I'm sure he knows.TheGodBen said:As the Beatles once sang, "A more conversation, a little less action please".
Uh, that's an Elvis song.

I'm sure he knows.TheGodBen said:As the Beatles once sang, "A more conversation, a little less action please".
Uh, that's an Elvis song.
Since no one has been making those arguements, you must be in the wrong thread...
Since no one has been making those arguements, you must be in the wrong thread...
Not really, most anti-VOY arguments do fall under that.
Seriously, shows like Blakes Seven or Farscape only mostly focused on their own small groups of main characters with few recurring characters and NO ONE cared. VOY does that, and all the audience does is whine that they want to see 50 recurring characters showing up every episode.
As for not being "respectful" enough of TOS, seeing the lousy attitude TNG+ always got from the TOS fandom (before they ever mentioned TOS) there's little point in being nice to people who are nothing but nasty. I personally never liked overly-emotional types or "Cowboy Cop" types so it's no big issue with me.
As for BSG, it fell apart as a show after only two seasons. VOY had to last for 7.
Since no one has been making those arguements, you must be in the wrong thread...
Not really, most anti-VOY arguments do fall under that.
Seriously, shows like Blakes Seven or Farscape only mostly focused on their own small groups of main characters with few recurring characters and NO ONE cared. VOY does that, and all the audience does is whine that they want to see 50 recurring characters showing up every episode.
As for not being "respectful" enough of TOS, seeing the lousy attitude TNG+ always got from the TOS fandom (before they ever mentioned TOS) there's little point in being nice to people who are nothing but nasty. I personally never liked overly-emotional types or "Cowboy Cop" types so it's no big issue with me.
As for BSG, it fell apart as a show after only two seasons. VOY had to last for 7.
So because nothing bad happened, it's okay that Janeway very nearly let something bad happen?If I go out onto a busy street and shoot a gun wildly, but I don't hit anybody, does that make it okay for me to put all those people's lives in danger?
I think it was the Beatles.![]()
Personally, I don't see it as an admission of guilt, I see it as being that she's open to the possibility of being guilty, but Chakotay lets her off the hook by saying that he would have crossed a line by mutinying (which makes no sense for a character that joined the Maquis and fought against Starfleet, but I digress). If Chakotay had responded with "Maybe, but that's something I didn't want to do" I would have had an easier time dealing with it."You may have had good reason to stage a little mutiny of your own" is pretty much an admission of guilt to me. And Chakotay's response (as well as Tuvok's) was pretty much an indication of trust.
There was a definite attempt by the writers to turn Janeway bad in that episode, I think we can all agree on that. The question is whether Janeway realised that she had crossed a line in the torture scene, did she feel remorse for it, how did she deal with Lessing in the future? I don't object to Janeway torturing a man if she feels it's necessary, I object to the lack of introspection afterwards.And if you don't believe there is a deliberate parallel between the captains here, then how do you explain the fact that both captains find their ship's dedication plaque in the bridge's rubble? When Chakotay says, "Let's put it back up where it belongs," he is repeating the exact words that Janeway said to Ransom in "Equinox, Part 1." Janeway's reaction shows that she remembers the incident and, I think, knows how close she had come to being as far out of line as Ransom had been. Close, but not quite.![]()
And my point is that Chakotay didn't trust her. If you're allowed to point to Tuvok trusting her in order to support her actions, then I'm allowed to point to Chakotay not trusting her in order to support my view that she was crossing a line.My point is that Tuvk didn't just back away he trusted her judgment.
And that's fine, you're entitled to like what you like, so long as we accept that I'm not a sexist for having problems with the way the torture scene in Equinox was executed.That is where we are different. If I want drama and character stories I'll watch TNG (which I do like a lot) or 90210. I want ass kicking sci-fi and I don't mind reading between the lines there are only about 45 minutes to each episode![]()
I don't take advice from hippies, if I did then I'd be high all the time and never get out of bed.I can't recall... but here you are... from a man who never felt the need to justify his actions to anyone.
I don't regret the past I was only trying to live for this moment. ~John Lennon
So Elvis sang a song about wanting more conversation and less action, did he?TheGodBen said:As the Beatles once sang, "A more conversation, a little less action please".
Uh, that's an Elvis song.
I have no trouble discussing BSG, I think that was a great show and what let it down was its focus on the mythology that RDM had no plan for. I otherwise admire the character and political drama and the fact that it showed the hardship endured by the survivors in the fleet. The reason why I didn't bother responding to you isn't because I'm embarrassed by BSG, far from it, it's because you were so obviously baiting BSG fans and expressing your own opinions as facts that there didn't seem to be a point in engaging you. I shall, however, engage someone far more reasonable on the subject.Thus, discussions of Voyager always involve BattleStar Galactica, even if certain participants try their best to avoid acknowledging it. It's sort of a Banquo's ghost.
But I think you actually got that and just had trouble expressing your thoughts. I expect your real point was that you want to avoid discussing BSG's failure, despite its relevance, by pretending it isn't.
The Galactica didn't have a viper factory, Pegasus did, and they dealt with that issue in the episode Scar when they spent over a month in an asteroid field mining for ore to build new squadrons. Once Pegasus was destroyed, Galactica was left with that ship's vipers, which was twice as much as Galactica needed.Voyager improbably produces torpedoes and shuttle craft. BSG improbably creates a viper factory to replace it's store of ships and magically cures Roslin of cancer. If anything, the two show have too much in common in certain aspects. Both wound up chickening out on delivering the goods.
Uhhhh... wasn't Janeway going to LEAVE HIM THERE TO BE KILLED? I thought it was only Chakotay stepping in that saved Lessing. That makes Janeway guilty of attempted murder, not just "leaving a guy tied up to a chair for a few minutes."
So what if they "took chances"? The point I'm making is that those shows got away with focusing on their main characters and no one cared, but when VOY did that they just got insulted. It's pure double standard.
And Hell, Farscape also got away with not explaining a lot of the same stuff VOY gets criticized for as well. It's complete double standard.
BSG had its flaws, largely in relation to its mythology and the sloppy motivation of the Cylons, but when it came to the in-fleet drama, the political and social consequences that Voyager didn't address, the show did a very good job.
Many of her decisions and bold actions always seemed to cry out "Hey look at me, I'm the first female captain and I got a bigger pair of balls then any of the other jokers before me"
Now I don't mean to drag this into a sexism issue, but there were many times where she'd go against the grain, simply to go against the grain.... she doesn't take no for an answer from anybody, she has her first officer whipped into doing anything she demands, regardless of how foolish or insane her plan sounds... Even Riker, Spock and Kira had a number of opportunities to change the minds of Kirk, Picard or Sisko..... but no matter what Chakotay said or did, Janeway was always stuck in her way just about all the time and after her forcing her hand to the point of making Chakotay choose between her plan and total mutiny, he'd tuck his tail between his legs and do as she commanded....... and the final episode?
The Galactica didn't have a viper factory, Pegasus did, and they dealt with that issue in the episode Scar when they spent over a month in an asteroid field mining for ore to build new squadrons.
As for Roslin's cancer, the miracle cure wasn't so miraculous, now was it? In that final season Mary McDonnell gave what is possibly the best depiction of someone dying from a terminal illness that you're likely to see in a sci-fi show.
TheGodBen;4401374 And my point is that Chakotay didn't trust her. If you're allowed to point to Tuvok trusting her in order to support her actions said:Equinox [/I]was executed.
I guess that's why there was such negitivity to TNG by TOS fans and negitivity by TNG fans toward DS9.People tend to react rather negatively to shows that are, y'know, bad. Just my experience though.
I guess that's why there was such negitivity to TNG by TOS fans and negitivity by TNG fans toward DS9.People tend to react rather negatively to shows that are, y'know, bad. Just my experience though.![]()
Yep, all you hear is "I Hate Reality TV" and yet shows like Survivor, Amazing Race, The Bachorette, TOP CHEF & the Apprentice are huge successes.I guess that's why there was such negitivity to TNG by TOS fans and negitivity by TNG fans toward DS9.People tend to react rather negatively to shows that are, y'know, bad. Just my experience though.![]()
Also why reality TV is such a huge hit.![]()
Vipers are spaceships, it makes sense to build them in space, and since they operate from and are repaired on battlestars, it makes sense that a state-of-the-art Mercury class battlestar could be refitted to build vipers, if not able to build them as standard. Remember, Pegasus was twice as big as Galactica, it's not just a basic battlestar. Galaxy class ships could probably build their own shuttles too, they were designed to operate outside Federation space for years so it makes sense.Yeah, and an aircraft carrier would have an F-18 factory on board, right? A ragtag fleet could mine islands in the Pacific for resources to build Super Hornets aboard ship. ROFL
That's not what made her interesting, what made her interesting was that she was a former school-teacher that rose to the presidency in extraordinary circumstances and she had an extraordinary resolve to lead her people to safety. She didn't stop being interesting when Baltar (temporarily) cured her of her cancer, she was still the same fascinating character as before.It was a cheap out. She was supposed to be the dying leader. She was supposed to have only a few months to live. She was not supposed to make it to the promised land.
They promised that they were going to kill her, this is what made her character interesting that she would not be there to see it all the way through.
There are definitely areas where BSG fell short, I think they focused too much on the military characters and didn't spend enough time with the population of the fleet. But in the end, I think that BSG stuck to their guns better than Voyager. Yeah, it had crap like turning algae into coffee and booze, but it was better realised overall.At any rate, my point is that both shows would have been better if they had "stuck to their" guns with regard to their original premises and rules.
Apologies, I misread your post.I knew your point. You ASKED ME "What's your point?" I explained. No need for a tude.
You said she threatened him with the brig so he backed down. I told you that she said she had a plan and he must have trusted her.
Tuvok has known Janeway alot longer, if that even means anything to you. This whole set of scentences was just to back up the false info you had given.
No, but that was the original charge, that people treat Janeway different from Archer even though they both committed torture. I reject that gender has anything to do with it, and to support that I will reference the scene where Roslin airlocks a Cylon, or assists in interrogating Baltar while he's under the influence of a fear-inducing drug. I don't have reservations about either of those even though she is a woman.Also I have never called anyone a sexist.
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