O-kay... Just because I'm not inclined to read 12 pages of posts (especially if most of them are like the first page), that's why I might have missed some comments that are actually decently tolerant toward those of us who not only don't love this series, but have tried it and found it repulsive for a number of reasons.
I don’t get it, this is a modern trek for a modern times. I mean sure we all would have wanted something different and it’s far from perfect. But I for one don’t miss the standard holodeck/stuck in the transporter/let’s build the captain a new chair episodes.
The new series need to compete with a totally new TV landscape. Disco, and Picard are doing that.
But then I am a fanboy.
"These are modern times" is a sentiment regularly thrown in the faces of people who prefer older series or older versions of remade movies. I remember a thread in the media forum here many years ago when someone pontificated at length about how horrible black and white TV shows and movies are, and he'd never watch them for that reason. No mention of disliking the actual plots, storylines, characters, settings, or genres - just "no color = garbage."
Other similar arguments (usually made when talking about TOS or Classic Doctor Who) are the special effects. Apparently early special effects = garbage, with no thought given to the characters, storylines, settings, etc.
Would these franchises have lasted over half a century if color and special effects were all that mattered?
That said, there is a reason why I avoid TV shows and movies that overly rely on special effects. For me, it's too much. It's sensory overload and I can't take it all in. I'm bombarded by motion and noise and have to block it out. That means avoiding looking at the screen, which of course means I won't catch everything the characters do. And in the case of DiscoTrek, it meant not seeing the captions when the "Klingons" were speaking.
"Modern" sensibilities are not something I'm able to process well nowadays, when it comes to SF/F.
Don’t pay too much attention to reviews. The ones with the most views are usually the negative ones because negativity gets more clicks. It’s by no means an indication of the quality of Disco. There’s a very vocal fan group that likes to bash the new Trek shows whenever and wherever possible. It’s - sadly - a thing in a lot of fandoms these days where fans with an obsession of how things used to be when they were young wear rose-tinted nostalgia glasses and refuse to accept that times have changed. That’s basically all there is to this whole “NOT MY TREK” screaming.
Way to generalize. Times have changed, yes. That doesn't mean older things are bad. I am within my rights to state that I prefer older, less sensory-overloaded versions of Trek.
Another unfortunate component of the toxic fan hate is bigotry. I don't know how much of the haters fall into this category, but I see so much of it on Facebook that it is the first thing I think of when I think of the haters. They hate Disco because the lead is female. They can't handle the trans elements. They body shame Tilly. They are just gross people so it is better to avoid them.
It's one thing on FB. It's another thing to generally accuse people here of not liking DiscoTrek because of bigotry (not saying there aren't bigoted attitudes displayed on this forum at times; I've seen those posts myself).
I don't hate DiscoTrek because the lead is female (Voyager is my favorite non-TOS Trek show, and Voyager has several very strong female characters - and I include Naomi Wildman in that assessment even though she's a child character).
I dislike Burnham because in every episode I saw her in (I gave up watching partway through season 1), she was
obnoxious. I dislike male characters who are obnoxious, too.
These people who hate the show -- not to be confused with those who are just critical of it ...
Thank goodness there's at least one person here who understands the difference. It is possible to loathe some aspect of a franchise without being one of the people you describe as a "fandom menace" (sorry, I know that's a Star Wars reference but I have no idea what the rest of it means).
There are the Gatekeepers. The "Star Trek 1966-2005" types who kiss the ground Gene Roddenberry and Rick Berman walked on, even though they didn't like most of it at the time it was actually being made (despite what they'll say or however they'll try to deny it now).
Okay, now I'm not so pleased. I know you weren't talking about me specifically, but there are enough people who have been familiar with my views on Enterprise and anything made after it - and some have dogpiled me rather mercilessly about it - to be rather miffed by this ridiculous overgeneralization.
Y'know what? I'd absolutely fed up with being considered a Roddenberry/Berman worshiper just because my preferred versions of Star Trek are TOS through Voyager.
Both men had some inspired creative moments and both of them had/have qualities that I would use to describe terrible human beings. I can enjoy the creation while divorcing it from the creators' more awful qualities, just as I can enjoy Mel Gibson's Hamlet even though Gibson himself is reprehensible.
And wonder if the negativity is actually coming from an overly loud, overly entitled minority of ignorant small minded racist misogynist dickheads.
Got to admit, it's a possibility !
Do you say this about everyone who doesn't like the same TV shows you like, no matter if it's Star Trek or something else?
Genuine question: does lack of interest in a recent franchise installment decrease interest in the overall franchise?
This would be a good question to raise in its own thread in the Media forum, in my opinion. There are numerous franchises to which it could be applied.
Q: What do TOS, TAS, TNG, DS9, VOY, ENT, DSC, LD, and PIC all have in common?
A: Some people don't like them.
BINGO!
We have finally arrived at a correct answer, offered without vitriol.
I agree, but I think Discovery does the same thing.
Plenty of times DSC has dug up old episodes or characters of Trek and shoved in memberberries. And of course Michael couldn't just be her own character. She has to be linked to a famous old Star Trek character somehow.
This, plus Michael's generally unpleasant personality, is a major part of why I don't like her. Retconning Spock's family history to shoehorn this unlikeable character into it is not the way to make me like her.