I don't think any one series has used it more than twice. I could easily count the uses on one hand.Eep! I was actually quoting my cartoon. The reference is to the propensity of New Trek to drop F-bombs left and right.
I don't think any one series has used it more than twice. I could easily count the uses on one hand.Eep! I was actually quoting my cartoon. The reference is to the propensity of New Trek to drop F-bombs left and right.
Picard is a pompous ass in all his appearances across the franchise.
20 years change people, Data was lost right in front of him while he was in shock over Shinzon, Picard still gives great speeches towards the end, Picard always hid his emotions in TNG and opened up later, age makes people soft, etc. etc.
Logic doesn't apply here.I don't think any one series has used it more than twice. I could easily count the uses on one hand.
I think this is fairly accurate, which goes to show how the Disneyfying of stories has taken full effect after Snow White and the "happily ever after" trope became widely rampant.I think on some level people who don't like Picard don't like the idea that their Hero not only is not fully respected by all as a Hero which people have talked about before but also I don't think people like the idea that Picard basically spent 20 years being unhappy and miserable and sad. People like their heroes to happy endings and even in a case like Kirk he basically died being a hero. Their is something though about a guy living through 20 year of Depression that feels disrespectful to the guy you grew up watching. I mean even I feel it and I like Picard as a show. It might be realistic but I think people sometimes just want the happy ending and even if he becomes happy now it still means he basically wasted 20 years of his life.
Jason
I wonder how much of that is the writing and how much is Patrick Stewart. He's a good actor, but I have yet to see anything he's been in which doesn't have the feel of Shakespeare, when it comes to his performances. There is a....sameness. It's like he can't quite come down from that elevated stentorian tone....which sounds pompous.
Still, quite a step up from "double dumbass on you!"I don't think any one series has used it more than twice. I could easily count the uses on one hand.
Ooo, ya got me. Or as JL says, merde!Still, quite a step up from "double dumbass on you!"
It depends for me.Yeah, no offense intended but I don’t consume a lot of fan fiction/productions. Axanar kinda ruined that for... well... everyone.
Eh, it's a swear word humanity has been using for the last 400ish years. The idea that its not going to be present is, well, dumb.Still, quite a step up from "double dumbass on you!"
Logic doesn't apply here.
I think this is fairly accurate, which goes to show how the Disneyfying of stories has taken full effect after Snow White and the "happily ever after" trope became widely rampant.
I understand that people feel that it is disrespectful. But, I would take a different approach in my few of characters, possibly informed by the shock of reading "The Man in the Iron Mask" and "Robin Hood," neither of which have that "happily ever after" like the movies. And, that was the recognition that those stories and those characters are not being disrespected to be treated as human.
To my mind, modern storytelling treats characters not as humans but as gods. They are to be revered, respected, and immutable in their presentation. If they have any failings then they must be made up for in the last act. And, while that sounds very pleasing and comforting it also reflects an inability to accept bad endings. Maybe because we want good ends, we want bad things to happen to bad people, and good things to happen to our heroes.
And, in my small installments those stories can work quite well. But, especially in Star Trek, which works on the idea of a growing and developing humanity, there is a deep need to present what reality will teach us is true-that bad things happen to good people, good things happen to bad, and people make choices that they regret. Honestly, that's the lynch pin of Kirk's arc in both TMP and TWOK.
tl: dr-Yes, people don't want more realistic. But stories show us all aspects of humanity.
I'm all for shows looking at the issues of the day. I think shows are praised later on for dealing with issues of the day when no one else would...It also plays a role in so many people angry when tv shows go "political" which they mean political in the sense they are talking about issues happening in the present day as opposed to more broad strokes looks at issues that could be done in any tv show going back to the 80's.
There are significant swaths of the American public sphere that insists any discussion of social reform is to beavoided at all cost . How many times are reformers accused of introducing race into a discussion by noting things like unequal treatment of African Americans by law enforcement (even before this year)? How did the racists become those who noted the disparities of education outcomes for minorities? Simply put, there is a see no evil, speak no evil, hear no evil approach by people who have decided the best way to stop the evolution toward a just society is to deny problems exist, to blame the "other side," and to claim that a series like Star Trek is radical for describing what our society is like.a symptom and a culmination of developents that have started a long time ago, and which may not end with him, either.
There are significant swaths of the American public sphere that insists any discussion of social reform is to be avoided at all cost . How many times are reformers accused of introducing race into a discussion by noting things like unequal treatment of African Americans by law enforcement (even before this year)? How did the racists become those who noted the disparities of education outcomes for minorities? Simply put, there is a see no evil, speak no evil, hear no evil approach by people who have decided the best way to stop the evolution toward a just society is to deny problems exist, to blame the "other side," and to claim that a series like Star Trek is radical for describing what our society is like.
ETA: I guess what I am saying, is that a segment of the American public not only takes political discussion less seriously, they actively try to repress it.
With certain people, that's two strikes against her right out of the gate. Not that most of them have the balls to ever admit that's the problem they have with Burnham and Mariner, but y'know....I've seen similar accusations toward LOWER DECKS Mariner that she's a Mary Sue when all she has in common with Michael is....being a black woman.
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