CaptJimboJones said:
If anything, I think DS9 tends to be overrated around here.
I like the show, but frankly it suffers from the fact that there was a very similar show on at the same time - Babylon 5 - that tackled a lot of the same themes and ideas, and did it so much better. And on a third of the budget, at that.
DS9 just suffered in comparison. It's not too different from how Enterprise suffered compared to Firefly and BSG, both of which made Ent (which I also like) look stodgy and outdated in terms of its storytelling.
I can only agree with you in the sense that being a "Star Trek" show straitjacketed DS9 from really getting darker, grittier, or showing the kind of human frailty that B5 did. However, DS9 came pretty close, and it did have better production values. I also think the Dominion War was handled better than the Shadow War, which were the two biggest conflicts for each series.
But I do agree with your comments about ENT. However, I think ENT suffered also because it came in the age of drama, with more hard-hitting, edgier stuff even on network TV. ENT played it too safe, and even though I enjoyed the Xindi arc, compared to new BSG, it looked like a cartoon, with the Xindi in their day-glo outfits and the Snidley Whiplash reptilian Dolim. ENT wasn't contemporary enough, and their attempts to make it up to date were either exploitative-T'Pol or too late-the "Stigma" ep.
Now, the reasons I feel that DS9 was so disliked.
-It came after the more beloved TNG. Similar to how many TOS fans didn't like TNG, I think some TNG fans didn't care for DS9, and some never warmed to it.
-The setting. I think many fans just couldn't imagine a Trek show that didn't involve traveling on a space ship and never gave DS9 a chance because of that. For some reason, the idea that interesting things wouldn't or couldn't happen on a space station seemed beyond them.
-The characters. I think they were way more combative than the TNG get along gang. It might've been a shock to the system. Though I found it refreshing that Sisko was a person who didn't at first want to be in command of DS9. It was more realistic to me, the things he was grappling with.
-The first two seasons were pretty slow going. I don't think DS9 really started gelling until the end of the second season. By then some people had already turned to other things.
-The show's 'dark' reputation. Many people see the Trek universe as more utopian than it was potrayed on DS9, and I think because of that they overrate DS9's darkness. I don't think it was any darker than TNG, with Picard's torture, Picard's assimilation, Troi's mind rape, Worf killing Duras in cold blood, etc., etc. I do think DS9 went into more depth with 'darker' issues like war, religious fanaticism, prejudice, terrorism, etc. due to it being a more stationary show.
-Sisko. I wonder if the show being headed by an African-American might've turned some people off. Perhaps they felt they couldn't relate to Sisko as well as others. For example, there have been studies done that show when black people are on a magazine cover it usually sells less. I wonder if some latent bias might've been present.