The postmodern destruction of Star Trek

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024
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Комментарии • 510

  • @BrockSamson-i1i
    @BrockSamson-i1i 11 месяцев назад +126

    Abrahms and Kurtzman at CBS, Shaka and the walls fell

    • @ianoz1
      @ianoz1 10 месяцев назад +9

      Couldn't have put it better.

    • @sharifelneklawy6916
      @sharifelneklawy6916 6 месяцев назад +3

      nothing disturbs me more about our modern world than the fact that this incredible comment only has 54 likes

    • @thurin84
      @thurin84 6 месяцев назад +4

      klutzman, when the franchise died.

    • @A-Milkdromeda-Laniakea-Hominid
      @A-Milkdromeda-Laniakea-Hominid 2 месяца назад +5

      Darmok, his eyes open.

  • @mediaversenetwork
    @mediaversenetwork 9 месяцев назад +12

    im with you, im 60 . been a trek fan for over 50 years. Worked on Trek in top creative positions on never greenlit products, Its all about Post modernism and echo boomer doubts vs modernism and its final affect on early gen x. Ther post material age has been post modern as all interactive interfaces like the Internet. self absorption is all the post modern can except.

  • @JustinAlexander1976
    @JustinAlexander1976 11 месяцев назад +18

    please don't give up. Your videos are awesome! There are so few commentaries that go beyond click-bait. Your take is genuinely unique and contributing to the conversation.

  • @nelkosme3734
    @nelkosme3734 3 месяца назад +6

    Baudrillard's quote is fully exemplified by Disco. It is visually impressive (although in monotone) but empty of meaning and authenticity. The only "achievement" is destroying the values and even characters of Star Trek (even the Federation itself and that in the most ridiculous way possible). The same applies to Picard season 1 and 2. One can only try to imagine how characters that are so focused on their emotions can function at all (a captain that cries more in an episode than my three year old granddaughter in a week).

  • @xheralt
    @xheralt Месяц назад +3

    Like Damien said, Jean Luc went from the modern Solomon to being the old man who needs to apologize for everything he's ever done. Something I picked up from comments downthread: I don't know why I didn't hit on the term "nepo baby" to describe Mary Sue Mikey Spock sooner -- I'm old enough to have seen the original wave of bad fan fiction on mimeograph featuring the sort of characters that named the trope, _don't even try to tell me "I don't know what a Mary Sue really is"._ Post-modernists tell us we must "value everyone's lived experience"...well, that's mine!

  • @JazzGuitarScrapbook
    @JazzGuitarScrapbook Год назад +69

    I’m OLD enough to remember when no one was sure if postmodernism was the dominant culture of late capitalism or pop culture code for messy looking buildings.

    • @relentlessmadman
      @relentlessmadman 9 месяцев назад +3

      Yeah what the hell doseit mean anyway??

    • @penelopegreene
      @penelopegreene 9 месяцев назад +6

      Novels with weird endings.

    • @richlisola1
      @richlisola1 9 месяцев назад +6

      Postmodern analysis was supposed to be a niche, idiosyncratic academic exercise-Not the standard mode of analyzing all of society and reality. It was never meant to be the lens we gaze at the world with, the academics who first conceived of it never meant for that. They admit this openly.

    • @penelopegreene
      @penelopegreene 9 месяцев назад +4

      I was once told Post-Modern was all history after WWII. Someone else told me Post-Modern was all history after 1960. 😆

    • @penelopegreene
      @penelopegreene 7 месяцев назад

      @@B_Estes_Undegöetz look. That's a lot to take in, but you put in the effort. So I'll like it.

  • @tomigun5180
    @tomigun5180 6 месяцев назад +4

    Evil cannot create anything new, they can only corrupt and ruin what good forces have invented or made.

  • @pickledtezcat
    @pickledtezcat 10 месяцев назад +9

    One of the key aspects of modernism was utopia. The idea that there's one perfect way of living, a perfect culture that we can find and live in. If we progress enough, we can reach that perfect utopian future.
    Another core aspect is the meta-narrative. That we can understand all of reality in terms of a single, over riding narrative. For example, Marxism was a modernist movement. It saw the whole of reality in terms of the materialist dialectic. And this allowed it to create an idea of a communist utopia, which we could eventually reach which would solve all the problems of capitalism and thus be a perfect world for everyone. Likewise, free market capitalism and western democracy was also seen as a utopia, framed in terms of a neo-liberal capitalist meta-narrative. At the end of the cold war, it seemed like the Marxist meta-narrative had been defeated, and so naturally, we would move towards the utopia predicted by western economists... The end of history and the beginning of a society served by the invisible hand, unfettered by government interference.
    However, at the same moment, utopianism and meta-narratives fell out of favor as postmodernism undermined the very idea that there could be an objective singular truth. And without that singular truth, there could be no meta-narrative. And so no utopia. One person's utopian society would be another person's hell on Earth... or hell in space.
    Star Trek was a casualty of this transformation in popular thinking. People no longer believed in the possibility of a utopian future. What would it be like? Would it be a communist utopia? A libertarian utopia? A Christian utopia? A western utopia? A feminist Utopia? What's the meta-narrative which provides the basis for this perfect society? Would a world without money automatically become a perfect society? Would there still be social problems in such a society? What about racism? Or sexism? Or homophobia? Or religion? It seems like these aren't directly caused by money, so would they continue to be problems? How would these aspects fit into the meta-narrative.
    A new worldview emerged, which veered away from utopian thinking, meta-narratives and structural analysis. It sought to redefine our society's problems in terms of individualistic moral failings. People stopped thinking about the dangers of capitalism, or imperialism or despotic communist dystopias, and started fixating on "bad people" vs "innocent victims". Political discussion degraded into racial and gender essentialism. This is the bankrupt philosophy which provides the foundation for modern television. Not just Star Trek, but almost everything on our screens. People are reduced to 2d cartoon characters embodying essentialist identity traits. They stand as avatars for individualistic moral failings transformed through collective guilt into caricatures of "bad people" and "innocent victims". Each character is an archetype, who embodies the essential characteristics of their identity grouping and serves as a microcosm of social ills. And in 21st century post-modernist media, these archetypes are constantly rebooted, remixed and replayed, over and over again, telling the same stories of collective sin and collective virtue, where people are defined not by their actions, but by their essential identarian nature. Identity as destiny.
    There is a way out of this zombie-infested, dead-end cultural landscape. Metamodernism deals with issues of belief and personal, or collective worldviews. As the name suggests, meta-narratives are possible again. Because intersubjective truth allows us to share a similar worldview and understand the world in similar ways, by negotiating shared values and shared goals. This allows us to reach towards a better future. Not a singular utopia, but a collection of "good enough" solutions to our structural problems. It also invites us to understand the world in terms of complex systems theory. Seeing problems not as individual moral failings, but as systemic dysfunctions that emerge from a system out of balance. "Racism" is a symptom of a problem, not a cause.
    But this new model is still forming. And there are lots of very rich and powerful people who benefit from the post-modernist fake un-reality. They are quite happy to have citizens who focus on individual moral failings, and believe in collective guilt and essentialism, instead of asking questions about structural problems. Their media empires rest upon the idea that there is no objective truth, only the loudest voice. And they couldn't maintain their position if people weren't utterly hopeless of ever finding a "good enough" way to mitigate the many looming disasters that face us.

  • @Sjaddix
    @Sjaddix Год назад +100

    What annoys me the most about Kurtzman Trek is the insistence that its canon to TOS and Peak Trek from TNG to Voyager. When its clearly not. I think if they just came out and said its a new timeline that annoy a lot of the more entrenched fans a whole lot less.

    • @0xKruzr
      @0xKruzr 11 месяцев назад +4

      there is 0 reason to believe it's a new timeline that hasn't popped up in TNG or another show before.

    • @chuckintexas
      @chuckintexas 11 месяцев назад +9

      Cheapning a characterization of Kirk AND the Kobiyashi Maru were what broke the illusion for _me_ . The REAST was WOKE-DOWNHILL , from there .

    • @chuckintexas
      @chuckintexas 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@inkermoy - ABSOLUTELY _CORRECT_ .

    • @will-vi9pk
      @will-vi9pk 11 месяцев назад +10

      Or they are actually just destroying it on purpose?

    • @danielmcelhatton1724
      @danielmcelhatton1724 10 месяцев назад +3

      I quite like SNW and in a way I agree. Why shoehorn in aspects like La'an Noonien Singh and the Gorn and make life difficult for themselves regarding what we knew in TOS regarding Khan and the Gorn instead of just creating something new and making it easier on everyone.

  • @AllenUry
    @AllenUry Год назад +25

    I don't know if the issue is modernism, post-modernism, or Post Toasties, but I have long contended that 21st Century Star Trek's failures come from the fact that none of its creators have any experience with the U.S. military. STAR TREK was created by a former B-17 bomber pilot and Los Angeles police officer (Roddenberry) who understood military structure and behavior. Most of the others who worked on the original show served either in World War II, the Korean War, or were drafted into the armed forces during the 1950s. Even if they were ultimately anti-war, they instinctively understood how people behave in a hierarchy. Today's writers have no such experience, so we have subordinates constantly mouthing off to superior officers and even commanding officers not respecting the military chain of command. The result feels grossly inauthentic, even to people -- like me -- who never spent a day in uniform. And this lack of discipline creeps into every other aspect of the writing, which always defaults to individual feelings rather than "the mission."

    • @magarciascomics
      @magarciascomics Год назад +6

      Not sure if I'm getting your meaning, but are you suggesting that we need more wars so veterans from those wars can create more compelling science fiction? Because if the cost of not having to fight in wars is mediocre storytelling, that's a price I'm more than willing to pay.
      Sorry for the sarcasm, but this "they don't make men like they used to" rhetoric is just too reactionary to resist.

    • @AllenUry
      @AllenUry Год назад +9

      @@magarciascomics Hardly. What I’m saying is that if you’re going to dramatize a military or quasi military organization, then you need creative input from people with experience in such organizations. This is why they have medical consultants on medical shows and law enforcement consultants on cop shows, etc. The military is an institution that has survived intact for more than 5,000 years, with or without wars. I doubt tithings will change in the next 300.

    • @n.d.m.515
      @n.d.m.515 11 месяцев назад

      On the other hand, this could be very deliberate. Just look at what @magarciascomics said on the comment section. It isn't just written by those who don't understand the military. They are written by those who oppose any and all traditional authoritative structure and morality. Most writers today are reactionary children who have never grown out of their infancy and lack emotional control. Logic to them is violence.

    • @TheGreatAmphibian
      @TheGreatAmphibian 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@magarciascomics Dear God, you just said something really stupid. No, you don’t need to serve in the military to write military characters who don’t routinely commit insubordination. You shouldn’t even have to research for something this basic.

    • @TheGreatAmphibian
      @TheGreatAmphibian 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@AllenUry Also wrong. Firstly, just common sense application of general knowledge would be enough to do what you are asking for. Secondly, yes, military organisations have existed for 5000 years… But not “intact” as you claim. There have been vast changes and differences over that time! For example, when was the last time a U.S. battalion was decimated..? Or allowed to elect its own officers? Have there been many floggings recently? Arguably the four most effective fighting forces in history were the Roman legions, the Mongols, the Napoleonic Royal Navy, and the WW2 Wehrmacht - and experience in one wouldn’t have helped you understand any of the others well.

  • @fullmatthew
    @fullmatthew 7 месяцев назад +4

    I couldn't help but notice when you said the giant corporate media franchises are trying to "Cling On" (Klingon?) to their centralized control of media. 😂 well done, Sir.

  • @wingsley
    @wingsley 11 месяцев назад +48

    This is an interesting, and measured, analysis and commentary on what Star Trek has become.
    To break it down in my own terms, during the original Star Trek series episode "Court Martial", Kirk was framed and put on trial for culpable negligence. The evidence that was created to frame Kirk was computer-based and it looked like all was lost. But Kirk believed in himself, stood up for himself, talked back to his superiors and Kirk's lawyer argued that Kirk's charges were unfair because Kirk had a right to challenge the computer itself. In doing so, Kirk re-affirmed his rights and found the malicious officer who tampered with the computer to frame Kirk. The episode was a principled argument for human rights in an age dominated by technology, a timeless story that still works (and is memorable) to this day. All the while the Kirk and lawyer Samuel Cogley are stuggling to formulate an effective defense in court, Kirk is turning over the case in his mind, and his communique to the ship inspires Spock to do the same. In 1960's sci fi TV's own weird way, the combined defense of Kirk, Cogley and Spock turn the tables by using a blend of computer analysis and scientific investigation to arrive at the truth. Kirk's mixture of his firm belief in himself, his distinguished (and much-decorated) career, combined with measured and thoughtful self-doubt, sustains him through his decision to plead not-guilty and to finally confront the truth aboard his own ship.
    By contrast, Star Trek: Discovery's premiere, "Vulcan Hello" and "Battle at the Binary Stars", introduces Commander Michael Burnham, a struggling officer who was obviously promoted too quickly and who has no such distinguished career or decorations. Burnham is presented as desperate and fatalistic, grasping at ways to make sense of what is happening. She is unable to effectively articulate her "Vulcan Hello" rationale to her captain. She blunders during a spacewalk that results in a confrontation with an aggressive Klingon. *She mutinies against the captain by herself,* further confirming she is not up to the task. And when Starfleet reinforcements arrive to defend the Starship Shenzou, they are woefully underpowered and unprepared for a confrontation with the Klingons. The fleet blunders its way into a disastrous battle, and is devastated by the superior Klingon force. And, for Burham's inept attempt at mutiny, she is court-martialed and blamed for both the mutiny and for the Klingon victory. She has no real defense, she has nothing to say to redeem herself. She does not even have a Samuel Cogley-style lawyer present to represent her. She is sent up the river and is subject to where Starfleet's tides take her: the Starship Discovery. Discovery makes no sense, as it regularly tortures an alien animal on "black alert" in order to magically teleport the ship in an un-Star Trek manner that more effectively resembles Samantha Stevens from "Bewitched" as she rarely explains "We zonked across the atmospheric continuum".
    The contrast between modernist "Court Martial" and the post-modernist "Vulcan Hello" / "Battle at the Binary Stars" could not be more clear. Kirk believes he is right because he believes in himself. Kirk believes in himself because he earned the captaincy of the Starship Enterprise, a ship powered by a 1960s-optimitic vision (if vague) of science-driven generations of hard work, innovation and ambition. The Shenzou is commanded by a short-sighted captain and a blundering first officer both of whom weren't smart enough to recognize that they were in over their heads, and the story makes it obvious they didn't even know the name of the star system they were in. (In an apparent nod to the ignorance of long-forgotten "sci fi" shows, the characters of the Disco-verse seem unaware that our galaxy includes numerous binary star systems.) Burnham cannot defend her actions because she has no defense, no substantial career to give her the needed knowledge and experience, and, by extension, a Starfleet that was equally inept. The only defense left is the magical Discovery, whose pixie-dust propulsion zonks the ship to and fro (though nobody seems to have the brains to ask if it could also manage time travel to prevent the war from happening in the first place) as the only way to defeat the Klingons by repeatedly ambushing their ships and installations. (Funny that the Klingons can overwhelm an entire Federation task force, but the lone Discovery waylays the Klingons without fail.) In the end, Burham's career (what there was of it; it was obvious she was a nepo-baby, in over her head) is subject to the tides of fate, while Kirk's was based on a solid foundation of accomplishments, risk-taking and the accumulation of wisdom. In the end, despite Paramount-CBS's insistence that there is only one Star Trek and that both the original series and Discovery somehow occupy the same universe, the way the characters (and their Universe) behave gives away that this can't be so: if Michael Burnham were assigned to Kirk's Enterprise, she would never be promoted past ensign. If Kirk visited the "Disco-verse", he would be even more desperate to get back to his own Universe than his was in "Mirror, Mirror".

    • @DavidDouglas-q7v
      @DavidDouglas-q7v 11 месяцев назад +5

      That was remarkably insightful. Thanks!

    • @Maisel9
      @Maisel9 10 месяцев назад +1

      You're describing these two characters accurately as they are in the respective episodes, but the comparison falls apart when one considers that you're comparing a pilot episode and a character on the beginning of their journey to a character who is already in his prime and a fully self-realised commander of his vessel when we first meet him and later in season 1. Burnham gets degraded to a mere specialist for the rest of the first season, only in season 3 is she an XO again and finally in season 4 a confident and self-realised captain. (They also solve the spore drive-animal cruelty problem btw, did you even watch more than the pilot?)
      There's a lot more one could say about Discovery, but usually I find the criticisms of people who like it better than that of people who outright hate it, or at least have a strong dislike for whatever reasons. I think apathy would be a stronger indication of the show being a failure, but since it sparks so much hate it does seem to hit a nerve in the whole modernist-conservative vs post-modernist progressive culture war and so does transport meaning and is adding something new and noteworthy to the canon.

    • @Theodorus5
      @Theodorus5 10 месяцев назад

      "If Kirk visited the "Disco-verse" wow...I would watch that! :)

    • @Maisel9
      @Maisel9 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Theodorus5 Idk technically Strange New Worlds is "Disco-verse" since the new Pike and his "new-old" Enterprise were introduced in Discovery, and Kirk did come visit. Or do you mean the 32nd century, which could also be called the "Disco-verse" from season 3 onwards?

    • @ianoz1
      @ianoz1 10 месяцев назад +4

      Love what you've presented here. The true potency of Court Martial is not about Kirk's belief in himself, it's Spock's belief in him. The "cold emotionless" Vulcan, despite all the science available, concludes something is amiss because he KNOWS Kirk would be incapable of panic or negligence in a time of crisis, which compels him to dig deeper.

  • @BGRANT777X
    @BGRANT777X 9 месяцев назад +24

    The characters grey area morality started in DS9. From the start of Discovery I got the sense that the writers mined places like reddit for what people remembered fondly about star trek. Section 31, wars, long arcs, Ben sisko and his morally questionable adventures, even Dax was the cool 90s smart bi chick yet DS9 is often the favorite series of those that hate the new stuff. I loved DS9 too but it is the ideological father of the core of new start trek. Great video by the way.

    • @Joe-jn5li
      @Joe-jn5li 9 месяцев назад

      dont forget the binaries of next gen or the planet where woman were in power and men the underclass. just to name a couple.

    • @JoeyisDREADful
      @JoeyisDREADful 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Joe-jn5li Even by Next Gen it already just wasn't as subversive, though. OS got blacked out in Southern States repeatedly because it pushed the boundaries. Next Gen and DS9 danced with wanting to do the same but then backed off to financial safety instead because they just didn't have the balls. It was not radical when Next Gen did matriarchy aliens, it wasn't so radical as to really challenge anything when they made Dax bisexual for 1 episode then never had it come up again and had her marry a man.
      Johnathan Frakes winning his fight to get a male actor cast for the genderless alien Riker fell for in the obvious trans allegory episode (and not ending it "conversion therapy is fine I guess") would have been radical. DS9 going through with the Garak/Bashir romance they set up, and had the actors working under the impression was coming, instead of chickening out of having to commit to a gay romance would have been radical.

    • @JoeyisDREADful
      @JoeyisDREADful 7 месяцев назад +3

      I'd argue Next Gen did ALOT of moral greyness, DS9 was just where "the point/question is the moral greyness" started.
      Next Gen did moral greyness as a barrier and the overarching philosophical/ideological conflict of the show. You believe in the lofty ideals of the Federation despite watching them constantly suck ass at living up to them and our heros having to navigate that the whole way. Sometimes one or more of them is on the wrong side but they never truly concede to "nessicary evil" and the point is always striving for the ideals even when in practice it's not possible for it to be totally clear cut.
      DS9 does alot of "What if you just HAVE to do moral greyness? What if it's all grey? WHAT IF THE SPACE NAZIS GET REDEMPTION ARCS AND THE CAPTAIN AGREES TO NESSICARY EVIL?! TREK IS DARK NOW!" which, while it gets away with it, imo, and actually doesn't *really* concede to the "nessicary evil" questions it raises in the end, it does spend the entire show entertaining them. So while great it's also alot of dumb people's favorite because "Captain tough and cool"

    • @thelordakira
      @thelordakira Месяц назад

      no it is not at all. DSN9 it is it's own thing. Nothing related to nu trek at all.

    • @thelordakira
      @thelordakira Месяц назад

      @@JoeyisDREADful TOS and TNG(season 1) were Rod trying to show a future utopia's.
      but those are unrealistic and static and boring. seasons after and DS9 went for , we strive for the utopia and reality exist lets use it.

  • @Redshirt434
    @Redshirt434 Год назад +44

    I despise 99% of 2009-current Star Trek. Except, chunks of Picard season 3.

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Год назад +16

      No arguments there. I find. modern Trek unwatchable.

    • @AshtonCoolman
      @AshtonCoolman 10 месяцев назад +1

      You don't like Stranger New Worlds?

    • @mikeallan7740
      @mikeallan7740 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@delocon No it wasn't, it was genuinely good.

    • @markwilliams2620
      @markwilliams2620 2 месяца назад

      ​@delocon
      If it was Membaberries it would be for we Gen Xers. We watched in our teens and twenties. You can't even get the premise of your argument correct. Try to learn as you age.

    • @charlesbeckwith3578
      @charlesbeckwith3578 Месяц назад +3

      Give Strange New Worlds a chance. I’m a TNG/DS9 fan and I love it.

  • @stevenserna910
    @stevenserna910 11 месяцев назад +6

    Abrams had stated that he was not a fan of Star Trek, he was a fan if Star Wars.
    Unfortunately, I dont think he did a very good job with either.
    And I'm not bashing the actors. They truly gave from what they had to work with. Its just a little disconcerting to see "Trek", and "Wars" go off on alternate tangents that seem to skew a definite in-direction. Not all the good-guys are so good, and aren't guaranteed to make it out alive.
    But, I guess that at least it does imitate a "life arc". I liked TNG, DS9, VOY, & ENT. They were in the Berman-verse and he swore to Roddenberry that he would keep Trek safe, but expanding.
    For the most part he did. But the job was more than one man could shoulder.
    Abrams made no promises, he's not beholden to anyone but himself and shareholders. Les Moonvies seems to be fulfilling the role of Sith Empower Palpatine. He killed Berman-verse Trek.
    I'm reminded of Sigourney Weaver's (Ripley) line from Aliens. Referencing the Zenomorph's behavior...
    "...at least they don't turn on each other over points." Where she's referring Burke's treachery.
    Les has, "...done sold his soul for a jelly-roll."
    At least, "Strange New Worlds" is interesting. I've liked Anson Mount's acting since his, "Hell on Wheels" days.

  • @t3h51d3w1nd3r
    @t3h51d3w1nd3r 10 месяцев назад +14

    If you want meta modern star trek then watch Orville. The first season is alright, maybe too much comedy but they tone it down and really find their feet in season 2, much like tng and ds9 did.

    • @tomigun5180
      @tomigun5180 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, it's very good. It's painfully leftist, but even for a far-right person like me, is enjoyable, because it makes me think about things (and unintentionally confirms my conservative worldview, but that's another story).

    • @johndawson6057
      @johndawson6057 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@tomigun5180yes exactly. So glad to find someone else like me

    • @xheralt
      @xheralt Месяц назад

      The only problem is, Orville is on Fox, which I've been boycotting for the last decade because of Rupert Murdoch's use of the platform for propagandizing. So I can't watch it, however much I want to.

    • @SlinkyTWF
      @SlinkyTWF Месяц назад +1

      @@xheralt If progressive shows air on Fox, and are successful, Murdoch will make more of them, as he seems to value money above all else.

    • @thelordakira
      @thelordakira Месяц назад

      @@SlinkyTWF at this point, i think he values any more time as the most valuable item.

  • @ae9999
    @ae9999 Год назад +49

    love the nuance and intellectual honesty of this analysis, I was waiting nervously for the inevitable ‘and here why its all the evil feminists fault’ part of the video and was pleasantly surprised when it didn’t come!

    • @etsequentia6765
      @etsequentia6765 Год назад

      Yeah I know. The "it's all the evil selfish violent toxic cis-heteronormative misogynistic straight white male's fault" narrative makes SO much more sense, amirite?

    • @davidlaurahay
      @davidlaurahay 11 месяцев назад +11

      exsept it would have obviously been more truthful had he done so. But yea, you heard what you wanted to so...

    • @arhicluj2008
      @arhicluj2008 11 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@davidlaurahay omg, how? How could have the point of this wonderful video go sooo far over your head?
      How can you not see how banal and shallow the blame of feminism is? The video explains postmodern though so well, the intersection with capitalism and how this is a cultural shift decades in the making. And all you can go back to is feminism bad hurr durr? Jesus Christ

    • @will-vi9pk
      @will-vi9pk 11 месяцев назад +1

      It's a little beyond post modernism dontcha think?

    • @davidlaurahay
      @davidlaurahay 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@arhicluj2008oh look, another triggered, brave basement nobody with a keyboard. No, not exactly, sht 4 brains. How about you first off, try starting with a properly constructed sentence? Then I might respond, but only after you learn basic English and perhaps check what's flying over your flat head. Until then f-ck o ff trd .

  • @fullmatthew
    @fullmatthew 7 месяцев назад +21

    Kurtzman at Paramount offices, his eyes closed.

    • @joeespin4377
      @joeespin4377 4 месяца назад

      not "eyes closed" but "intelligence non existent" or intellect on "eternal hold"

    • @thelordakira
      @thelordakira Месяц назад

      @@joeespin4377 Kurtzman is a Pakled

  • @MrGadfly772
    @MrGadfly772 10 месяцев назад +2

    New Star Trek is not representative of what Star Trek was about. Old Star Trek was always about society as a whole. How a culture embraced the future. It was about us, as a species, and our future. Now people like JJ Abrams and Alex Kurtzman have made that same vision very small. It's focus now is all about small concerns and caricature like individuals. Individual romances, quests for revenge, challenges to self-worth. These are the petty themes of NuTrek. Older Trek had the un-named character as the audience itself. It talked about where we had been and where we are going as a species. NuTrek could care less, it obsesses over trivial issues and paints everything with a comedically large brush. We see characters cry and question, not about humanity, but about their feelings. Gone is the past, only the moment is present. There is no growth, no challenges, for a species, only the flitting concerns of the present, and the tiny vision of mere individuals and their individual "stories". Most of all the audience is not present, it's been excluded from the formula. Now the audience has been pushed out to the foyer and the selfish obsession of the individual has taken center stage.

  • @Zoie3x8
    @Zoie3x8 12 дней назад +1

    star trek stopped being [star trek] when it stopped being about a future where the core of it was 'we should always strive to be morally and socially (and perhaps also physically) better than we were (even if we sometimes fail, and have to try again)' which generally translated to a better, more hopeful future. This is why alot of real trekkies love TNG and DS9, because those two series's iterate all of the dynamics of that statement.

  • @RPGmodsFan
    @RPGmodsFan 9 месяцев назад +6

    To me, Star Trek is about projecting an optimistic outlook on humanity's future, NOT about the dystopian future projected by JarJar Abrams and Alex KLUTZman.
    As a real life story, during the syndicated airing of old TOS, a police officer, after a day of seeing the worst of humanity, would love to go home and watch ST TOS, in order to keep his sanity.

  • @palpaladin315
    @palpaladin315 11 месяцев назад +6

    In hindsight, I feel like the thing people misses about Abrams Trek (or Kelvinverse); is the hard space aesthetic was totally gone that Roddenberry insisted upon. So it came off as more of a full on fantasy. - and this was repeated with Star Wars, they polished away all the grit.
    While that works for Trek, to a certain degree, it definitely doesn't for Star Wars.

    • @tellyourmomisaidhi5804
      @tellyourmomisaidhi5804 10 месяцев назад +2

      Roddenberry had this idealized version of Humans in the future. He would not have approved of DS9, its story arc (especially the Dominion War) or its setting on a station. He felt every episode could stand on its own and there were never lasting effects from one episode to the next. Ship takes heavy damage this week, poof they are in orbit of planet and all is right with the world the next episode. TOS may have been the origin of all Trek but it sure as hell was not the best trek. I cannot bring myself to sit through Disco but SNW and Lower Decks have mostly been good (I could have done without the fairy tale episode and the singing episode of SNW).

    • @xheralt
      @xheralt Месяц назад

      And vice versa. Ruin Johnson and Jar Jar Abrahms Star Wars-ified Trek.

  • @mp-kq3vc
    @mp-kq3vc Месяц назад +1

    "Decentralized Digital Media." I imagine some think that is this a good thing, and maybe there is some benefit. However what I mostly see is lack of fact-checking, emotional outbursts vs objective analysis, and most of all (and this is huge) a need to be "liked." I remember when needing to feel liked was laughed at as a teenager thing. Now it is considered "doing business."

  • @lesliepark728
    @lesliepark728 Месяц назад +1

    The 2009 star trek reboot was my entry point to the franchise, i liked the films right enough when they came out, never understanding why the older fans hated it so much. But then when lower decks was announced i decided to binge watch the franchise from tos to present and, honestly, i get it. But i still have a soft spot for the JJ Abrahams movies, despite their flaws.

  • @travisjohnson622
    @travisjohnson622 4 месяца назад +1

    The difference betwewn DS9/Voyager trek and Kurtzmann Trek:
    One set of Trek went out of its way to fit in to the mold.
    One set went out of its way to break it and defy the image.
    And the sad thing is, all of this Kurtzmann stuff has been made to update the franchise and bring it into the 21st century fandom. What has ended up happening is that the older fans are being driven away. The newer fans that it was made to attract are merely casual. They will move on when the next marvel vs terminator vs star wars silly trend comes along, leaving Star Trek truly deserted and defunct.

  • @gerardojg
    @gerardojg Месяц назад

    As always, I found your video illuminating. As a fan of Star Trek, I was surprised you left out the other two ST shows of the 90s. I would like to add that social media criticisms have an impact on the writing, IMO. It's a peculiar time in entertainment. I distinctly noticed a change in tone and direction with ST "Discovery" later seasons. Especially "Picard" S3, it gave me the "You'll get what you get and you will like it" vibe. I have a deep affection for Picard and Mr. Stewart, so I did. I do feel like social media is shaping popular entertainment in surprising ways to the detriment of corporate plans for profit.

  • @darkguardian1314
    @darkguardian1314 11 месяцев назад +3

    It's ruined for this series and any in the future because they have gone so
    far into the future that anything threatening Earth or Starfleet will be meaningless.
    EX: When Picard Season 3 was battling the Borg to save Starfleet, we already knew they would succeed.

  • @1simo93521
    @1simo93521 11 месяцев назад +15

    Nu trek has amazing sets and special effects but the incompetent writing is abysmal and is ruining the whole thing.
    I hear the issue is that the young middle class writers have never experienced life so write the same drivel they were taught in university it's why every programme seems the same like it was written by A. I.

    • @sabinegierth-waniczek4872
      @sabinegierth-waniczek4872 10 месяцев назад +1

      IMO you make a good point. Given that Gene Roddenberry TMK was a long serving police officer during a time of turmoil and many reforms of the service, I am convinced that much of his professional and life experience found its way into his creation.
      I watched S1 and one or two episodes of S2 of Discovery, because I wanted to give the concept a chance, but from the ca. third ep / S1 it became a trainwreck my sense for the morbid compelled me to watch.
      I confess that I despise the format intensely, not least because TOS was my childhood lore, and I still love to watch it (as a physician I identify with "It's life, but not as we know it", "He's dead, Jim" and "I'm a doctor, not an [e.g. escalator]...").
      Postmodernism for me is an enigma, I am a simple mind and only can rely to my gut feeling that something innocently entertaining is successively destroyed by persons who do not know and therefore do not respect what they are up against with their IMO Orwellian enthusiasm. But that's me, my opinion, most likely unpopular (the new Kobayashi Maru test, one can't win nowadays...).

    • @nowhereman1046
      @nowhereman1046 9 месяцев назад

      @@sabinegierth-waniczek4872 Gene Roddenberry wasn't just a police officer. Long before that he had joined the Civilian Pilot Training Program and then was a commissioned officer in the U.S. Army Air Corp who flew B-17 bombers in World War II. Immediately post-War, he was an airline pilot for Pan American Airways. Through this time he survived three crashes as well as the horrors of war, and the slog of being a commercial aviation pilot on many routes around the world.
      He wasn't alone, there were many members of the Original Series cast and crew who served in the military. For example, Leonard Nimoy in the U.S. Army, and James Doohan in the 13th Field Regiment of the Canadian 3rd Infantry Division in their 22nd Field Battery and took part in D-Day.
      These people came with a lot of life experience that helped make what they wrote more authentic or helped others to.

  • @TonboIV
    @TonboIV 11 месяцев назад +10

    The people who say that Star Trek has "gone woke" either don't know what "woke" means, or have very faulty memories of older Star Trek. It's always been woke. All that's changed in that regard is that Star Trek has moved on to exploring more contemporary social issues.
    The problem with new Trek isn't "wokeness". The problem is that it's shit. It's being milked to death by soulless corporations trying to maximize profit and minimize risk. It's being killed by the banality of money and the soulless money machine which even the humans who profit from it do not actually control, any more than a water molecule controls a wave. It's an emergent process that only eats.
    The original series barely got made in the first place. Corporate media companies didn't want it. It succeeding despite them, and the franchise continued to succeed despite the entertainment industry only because the fans were that passionate and that many, and because there was a core of people working on it who managed to make it despite the system that was trying to turn it into slop from day one. The death of Star Trek is exactly what post modern thinkers have been telling us about. The creators could only make a good show despite the money men for so long. Eventually the money men won, because money never gets tired, and now we have shit trek. You can fight entropy but you can never win.
    The good Star Trek is now being made by Trek fans, despite the media companies. Fan projects like Star Trek Continues, or the Orville, which is really a spiritual successor to Stark Trek, and doing what it should have been doing for the last 20 years. It's also woke as fuck and clearly understands postmodern thinking.

    • @thelordakira
      @thelordakira Месяц назад

      old trek was pregressive, new trek is not.
      progressive=
      Libertarianism
      Anti censorship
      Will talk with everyone
      understands people have different opinions
      We point and argue to a direction the future
      englobing differences (to a limit)
      teaches
      looks like anyone
      Woke=
      Socialists (that they know it or not)
      Pro censorship
      Only talk with each other
      excommunicate any deviations
      Cant argue, wants everything now.
      authoritarians
      enforce ideology
      has identifiers/costume, special hair style, covid mask
      new trek is shit because of the woke.
      the other issue the woke have is skills, which then gives bad stories.
      I have seen good fun propaganda movies.
      but the propaganda they make is sad and insulting.

  • @KatharineOsborne
    @KatharineOsborne Год назад +42

    On Picard, Jean Luc becoming frail and unmoored is a VERY interesting take, and I think I a natural progression from a philosopher king in command of himself. And it's not like that arc wasn't hinted at earlier. He frequently butted heads with Starfleet command, as well as being literally taken apart and remade by the Borg. His 'command' was always meant to be challenged and deconstructed. It is however unfortunate that the Picard series just totally whiffed it in the execution.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  Год назад +13

      Yes, I agree with you on all of this. I'm largely repeating the complaints I have heard in this essay. Picard was 70% great but the bad 30% was stinky cheese bad.

    • @pauljazzman408
      @pauljazzman408 Год назад +2

      It is reported that Patrick Stewart would only do Picard if there were 'No Enterprise, no uniforms' so that hamstrung it from the start until he relented in season three.

    • @VaraLaFey
      @VaraLaFey 11 месяцев назад +3

      He may have butted heads with Starfleet, but he was almost always right and proven to be so. He may have been possessed by the Borg, but he won and largely if not completely exorcised that demon as the series went on. Not exactly the track record of one doomed to become frail and unmoored, but no matter. Can't have heroes even in art, ya know.

    • @KatharineOsborne
      @KatharineOsborne 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@VaraLaFey being right doesn’t mean as a character he isn’t going to struggle (conflict is the heart of any story). The mistake would have been to put Picard on a pedestal, it would have been more boring (if comforting). It also might have worked better if the POV was more subjective, drawing the audience more into what Picard was struggling with, rather than trying to hit everyone’s POVs (which can work when you have 26 episodes in a season but not so much with 10).

    • @MattHabermehl
      @MattHabermehl 11 месяцев назад +1

      I liked the idea of an older man looking back on his life with a combination of regret and pride. It gave Stewart some juicy acting space, and once or twice he nailed it (then other times, like when they all dressed up in disguise to go to that one bar, it was nauseating). I did love the Riker and Troi storyline, having lost their son, and how it turned Riker sour. But it wasn't until the last season that they were able to reclaim that je ne sais quois that made TNG so good.

  • @braydonnelson4741
    @braydonnelson4741 Год назад +9

    That was a lot of fancy words!

  • @Kitty-CatDaddy
    @Kitty-CatDaddy 11 месяцев назад +15

    Yeah, I'm not a warrior philosopher, all I know is everything after ‘Enterprise’ sucks and I just do not watch it. It is the story tellers’ job to make the story he is telling compelling. It’s not our job to just swallow whatever they try to stuff down our throats.

    • @anonygent
      @anonygent 11 месяцев назад

      *including Enterprise

    • @n.d.m.515
      @n.d.m.515 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@anonygent I like Enterprise and did when it was originally on television. They understood Star Trek, even if they got the lore messed up. If you don't like it that is fine. These NuTreks are just plain lacking in anything resembling what makes Star Trek any good.

    • @hellacoorinna9995
      @hellacoorinna9995 6 месяцев назад

      @@n.d.m.515
      The only thing I like about the Abrams movies is some of the tech. The fact they use the slidey food slot, on a *solid* door in the brig.
      And being a movie, instead of "Rerouting the buffer junction through the nadeon particules" to beam them onto the laser-drill, they just Baumgatner onto it.
      Or cock-bottle onto the 'evil bad guy orbital dock'.
      But the '09 movie is the only one where the Big-E gets her teeth initially kicked in then comes back swinging hard and has her big-damn-gunship moment.
      All the others seem to have a hate-boner and she consistantly gets the crap kicked out of her without getting her 'come back swinging' moment.

  • @drewtheunspoken3988
    @drewtheunspoken3988 5 месяцев назад +1

    My biggest issue with modern Star Trek isn't anything like "woke" ideologies or, even to a degree, realism. It's that Star Trek was a reaction to a pessimistic time when the Cold War was very hot. It was about an optimistic future where we had outgrown war and moved, as a species, to a place where we could finally unite and pursue greater things.
    Modern Trek feels very much like that Universe sliding backwards.
    Maybe I've just misunderstood Star Trek all this time but these darker, violent space adventures just don't feel like Star Trek to me.

  • @modolief
    @modolief Месяц назад

    "The angry nerd-bro corner" ... omg, you nailed those guys! Puts things into a new perspective for me, thank you.

  • @Shibby27ify
    @Shibby27ify 27 дней назад +1

    The cool thing is post modernism is like an adolescent phase that heralds something better than modernism or post modernism, something more integral. We just gotta weather this postmodern nothingness and narcissism for society to truly grow up.

  • @jimmyolsenblues
    @jimmyolsenblues Год назад +5

    I don't think Kurtzman Trek are using writers that watched The Original Series. Just the movies.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  Год назад +2

      That's an interesting idea. I think I agree.

  • @giantclam1822
    @giantclam1822 10 месяцев назад +3

    Old Trek : Great writing, not overdoing special effects ( whatever the reason).
    New Trek : Shit, juvenile writing, overdone special effects.

    • @RubikonRubikon-f9q
      @RubikonRubikon-f9q Месяц назад

      Great writing from time to time. The charm of Trek has always been to me that if its bad, its really bad and if its good, its really good. For every The Best of both worlds, you get Code of Honor

  • @TheAutomotiveReview
    @TheAutomotiveReview 6 месяцев назад +1

    JJ Abrams and Alex Kurtzman both had no idea what Gene Roddenberry’s Star Trek was created for! Abrams and Kurtzman tried to make Star Trek into a Cash Cow! The Roddenberry’s Star Trek was a vehicle to explore and tactic the sociological and physiological questions of our times cloaked in the not to distance future to make it realistic and obtainable. There is a wealth of Star Trek novels and characters from which to weave a tapestry of excellent cinematic stories. These Two Modern Day Executives were unable to materialize the full potential of the Star Trek Universe. Terry Matalas has a far better understanding of the Star Trek Universe and what the True Star Trek Fans want! Roddenberry tackled complex social concepts in a very thought provoking manner. This is what Star Trek is at it’s core a vehicle that both entertainment and thought provoking discussion of current events and issues which have plagued our civilization since the beginning of recorded history. To Erase History is to Doom Us to Constantly Repeat the Errors of our Ways! Strange New Worlds could be the launching point to return Star Trek into a vehicle for Social Discussion and Reflection.

  • @Ailsworth
    @Ailsworth 11 месяцев назад +6

    The first thing I always do when I find myself in agreement with someone, I distance myself from him. The thing is obvious - if one doesn't see "the message," he is not knowing what to look for, or he is pretending not to know. One cannot explain with great clarity what is going on and then deny that he knows what is going on.

  • @anthrobug
    @anthrobug 10 месяцев назад +9

    You don't save it. Paramount owns it. You create or do whatever you can to help create a new story; a new universe released as public domain that's so well fleshed out with characters, backstories, and sprinkled with technology magic, so people can start creating stories right from the start. It just takes time, hard work, and love for the subject. Or money. Or both ideally.

    • @michaelpettersson4919
      @michaelpettersson4919 6 месяцев назад

      And they someone will hit you with cease and desist order anyway claiming that your setting is too similar to another. Even bogus claims are costly to deal with.

    • @anthrobug
      @anthrobug 6 месяцев назад

      @@michaelpettersson4919 Wow, why do anything then?

    • @michaelpettersson4919
      @michaelpettersson4919 6 месяцев назад

      @@anthrobug That is the idea. Push out the competition.

  • @BobMcBobJr
    @BobMcBobJr 2 месяца назад +1

    Late to the party but I just wanted to say, "wokeness," in it's usual usage by those such as the drinker and nerdrotic, is the direct result of postmodernism so people use it as shorthand, both because it rolls off the tongue better, and because it doesn't carry the philosophical baggage that makes it difficult for people with a cursory understanding of philosophy and/or politics to understand. In other words, wokeness is much easier to see and thus point to than it's underlying philosophical support, postmodernism.

    • @RubikonRubikon-f9q
      @RubikonRubikon-f9q Месяц назад

      Lets not give them too much credit. They use "wokeness" because they hate black people and women

  • @Izelikestea
    @Izelikestea 22 дня назад

    i am sure other people have commented this. but the orville is the perfect meta modern star trek.
    st prodigy is also criminally underrated.

  • @Drforbin941
    @Drforbin941 9 месяцев назад +2

    I am a philosophy major and I do not understand your point at all.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  9 месяцев назад +1

      I guess wasting all that money didn't help.

  • @eduardopimenta280
    @eduardopimenta280 Год назад +19

    I really liked J.J's Star Trek, at least the first movie, but I really disliked Discovery. It's so focused on the protagonist that we barely see the rest of the crew. I didn't even knew their names by the end of the first season.

    • @ricksandstorm
      @ricksandstorm 11 месяцев назад +1

      I felt the same watching TNG. The first two seasons mainly seemed to focus on just Picard, Data and Wesley.

    • @Atheos-1
      @Atheos-1 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@ricksandstorm So, just using basic math, the worst two seasons of TNG were 3 times better than Disco? I agree wholeheartedly.

    • @MusikCassette
      @MusikCassette 11 месяцев назад +4

      "I really liked J.J's Star Trek" Why that? that movie was garbage. I mean Disco is bad, but it does not reach the pure shittiness of JJ Abrams Movie.

    • @eduardopimenta280
      @eduardopimenta280 11 месяцев назад

      @@MusikCassette I mean, for once, the theme song is awesome, made by the incredible Michael Giacchino. The actors are good, and the action sequences are pretty spot-on, specially that sword fight with Sulu and the grittiness of space battles. I also personally like that it told a story about their beginnings (I don't personally care for the sequels, for example). It's just a good action movie. He made ST into a good action movie. I know that for some it might be a detriment to the issue here, but ST historically is known to sometimes suffer from lack of rhythm and good pacing.

    • @eduardopimenta280
      @eduardopimenta280 11 месяцев назад +2

      @nigratruo ST is great, but people tend to overstate its cleverness. I prefer the original series, for example, because it was a bit silly. The fight scenes, Kirk's love affairs, the Spock jokes, the Bones jokes. That was in the original vision of the series, much like the silliness in the original Star Wars movies. Even Next Generation with their filler episodes, Q's shenanigans and shakespearen adaptations.
      Of course, there were episodes with deep philosophical themes that were great, but I most remember that from late sequels like DS9 and Voyager. The series that Roddenberry was involved in was the silliest of them all.

  • @MattHabermehl
    @MattHabermehl 11 месяцев назад +3

    I respectfully disagree (great vid btw) about any irony demonstrated by Peterson, for example. I don't think, other than being born after the modern age, that he is particularly postmodern. He has indeed said that we look at life through stories, and he's not blind to the importance of narrative and how narrative can shape culture and psychology. But just giving narrative its due is not sufficient for being postmodern. Rather, the postmodern idea is that there is nothing other than narrative; that it's narrative all the way down, so to speak. Peterson vehemently disagrees with this, as should anyone with trained philosophical scruples. As a metaphysical view it's self-contradictory. This sounds wrong, I'm sure, because the first postmodernists were trained philosophers. But they were particularly captured by the linguistic turn in philosophy, which was (truly ironically) initiated by Frege as he was trying to figure out a logic for scientific discourse.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  11 месяцев назад +2

      What Jordan says and what Jordan is are not the same

    • @MattHabermehl
      @MattHabermehl 11 месяцев назад

      @@DamienWalter I wasn't expecting a direct reply, thank you so much for the honour. For what it's worth, I agree with your displeasure about the culture warrior persona. I think it's consistent with his philosophy (with an exception noted below), but the way he approaches it can be ugly. I do think he has heard that feedback, though, and seems (from the admittedly small data set I have) to be cleaning up his act a bit. I think he realizes that not transcending the culture war is a bad look for him and not necessary, given his core mission and his other talents. One thing that is impressive about his sober and considered philosophy is that we need left and right like we need both hemispheres of our brains. But in his culture warrior persona he seems to forget that.
      If I still have your attention I'd like to thank you for the actual content of your video, which is well handled and, as an ooold star trek fan, agreeable.

  • @penelopegreene
    @penelopegreene 9 месяцев назад

    I just hate messy buildings. I WOULD appreciate an ending to a novel that I don't need a slide rule to figure out.

  • @johnnyr25
    @johnnyr25 Год назад +5

    I think you've nailed it Damien.
    I, for a long time, struggled to understand Paramount's need to keep returning to the Kirk, Spock, McCoy period of Star Trek both thematically (Voyager, debate me NerdBros) and literally (everything ST: Enterprise forward). Then it struck me. Paramount has some seriously lazy writers.

  • @RobertWScott523
    @RobertWScott523 Месяц назад

    fascinating discussion & explains why I loathe all reboots of old franchises, thank you! personally tho, I would argue that the postmodernist angle crept in w/Wrath of Khan (I talked about this in one of my old vlogs called 'the darkest trek of all') - where the film does some sleight of hand (creating a wartime atmosphere) to divert the audience from criticizing Kirk for getting students killed rather than attending to their safety, ie- ego service over responsibility (Roddenberry didn't like this)... the result is a film that quietly threw the Kennedy era optimism of TOS under the bus to embrace more ambiguous examinations of character & uncertainty about the future. the rest of the OS cast movies then rebound between the old school modernity (best exemplified in the Voyage Home) and the postmodern (Search for Spock). TNG then swings back hard to modernist mythmaking, then DS9 (and to a lesser degree Voyager) swings back to increasingly postmodern takes (best exemplified in the DS9 ep. 'In the Pale Moonlight'). Anyway- I think the seeds of postmodernism were actually germinating there for some time, waiting for Abrams to water them & Kurtzman to harvest them.

  • @robslack5468
    @robslack5468 10 месяцев назад +24

    The answer is the animated Lowe Decks. It is very meta, embracing all eras of Trek. Cherishing and mocking in a way that celebrates the things that fans love about Trek. It had a rocky, abrasive start, but they quickly course-corrected delightfully.

    • @kennethferland5579
      @kennethferland5579 10 месяцев назад +7

      Lower Decks though can never be anything but parasitic to the larger Trek story and its exactly the kind of post modern superficiality which people have been railing against, it's just in a format that everyone knows is unserious humor rather then drama, if it were the future of Trek then the franchise would be better put out of it's misery.

    • @commanderkruge
      @commanderkruge 10 месяцев назад +5

      Lower decks is legit fun. Star Trek, as a franchise, is big enough to handle some comedy too. And yes, I guess this whole meta angle they often use is very "postmodern" if I understood the definition of that. but that's not automatically bad to me, apparently.
      Self referential tongue in cheek humour is totally my thing. :) And I love that they did the Strange New Worlds crossover.
      .... now THERE is a Star Trek show that makes me happy. I was born in 71 and watched the original show on German TV as a kid. Strange New Worlds tickles all the right nostalgia nerves in me while at the same time being modern and fresh as well. :)

    • @fuzzywzhe
      @fuzzywzhe 10 месяцев назад +1

      It's just a ripoff of Starship Regulars.

    • @davfree9732
      @davfree9732 10 месяцев назад +3

      If lower decks had come out during DS9 or VOY I might have been able to accept it as a meta self referential mickey take of itself... But since it came out alongside STD a rocky, abrasive start is being generous... Secret Hideout ripped the old means of Trek production apart and replaced it with 2009's action style coupled with some sickeningly bigoted accusations thrown at the Trekkies from Secret Hideout via paid for puff pieces and NuTrek Stans...
      The Orville hit closer to home of what Star Trek is supposed to be, one highlight being the 'planet of social media voting' that showcased the problems with social justice via what people think when exposed to information of a certain slant then asked 'thumbs up or thumbs down' like it's ancient Rome.
      I'm all for seeing improvements, but if that means the people who attacked fans and made bad content fail upwards to do the same thing all over again, I'll gladly kill off Trek behind the barn myself and wait for someone who gets it to come by and resurrect it. I don't want to hear Trek preaching unless they are prepared to interrogate and explore and expose the good and bad of that argument... And that's not something NuTrek and it's writers feel comfortable doing which means they are not mature/ready enough to write a Trek series.
      As for LD... It only got better when the producers of NuTrek backed off to focus on other shows leaving the showrunner to make what he wanted... Similar to how Picard Season 3 was a huge improvement when Matalas was given the keys to the studio while everyone else was to busy making other shows and could not contribute or pass memo's and notes. Secret Hideout is just a holding kitchen for producers to earn a paycheck while proving the old saying... To many cooks spoil the broth.

  • @rogershore3128
    @rogershore3128 11 месяцев назад +3

    I simply don't recognise the 2009 film and beyond as Star Trek. It comes across as a parody of the show I loved......

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Месяц назад

      And they turned Scotty into a comic character. It's a shame.

  • @karenness5588
    @karenness5588 Месяц назад

    I felt Star Trek changing with Pickard's Enterprise. It was already relativist. I remember fuming about a young officer being chastised by his superiors for rebelling at the idea of a slave girl being used to bear the child of an elite alien that was brought on board the Enterprise.
    I believe there are certain universal principles, having nothing to do with the superficial detected by our senses and the idea of any being having any rights over another is something completely antithetical to those principles. Some beings definitely have more power than others, but it does not, and will never, confer a legitimate right that cannot be criticized and contested, especially by the weak.

  • @lancebaylis3169
    @lancebaylis3169 6 месяцев назад

    Everything in today's media landscape feels like a post-modern simulacrum of what we've enjoyed in the past. *Objectively*, Strange New Worlds is better than a lot of its Star Trek contemporaries, but the reality is that it's still essentially doing things we've already seen done better in previous Star Trek, while at the same time constantly "winking" at the audience and staying just on the line of being self-parody. Although I feel like the musical episode leaped over that line.

  • @dustinneely
    @dustinneely 10 месяцев назад +1

    As far as I'm concerned Star Trek ended in 2005. Canon went out the window.

  • @steveb9713
    @steveb9713 10 месяцев назад

    Yes I though Picard Season 3 coincided with our current meta-modern era. It took the postmodern mistakes of season 1 and 2 and took what worked, discarded what didn’t, and brought back the modern feel and crew from the original show to create a satisfying ending, and hopefully does lead to a new show

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786 Год назад +10

    Dr. Leonard McCoy: "Star Trek' is dead, folks. Move along, nothing to see here."

    • @etsequentia6765
      @etsequentia6765 Год назад

      Apparently, we have license to continue to defile, violate, disembowel and defecate on the rotting corpse. In the name of thinly vailed various political agendas, of course. And also attack, abuse and shame any fans who dare point out and object to our disrespect for the franchise and what it meant to the fans.

  • @richardjames6947
    @richardjames6947 10 месяцев назад +4

    Discovery is the absolute worst.

  • @BUYBOTH
    @BUYBOTH 2 месяца назад +4

    I see it a little simpler. The original Star Trek and the spin offs through Enterprise were focused on morality and having guiding principles in how we conduct ourselves. The Trek that followed is warping into a DEI worm hole.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  2 месяца назад +2

      Seeing things simpler generally means seeing them wrong. Stop letting people fill your head with this DEI nonsense.

    • @BUYBOTH
      @BUYBOTH 2 месяца назад +3

      @@DamienWalter For that to happen you'll need to contact the studios who include such content and expect us to watch it.

  • @Cherokie89
    @Cherokie89 5 месяцев назад

    The opening season to discovery blew my tits off. It was awesome. The war, the introduction of the mysterious ship that can jump anywhere, the disgraced prisoner protagonist. I loved it

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  5 месяцев назад +1

      Somebody loves everything.

  • @michaelpettersson4919
    @michaelpettersson4919 6 месяцев назад

    Every new version of Star Trek has attracted criticism BUT usually the fandom get over that. Discovery however broke this cycle. Now it is only bad going worse.

  • @ArifGhostwriter
    @ArifGhostwriter Месяц назад

    Star Trek - Strange New Worlds - was an excellent execution of the franchise. It is/was a relief to see what they did - in stark contrast to how say Disney is torpedoing its own key IP.

  • @LongDefiant
    @LongDefiant 5 месяцев назад +2

    You can't understand Roddenberry without understanding Marxism

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  5 месяцев назад +2

      You really can chap. The attempt of Marxists to try and claim any positive vision of the future is quite sad.

    • @LongDefiant
      @LongDefiant 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@DamienWalter just so I understand, how much effort have you put into actually understanding Marxism? Has it been an intentional focus of study or are you reacting from things you've been told?
      And just to be clear, I'm not strictly a Marxist, but Roddenberry was definitely influenced by Communism.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  5 месяцев назад

      @@LongDefiant Look around the channel.

  • @vilod
    @vilod Месяц назад

    Abraham's never understood Star Trek or science fiction, for that matter.

  • @Miata822
    @Miata822 9 месяцев назад

    Fascinating. I need to think about this, do more homework, then come back for a 3rd viewing.

  • @nightlightabcd
    @nightlightabcd 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank god, let it die already! Can't the writers come up with something else! For the good of humanity, let Star Trek die with dignity!

  • @cpuuk
    @cpuuk 11 месяцев назад +2

    I think I still suffer from blind spots on my retina from that film O_o

  • @michaelpettersson4919
    @michaelpettersson4919 6 месяцев назад

    Maybe Strange New World is an answer anyway. If you are lost in the woods you should if possible backtrack to somewhere you knew where you where. FROM there you can go forth. First backtrack to regsin your footing THEN evolve.

  • @TheTransporter007
    @TheTransporter007 11 месяцев назад +2

    JJ needs to hop out the gene pool.

  • @pauljazzman408
    @pauljazzman408 Год назад +3

    What a great analysis of what's been going on with Star Trek.
    I never really understood post modernism and it seemed to talk about competing 'narratives' as if there was no objective reality. I suppose I like authenticity and depth, and consistency of meaning. I really think that is what has happened to Star Trek. JJ Abrams must be the worst/best exponent of this where he says he never understood Star Trek TOS and just wanted to turn it into Star Wars which is all about spectacle and action and just a bit of meaning to thread all the action together.
    Star Trek Discovery was darker and maybe didn't have the optimism we expect from Star Trek, and the characters had more doubts about what to do and have to deal with a Mirror Universe where Star fleet is replaced by the Terran Empire. In season two the Federation's intelligence agency, section 31, seemed to be acting on its own agenda and was taken over by a destructive AI. So the enemy isn't a new alien but our own institutions gone bad. That was all quite interesting I think. So that seemed to work. Then in season three we are in a future where much of the federation has collapsed. We get into a character wanting to be a 'they'. Which maybe just reflects what is going on in our post modern society, but would be hated by some of the critics or the 'nerd bro' variety. Very interesting what you say about 'woke=postmodern' and the critics are themselves post modern.
    Maybe that is why I quite liked Strange new Worlds because it is a nostalgic trip into the past, but ultimately a bit lacking. I think the characters and stories are better written. I'd be interested to see what a Meta modern Star Trek would be like.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  Год назад +1

      I feel the same about SNW. I suspect great Trek won't return until the next phase...

    • @citizen_wayne
      @citizen_wayne Год назад

      That's because "post modernism" is a fucking artstyle and not a social movement. It was a label assigned to anything remotely progressive by Jordan Peterson. That guy is actually fucking insane and has been for 15 years. His claim to fame, fighting a "forced speech" bill in Canada, wasn't even forced speech at all. It was a bill to protect trans people from deliberate harassment by having them constantly deadnamed or misgendered. At best, the law could be interpreted as "You cannot speak to trans people using their old pronouns once informed. So, use their name, their pronouns, neutral language, or don't speak to them at all. The latter being why it is not compelled speech. So, the guy has been an idiot propped up by other hateful illiterate idiots since anyone learned his name. He has since bragged about his ability to "monetize social outrage" on camera...and people still listen to him...and use fucking made-up terms like "post-modernist". Don't get sucked in, please.

    • @citizen_wayne
      @citizen_wayne Год назад

      @@DamienWalter Then you're fucking dumb or hateful, man, because SNW is amazing. Seriously, if you don't like it, you just need to come to terms with the fact that you don't like Trek. It *is* that simple. There is no rational explanation you can have that distinguishes SNW from old Trek. Unless you hate special effects or social progress. You're life is going to be very difficult with or without Trek in that case. I've seen every Trek episode and film ever made at least twice. SNW is as true to Trek as anything and far truer than Discovery or Prodigy. SNW is great Trek.

    • @hellacoorinna9995
      @hellacoorinna9995 11 месяцев назад +1

      "Picard" (And STD) was just "Hey, The Expanse is Popular, lets do that Oooohh oooh, I also played Mass Effect back when I was in college lol"
      STD'S blue-metallic uniforms (Systems Alliance), Enslaved Synths and eldruritch-horror old machines.
      Grittyiness and swearing (Admiral Hubris is a poor-mans Asavarala).
      Raffi the saddo who gets drunk and lives poorly. La Siena 's interior borrows from the Rocinante.
      The Skipper of both ships do bear a passsing resemblence.

    • @hellacoorinna9995
      @hellacoorinna9995 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@DamienWalter
      Pity SNW doesn't think the "Kzinti concept" (tool using predators that tap into our mokey-brain fears of being prey) was scary enough, and just made the Gorn "Xenomorphs but lizards"

  • @mahatmarandy5977
    @mahatmarandy5977 11 месяцев назад +1

    “It represented the power of the individual using technology going out into the unknown and shaping it for our own best purpose.”
    Where are you getting that from? Trek has *never* been about the individual. “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the one,” and all that. And it’s set in a military, the type of organization that is not noted for its tolerance of individuality. And despite the occasional talk of multiculturalism and valuing everyone, probably about a quarter of the planet-of-the-week episodes involve a bunch of earthlings showing up on this or that planet and explaining how the locals have been doing it wrong since time immemorial, what with their local beliefs in the supernatural or use of money or random social taboos, or what have you that don’t match with the values of the makers of the shows, and are therefore bad.
    Star Trek has *never* been about individuality.

  • @edp2260
    @edp2260 9 месяцев назад +3

    J.J. Abrams couldn't even hold a camera steady.

  • @1simo93521
    @1simo93521 11 месяцев назад +5

    It could be that the show has been made with the idea that modern audiences are too stupid to understand complex ideas so we just get crying fits, swearing and screaming instead.

  • @dennisdenise1
    @dennisdenise1 10 месяцев назад

    I absolutely despise reboots. Nor do I like prequels. It changes the characters, it changes the history to the writer’s vision. This is not the vision the original writer. I always prefer pushing the story forward with new characters on new journeys. NO ONE can rewrite TOS, nor should they try. It’s the foundation of all Trek. Just build on it. This new Trek, it’s just so sad. Trek needs new writers that want humanity to improve upon itself. Not this constant infighting with inept stories/writing. I watched Trek as a young boy, little did I realize how it taught me to grow into a better man, a better human. I hope that one day the journey will continue.

  • @4891MR
    @4891MR 2 месяца назад

    Well, I love meta-modernism, but if it means incorporating postmodern and modern values together, then it also needs at least to include the pre-modern.

  • @JanusCycle
    @JanusCycle Год назад +4

    This video sounds like a call to action. It makes me want to drag the meaning I gained from watching Star Trek in the 90s, through these postmodern waves that are crashing down around us. And help bring out some new collective wisdom. Great stuff, thank you.
    This is perhaps why the angry nerd bros are rejecting postmodern Star Trek so vehemently. Including the copies of classic Star Trek that are being made in an attempt to appease. They are so frustrated for something new and better that you are articulating as meta-modern story telling. It's about time we all stood up to bring out our own understanding of the old modern Star Trek stories and see what can be made from this jumble.

  • @richierich8555
    @richierich8555 7 месяцев назад

    I think what most people are unhappy about is that the new writers and producers changed the concept of a franchise where humanity has finally solved all their problems and moved on to the larger philosophical issues, to a franchise where humanity just takes its problems to the stars with them. If Trump can be elected president, then why should we bother giving you a positive Star Trek?

  • @spencerbookman2523
    @spencerbookman2523 9 месяцев назад

    I think any stories that incorporate modernist ideas will be rejected by those in the know as being too patriarchal, misogynist, racist, colonialist, etc, etc. This seems to be the effect of "going woke" on popular culture.

  • @thurin84
    @thurin84 6 месяцев назад

    i really wish all the post modernists would bow to the inevitable and leave all the rest of us to get on with things.

  • @apscreditcards
    @apscreditcards 6 месяцев назад +1

    You contrast the concepts of “Modern” and “Post-Modern”, and while you associate the word “WOKE” with “post-modern” (while simultaneously disparaging the word “WOKE”) you fail to use the associations I find most relevant: “MODERN Star Trek”= HOPEFUL vision of the future, while “POST- MODERN Star Trek”= DESPAIR and a dark vision of the future! What consumer of Star Trek would choose despair over hope?

  • @mikeward9870
    @mikeward9870 Год назад

    Nice insight about decentralized gems being subsumed into corporate media franchizes!

  • @scottmcneely1927
    @scottmcneely1927 Месяц назад

    Strange New Worlds at least tries to be reverent to original series continuity. It's not the disaster that Discovery and Picard were. Although, their take on younger Spock is a bit embarrassing.

  • @commanderkruge
    @commanderkruge 11 месяцев назад +6

    Oooooh, this video was quite the nice surprise. :) Too often "NuTrek" gets criticized as "woke warfare", so the alt right has something to get angry about. They are the reason I initially skipped this here several times when it was suggested to me, but now it was playing in my queue and how delightful to see someone pointing out the actual problems that DO exist in NuTrek. So far i love to hate Disco, but none of my reasons has to do with gender, skin colour or sexual orientation of any of the characters. Heck, Stammetz (spelling?) is by far my (CIS) favourite character, I like the guy and his slowly growing family unit. More women in central roles? Women who, the horror, aren't all chosen as eye candy? Dang, yes - TV and movies need more of that. "Too few white people" in Disco? Hummm... It IS supposed to be a ship with humans from a United Earth - and to me it seems like the mix of skin tones of the humans in the show is MUCH more representative of that fact. up to Discovery the "Mix" in skin tones was quite obviously an "American" one. Disco is actually way closer to represent a global mix of people. That's one of the things Trek always was about - Mankind overcoming all of it's larger problems and learning to finally get along and work together.
    None of that is a problem to me. What IS the problem in abandoning all the optimism, turning a utopian future into an almost dystopian one. Having onscreen gore and splatter effects (beheadings, disembowelment) and monster torture rape scenes (during the "humanification" of the albino Klingon, forgot his name). Up to that point Trek was always something that you could show kids and that had many "moral play" episodes that were all about getting the viewer to think about moral values. The main characters in Star Trek almost always were role models. Now imagine showing Disco to kids... :D
    And the whole "post-modernist" angle was completely new for me, but I think I understand what is meant by it.

    • @boldlypod
      @boldlypod 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes this. All of this here.

    • @commanderkruge
      @commanderkruge 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@boldlypod Thanks. Me, I'm perfectly happy with Strange New Worlds, by the way. It feels a LOT like the original series I watched as a kid on German TV in the 70s, but with the up-to-date look (which - fair is fair - rocks in ALL of NuTrek). It's episodes show that you even can combine the "planet of the week" format in which each episode can stand on it's own with an overarching plot and have your cake and eat it too! :D
      Not that an overarching plot is automatically bad - that's of course nonsense. But it needs a little more preparation - for example you should know where you want the whole thing to end up BEFORE you start shooting. Perfect example for this being done right is Babylon 5 - Strazcinsky (spelling?), the series creator, had all the major plot points and developments for a five year series planned ahead, with a little jiggling room to allow for unforeseen developments (like Michael O'Hare dropping out for health reasons after season one). The series starts as episodic in season one, but even so one quickly notices that it doesn't reset after each episode, but rather stuff goes on and plot points come back and before you know it you're in "you CAN'T miss an episode, because so much stuff goes down"-Overarching arc territory. Good stuff. :)

  • @jcoriha
    @jcoriha 13 дней назад

    So, in other words, we need Star Trek to be more like Deep Space Nine.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  13 дней назад

      Midway DS9 season 5 was the last time Star Trek was Star Trek. That was the 90s.

  • @Fenris77
    @Fenris77 9 месяцев назад

    JJ loves to overdo it. Like 800 crew and passengers would be impossible in the era where the movie is happening in. The Constitution class Enterprise had at most 400 crew members and not a dozen phase cannons but at most 4 or 5.
    And the less we speak of the Star Trek Discovery where apparently Vulcans did not know about human boy/girl names etc...

  • @CP-ti3rf
    @CP-ti3rf Месяц назад

    Please make a video on metamodern values in storytelling.

  • @robertpearson5410
    @robertpearson5410 11 дней назад

    Peterson is lost in space, one of his own making. New Trek is soap opera in the TV series, action thriller in the movies.

  • @AcousticallyYours
    @AcousticallyYours 9 месяцев назад

    Having grown up watching the first broadcast of Star Trek TOS, along with many of the other spin-off series. One observation I have is that with the newer series, Star Trek has lost its way, and become a “short attention span” soft-science fiction series. They have lost that feeling of “outer space” with all the noise in the vacuum of space. There is also way too much gratuitous violence, and less character development. Series like Discovery, Star Trek, Strange New Worlds, etc…, have become more tedious, too fast moving, and outer space has become too “noisy” and this ignorance of basic science REALLY detracts from the production.

  • @Destructor111
    @Destructor111 11 месяцев назад

    I knew it was the second 2009 trailer as soon as you showed the comment. It is amazing, in spite of what it did to Star Trek.

    • @DamienWalter
      @DamienWalter  11 месяцев назад +1

      Delete the movie, keep the trailer.

  • @RurouniKalainGaming
    @RurouniKalainGaming 9 месяцев назад +1

    Just think about a fan Creations that have been stifled by the powers that be they could have done things better. Not always of course but there are definitely cases where they could have.

  • @Prospector32
    @Prospector32 10 месяцев назад

    OK, I can see the point of most of this, but one comment stuck in my craw. I don't think that the Kurtsman Trek is and more "colonialistic" than the previous versions. There were plenty of instances on all phases where Star Fleet and the Federation was exerting their power over Class M planets, using them for themselves regardless of what it may do to the planet or the colonists. And it obviously wasn't reserved to "the good guys", this was a behaviour shown by the Klingons, Romulans and Dominion, just to name a few.

  • @ChrisForman
    @ChrisForman 4 месяца назад

    Lower Decks is your meta modern Star Trek!

  • @kennethferland5579
    @kennethferland5579 10 месяцев назад +2

    Orville did that already, it has people which are far more human and flawed even shallow to a level which would put Seinfeld to shame, but tells a story which is inspiring, forward looking and pertinent to our times.

  • @bluedotdinosaur
    @bluedotdinosaur 5 дней назад

    Kind of predictable that at least a third of the comments can’t engage with the piece and just vent anger about certain undesirables gettin’ uppity in space.

  • @stopgeorge
    @stopgeorge 9 месяцев назад

    Interesting thoughts on post-modernism as it relates to Star Trek. Although, if I were to be critical, I would say that you didn't provide many examples to back this point up. That said, I get it. However, I think the main issue with Nu Trek is the writing. It just isn't very good. But maybe that's a symptom of this post-modern shift? Rarely do we get good science fiction thought experiments anymore. Instead, as we've seen with the latest gawd-awful season of Strange New Worlds, it's all about feelings and personal conflict. Small internalized ideas. It might as well be a show about a high school in space as the characters are one-dimensional, unprofessional and juvenile. In fact, we get one episode where we literally get a Rick & Morty cartoon becoming part of the show! In another, we get a freakin' episode of Glee. It's a mockery of what the show used to be. So, I guess in that sense, it is post-modernist. It's a shame, though. There are so many interesting thought-provoking events, innovations and moral dilemmas happening in today's world that could be explored in this show. The writers have such a rich source of content to pull from in 2024. Unfortunately, they only know how to write soap operas.

  • @Name-ps9fx
    @Name-ps9fx 10 месяцев назад +1

    Well....maybe because today's youth ARE primarily millenials, just like back in the early 60s the youth were primarily boomers...? The morals and values we had growing up fit very well with TOS Star Trek (keep in mind a half-human/half-Vulcan was very controversial then, just as the diverse bridge crew were! A Japanese man, a Russian, a black woman, and who knows how many guest stars), yet it also was a space-bound "Wagon Train to the Stars" and other "wild west" tropes, all in the hope it'd get enough of an audience to bring it to life!
    Today, boomers are rapidly aging and in 10-20 years we won't be a major influence in society...but the millenials will be! For better or worse, that's where the society is going...and if Star Trek (the franchise) wants to survive, it has to bring in the younger generations.

    • @scottm9605
      @scottm9605 Месяц назад

      I'm 40 and I'm a millennial. We are not "the youth" any more.

  • @dramaticwords
    @dramaticwords 9 месяцев назад +1

    You lost me when you said SNW was a return to traditional ST. It's nothing of the kind. Nor do I think ST will be saved by combining classic ST values with the crappy writing and inverted values of nuTRek. Frankly, I think ST will only be saved by doubling down on it's original values, as today's world desperately needs that optimistic, humanistic, vision of the future.

  • @IanM-id8or
    @IanM-id8or 11 месяцев назад +4

    Star Trek Picard season 3 is actually good.
    Yes, I was surprised too, given the disaster that was the first 2 seasons

    • @KittyBoom360
      @KittyBoom360 11 месяцев назад

      I agree. Picard season 3 was good stuff. It's like the producer's listened and course corrected and then gave us a wonderful love letter.
      Also, Strange New Worlds has been great. It feels like the perfect mix of old and new.
      So I feel like Star Trek is already back on the right path right now and don't understand why this video.

    • @n.d.m.515
      @n.d.m.515 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@KittyBoom360 I thought that I might like the Strange New Worlds, but then realized it was terrible writing with bad logic. Nope, still childish surface level angst.

    • @wuwei1846
      @wuwei1846 10 месяцев назад

      I don't see how you could possibly come to that conclusion. You're not the only one so I actually watched 3 episodes of it before I turned away in disgust.
      One dimensional characters. Doing incomprehensible things for incomprehensible reasons. Antagonists that are evil because they are evil.
      Protagonists that are good because they are good. No one respects anything or anyone. It's dull. It's garbage. It's meaningless.

    • @KittyBoom360
      @KittyBoom360 10 месяцев назад

      @@wuwei1846 It's called paying homage to the source material.

    • @wuwei1846
      @wuwei1846 10 месяцев назад

      @@KittyBoom360 You really think that Dr Crusher would casually vaporize an unconscious man?
      Or Picard would casually undermine another captains authority?
      Or a crew would simply listen to two derelict guests rather than their captain?
      Or Warf walking around with a bat'leth and casually chopping heads off?
      Or illogical plots where they can not run because then they would be shot but moments later they just flee crawling at impulse speed to a nearby nebula?
      Ships designed to look scary rather than functional?
      The protagonists are all flamboyant pirates. All the same one dimensional character.
      Starfleet having no structure other than revolving around Picard as a personal privilege to bend in whatever direction he likes?
      No consistency. no morals. No principles. No logic. No characters. It has nothing to do with startrek other than the actors and the stage.

  • @rivenmotors7981
    @rivenmotors7981 11 месяцев назад +5

    A great thought provoking start to the discussion. My own reactions to SNW are that the captain has been reduced to being the cook, the women are in charge, there isn't any chain-of-command or discipline in starfleet, and vulcans are REALLY emotional. Shitty writing and shitty directing from children who fail at understanding anything but social media.

  • @SMunro
    @SMunro 9 месяцев назад

    Its a focus on the trauma of people caused through current actions.

  • @SMunro
    @SMunro 9 месяцев назад

    And after postmodernism 8t is what? Post humanity? Post fictionalism? Post anarchy?