceptable.Probably so but, with expception of one season 6 episode, I know far worse things. Mostly in modern Star Wars andf this is just what I know about.
Probably but that's after the fact armchair quarterbacking. Who was available to do the job on time and under budget?
Me either. I think VOY would have been better served keeping them both and losing either Harry Kim or Chakotay. Harry would be the easier boot, there would have been no shake-up in the hierarchy. But Chakotay was a badly conceived character.Agreed here. Seven was a character Jeri totally owned and pushed past the ridiculous sexiness of a Borg character.
But I never resented the character over Kes leaving. That's not a problem with Seven; that's a leadership decision.
Indeed, yes. Maybe subbed in a few people from DS9. People who could form long term storylines, ration torpedoes, and put hollow pips on ensign's collars.They weren't doing their job and should have been replaced.
I'm not asking for people who are elite players... just people who know how the game is played.Probably but that's after the fact armchair quarterbacking. Who was available to do the job on time and under budget?
Indeed, yes. Maybe subbed in a few people from DS9. People who could form long term storylines, ration torpedoes, and put hollow pips on ensign's collars.
Writer's block is a thing.However, I always found it wrird that they all of a sudden lost the ability to write for the character when they had done a decent job for three years-unless they were ordered to lose the ability to write for the character.
Or more like...Janeway: "Over the last two months, by more carefully rationing our torpedoes, our torpedo reserves have increased from negative seven to plus 3. Some of the metal spared by the rationing has also been used to finally created some rank pips for you. Congratulations, Lt. Jg. Kim!"
It's all about percentage.Writer's block is a thing.
Not everything is evil, mean spirited, or malicious in intent. Sometimes people burn out but don't realize it until it's too late.
I'm really not a fan of the assumption stupidity, incompetence, or maliciousness as motivations for people we don't know.
How do we know what's evil, mean spirited or malicious? I have no way of telling. Some actors hate their characters but still keep going.It's all about percentage.
I don't find it believable at all when it's stated that the whole bunch of writers all of a sudden lost the ability to "come up with stories" for a character.
Not everything is evil, mean spirited, or malicious in intent, but some are.
And someone gives the orders and the staff replies "Yes, Boss!"
Unfortunatlely, it's the impression I get in this case.How do we know what's evil, mean spirited or malicious? I have no way of telling. Some actors hate their characters but still keep going.
I don't see a reason to just call people liars. It's just strange to me.
It's really none of my business to accept or reject. If they're lying why difference is that to me? I wasn't there, and there are so many different factors to production and writing for me to go with malice.someone comes up with three different explanations for one questionable event of which none looks believable and none is actually confirmed in any way, then it's hard for me to simply accept them.
Play a villain or someone morally depraved. Or just an antagonist in a comedy.How can a person possible work with something that the person hates? It must be devastating for the mind and soul.
Indeed. In contrast, look at Larry Linville playing Frank Burns. By all reports, Linville was a sweet guy who was easy to get along with. After 5 years of playing an antagonist to Alda's Hawkeye he got tired of it. Too bad, because they are a lot of hints of a tragic background to his character and could have gone better.Also, sometimes you see a bit of yourself in a character, whether they're good or bad. For me, a good example is Jud in "Oklahoma". He's not a likable man... but he's probably been shaped by years of being universally disliked. It gets to you after awhile.
I don't like when people lie to me. That's it.It's really none of my business to accept or reject. If they're lying why difference is that to me? I wasn't there, and there are so many different factors to production and writing for me to go with malice.
Mileage will vary.
Play a villain or someone morally depraved. Or just an antagonist in a comedy.
There's lots of ways. The workman attitude is very strong in many people and dominated generations of thought. It's only devastating if that's your only reason for being.
I just don't take this case personally since it's not directed personally at me.don't like when people lie to me. That's it.
And you have that luxury. Writers and actors don't always. Nimoy makes a point of that.playing a character I simply find boring or downright disgusting for many reasons or a character in a series which I find uninteresting and boring (like Stargate Universe), no I wouldn't do that.
Which is the right thing to do since the comment wasn't about you.I just don't take this case personally since it's not directed personally at me.
And you have that luxury. Writers and actors don't always. Nimoy makes a point of that.
What a completely delusional response to someone giving you the facts about a claim, even including a list of sources. No-one should be able to take you seriously seeing how you just ignored the plain facts (which are easy to verify) and chose to believe in some concocted fantasy. Seriously, why is it so difficult for you to just say “Oh, you know what, I was wrong about that and they actually do mention Kes a number of times after she left the show.” This doesn’t mean you suddenly have to like that they wrote her out of the show or that you can’t wish they would have mentioned her more often. But please let’s argue about what’s factual and not about what’s imagined.Even Mark and Janeway's dog was mentioned more than Kes was.
Bringing her back for an episode was help in the way that it gave her a well-paid gig on a prestige television show. It was help in that it demonstrated to viewers and fans that there was no animosity between her and the show.No, I'm not confusing Kes and Jennifer.
And bringing back an actress to destroy a character she was playing before getting fired is hardly any "help". In that case, why didn't they bring her back for the whole 7th season if they wanted to "help" instead of coming up with an insulting piece of crap which may have made her lost many of the fans she actually had?
So her issues (“personal – and many assumed addiction”) affected her reliability. They first reduced her screen time, but when things got even worse, they reluctantly let her go. What about that makes you think they could have just brought her back full-time for an entire season? Why would they do that if she had become unreliable? They clearly liked her well enough to want to work with her again, just not as a full-time commitment. And why would that have been the only acceptable kind of “help”?[…] That capacity for darkness is something that all the actors recognized in Lien. “I always sensed deep water in her,” Phillips says. McNeill thinks very carefully before saying, “There was always a bit of a weight that she seemed to carry that you couldn’t quite put your finger on. There was a seriousness that she carried all the time, personally and in her performance.”
As time progressed, that emotional weight became an issue and the cast and crew started to realize that Lien was struggling with personal – and many assumed addiction – issues that had a serious effect on her. Those issues started to affect her reliability and as a result, the producers reduced the amount of screen time devoted to her. “We knew that there was something going on,” Taylor says, “but she wouldn’t talk or let us offer to help. She just shut down.”
The situation became so serious that, reluctantly, the producers decided to drop Lien’s character during the fourth season. At the time, everyone felt it was inappropriate to discuss the real reasons in public but her problems later in life have been well documented. […]
Well, they were in no way whatsoever obligated to tell you anything about why they decided to not have her on the show anymore. They didn’t owe you, or anyone for that matter, an explanation for what I’m sure wasn’t an easy decision to make. That they first told people alternative reasons for why they had to let her go was apparently only done to protect Jennifer Lien’s privacy and reputation. I don’t understand why you apparently want it to be some deep conspiracy.The point is that they lied about the reason for Jennifer's "leaving" and they lied about it twice. And recently they have came up with a third version, using Jennifer's recent problems as an excuse for what they did back then.
Facts? Your "facts"?What a completely delusional response to someone giving you the facts about a claim, even including a list of sources. No-one should be able to take you seriously seeing how you just ignored the plain facts (which are easy to verify) and chose to believe in some concocted fantasy. Seriously, why is it so difficult for you to just say “Oh, you know what, I was wrong about that and they actually do mention Kes a number of times after she left the show.” This doesn’t mean you suddenly have to like that they wrote her out of the show or that you can’t wish they would have mentioned her more often. But please let’s argue about what’s factual and not about what’s imagined.
It gave her a small sum and p**ed off her fans. You call that "help"?Bringing her back for an episode was help in the way that it gave her a well-paid gig on a prestige television show. It was help in that it demonstrated to viewers and fans that there was no animosity between her and the show.
Now why should I believe their propaganda. They lied twice about why they fired her, why should I believe then now?As for “why didn't they bring her back for the whole 7th season” — I still think you completely misunderstand the whole situation. Quoting from “Star Trek Voyager: A Celebration”:
So her issues (“personal – and many assumed addiction”) affected her reliability. They first reduced her screen time, but when things got even worse, they reluctantly let her go. What about that makes you think they could have just brought her back full-time for an entire season? Why would they do that if she had become unreliable? They clearly liked her well enough to want to work with her again, just not as a full-time commitment. And why would that have been the only acceptable kind of “help”?
Well, they were in no way whatsoever obligated to tell you anything about why they decided to not have her on the show anymore. They didn’t owe you, or anyone for that matter, an explanation for what I’m sure wasn’t an easy decision to make. That they first told people alternative reasons for why they had to let her go was apparently only done to protect Jennifer Lien’s privacy and reputation. I don’t understand why you apparently want it to be some deep conspiracy.
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