posted
Ok, i'm not so sure in wich forum to post this..
Make up your own worst plots for a new series!! Let's call the ship the USS Whateverhernameis. I'll start with mine:
The crew of the Whateverhernameis get stuck in a alternative universe and discover that they, and the rest of the ST universe are the stars in a TV series! (actually, this already happened in "Past Tense" DS9)
------------------ "When You're Up to Your Ass in Alligators, Today Is the First Day of the Rest of Your Life." -- Management slogan, Ridcully-style (Terry Pratchett, The Last Continent, Discworld) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Prakesh's Star Trek Site
posted
Don't know about an episode but it could have a doctor who starts of being normal then during the 4th or 5th season suddenly becomes unbelievably brilliant and can do almost anything.
The series is set some time after Trek 6. The Excelsior, old and somewhat broken down, is towed into Risa orbit and converted into a restaurant/hotel. Captain Sulu remains aboard as the boss and the uniform pants are replaced with shorts.
------------------ "A gathering of Angels appeared above my head. They sang to me this song of hope, and this is what they said..." -Styx
posted
A crew member falls ill from an alien and his memories good bad and indifferent have to be brought to the surface... thus ensuring a full recovery!
Oh, Shades of Grey
Well then how about...
The whole crew is beamed aboard a shuttle craft...
------------------ "Who wouldn't be the one you love Who wouldn't stand inside your love." - Stand Inside Your Love, The Smashing Pumpkins
posted
How about a show where a crew get stranded decades away from the Federation and they have to get back?
Just like Voyager, you say? Au contraire, my friends. You see, this ship wasn't transported into the far reaches of the galaxy. This ship was blown up, and its crew are puttering on back to Fed space in their escape pods... :-)
------------------ me: "I need a new sig..." CC: "Well create one." -why I don't have a real signature
How about having a kid onboard a starship that knows everything but is actually 98 years old who had a shuttle accident that made him young. He was an old admiral near retierment when the accident happend and now has decided to stay in Starfleet, where he has to deal with people who think he's too young to be an admiral.
I took the element of the episode where Picard and company become young again and expanded on it.
------------------ "Life's a bitch, then you die" -USS Vanderbilt, Vanderbuilt Class starship
posted
If we're talking about plots that ought to be retired, I have one:
A situation has developed somewhere and our ship is the only one that can respond to the crisis in time.
This was the basic plot for:
Star Trek - The Motion Picture Star Trek II - The Wrath of Kahn Star Trek IV - The Voyage Home (somewhat of a stretch) Star Trek V - The Final Frontier Star Trek - Generations (Enterprise B at the Nexus)
All of these stories involved either a new ship, just out of spacedock, or an understaffed/inexperienced crew. Talk about going to the well once too often...
posted
Sol: That's right. Starships are supposed to be well-functioning machines. A vital component shouldn't suddenly stop working and endanger the entire ship. What if there were a show set on a submarine, a car or an airplane and the plots revolved around the engine not working correctly and endangering the cast with death? I know a starship is supposed to be a character, but such plots are rather contrived, I think. The same goes for holodeck malfunctions. Conflicts should come from the characters or from situations outside the ship, not from the ship itself. Futhermore, if the highly trained Starfleet engineers were unable to fix it, but a 14-year-old boy can, it makes the plot even more stupid.
------------------ When you're in the Sol system, come visit the Starfleet Museum
posted
But that isn't what the post said. It specifically said there should not be anymore plots where a problem arised that only our heroes could solve. So I ask you, should we watch anything at all, ever? Lots of hospitals in Chicago, yet this guy just happens to wind up on ER? Plenty of people in the audience, but only one person is allowed to answer Regis? How likely is that?
I for one am sick of all these shows where these "characters" have to deal with some sort of "plot". I mean, come on, how often can we be expected to buy all this?
------------------ "What did it mean to fly? A tremor in your soul. To resist the dull insistance of gravity." -- Camper Van Beethoven
[This message has been edited by Sol System (edited April 03, 2000).]