This weekend, I caught an episode of Voyager that I had not seen before. Just which episode it was isn't important, but what a character said simply put the final nail (among the hundreds of others) in the coffin for me.
I simply had no other recourse but to laugh. If I hadn't laughed, I would have cried at the utter vacuousness of the sentence. What's worse is that it wasn't said just once. No, no no! It was said at least twice.HoloDoc wrote:"We're using a triaxlated signal on a covariant subspace band..."
If I believed in a god, I would have pleaded for it to make it so I would not have to hear such crap, ever again.Janeway wrote:"They're using a triaxlated signal on a covariant subspace band..."
Though the sets were cheesy, TOS still rules the day with at the least half decent plots (though continuity never seemed to be a concern). The Next Generation was a more complete vision from Gene Rodenberry, but it failed because of hackneyed writing at some point in its tenure. I didn't get to watch DS9 as much as I wanted, so I have no misgivings for it. (Other than the excuses to have the characters somewhere else and giving them advanced shuttles, aka Runabouts, and then the Defiant to do it.) Voyager and Enterprise, no matter how much I wanted to like them, are, or will be, failures because they suffer from the malady of stupid writers.
What am I really saying? Thanks, Mike Wong for opening my eyes and thanks to the rest of you.