misskim86 said:
I hate Voyager because in my opinion Voyager is what started the slow death of Star Trek.
I will never understand those who actually "hate" any form of entertainment. I enjoy tv and films but I can't say I ever was invested so much as to actually feel hate-Disappointment? Yes.
DS9 was way ahead of its time
Not really. Story arcs had been part of soaps and certain primetime dramas long before DS9. And really DS9 was no where nearly as serialized as other programs. For the most part beyond the Occupation arc and the Final Chapter, DS9 adopted the X-Files approach of standalones with the occasional big two parter that touched on the mythology.
In fact I experienced a lot of frustration with how the Dominion, the war etc would be left in the background or only peripherally touched upon. Take season six it had some good episodes it had too many weak filler hours.
But because of the fact it was ahead of its time the ratings weren't the best
Actually I would argue a whole host of factors, the least of it being a head of its time, were responsible. Some viewers had their fill of Trek after TOS/TNG, others didn't like the darker elements and felt it wasn't Trek, others simply didn't care for this incarnation for whatever reason.
so instead of at least continuing on the same track, they took one step BACK and returned to the old tried TNG practise of a new forehead ridged alien of the week complete with a big juicy reset button.
I personally don't see anything wrong with episodic tv. I feel it is just as valid as long arcs. I like both actually. But if arcs alone guaranteed success then series like Kidnapped, The Nine, Journeyman, Day Break etc would still be around.
TOS/TNG and a whole host of other tv programs did fine with the episodic format. The problem I would argue wasn't the format but the quality of writing. I think people didn't stop watching VOY because it wasn't arc-based. I think they didn't have an affinity for the characters and the individual stories themselves just weren't engaging. It isn't the format, it is the quality of the writing. Look how many great standalones TNG churned out.
Besides while arcs are far more engaging on average they do suffer somewhat in terms of replay value because that initial excitement that is a large part of their fun isn't there the second or third time around while standalones for me seem to hold up better.
Instead of bringing Star Trek up to speed with current TV they just simply continue their ridged alien of the week with a reset button.
Once again ENT's problem were the characters and the writing. The plots were retreads, there were no interesting twists, the sense of wonder for the most part was absent, it ineffectively exploited its premise.
That isn't to say there weren't interesting standalone on ENT there were, the problem was they were too few and far between. Had there been consistentcy in quality there wouldn't be all this complaining for either VOY or ENT.
And I might add that while ENT's Xindi arc isn't the first season long arc a show has ever done it was the first even before LOST or Heroes that experimented with the style that those series would make their hallmark-a series of unanswered questions, seemingly unconnected threads that are tied together, a series of mysteries.