This is topic Star Trek 2000 - Live Long and Fester? in forum General Trek at Flare Sci-Fi Forums.


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Posted by Savar on :
 
Greetings all. I just joined the Forum and thought I'd solicit a few opinions from the august members regarding the history and future of Star Trek.

I have lately become rather dismayed to observe that the Star Trek "franchise" has become exactly that - a franchise - a business proposition where anyone with enough money or power can purchase the right to create a new chapter in the epic, fill it with whatever drivel they desire, and call it Star Trek, with no thought or concern over whether it bears any resemblance to the original concept.

With each successive series, the vision that Gene Roddenberry created is left further and further behind. This explains why each series was less popular than the one before it. Deep Space Nine never quite captured the Next Generation audience, and Voyager was watched by even fewer viewers. Voyager had so little support in some areas that many stations dropped the series from their lineups altogether.

I do not mean to suggest that DS9 and Voyager were unsuccessful or lacking in entertainment value. Only that the concepts of these series strayed from that which made Star Trek the phenomenon it became in the first place. Star Trek was conceived by a humanist. Ultimately, in my humble opinion, it examined what it means to be human. Ironically, we learned about being human from non-human characters like Spock (yes, half-human, I know...) and Data. While there are still some vestiges of this philosophy to be found in DS9 (Odo)and Voyager (the Doctor), these series seem too preoccupied with their story arcs to truly explore the human condition. They risk turning Star Trek into just another space opera.

I find myself wondering if Star Trek would have followed the same course if Gene Roddenberry had not died. I really doubt he would have approved of the dark, confrontational, war serial that DS9 became. And a series about a lost ship trying to get home is so clich� in science fiction... I know that before he died, Gene turned the production over to Rick Berman, but I have never been happy with his custodianship. It almost seemed that since he was not capable of creating a successful series himself, Berman tried to reshape Star Trek to his own tastes. The results, of course, were less than spectacular.

For me, Star Trek is about a ship named Enterprise, her crew, and captain. Formulaic? Admittedly so. But Gene proved the formula works. He caught lightning in a bottle - twice. Stick to the charter. Show me strange new worlds. Seek out new life and new civilizations. Wait a few years until we all recover from Star Trek Overdose, then bring back the Enterprise. Tell the story of the Enterprise-B (just get a new Captain - not that spineless dunsel Harriman in his ill-fitting uniform), or the Enterprise-C (yes we know her fate, but what of the years before?) Fill in the gaps or find a new Enterprise to embark on. If this can't be done, perhaps we should consign Star Trek to the annals of television history and put an end to what might become a sad saga of mindless spin-offs, attempting merely to milk the cash cow. In my view, to let this happen would denigrate the legacy of a show that has had an enormous impact on American life, and diminish the memory of a man whose wonderful imagination created it all for the purpose of teaching us about ourselves.

Well, that's my rant. I sincerely hope I haven't offended anyone. If DS9 or Voyager is your favorite show of all time, you'll get no quarrel from me. I enjoyed aspects of both shows. I would only argue that we shouldn't be so accepting of just anything Paramount is willing to slap a Star Trek label on.

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Posted by Fabrux (Member # 71) on :
 
Oh $*@#(*%

I for one am getting just a tad tired of people saying this kind of crap about DS9 and VGR. They're good shows and don't deserve this kind of treatment.

Sorry about that, but it had to be said. Welcome to the board, BTW

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"Yes. I have seventeen brains! And eleven legs. And a pecan."
-Frank Gerratana, March 3, 2000


 


Posted by Omega (Member # 91) on :
 
I hereby second your welcome to the forums.

Now to shred your argument.

Trek, at its core, has always been about the human condition. "What does it mean to be human?" it asks. Yes, at times there have been eps that did not ask this question. Voyager's "Deadlock", DS9's "Visionary", and TOS's "The Enterprise Incident" come to mind. They were just good science-fiction. DS9's purpose in a continuing war was to explore an area of humanity previously untouched in Trek. Do laws, in fact, fall silent during war? Is it morally acceptable to slaughter an enemy that has no hope of defeating you to defend yourself? Episodes like "In the Pale Moonlight", "Inter Arma Enim Selant Leges", and "The Siege of AR-588" proove that the exploration of the human condition continues in Trek.

Now to Voyager, I can not offer as much praise. Yes, it has it's good eps, but nowhere near as many as DS9. The one in which B'Elanna was arrested for having a negative thought, for instance, asked some good quesitons, although not as well as it could have. Of "Mortal Coil" I can offer the same comments. The writing as a whole could explore the theme of humanity far better than it has, but I think it's a little premature to declare Roddenberry's dream dead.

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You are wise, witty, and wonderful, but you spend far too much time reading this sort of trash.

 


Posted by Jeff Raven (Member # 20) on :
 
Star Trek was made not just with a vision, but also to entertain... And only one of those aspects makes money.

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"If a nail is driven into the wrong place, it would be foolish indeed to become angry with the hammer." - Old Russian Proverb
 


Posted by Savar on :
 
Well, despite my best efforts to appear magnanimous, Fabrux objected rather bitterly to my opinion. I just KNEW someone would get their knickers in a twist.

I would like to clarify a few points. I am not suggesting that DS9 and Voyager are not worth watching, nor am I suggesting that Voyager,the last remaining Trek on TV, be cancelled. I merely wished to elicit thoughts from others regarding whether these series on the whole live up to the high standards set by their predecessors.

Not every episode can be an award-winner, I'll readily admit. Who could forget "Spock's Brain" (uugh), or "Rascals" (double uugh). Nor should every episode have some high-minded philosophical undercurrent. My concern is that Star Trek is ever so slowly losing its way, becoming more and more like every other bit of science fiction and that the people in charge don't give a rat's pitoot.

Like it or not, each TV Trek is less popular than the one before. The audience tuning into Star Trek was 35 million strong in 1987. By 1996 it had dropped to less than 4 million. The Next Generation ceased production so it wouldn't compete with DS9. The ratings were less than satisfactory, so the writers trotted out Worf and the Defiant to try to garner more interest. The Dominion War was in my estimation a blatant attempt to gain viewers by offering more violence, death, and exploding starships.

Fabrux, it appears you are a big fan of Star Trek, and I think that's great. It may interest you to know that I took part in the campaign to save the original Trek from cancellation quite a long time ago. I was also among those who petitioned NASA to name the first shuttle after the Enterprise. I love Star Trek too, and would like nothing more than to see it go on forever, as long as it stays true to its roots. Roddenberry's dream isn't quite dead yet, Omega, but it's on it's way out. I seriously doubt we'll see a DS9 movie and it will be a bloody cold day in hell before Voyager sees the big screen.

My greatest concern stems from what I believe is the poor custodianship exhibited by those responsible for the show, most notably Rick Berman (executive producer) and Brannon Braga (co-executive producer and head-writer). Rick Berman cooked up DS9 after reading the Babylon 5 guide. I know someone's going to debate me on this, but it's true. The man has never once had an original thought. Brannon Braga never once watched an episode of the original series. When asked why he was quoted by Sci-Fi Universe "-its not that important whether I have seen the original series. I mean, who gives a sh*t?" When asked about fans on the internet protesting Viacom's persecution/prosecution of Trek-related fan webpages he said, "No offense, but they got too much time on their f**cking hands." Bet you didn't know that... These guys are morons, Fabrux, and if they don't pull their heads out of their you-know-whats, there WON'T be any Star Trek around when your my age.

I'm a dyed-in-the-wool Star Trek fan, trekkie, trekker, whatever. Please don't turn this thread into a "my Trek's better that your Trek" thing. I like DS9 and Voyager. They're just not Star Trek to me.

Cripes, I hope nobody gets too bent out of shape over my criticsms. I don't wish to stir a hornet's nest, just start a friendly debate... Would've included a lot a smileys if I knew how to do it... Here's a crummy emoticon for good measure ;->
 


Posted by Baloo (Member # 5) on :
 
Savar has a very good point. No matter how much you like the current series, you have to admit you have a lot less company than a few years before. Something is happening to the Trek franchise, and despite your strident claims to the contrary, the proof is in the numbers. There's a lot fewer people tuning in to watch the Trek saga. I don't know if "they strayed from the formula" is quite the best description of what happened, but it's close.

They're doing something that is wrong, in that they can't seem to keep the spirit of the series alive. Failing that, it seems to me that they're trying to milk the cash cow dry before it loses momentum (to badly mix some metaphors ).

When Walt Disney was alive, the Disney studios could do no wrong. Every project they touched turned to gold. When Walt Disney died, they lost their main creative talent. They struggled along for many years, turning out mediocre "entertainment" like "Million Dollar Duck" and other drivel. It took them several years to finally recover and figure out how to get along without Walt.

I suspect that Gene's presence added direction and purpose to the whole Star Trek enterprise. I hope they find their direction before they've driven off so many loyal fans that it isn't worth the investment. I hope they recover before they have to scrap the whole franchise, because I like what Trek can be, but all too often isn't anymore.

--Baloo

P.S.: Welcome to the forums, Savar. You certainly picked a sore spot to pick at on your first go, huh? Don't worry, a lot of us have been there, done that, and got the tee-shirt!

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"Lassie, her ears pricked up!"

--Atoth the Tamarian [From "Star Trek: Door Repair Guy"]
http://www.geocities.com/cyrano_jones.geo/


 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
Well, I'm going to stay as far away from this one as I can, but there's a big flaw in proclaiming "Trek's audience is down, it must be increasing its suckitivity!" (Humor me.) Considering that the audience for, well, everything is going down. I'd like to see the evidence that proves such a decline is due to the evil machinations of dark powers. Pop culture does cycle, you know.

Ok, I can't resist. Anyone claiming that DS9 is a copy of B5 must first refute the claim that B5 is essentially a cut and paste from The Lord of the Rings, one in which not even the names were changed to protect the innocent. (Not that I would defend such an argument, though it has struck me as curious at various times in the past. My point is that both are essentially equally nonsensical. The claims, that is, not B5 and The Lord of the Rings.)

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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven

 


Posted by Bernd (Member # 6) on :
 
I agree that Berman and company have left Gene's ground when they started DS9, and they didn't quite find the way back when they launched Voyager. However, is it necessarily bad that Star Trek has changed since then? Savar, I don't know why you focus so much on a starship called "Enterprise". I know, this basic setting is only one point among several others that form something we may call the "Star Trek Universe". Do you specifically think that TOS and early TNG fans wouldn't accept the "new" Star Trek?

I think if TPTB were supposed to create good entertainment only, they were mostly successful since TNG. Only if you postulate they were to follow exactly Gene's path, I would agree they failed.

As for exploration of humanity and the profoundness of the stories, I couldn't tell that there was really a decay since then. Take DS9 episodes like "Dax", "Second Skin", "Honor Among Thieves", "Wrongs Darker Than Death Or Night", "In The Pale Of Moonlight" or "Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges". There seem to be even more in Voyager: "Tuvix", "Remember", "Distant Origin", "Random Thoughts", "Mortal Coil", "Living Witness", "Nothing Human", or "Latent Image". There were not really more of this kind in TOS or TNG.

Apart from that I also expect general science fiction (strange phenomena and such) from Star Trek. Voyager has much of it, DS9 rather few. This is a problem of DS9, and the endless Dominion War (probably meant to compensate for that deficiency) was even aggravating it. Not that DS9 would have been warlike, I only felt that it wouldn't suit the spirit of Star Trek to show space battles instead of Picard-like diplomatic solutions. In this respect Voyager has a problem too. How often did the E-D fire phasers in seven years? About as often as Voyager in a few weeks.

I have the impression that the advances in visual effects could create the impression that the main scope is now on space battles and phaser fights. I'm not referring to long-time fans here, but rather to the young generation (dangerous statement, since many of you are actually <20 ) who often don't care about the difference between a light saber, a phaser or whatsoever. I mean, science-fiction might have become something like the often dull video games that were originally derived from and loosely based on it, and Star Trek wouldn't be an exception any more. The product has to be stylish in order to appeal to the (young) audience, but profound enough to find real fans. Considering this dilemma Star Trek is performing rather well.

Finally, I would like to reaffirm that I think a break for Trek would be the worst that could happen. After all, if there is no Trek for a couple of years, it would be remembered as the "old-fashioned show our parents used to watch", a statement that is absolutely detrimental to science fiction. A revival like the one of TNG has to be considered as a one-time miracle in a time when there was plenty of room for science fiction.

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"Species 5618, human. Warp-capable, origin grid 325, physiology inefficient, below average cranium capacity, minimum redundant systems, limited regenerative abilities."
Ex Astris Scientia
 


Posted by Montgomery (Member # 23) on :
 
*applauds Savar*

I agree with pretty much all you said. I am fond of the more recent incarnations too, but for me noting gets the blood pumping quite like seeing the big E warping off to adventure. I doubt it could be recaptured by a third version, and await news of series 5 with great trepidation.

Ah well, there's always reruns.

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"O-PEN FIRE!!!"
 


Posted by Dane Simri (Member # 272) on :
 
Welcome to Flare, Savar. I too agree with a good deal of what you're saying. But...

I think we need to be careful of doing to Gene Roddenbery what the people of the UFP did to Zephram Cochrane after he left the scene. (In fact, I've often thought that Bergman, Braga, and Moore were trying to say exactly this when they made Cochrane the kind of character he was in ST-FC.) Yes, Gene was a visionary. Yes, he captured lighning in a bottle -- twice. But I think he could just as easily have spoken Cochrane's words in the cockpit of the Phoenix: "You know what my vision is? Dollar signs..." etc.

Now, before you pick up stones to hurl at me, all I'm trying to say is that Trek can be good, quality entertainment, on par with anything that Roddenbery did himself, without Roddenbery and, more importantly, without Roddenbery's "magic formula," the aforementioned "Enterprise, her crew, and her captain."

I, too, watched every episode of TOS long before there was a TNG. I have no great affection for Bergman, Braga, Moore, and the lot. I agree that a break is not what the franchise needs. I wish Paramount would sack the current franchise leadership, find an old fan who has invested his life in the Trek universe (I volunteer ), and start anew.

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Dane

"Mathematicians have long held that a million monkeys banging on a million keyboards would eventually reproduce the collected wisdom of the human race. Now, thanks to the internet, we know this is not true." -- Robert Silensky
 


Posted by First of Two (Member # 16) on :
 
I STILL say the the primary reason Voyager's ratings are low is because it's shown on so few stations, not the other way around. I think it was a height in hubris to start a network that was essentially based around one show, moreover a network that was only accessible on a few stations (Voyager around where I live is ONLY visible to people with cable, the nearest station is too far away for anything but the fuzziest snow-picture. I can't watch THAT, can I?)

As for the whole DS9 / B5 thing: I've watched both shows. Besides being set on a space station and having aliens, they're completely different, and anybody who says otherwise is belching methane out their posterior.
I refused to watch B5 for the first 4 years BECAUSE I'd heard about the whole B5/DS9 thing, and I regretted that decision after I started watching. It's a fine show, Tolkien-lifting notwithstanding (show me a story like that that DOESN'T borrow from other mythic cycles on occasion. Shall I say Voyager = The Odyssey?)

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"Nobody knows this, but I'm scared all the time... of what I might do, if I ever let go." -- Michael Garibaldi


 


Posted by Kosh (Member # 167) on :
 
I'm afraid I don't have time to read everything right now, so I'll throw in two cents, and read later.

I think First is right. Voyager suffers from being on UPN, a network that covers little of the country. I think it's ratings would be similar to DS9's if Voyager had been in syndication. I'll grant you that that's way down from TNG, but they would still be respectable.

Trek was always a cash cow. The Rod did everything he could to make money, including writing lyrics to the theme song, so he could share in the roylties.

They don't make quite as many good episodes as they used to. DS9 had fewer then TNG, Voyager fewer then DS9. I think this is a symptom of bad writing, which is sad, considering how many good writers there are writing Trek books.

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Fool of a Took, throw yourself in next time!!
Gandalf


 


Posted by Aban Rune (Member # 226) on :
 
While I agree with most of what you said in your opening post Savar, the one thing I'd like to disagree with is the point about Trek being at its best when it was only about the Enterprise. While I do agree that an Ent. B series would be great, I also think that Trek grew when it explored other groups, other settings and circumstances. I think it became more believeable and when the groups crossed over, I think the universe became a bigger and more plausible place.

Just my two cents.

Good to have you here.

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"A gathering of Angels appeared above my head. They sang to me this song of hope, and this is what they said..." -Styx

Aban's Illustration www.thespeakeasy.com/alanfore



 


Posted by Fabrux (Member # 71) on :
 
I'm not bitter. Now coffee, that's bitter...

Now, Savar, saying that DS9 and Voyager are not Star Trek isn't exactly praised around here... So what if I'm only 15. So what if I've only seen 3 episodes of TOS. Does that make me not a true Trek fan? I've seen all the movies. I've seen all the TNG episodes. I've seen all the DS9 and VGR episodes, except for a few that I was unfortunately unable to catch. My favourite Trek movie is not Generations, First Contact, or Insurrection as I'm sure you would expect. My favourite Trek movie is The Undiscovered Country. Didn't expect that, did you? And why is it that DS9 and Voyager are "not Star Trek" as you say? I'd like to know why you think this way. If you ask me, every incarnation of Star Trek is just as much Trek as TOS is. No series is better, no series is worse. They're equal.

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"Yes. I have seventeen brains! And eleven legs. And a pecan."
-Frank Gerratana, March 3, 2000


 


Posted by Dane Simri (Member # 272) on :
 
Need a little help un-knotting those knickers, Fabrux?

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Dane

"Mathematicians have long held that a million monkeys banging on a million keyboards would eventually reproduce the collected wisdom of the human race. Now, thanks to the internet, we know this is not true." -- Robert Silensky
 


Posted by Elim Garak (Member # 14) on :
 
First of Two has voiced my main thoughts on this already:

quote:
I STILL say the the primary reason Voyager's ratings are low is because it's shown on so few stations, not the other way around. I think it was a height in hubris to start a network that was essentially based around one show, moreover a network that was only accessible on a few stations (Voyager around where I live is ONLY visible to people with cable, the nearest station is too far away for anything but the fuzziest snow-picture. I can't watch THAT, can I?)

If you look at all the factors against Voyager, it looks pretty good that they get the ratings they do...

And Kosh said it for me, too:

quote:
Voyager suffers from being on UPN, a network that covers little of the country. I think it's ratings would be similar to DS9's if Voyager had been in syndication. I'll grant you that that's way down from TNG, but they would still be respectable.

(Although some of TNG's seventh-season ratings could be low enough to overcome.)

And I have a question: Why is it when people come down on DS9 and Voyager, that people like Fabrux and I "have our knickers in a knot" (or whatever expression you choose to use) because we happen to like all four series; and yet the people who blast the shows for not "being Star Trek" never "have their knickers in a knot"? I've noticed this at the Trek BBS, too.

Just my thought for the day.
 


Posted by Fabrux (Member # 71) on :
 
Exactly. My knickers are not in a knot

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"Yes. I have seventeen brains! And eleven legs. And a pecan."
-Frank Gerratana, March 3, 2000


 


Posted by Savar on :
 

it's knickers in a TWIST.... oh well...

More clarification of my opinions seem to be in order. First and foremost, I never claimed that DS9 is a COPY of B5, only that the idea popped into Rick Berman's vacant skull only after he got hold of the synopsis for the show. You won't catch me making comparisons between these shows.

Secondly, I did not intend to suggest that Star Trek could only be successful if it were about a Starship Enterprise and crew, only that the starship-based exploration theme works best FOR ME. This was only an OPINION. Other venues would work equally well if such creations could benefit from consistently great writing and producers who cared about the fans. Is everyone really so indifferent towards Brannon Braga's claim that trek fans have "too much time on their f***ing hands"? He's talking about all of us, you know.

Simri, I would agree with your intimation that many Trek fans place Gene Roddenberry on a pedestal higher than he deserved. The "Great Bird" was not so great in many capacities and was as profit-minded as anyone in the business. After all, Spock's IDIC-pin thing in TOS was Gene's haphazard attempt at Trek merchandising. Fascinating point about Cochrane, but neither Berman nor Braga are sharp enough to use Cochrane as a metaphor for Roddenberry. I doubt either knows what a metaphor is... In actual fact, Braga didn't know anything about Cochrane to begin with and considered making the character Picard's LOVE INTEREST until he was told who Cochrane was... Trek can certainly continue without Gene, but not without the proper care. It takes talent, and a good measure of vision to create a new series, talent which I believe is a bit lacking in the current production staff.

Concerning Voyager's ratings and UPN, point well taken. I would agree that the numbers must be skewed somewhat by the fact that Voyager is not syndicated. Yet this goes to one of my points in a roundabout way. Paramount used Star Trek to jump start their fledgling network, instead of giving the show its due by allowing it to be syndicated like it's predecessors. And then there is the nastiness that the parent company, Viacom, likes to perpetrate against harmless, non-profit, personal web pages that are in any way Trek related. The people in charge these days are not very fan-friendly.

Lastly, I would like to apologise to Fabrux for apparently insulting him YET AGAIN. It was not my intention to suggest that your opinion at age 15 is any less valid than mine at age 143 (seems like that long, anyway) or that you are any less a fan. I would be happy to watch Star Trek in any form for as long as its around so long as it is under the creative control of someone truly creative and insightful. Remember, I'm not bashing DS9 or Voyager. I like both shows. I merely stated that each series seems to be getting farther and farther away from what I believe made Trek successful.

Here are the facts: For a number of debatable reasons, Trek has lost a lot of its audience. Fewer viewers mean fewer profits. Fewer profits mean less network support for the show. Pass this point and it means another letter-writing campaign. I DON'T want to see this happen. Cancellation of any Trek series could mean a death-knell to the legacy.

In short, my beef is with the producers. I don't trust them. I don't like them. I love Star Trek, however, and always will. Thanks everone for the kind welcome. I am really looking forward to being a member of such a superb forum.


 


Posted by Elim Garak (Member # 14) on :
 
Where Fabrux and I come from, it's "knot." So there!

quote:
Is everyone really so indifferent towards Brannon Braga's claim that trek fans have "too much time on their f***ing hands"? He's talking about all of us, you know.

You're trying to turn us all against Braga. Fascinating...

quote:
I doubt either knows what a metaphor is...

Of course not. They're only English/film school majors...

quote:
In actual fact, Braga didn't know anything about Cochrane to begin with and considered making the character Picard's LOVE INTEREST until he was told who Cochrane was...

I've heard of this, but since no one has ever given me proof (or close enough to it) of this, it's just a rumour to me.

(Edit: Actually, now that I think about this... What's wrong with having Cochrane being Picard's love interest? Aren't we accepting of bisexuality in the 24th/21st centuries? Mind you, if he thought Cochrane was a female, that's something different altogether.)

quote:
Concerning Voyager's ratings and UPN, point well taken. I would agree that the numbers must be skewed somewhat by the fact that Voyager is not syndicated.

"Somewhat"?!

Let's see... A 40% or greater difference in total national coverage when comparing DS9/TNG and Voyager. Guess which one's lower! (That in and of itself is a major difference.) Only one station counted per area, whereas syndication counts multiple stations per area. Voyager's ratings are for one showing of the episode per station/area only, whereas syndie shows are multiple airings on the same station all added. And some people aren't motivated to watch that one showing as about 4/5ths of the UPN stations rerun Voyager on Sunday, IIRC.

UPN stations (like the one in Boston, as Fabrux will easily tell you) will oftentimes reschedule airings of Voyager. Then there is a rating of 0 submitted for that area. Ouch, huh? If this rescheduling happened to a syndie show, the rescheduled airing would actually count.

"Somewhat" is not the way to describe it.

[This message has been edited by Elim Garak (edited March 18, 2000).]
 


Posted by colin (Member # 217) on :
 
For me personnally, my favorite is TOS. However, I don't discuss the show or the details of the show (there are subjects that I would like to talk about, such as Gary Mitchell's service aboard the USS Enterprise) here or at TrekBBS because I find that people don't know or don't care to know the show.
The issue I find is similar to another issue-this with my mother. We are watching a show and she can't seem to want to like the show because of a bad special effect, the plot, the moral behavrior of a character, etc. I find fans of the modern Star Trek who when speaking of the original speak of the outdated ideas and concepts, the weak acting, and the bad special effects. I chose to ignore these facets of the show (this is the best that could be done in the 60's and on a limited budget) and I find for myself that there ideas and concepts which I find still relevant. In "Conscience of the King", there is talk of a computerized society. The price for having a computerized society is our humanness. I could argue in a thread that the USA is becoming such a society if people cared to discuss it in relation to the fears raised in the original. Also, I find that many people will take the time to study, build, and debate the technology of Star Trek than they do of the characters or their motiviations. One of the primary effects of the lower budget on TOS is that the actors were given more to do in terms of the plot. And for me there is the richness of TOS. The producers of Star Trek give the modern Star Trek fans enough technology-ships, technobabble-happy. Further, many of you are willing to pay eight (for the Star Trek magazine) to sixty (For the encyclopedia) dollars for information that you could in your time find and perhaps you may learn more and question more. The information in these texts is a summary-and sometimes not very complete summary-of the information seen in the episodes and films. By buying the merchandise with every dollar you earned or are given, you are telling the studio that you are pleased with the products. With every viewing of a show you may tolerate or dislike, you are informing the producers that there are four million individuals who like Voyager and want the status quo. When a people don't like a political decision or figure, they petition or vote to change or substitue that political decision or figure. If you don't like the current state of Star Trek, make a petition asking for change. Otherwise, stop the bitching and accept the status quo or stop buying the products and turn Star Trek off. I did the latter-this is how I spoke and voted against the status quo. (By the way, you will never see from me another TOS related topic. I have learn that enough of you don't care about this show or ideas for me to invest the time in writing a thread. I do care about TOS.)

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takeoffs are optional; landings are mandatory

[This message has been edited by targetemployee (edited March 18, 2000).]
 


Posted by Fabrux (Member # 71) on :
 
Okay, targetemployee, time for me to defend....

You want to know why I don't watch TOS? I'll tell you. It's because the only time it's aired on stations that I get is at 2 AM on Saturday! I don't know about you but that's a little too late for me. Why don't I record it? Because my VCR is rather noisy when it starts to record and would probably wake me up from my slumber. I care about TOS, but I won't go to extremes to watch it.

And why do I buy books and ST: TM? Because knowledge is power!

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"Yes. I have seventeen brains! And eleven legs. And a pecan."
-Frank Gerratana, March 3, 2000

[This message has been edited by Fabrux (edited March 18, 2000).]
 


Posted by Fabrux (Member # 71) on :
 
Another reason why I don't watch TOS is because I grew up on TNG. Most of us here did. Some of the more senior members of the board grew up on TOS. And in a few years there are going to be people who grew up on DS9 and VGR. These people won't like TNG as much as they like DS9, just like people who grew up on TNG don't like TOS as much as TNG, DS9, or VGR. And it's kind of the same way for people who grew up on TOS. They prefer TOS and believe that TNG, DS9, and VGR aren't on par with TOS.

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"Yes. I have seventeen brains! And eleven legs. And a pecan."
-Frank Gerratana, March 3, 2000


 


Posted by Vacuum robot lady from Spaceballs (Member # 239) on :
 
Ah, but is erroneous knowledge power?

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"I have never let my schooling interfere with my education."
-Mark Twain
 


Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
If knowledge is power... and power corrupts... Uh-oh... :-)

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"To make the merry-go-round go faster, so that everyone needs to hang on tighter, just to keep from being thrown to the wolves."
-They Might Be Giants, "They Might Be Giants"
 


Posted by colin (Member # 217) on :
 
I first watched Star Trek when I was a kid in the late 1970's. My mother introduced me to the first movie and that started my fascination with the series. I have stayed with TOS since then for I feel comfortable with the characters.
One of the difficulties I have with Voyager is that there doesn't seem to be a community, a teamship amoung the crew. There are small cliques aboard the ship that are forced to interact with each other because of the demands placed upon them by an authoritive and caring figure. In a small part, I feel this reflects our society.
I was sick with depression. This made me isolated, cut off from others. At the hospital, I learnt that being isolated is not a normal condition of being human. Yet in our society, isolation is becoming more of the norm. Voyager reflects this growing trend toward isolation in our society. And for me this is the primary reason I stopped watching the show.
Now, each generation imprints his or her marker on Star Trek. The generation that created TOS was of the WWII era. The generation that created TNG was of the Vietnam Era. And the generation that created DS9 and VOY was of the post-Vietnam Era. The generation that creates the next show will be of a later one-Gen X. They will focus on the issues important to them.
Has Star Trek gone farther away from its roots? Yes, just as a grandchild is separate from a grandparent in the way he or she thinks, behaves, and the range of tolerances that he or she exhibits about societal issues. For some reason, I feel more comfortable with the grandparent, I like the parents, and I don't feel comfortable nor accept fully the grandchild. (I see DS9 as a parent. Both TNG and DS9 were the origins of Voyager more than TOS.)Yet as I stand next to the grandparent, I see people fascinated, intrigued, and puzzled by the grandchild. I hear there might be a great-grandchild. The next member of this family is unknown to me. Will I like? I don't know yet. Will it be farther away from the grandparent? Yes. Will it be as good as the grandparent? Maybe, maybe not. I know the parents were nearly as good as the grandparent. The grandchild is the black sheep of the family-independent of the familial traditions, struggling to find its own niche, yet always returning to one of the parents for comfort and support and recognition. There have been more missed potential and mistakes for the grandchild than for the others. Yet, in a few instances from I what hear, there is some growth. Will the next one learn from the mistakes? Hopefully.
Though I will not be watching Voyager in its last season and a half, I wish all the best for the series. And I have my fingers crossed that the next series will be closer to the traditions established by TOS-good, consistent characterization; strong plots; and a reliance on character motiviation, not plot motivation, for episode momentum.

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takeoffs are optional; landings are mandatory
 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
You know, perhaps the reason Braga mentioned Trek fans having too much time on their hands is because...we have too much time on our hands! I mean, sweet mother of God on a henhouse, have you READ some of the things we discuss around here? Not a single one of us is hurting for time to devote to things. And I'm lovingly and willfully a part of that! It isn't necessarily a value judgement.

Futhermore, I take issue with this us vs. them mentality when it comes to fans and the producers. First of all, I know as much about Brannon Braga's life as I do that of Ulchan Maro, crack Mongolian horse trainer. In other words, zero. Zipski. I can only judge him or any of the powers that be in terms of what they create. And seeing as how the present "evil regime" has provided me with over a decade of entertainment that ranks as Damn Fine on the Sol System Definitive Scale of Things, I don't see where there is much of a case for violent revolution.

Let's take Braga, shall we? Under his no doubt Stalinesque command, Voyager has enjoyed what many fans, including, I think, many of the more vocal detractors, would call its best seasons. Is this divine intervention? Sure, Braga wrote such things as The Episode Which Dare Not Speak Its Name. But he also wrote Frame of Mind. (Which is a TNG episode, but I mention it only because I liked it a great deal and my mind is not actively stocked with writing credits for Voyager at the moment.) Is Braga a soul-sucking jerk? Possibly. But to be brutally honest, I don't care, so long as that doesn't interfere with the quality of the show.

Post-mortem Script: I'd add "doesn't make the working environment a living hell for coworkers" to the above, but a bit of thought leads me to conclude that were such a thing endemicly true, the end product would suffer.

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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven

 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
Targetemployeee sneaked in while I was writing, and there is something specific I want to address from his post.

There are many arguments you could level against Voyager, and while a certain lack of...sense of the crew as a whole does exist (And existed for all the other series except DS9, really), I don't think the notion of "independant cliques" is a fair one. That is, we basically see one rather cohesive group to the exclusion of all others.

Voyager has tried to address this, to varying degress of success. The shows largest problem in this arena is the lack of followthrough. There's nothing wrong with having each episode stand wholly on its own, but it's not easy to address issues like this in that sort of format.

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"What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity."
--
Camper Van Beethoven

 


Posted by Fabrux (Member # 71) on :
 
I will not say anything in reply to UM or TSN as this thread would quickly become a canon vs. non-canon argument

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"Yes. I have seventeen brains! And eleven legs. And a pecan."
-Frank Gerratana, March 3, 2000


 


Posted by Dane Simri (Member # 272) on :
 
"You want to know why I don't watch TOS? I'll tell you. It's because the only time it's aired on stations that I get is at 2 AM on Saturday! I don't know about you but that's a little too late for me. Why don't I record it? Because my VCR is rather noisy when it starts to record and would probably wake me up from my slumber. I care about TOS, but I won't go to extremes to watch it."
- Fabrux

/start crotchety-bitter-old-man-speak/ Now, back when I first started watching Trek all we had was TOS, and it was on at 1 AM on a PBS station with reception so bad I thought Spock was an ugly woman for the first year I watched it, and we didn't have VCR's to record it, and I STILL watched it every week until I'd seen every episode enough times to tell you the title just by the color of the planet the Enterprise was over in the opening scenes... /end c-b-o-m-speak/

Actually, except the part about thinking Spock was a woman and the part about knowing the title by planet color, that's a true story. Fabrux, I think your Star Trek experience would be made more profound if you'd stay up a little bit and watch TOS. In other words, get your priorities straight and know your roots.

Oh, and just to set the record straight, while I DO have a favorite series, I also love them all, plus all the books, all the feature films, etcetera etcetera ad infinitum. I am a self-admitted Star Trek junkie; I'll watch just about anything they put out. I will, however, quit watching for good if Picard ever gets a male love-interest.

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Dane

"Mathematicians have long held that a million monkeys banging on a million keyboards would eventually reproduce the collected wisdom of the human race. Now, thanks to the internet, we know this is not true." -- Robert Silensky
 


Posted by Fabrux (Member # 71) on :
 
I just don't want to watch TOS that much, really.

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"Yes. I have seventeen brains! And eleven legs. And a pecan."
-Frank Gerratana, March 3, 2000



 


Posted by Elim Garak (Member # 14) on :
 
quote:
Another reason why I don't watch TOS is because I grew up on TNG. Most of us here did. Some of the more senior members of the board grew up on TOS. And in a few years there are going to be people who grew up on DS9 and VGR. These people won't like TNG as much as they like DS9, just like people who grew up on TNG don't like TOS as much as TNG, DS9, or VGR. And it's kind of the same way for people who grew up on TOS. They prefer TOS and believe that TNG, DS9, and VGR aren't on par with TOS.

Well, I didn't grow up on TNG. I got interested around when Voyager started (or a little before, to be precise). I'll freely admit that TNG is my least favourite (although I still love it dearly), but TOS, DS9, and Voyager all take their turns being my favourite series.

But no one ever said I was normal.

quote:
I will, however, quit watching for good if Picard ever gets a male love-interest.

Why?

quote:
The producers of Star Trek give the modern Star Trek fans enough technology-ships, technobabble-happy.

Hence the major forum here being Starships.
 


Posted by Alshrim Dax (Member # 258) on :
 
TOS has lasted 30 years .... You can't argue with that kinda track record ...

I think that maybe you should record those original eps and see what we're all talking about, Fabrux before striking out so vehemently at Savar.

He's got a point ... Back then .. It wasn't about making the ratings .. Well.. not so much anyway.. it was about making a show that was different than anything else on TV. That's what it was about ... Seeking out strange new worlds was something that most Picture Studios were afraid to touch back then.

TOS has a loyal following for a reason .. TNG too ... it grew on us TOS ppl after a while.

Now .. I'm a really big Voyager fan... I like the show, I've been loyal to it since Ep #1 .. But let me tell you, there are simply some repeats I WILL not watch ... TOS .. I'll watch whatever repeat happens to be on, and I'll watch the full hour of it .. why? Cuz it still has that sense of freshness to it .. You know that when they did that ep, it was the first time anyone had DARED to do it in that day!

Voyager? DS9, and even some TNG, were recaps of an old theme based on the Original Series .. sure there had to be some arcs, but that's not what I'm talking about .. I'm talking about eps that had nothing to do with one another,,,, but still had the same type of story line ..

VOYAGER and DS9 are both great series !! I still record old eps of DS9 every Monday .. and I watch the ones that interest me .. but here's something that I find interesting which tends to back up Savar's claims here ...

For me PERSONALLY, I record all 4 series .. TOS, TNG, DS9 and VOYAGER religeously...

I'll watch every TOS ep .. no matter what, and I've seen them all about 50 times each..

TNG: I'll watch about 80% of the eps .. the good ones ..

DS9: I'll watch about 75% of the eps I record, so long as they keep my interest ..

Voyager: Very rarely will I watch a repeat !!

The freshness of the stories aren't as crisp the closer you get to the year 2000. The story-lines almost seem forced out of the writers ..

I think that is the general idea Baloo and Savar are trying to convey here.

(and I wanted this to be a short post)

Savar --> Smiley's --> : and )

Welcome aboard!

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-There can be only Nine !! ..mmm.. maybe 10 !!

- Alshrim Dax
The Other Dax:


[This message has been edited by Alshrim Dax (edited March 20, 2000).]
 




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