Hmmm - combining really bad, fat actors in ugly uniforms on a simple set with the great cast and set of enterprise equals artistic quality?
I was hoping I wouldn't have to explain this myself, but it looks as though I do. Let's look at my remark:
Some ENT fans just can't get over the "franchise valentine" concept and won't stop ever stop moaning about it, even though it has no inherent bearing on the actual artistic quality of the episode.
Assuming full English proficiency, any halfway literate person should have understood that in this context, "artistic quality" is a neutral term, connoting neither good quality nor bad. It's like saying "some L'Oreal fans can't get over the fact that your choice of shampoo has no inherent bearing on the temperature of your bath." Based on that sentence, there's no way of knowing if I'm calling that bath temperature hot or cold.
In other words, I
wasn't saying (in that particular post) that TATV is good. I was saying that some
ENT fans seem to be so opposed to the Riker and Troi structure of the episode that it blinds them to all other consideration of it as a forty-minute drama.
Those who can't grok language that simple and concise that should probably spend less time watching mediocre pulp television in the first place and more time reading good, challenging books.