• @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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      78 months ago

      It’s not my least favorite Star Trek show. I like it overall. I just feel kinda icky during the decontamination scenes.

      • @eva_sieve@startrek.website
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        138 months ago

        u/Stamets likes his Star Trek hot folks to be fully clothed, damnit! Like Captain Pike! or Doctor Culber! or Captain Pike!

      • @ummthatguy@lemmy.world
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        98 months ago

        Of which there are several. Berman is such a horn dog. But here, Stamets, is a shot you might not be too opposed to:

        • @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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          128 months ago

          Yeah, the Berman-level horny is what put me off in all honesty. I’m not the type of gay who is going to be immediately freak out by seeing a woman undressed or anything. Even when focusing on any of the male characters I still just felt weird. Also the absurd level of blue on everything. Genuinely forgot how saturated that was, holy shit!

        • @Rakonat@lemmy.world
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          38 months ago

          Berman was a horndog but Roddenberry and Thiess pretty much ran with what ever the censors said was okay and pushed till the censor pushed back.

        • @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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          78 months ago

          Like if someone wants to put in sexual stuff to make something sell, sure. I might not like it but I’ll get it. But those decon scenes were really really forced. At least with Seven of Nine it ended mostly with her obscene skinsuit. But these scenes were just too heavy handed for me to enjoy and felt a lil gross. Not enough for it to make me dislike the show but enough to be memorable.

          • @stephfinitely@lemmy.world
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            98 months ago

            Weird I really didn’t remember them. But now I’m like oh yeah I was very uncomfortable. Unfortunately as a women star trek fan there are a fair bit of content I have to just forget or be like its wrong but sadly a product of that time. Lucky there are a lot of women positive content in the series too. Which I think is a bigger chunk then the problems.

    • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      38 months ago

      It is too serious and “mature” in my opinion.

      And the crew is way too homogenous to have interesting scifi relationships between them.

  • Deebster
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    178 months ago

    I’m the Worf kind. I suspect that for us non-USA types it’s pretty one-sided.

    • @cam_i_am@lemmy.world
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      298 months ago

      Yeah as an Aussie, faith of the heart comes across as some cringe American power ballad bullshit.

      It’s such an insane genre shift from Trek of that era as well. Like how do you have 3 of the most incredible, majestic, orchestral themes from TNG, DS9, and VOY, and decide that what Trek really needs is a Rod Stewart song? It’s bizarre.

      • @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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        8 months ago

        cringe American power ballad bullshit.

        I’m not going to lie, I find this genuinely hilarious.

        So the song was originally written by an American named Diane Warren but that’s where the connection to the United States ends. It was originally written for Rod Stewart, an English artist. The Enterprise version however is performed by Russell Watson. An English artist.

        • @cam_i_am@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Bahaha fair call mate! The other artist who came to mind was Bryan Adams, who it turns out is Canadian so clearly I’m completely full of shit.

          Logic and reason aside… Idk it just feels like American fluff to me. To be clear, I don’t mean to hate on American culture with that statement. Every culture has its own vapid, meaningless fluff. God knows Australian culture does!

          Regardless of who sang it or wrote it, something about faith of the heart just feels really, really American to me. Obviously Trek has always been an American show, but it has always seemed to make an effort to be more universal than that. I still remember hearing faith of the heart for the first time and it just felt… foreign. Unrelatable.

          And personally I just hate power ballads so that’s my own bias haha. My whole argument is vibes and opinions really, I make zero claim to being correct or even internally consistent on this.

          • @BarrelAgedBoredom@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            Don’t feel bad, your instincts are on point. It’s some apple pie baseball chevy truck american anthem at the stadium bullshit. It’s so american it hurts and Im from the southern US lol

          • @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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            88 months ago

            Oh don’t get me wrong, i’m not bashing you with that comment. There’s a reason I removed the ‘the call is coming from inside the house’ line. I was doing it in jest and light-hearted banter but you never know how text can come across so I wanted to be safer than sorry.

            It does feel pretty American though. I get it. The vibe is definitely there. The song just screams “PATRIOTISM” in a way that is pretty in line with America. Has that whole “I’M THE VERY BEST WE’RE NUMBER 1 NO ONE CAN STOP US” theme throughout it.

            I listen to jazz and pop so I mean I’m not exactly someone who is a huge fan of ballads either. Right with you. This song I do like but mostly just for nostalgia purposes I think. The same way I start singing along with Rick Astley whenever Never Gonna Give You Up starts playing.

            However, as a Canadian, how fucking dare you mistake Bryan Adams for an American. Awful. Mean. Terrible! Cruel! We can’t be friends.

    • @Ashyr@sh.itjust.works
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      138 months ago

      Why would this be a USA vs non-USA thing? I’ve only ever heard it mocked here in the states.

      I feel like this is matter of personal taste not nationality, but I could be wrong.

      • @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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        108 months ago

        Why would this be a USA vs non-USA thing?

        I have absolutely no idea. Frankly that’s one of the most bizarre takes I’ve seen in sometime. As you pointed out, the theme is relentlessly mocked in the US. By all Trek fans in general, really. Why someone would immediately make this a nationalistic thing I have no idea.

      • @StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website
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        58 months ago

        It seems such generic American soft rock. Journey or bands like.

        No matter that the singer is British and the song was originally written and recorded by Rod Stewart.

        Even having lived in the US as a student, I never could understand the appeal of that stuff.

  • @Rooty@lemmy.world
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    138 months ago

    I like how corny it is, it fits the “pioneers on an exploratory mission” perfectly. Having a bombastic orchestral theme pre-federation makes no sense, the first Enterprise is a sitting duck for just about any starfaring culture, they got boarded by the Ferengi one time, ffs.

  • @Killer57@lemmy.ca
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    78 months ago

    I find Enterprise isn’t bad for the most part, just don’t bring up the final episode.

  • @GraniteM@lemmy.world
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    58 months ago

    I’d prefer it if the self-hatred and vicious fandom in-fighting were left to Star Wars, where it belongs.

    • @DragonTypeWyvern
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      58 months ago

      The stereotype of the angry nerd is a Star Trek fan at a convention…

      And Star Wars fans didn’t start arguing until the Movie Which Shall Not Be Named

        • Doug [he/him]
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          38 months ago

          Thanks for picking that one up. Too often online it seems like most people have forgotten how long the newest Star Wars has been the bad one.

          Probably partially because we’re getting old

          • @DragonTypeWyvern
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            8 months ago

            There’s a pretty big difference between “this movie is the worst one, but ‘Hutt Slayer Leia’ tho” and “This guy doesn’t understand the Force, the Jedi, the previous movie, that space is frictionless, that a squadron for a capital ship is a good trade, or the technology of the series and the reasons for the limitations on it. Oh, and also he pussed out of ReyxFinn, a plan confirmed by previous screenwriters and novelists, so he could shove in Finn being molested by a stalker?!?”

            I can keep going

            But I won’t, because I am a big boy who can emotionally handle that some people apparently didn’t understand the themes of a series derided for destroying complexity in cinema.

            • @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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              8 months ago

              Well. This kind of proves Granites original point. Also demonstrates precisely why I stopped posting in the Star Wars community. Just so constantly and exhaustingly negative all the time.

              • @DragonTypeWyvern
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                18 months ago

                Their point was that the Star Wars fandom is more contentious than the Star Trek fandom.

                Mine was that that only stated relatively recently, and with one particular movie.

                Like, sure, you’d have fans saying a specific movie is worse than the others but it didn’t spawn the kind of grief 8 did.

                • @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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                  18 months ago

                  Star Wars fandom has been hostile and bitter at one another since at least the prequels. When those were released things turned, hard, and they never came back. When the sequels were released people swarmed those and have been hyper negative ever since.

                  Things were ALWAYS bad in Star Wars, they just got a thousand times worse with Force Awakens. It’s pretty disingenuous to try and pretend like none of that ever happened.

    • @setsneedtofeed@lemmy.world
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      48 months ago

      The show arguably gets good in season 3, if you can vibe with Dark Archer. And season 4 is pretty much universally praised.

      The show found its rhythm right as it got canceled.

  • Echo Dot
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    48 months ago

    Enterprise was done dirty. They should have been allowed at least one more series to deal with the romulans. It was just starting to get good.

    Sure the character of Jonathan Archer was a complete idiot who shouldn’t have been allowed in charge of a light switch. But that kind of makes sense because it was only given the job because of who his dad was rather than because he had any skills. No human knew what they were doing at that point in time because no human had really had any interaction with any alien species yet except the Vulcans.

  • @jet@hackertalks.com
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    -38 months ago

    Every time it’s a holodeck episode, or an alternative timeline episode, or alternative universe episode, I usually skip it. I’ve invested myself in the story in Universe they created, and they want a filler episode that doesn’t matter for the main overall plot, that’s great for them, but that’s not what I’m watching for. So yeah I totally get it

    • @Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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      8 months ago

      holodeck episode

      Bride of Chaotica

      alternative timeline episode

      Yesterday’s Enterprise

      alternative universe episode

      In a Mirror Darkly

      I usually skip it

      Those are also just single examples of each. Moreover, that’s like… a third of all Star Trek episodes. You are actively denying yourself some of the best episodes in all of Star Trek.

      You also say you’re invested in the universe they create but those stories help explain and inform the universe. How do you know where your limits lie without exploring your own limits? How do you know how good you have it until it’s gone? How do you know how far you’ll go until you see yourself staring right back at you?

    • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      48 months ago

      You do know that those holodeck and alternative timeline/universe stories … are part of the Universe they inhabit, right?

      I mean, even the mirror universe tells us loads of things about the original universe by displaying the complete opposite.