A
Amaris
Guest
I, for one, love the looser constraints. Star Trek can reach for some truly high ideals, and I love that about it. At the same time, when it tries to make humans more human than humans, and *then* tries to add comedy to it, it can be "cringe" in a sense. For example, I loved Data's "oh shit!" moment in Generations, because that felt spontaneous and very human (coming from the always awesome Brent Spiner). I did not like Data's "saddle up, lock and load" quip in Insurrection, because it felt forced and unnatural (as in the writers decided this would be a great one liner for an action film).Here's my belief:
"Lower Decks is an exaggeration or exactly what happened depending on how you choose to view it."
Because Gene Roddenberry had the same view on TOS.
Lower Decks is so much like the first example: living beings in a realized fictional universe dealing with adversity in such a way that sometimes the only thing to do is bow to the absurd and roll with it. They take their jobs seriously, they take their relationship with each other seriously, but shit happens, and we get to see the fallout of when rational beings try to deal with irrational situations.
I love it, and I hope we get many more seasons.