I'm confused about something, I only watch the show, don't buy magazines or whatnot but I've been on two ST forums and heard fans bitching about a particular producer or writer and I don't know one from the other so I thought I'd ask.
Braga or Bermen? one of them was spoken of regularly as if they "ruined" the series?
Trying to stay on topic with the OP... I would say that Berman is the person most people speak badly of in reference to Trek. Rick Berman was a producer at Paramount who was hired by the studio to help oversee TNG. He didn't create TNG. Gene Roddenberry was creator and executive producer. Berman's job I think was to keep the show running and look out for Paramount's best interests. Rick Berman is very good at being a producer - he can be a liason to the studio, he can work with schedules and budgets, and deal with all the fine details involved with producing a television series. He wasn't the creative force behind TNG - Roddenberry, then later people like Michael Piller and Jeri Taylor were the ones telling the stories. Berman was the man sitting at the desk approving things and making sure the series was on-track.
Berman and Piller co-created DS9 after Roddenberry's death. Piller oversaw the day-to-day work and was more heavily involved. Later, people like Ira Behr and Ron Moore oversaw the writers room and a lot of the production work. Berman was still the big man sitting behind the desk and had to approve everything, but he wasn't really the showrunner for DS9.
Berman co-created that series with Piller and Jeri Taylor. Initially, Piller and Taylor were running the show day-to-day and leading the writers room. Eventually, both left, and Berman promoted Brannon Braga to oversee the show. I don't know exactly how much input Berman was giving on VOY's creative direction, but he definitely didn't allow for much deviation. Ron Moore gave an interview and was very clear about how controlling Berman was when Moore briefly worked for VOY during season 6. Moore pitched ideas and tried to do creative things and Berman shot him down. UPN was also a factor that Berman dealt with. For the first time since TOS, Star Trek was on network TV. There were more people trying to shove their hands in the cookie jar, making decisions, trying to control the direction of the show to maximize ratings and bring in the young male demographic. Berman's job was to balance the network's demands with the studio's demands and the ideas from the writers. It seems as if, more often then not, Berman caved in to the network. UPN wanted "dumbed down" Trek for the teen boys to watch, and Berman delivered it.
By the time ENT was creative, Berman was deeply involved in the creative process. He co-created this series with Braga. But this time Berman wasn't just a producer - he was also a writer. He and Braga wrote several ENT scripts together. Instead of allowing a talented head writer to lead the creative direction of the series, he was doing it himself. And since ENT was on UPN just like VOY, he had to deal with the same network demands as before, and he continued to give UPN the version of Trek that they wanted.
Berman deserves credit for being a great producer and for keeping Star Trek alive and kicking after Gene Roddenberry's health deteriorated and after his death. But should Berman have been a creative force, heading a writers room? Definitely not.