What's My Problem With Star Trek: Voyager?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • ▶Watch more Trek, Actually videos at: • Trek, Actually
    ▶Listen to our Trek-themed comedy podcast, The Ensign's Log:
    RSS: / sounds.rss
    Soundcloud: / the-ensigns-log-podcast
    Website: www.lemmelistenpodcasts.com/th...
    ▶Patreon: / steveshives
    ▶PayPal: www.paypal.me/SteveShives
    ▶Subscribe: / steveshives
    ▶Twitter: / steve_shives
    ▶Facebook: / thatguysteveshives
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 3,3K

  • @daric_
    @daric_ Před 9 měsíci +135

    The conflict between the Maquis and Starfleet crews being forced to work together after being thrown into the Delta Quadrant lasted like two episodes and then it is totally resolved. Then they're one big happy Starfleet family after that. That was always remarkably baffling to me.

    • @dracopticon7788
      @dracopticon7788 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Of course it is. But think like this: if they would play out ALL the minute conflicts between those two factions the series would be nine more seasons or something. So, sizing it down is what they do.

    • @JustGimmeAFrakinName
      @JustGimmeAFrakinName Před 7 měsíci +4

      An understandable question, but the reality is that both Maquis and Starfleet are military hierarchies. For anyone from a lower rank, the difference is Delta Quadrant, not Captain, in everyday life.

    • @x64hitcombo
      @x64hitcombo Před 7 měsíci +1

      I did something similar in a space TTRPG for my players where they were stranded with a pirate crew on their ship and almost immediately my players decided to expel the pirates. Maybe it's just not as interesting of a premise as anyone thought

    • @kadenarden1952
      @kadenarden1952 Před 6 měsíci +2

      This is a common thing in Star Trek. Very rarely does any action have long-lasting consequences.

    • @joycewasser2883
      @joycewasser2883 Před 5 měsíci

      @@emjai2122 not nearly enough

  • @darkmagic616
    @darkmagic616 Před 5 lety +635

    Harry dies several times saving the ship and still remains Ensign, that's bs and I will always be salty about it

    • @nickturnbull5454
      @nickturnbull5454 Před 5 lety +21

      He deserved it for being such a bland character.

    • @nutsandgum
      @nutsandgum Před 5 lety +16

      He is a souless quantum clone remember. You cant promote one of them!

    • @tarnvedra9952
      @tarnvedra9952 Před 5 lety +12

      Go throw some feces at Rick Berman´s house.

    • @patrickerwin7386
      @patrickerwin7386 Před 5 lety +26

      You understand that promotions in the military only happen because spots open up when people leave. No person ever died to allow for him to be promoted into a higher role. He was already a lead bridge officer. Not much room to go up.

    • @ryanyarbrough1343
      @ryanyarbrough1343 Před 5 lety +48

      Sorry, but if Paris can go demoted from lieutenant junior grade to ensign and then promoted back to lieutenant junior grade at the end of the next season, then you have shi**y writers. I think in Garrett Wang's case (Harry Kim) is that he said something bad about Rick Berman so I think that's the reason why Poor Harry remains an ensign for the entire run of the series. It's also why Garrett, who wanted to direct episodes of the show, was denied the director's chair. I think he was the only cast member in any Star Trek show denied in this case to direct.

  • @MichaelLesterClockwork
    @MichaelLesterClockwork Před 4 lety +81

    That is what I always loved about Babylon 5, the seasons each had their own arc, characters evolved, and very few episodes were "status quo"...

    • @seanmcdonald5859
      @seanmcdonald5859 Před 2 měsíci +1

      My thoughts exactly. . . . . .

    • @ZuluRomeo
      @ZuluRomeo Před 26 dny

      Television learned so much from Babylon 5. We see it in today's season-arc shows.

  • @GehennaGirls
    @GehennaGirls Před rokem +71

    The fact that voyager is episodic isn't necessarily bad in and of itself, but the series plot just lends itself so well to serialization that it feels like they really whiffed

    • @nobodyimportant2470
      @nobodyimportant2470 Před 8 měsíci +17

      Exactly. Episodic worked well on TOS and TNG because they had easy access to StarFleet facilities to fix shit and reset things to the status quo between episodes. The biggest plot point of Voyager was that they were stranded with no resupply from the Federation which begs for continuity between episodes as they use what they can get to fix the ship as they go. There are things that can't be replicated they would need to mine/refine/manufacture it themselves or trade with aliens and adapt the parts to fit.
      There are a lot of good episodes but the series as a whole really dropped the ball.

    • @THINKMACHINE
      @THINKMACHINE Před 4 měsíci +3

      That it would have been so _easy_ to carry stuff over from episode to episode is what annoys me. Painting a little scarring or patched hull on the ship model, sticking little extra bits on it here and there. Making tiny alterations to sets. The writers just keeping track of how many damn shuttles and torpedoes they have left.

    • @BladedEdge
      @BladedEdge Před 2 měsíci +1

      Voyager is frustrating because while overall it's a very weak show, it has some of the very best episodes in all star trek. Living Witness for example. Diamonds in waves of sand

    • @One.Zero.One101
      @One.Zero.One101 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Yeah out of all the shows, Voyager is the one that’s more suited to change. The problems with rations, power, manpower, supply just became lip service because it never really affected them apart from surface level situations.

  • @dij7878
    @dij7878 Před 6 lety +395

    I think The Doctor and Seven were the best, most well-developed characters.

    • @Cptn.Viridian
      @Cptn.Viridian Před 5 lety +23

      Would you mind if I added Tom Paris to this list? He also had some good development, and along side Seven and the Doctor is also one of my favorite charecters.

    • @Marsproject11
      @Marsproject11 Před 5 lety +5

      @@Cptn.Viridian He was basically the same person he was at the start of the show though, nothing dramatic had changed about him.

    • @cuchulainn140
      @cuchulainn140 Před 5 lety +28

      Marsproject11 I wouldn’t say he’s the same person. He went from an arrogant womanizing ass that had no regard for anyone else unless it benefited him, to a caring person, who was a great friend and a wonderful husband and father

    • @Jane-yg3vz
      @Jane-yg3vz Před 5 lety +2

      @@Marsproject11 How much do any of us really change in the span of seven years?

    • @Bizorke
      @Bizorke Před 5 lety

      ​@@Jane-yg3vz I read that our taste buds regrow every 7 years. So he probably likes new foods he didn't like on day 1.

  • @Fredrikschou
    @Fredrikschou Před 5 lety +226

    Allways remember to reverse the polarity of your inverted tachyon beam. Allways.

    • @robertmcginty4146
      @robertmcginty4146 Před 5 lety +28

      And if that doesn't work, have the lateral sensor arrays perform at least 3 different spectral analyses.

    • @ramonrobles1980
      @ramonrobles1980 Před 5 lety +19

      If all else fails you may need to jettison the warp core.

    • @sebeazzurri
      @sebeazzurri Před 5 lety +11

      Always remember that the word always has one l.

    • @faleway9863
      @faleway9863 Před 4 lety +2

      I'll do my best *wink *wink

    • @faethon6990
      @faethon6990 Před 4 lety +6

      Then you need to compensate for the tacion emissions in the gravaton intofearametric pulse

  • @dalekman9999
    @dalekman9999 Před 4 lety +49

    Dont forget they literally kill the harry kim we know when voyager splits into two alternate voyagers and then replace him with the split ones harry, and its never acknowledged again that harry literally died.

    • @kinglydagon6035
      @kinglydagon6035 Před 2 lety

      I know its pointless to bring this up but in Star trek online PC game, That same Harry Kim that died got reanimated by the Kobali and he comes back to Earth Confused as fuck and its really good. XD

    • @MattCraftDotDerp
      @MattCraftDotDerp Před 2 lety

      What episode was this??

    • @andrewlowe693
      @andrewlowe693 Před 15 dny

      Same with Wildman's baby, the mother watched her own baby die but gets served up an alive clone later and so all is good apparently?

  • @chrissysky01
    @chrissysky01 Před 4 lety +55

    You hit on why Seven and the Doctor are my favorites, they're the ones that have growth. I don't hate everyone else, not by any means. I love Voyager but it did have so much wasted potential, so if people hate it or it's their least favorite, I get why.

  • @WesStacey
    @WesStacey Před 5 lety +242

    For a while Voyager was my favorite show, then i watched DS9 and man that show is just by far the best show. It has some of the best character development, it shows consequences of peoples choices some of which has MAJOR consequences for the quadrants as a whole. It really shows some of the major holes in Voyager and in TNG to some extent as well. So yeah i still enjoy Voyager but yeah DS9 was by far the best.

    • @originaluddite
      @originaluddite Před 3 lety +16

      It did not help Voyager that much of its run existed alongside DS9.

    • @KhaosAdmiral
      @KhaosAdmiral Před 3 lety +13

      I like Voyager as well, but yeah I will admit that compared to DS9, Voyager played things a bit too safe for my liking.

    • @dingle2987
      @dingle2987 Před 2 lety +7

      I watched them all together. Voyager just had better pacing and that made it easier for a child’s attention. DS9 is objectively the better show as long as you can look past it’s avoidance of Roddenberry’s vision of the future, and if you can make it past the boring early episodes that try their best to make up for being stuck on the station.

    • @Beanmachine91
      @Beanmachine91 Před 2 lety +1

      people say DS9 is boring but as a trekkie i like all star trek equally lol

    • @pokeyswan5563
      @pokeyswan5563 Před 2 lety +25

      @@dingle2987 I think DS9 actually showed the lengths you have to be prepared to go to in order to gain Rodenberrys vision of the future. Just because the Federation is invested in that future doesn't mean every civilisation they come up against will be as equally as invested.

  • @BrianCrosby
    @BrianCrosby Před 6 lety +254

    The Borg... The enemies so undefeatable that janeway defeats them every time

    • @Nick-jb4xi
      @Nick-jb4xi Před 5 lety +25

      Keovar: Except originally killing them was basically impossible. They needed divine intervention just to escape...

    • @KymiToliver
      @KymiToliver Před 5 lety +2

      Not every time.

    • @anthonysanchez1313
      @anthonysanchez1313 Před 5 lety +14

      Janeway is definitely fearless and a risk-taker and it pays off for her.

    • @AshPrimeDCFC
      @AshPrimeDCFC Před 5 lety +29

      Voyager ruined the Borg and completely removed any fear of them. That's why the Dominion are the ultimate Trek villains. They were the closest the Federation ever came to destruction.

    • @BattlestarZenobia
      @BattlestarZenobia Před 5 lety +9

      AshtimusPrime how did Voyager ruin the Borg, every time they showed up they where dangerous, in Dark Frontier they only had to be a few seconds behind schedule for the mission to fail.
      Even when Voyager had detailed specs of Borg ships and weapons and shields modified by knowledge from the 29th Century they still very only able to narrowly escape

  • @savagegardenrox
    @savagegardenrox Před 4 lety +231

    Tom and B’Elanna both grow over the course of the show.
    I will say Janeway and Tom should both have been more disturbed by their sojourns as salamanders

    • @jcarry5214
      @jcarry5214 Před 4 lety +36

      I think about those salamanders at least monthly and I'm not happy about it.

    • @jemts5586
      @jemts5586 Před 4 lety +3

      @@jcarry5214 😂😂😂😂

    • @hellacoorinna9995
      @hellacoorinna9995 Před 3 lety +4

      What about Jean-Lemur Picard, or XenoWorf?

    • @winwinmilieudefensie7757
      @winwinmilieudefensie7757 Před 3 lety +1

      Thats like expecting someone to be disturbed for coming out off dads dick and after that out of moms vag ... its not relevant

    • @theavocado6061
      @theavocado6061 Před 2 lety +4

      I was about 12 when that episode first aired and was very freaked out by that episode.

  • @theunbrokenbarb169
    @theunbrokenbarb169 Před 4 lety +199

    As a guy who can honestly say I love Voyager, it's literally my favorite Star Trek I can say I appreciate your point of view, though it's not the same as mine. You are the kind of person I'd love to discuss Trek with because I feel we could establish a civil debate without leading to an argument. Thanks for your input 👍

    • @elenapederson1862
      @elenapederson1862 Před 2 lety +3

      Facts Captian Janeway please marry me 🥺

    • @amerigo88
      @amerigo88 Před 2 lety +2

      I always found Voyager bland and anodyne. Frankly, I just found Janeway so dull, emotionless, and disengaged that it hurt the show's core. Her voice grated on me in nearly every scene. The ship (model) is the ugliest of all the Star Trek starships. Tuvok was rather interesting. Seven of Nine spiced things up in many ways. I detested Neelix and like Janeway, he drained energy from every scene he was in.
      The show just really lacked strong personalities and the critic here hit the nail on the head about being able to skip seasons and realize basically nothing had changed.
      I greatly enjoyed DS9, but found TNG a bit too formulaic, although the characters were memorable.
      Watch Red Letter Media's review of Star Wars - The Phantom Menace. The part where they ask people to describe the central characters from one show vs another would be instructive. Specifically, I would ask someone to describe Sisko vs Janeway, Odo vs Bilana, and Quark vs Neelix without referencing their title, makeup/species, or their role. It wouldn't even be close, the contrasts would be so stark.
      My 2 space credits.

    • @zippersidewinder1516
      @zippersidewinder1516 Před rokem +11

      Voyager by far is my favorite show. I don't know why people cap on it so much

    • @darkmatter3006
      @darkmatter3006 Před rokem +3

      I love Voyager as well.
      Than comes TNG , than ENT . TOS I never started to enjoy watching ...after first watching Voyager, TOS was for me like sexistic cowboy show with hardly any modern ideals.
      TNG and VOY are really much alike.
      And I like that almost every episode starts in peace and status quo .
      That make is enjoyable to watch and to create a good mood. There it nothing like that in today's shows.
      I'm really sad that I couldn't watch DS9 too far, while many say, it's a great show. I hate the Ferengi and I miss a logical part like Data or Tuvok. The characters are not nice in the first place. I guess, I don't like that.
      And Voyager paints a great picture of our Galaxy and how big it is. And it has enough science stuff in it.
      Of course it has is weaknesses, but most of the time , what I think to be weak, most others celebrate and vis versa 😁

    • @DV-1701
      @DV-1701 Před rokem +5

      @@amerigo88 Thats weird cuz a youtuber done a pole on ST ships design and Voyager came first I believe,and I really liked it

  • @TheYacu
    @TheYacu Před 6 lety +226

    My Problem was... well, they started of with an incredibly diverse and conflicted crew. Some were Maquis, some Starfleet, some aliens who joined on the way, Tom Paris was an ex convict. All the conflict, moral grey areas, difficult and complex questions they could have explored. But, no, they make them all Starfleet after just one episode. Ranks, uniforms and all. They live in harmony with another almost right from the start, instead of making the process of becoming a crew and forming trust and friendship the result of a long term developement.Such a waste of opportunity. It's like the screen writers had good ideas at first but then got scared and reverted to well paved roads.

    • @MisterRorschach90
      @MisterRorschach90 Před 5 lety +27

      They literally had entire episodes about the crew learning to work together and trust each other... rewatch the series maybe.

    • @robertt9342
      @robertt9342 Před 5 lety +16

      jordan secrist . They even had story arcs over a several episodes and was an underlying theme. The crew never was the same as a federation ship either. There was no way actions and behaviours of many of the crew would have been acceptable on a standard star fleet vessel.

    • @prphd555
      @prphd555 Před 5 lety +9

      I agree with yacu and feel like it sorta gets retconned out

    • @kenknowler5379
      @kenknowler5379 Před 5 lety +6

      what you mean like 5 eps in the first season some guy not listening and chekotey punches the guy outa his chair? yall too critical

    • @BVCStudios
      @BVCStudios Před 5 lety +2

      yep, totally right on

  • @coreydonaldson3303
    @coreydonaldson3303 Před 6 lety +134

    The opening theme for Star Trek Voyager scored by the late Jerry Goldsmith is awesome !

    • @Crlarl
      @Crlarl Před 5 lety +11

      That is undeniable.

    • @henryburby6077
      @henryburby6077 Před 5 lety +3

      absolutely!

    • @sook....993
      @sook....993 Před 4 lety +2

      The opening theme makes me tear up, its gorgoeous!

    • @Muzikman127
      @Muzikman127 Před 2 měsíci

      I have been known to enjoy the credits more than the episode lol, it's really good

  • @danieltilson4053
    @danieltilson4053 Před 8 měsíci +24

    Barclay was, in my opinion, the best used of the "borrowed" assets. He was still the same nervous wreck as always, but he had gained at least a little bit of confidence from his years of therapy.

    • @dm121984
      @dm121984 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Agreed. Barclay was one of the few borrowed assets that worked and wasn't ground down by Voyager; the Q and the Borg where both worsened over the course of the series. The first Q episode wax actually really good, and the first few appearances of the Borg ranged from ok to great. But by the end of the series, both where much less interesting entities.

    • @michaelallen1432
      @michaelallen1432 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Yea, he was a nervous wreck, but he was also brilliant. Maybe Riker was right when he said a starship isn't the place for everyone.

  • @ulrikcaspersen9145
    @ulrikcaspersen9145 Před 4 lety +62

    An additional comment to my previous:
    For a series about a ship and it's crew on a journey, it is ironic to note that series is static or "immobile" most of the time; too large a percentage of episodes share the same basic stories, and several of the species they meet are very similar to characters in either Voyager itself or in previous series.
    DS9 on the other hand, is rather static in regards to travelling and only explores planets and area relatively close to the Wormhole, and thus the physical location; which is logical given that the primary location is a space STATION rather than a SHIP. But in terms of stories combined with development of characters and the changing relations between empires/associations, makes DS9 a lot more mobile. Rather ironic, or ...?

    • @rosab4698
      @rosab4698 Před 3 lety +6

      Excellent distinction! That is why DS9 works, even on a space station. Because the characters and their relationships are always in flux.

    • @seandobbins2231
      @seandobbins2231 Před 7 měsíci +3

      I wouldn't call it ironic, in fact it's natural. Given that the main location is static and immobile it must have more mobility with its characters and relationships, be they between characters or planets/organizations/nations/empires.

  • @maxacorn
    @maxacorn Před 5 lety +171

    the xindi arc in "enterprise" is what "voyager" should've been. a lone starfleet ship in uncharted and hostile space on a desperate mission. by the end of that season, the enterprise was a mess and the crew went through hell and back that changed them for the rest of the series.

    • @TheChimples
      @TheChimples Před 4 lety +13

      If Voyager got more and more damaged with each episode, I would have stopped watching. To me Star Trek is about escapism. I have enough stress in my own life, I don't want to stress about the state of Voyager's deteriorating condition.

    • @MrHacksawJoe
      @MrHacksawJoe Před 4 lety +45

      @@TheChimples " I have enough stress in my own life, I don't want to stress about the state of Voyager's deteriorating condition."
      Don't ever watch the reboot of Battlestar Galactica then. Lol

    • @TheChimples
      @TheChimples Před 4 lety +9

      @@MrHacksawJoe I did watch it and liked it but it was a messed up show in many respects and definitely isn't a feel-good show if you know what I mean.

    • @xxperrin
      @xxperrin Před 3 lety +5

      maxacorn the xindi arc is what ruined Enterprise.

    • @GoGreen1977
      @GoGreen1977 Před 3 lety +20

      @@xxperrin I respectfully disagree. I loved the Xindi arc. I found it captivating, especially the concept of different sentient species from the same planet and how they worked together after devastating wars, then turned against each other when it became obvious the more war-like species were taking them down a violent, dangerous"road", with the encouragement of the trans-dimensional beings.

  • @LTDANMAN44
    @LTDANMAN44 Před 5 lety +318

    the doctor was an awesome charactor

    • @tylercosner4509
      @tylercosner4509 Před 4 lety +12

      He's the only character.

    • @anthonykrejci9515
      @anthonykrejci9515 Před 4 lety +7

      @@tylercosner4509 Tuvok, Seven of Nine, Tom Paris, Neelix...Janeway....

    • @balshabethstrages2923
      @balshabethstrages2923 Před 4 lety +3

      He was, but the lengths they went to with him, especially later on, when they started finding implausible reasons to treat him as a person (and shoe-horn in unlikely holographic sentients and their 'rights issues') were all laughable. It all started with the script-writers not having anyone show the small amount of common sense to explain to Kes that her view of the Doctor as a person, was wrong (not to mention, infantile). It snow-balled from there until we have the unwanted and highly-artificial moral expositions and explorations later in the series. They should have simply had him be the living doctor from the beginning.

    • @hezekiahramirez6965
      @hezekiahramirez6965 Před 4 lety +4

      I agree. Eccleston is my favorite version.

    • @diego2112gaming
      @diego2112gaming Před 4 lety +11

      @@balshabethstrages2923 I would argue that since "Measure of a Man," there's actual legal precedence for the Doctor being treated as a person. Unlike normal computer programs, he displays an obvious self-awareness (disdain for people forgetting to shut off his program, and even a bit of existential dread at the thought of the crew being beamed through the Wormhole back to the Alpha Quadrant, since his program is integrated with the ship), no one can argue his intelligence, and I don't really think we want to go down the rabbit hole of proving consciousness.
      The Doctor meets the legal requirements as set forth by Starfleet in Captain Louvois' ruling in 2365 for sentience, some six years prior to the Doctor's initial activation. So, as "laughable" as it may be, there is actual in universe legal canon established in an actual onscreen episode that sets forth why it has to be that way.
      So, to say that Kes' treatment of the Doctor is infantile is, by my estimation, to say that the crew of the Enterprise's treatment of Data is the same. To say that her treatment of him as sentient is wrong, is to say that the court's ruling of Data as a sentient being is wrong.

  • @samueltheprideofafrikarobi9319

    It is a shame that the writers never allowed Chakotay and Janeway to have a real personal relationship. They were both available due to Janeway's husband giving her up for dead and Chakotay not having a woman in his life. And feelings between the two were defiantly eluded to. Especially in the episode where they become stranded alone on a wooded planet and Chakotay builds her a cabin and a tub...a life that neither of them really wanted to leave behind. It's also not like the extenuating circumstances of their lives wouldn't have allowed them to be together despite their rank/positions on the ship. (Starfleet can't say "it's against the rules" if Starfleet is 70,000 ly and 70 years away. It really kind of sucks that at the end of everything, Janeway never really finds anyone and Chakotay (all of a sudden) ends up magically having a relationship with Seven in the last few episodes even though Chakotay and Janeway had 7 years of history and NO romantic buildup had been established between the he and Seven of Nine prior.

    • @TheDawnofVanlife
      @TheDawnofVanlife Před 2 lety +12

      As I understood it, Mulgrew vetoed her character and Chakotay actually becoming romantically linked. And of course Seven was too hot not to link with someone (even tho her character being totally asexual actually makes more sense then forced romance), so last minute Chakotay romance, here you go.

    • @Shan_Dalamani
      @Shan_Dalamani Před 2 lety

      Mark was Janeway's fiance, not her husband.
      If you want to explain Seven and Chakotay, do what the fanfic writers did - watch their interactions over the seasons and realize that you actually can connect them to the point where they're trying out this dating thing.

    • @tuulipirttila4456
      @tuulipirttila4456 Před 2 lety +5

      I agree. It would have made a such an interesting relationship dynamic between the two characters and been really cute too. It would've also been a really fun relationship to explore, since the whole "starship captains can't date" dilemma has been addressed in other Star Trek series as well.

    • @Smeginator
      @Smeginator Před rokem +1

      Ironically, Prodigy seems to be almost leaning more in that direction - I haven’t seen season 2 yet, but season 1 ends with her vowing to find him because he was forced to abandon ship

    • @akosbarati2239
      @akosbarati2239 Před rokem +4

      @@TheDawnofVanlife For most of her career she played eye candy, which went against pretty much what she wanted to do, and did Voyager as a challenge, since strong female leads in serial format were mostly unheard of. Had she accepted a romantic route, she would have delegated the character behind Chakotay. The Internet was still in its infancy, so studio executives had a lot of sway over what they actually wanted to see on screen and they had their way when they cast Jeri Ryan. The bad thing is, though, that originally Mulgrew misunderstood Ryan's intentions and treated her adversarial even though they both were in the same boat.

  • @rosswieloch1115
    @rosswieloch1115 Před 3 lety +36

    I can over look the "staticness" of TNG and TOS a lot more than I can for Voyager because in TNG & TOS they're still in Federation territory. They may be on the edge exploring new worlds but they're never more than a few days or a week from support. The Enterprise can be damaged in battle and half the crew eaten by a slime monster and they can simply head to Starbase 1157 for repairs at the end of the episode.
    The next time we see them, weeks could have gone by. The ship has been repaired, crew members replaced and our heros have had time to come to terms with the trauma is seeing over a hundred crew members be eaten alive by a slime monster.
    Voyager doesn't get that pass. Granted that could be that I'm looking at Voyager from 2021 where nearly every show has character development now or season long arcs. But even when I first watched Voyager it seemed that there should have been more carry over from one episode to another.

    • @michaelramon2411
      @michaelramon2411 Před rokem +9

      I was thinking the same thing. The other series have access to substantial resources to restore the status quo at the end of any episode, but Voyager doesn't, and so the fact that the status quo is always restored becomes super noticeable.
      Additionally, Voyager is the only series with a specific, overarching goal for the crew. That makes it a poor fit for the highly episodic format - characters should be focused on that, but they are always getting distracted by weird things and never seem to make any progress. Star Trek doesn't need overarching plots ("let's go and poke that planet over there" works fine, clearly), but Voyager's premise specifically CALLS for long-form arcs and meaningful progress.
      I can't help but wonder if taking most of its episodes and just recontextualizing them as "we're intentionally exploring the Delta Quadrant" would have improved its reputation.

    • @tbeller80
      @tbeller80 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Voyager was originally built up during pre-production promotional materials as being the stranded, desperate, low-supplied ship with a crew that needed time to integrate the Maquis. Instead a single episode or two was devoted to each of those concepts rather than it be the backbone of the series. They played it safe with TNG-style plots when they could have done something new. So many missed opportunities

    • @stevenserna910
      @stevenserna910 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Actually Voyager did rescue a smaller Fed starship USS Equinox that had reverted to the "get home by any means required" game plan, captained by Rudy Ransom. They had also been brought there by "the Caretaker".
      Voyager adopted some members of the USS Equinox crew and reduced them to "buck privates" doing all the worst/menial jobs, under constant surveillance. But, they made it back to earth. Capt. Ransom didn't.

    • @schnittmagier5515
      @schnittmagier5515 Před 26 dny

      Never watched beyond season 2 but i recall watching the pilot and beeing hyped that resource management seems to become importaint. I think it is mentioned that they have something like 20torpedos in storrage and 2 shuttle craft and after those are gone there is no way for replacement. So anything that tng could do on a regular base like shooting a probe into a nebulae would be much harder decision. They can not help everybody if they want to survive. Plus the 2 crews might have ongoing issues with each other. I was hoping that they will keep track of everything and decisions will matter way more in the long run. But it seems it never did.

  • @jacobkosh
    @jacobkosh Před 5 lety +69

    Characters in The Next Generation did change, they just did so gradually over time and not often in response to big specific on-screen events. Picard loosens up and becomes more human over the course of the first couple seasons (people say that's a S1 thing, but he's still kind of stuffy and distant even by the beginning of the late-S2 story "Samaritan Snare"). Geordi and Data's friendship develops, Data gradually becomes more sophisticated and spends less time grappling with language mixups and more time thinking about serious aspects of the human condition. Riker loses some of his boyish charm and becomes more gruff and fatherly.
    (The women didn't fare as well, but...that's 80s TV for you, really.)
    If we had the entire show to do over then yes, sure, there's definitely stuff that should have had more impact than it did, like the aforementioned women, or Picard's trauma with the Borg. or a couple of characters' near-death or life-altering time-travel experiences. But by and large, a lot of the time the stakes in TNG weren't that high, which is something I like and respect about the show. Whole episodes would just be about straightforward character drama, like a character coming to terms with an old lover or with an estranged family member, instead of the ship constantly nearly exploding. As I get older, that's what stands out to me more and more about TNG; it's less of an adventure show (although that's still an element) and more of a drama, sometimes a very good drama. But it's drama of a sort where characters aren't constantly having their worlds rocked from week to week; it's mundane. Riker's not gonna be like "remember when I didn't get along with my dad and then I did?"
    The problem with Voyager is that their situation was inherently more dynamic and dangerous than the situation of the TNG characters but they grew even *less* over those seven years.

    • @kirstencorby8465
      @kirstencorby8465 Před 2 lety +12

      Well, Troi was able to become friends with Riker once again after the difficult end of their relationship. They worked closely together too. She embraced her Starfleet identity more fully and trained to become a bridge rated officer. She grew. Crusher less so.

    • @Shan_Dalamani
      @Shan_Dalamani Před 2 lety +2

      @@kirstencorby8465 Was that before or after Captain Jellico told her to put on a proper uniform? Troi is so boring and annoying that I don't remember. And Crusher was still the same vapid, boring character at the end of Season 7 as she was in the pilot.

    • @One.Zero.One101
      @One.Zero.One101 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Shan_DalamaniI understand the dislike for Troi, but I liked Dr. Crusher from the beginning up to the very end. I think her mother/son relationship with Wes is very good. Her closeness to Picard allowed her to speak to him informally like no one else could.

  • @nightmotherasmr
    @nightmotherasmr Před 5 lety +416

    One of the problems I had with the show (still love it, though) was that for most of the time, it didn't really feel like they were lost and alone far from home. It was such a good premise, but when almost every episode could have taken place in federation teritory, or they find some artifact from Earth, frozen historical figures from Earth, or lost Earth colonies, and all these connections with Earth happen quite frequently, it doesn't really feel like they are lost in space.

    • @craigarthur7599
      @craigarthur7599 Před 5 lety +20

      I totally agree, unfathomably far from home but nothing ever really felt alien.

    • @GoGreen1977
      @GoGreen1977 Před 5 lety +21

      I noticed that the aliens they met almost always seemed to have similar emotions, similar relationships, similar lifestyles to us humans. There were a few major exceptions, but for the most part, the beings they met were way too familiar.

    • @robertmcginty4146
      @robertmcginty4146 Před 5 lety +20

      And they found the freaking dinosaurs.

    • @thegardenofeatin5965
      @thegardenofeatin5965 Před 5 lety +22

      @@robertmcginty4146 And Amelia Earhart.

    • @dgwdgw
      @dgwdgw Před 5 lety +11

      > all these connections with Earth happen quite frequently, it doesn't really feel like they are lost in space.
      Funny you should use that exact phrase, because _Lost in Space_ itself often has precisely the same problem. Early on, the Robinsons are established to have landed on a planet in another "galaxy". Yet, aliens who have been to Earth or at least know of it-and miraculously speak perfect English, and usually dress exactly like a human would-visit them almost every week. Sometimes even actual humans show up out of the blue.
      I've not gotten too far through (only on the second season), but the parallel is just amusing.

  • @FreulerAZ
    @FreulerAZ Před 2 lety +11

    I think one of my pet peeves about Voyager was that in the later seasons they started running across other people from the Alpha quadrant. How many ships got stuck out there? And they were gone at the end of the episode.

  • @explodingplant2
    @explodingplant2 Před rokem +27

    I agree with all your points; even earned nerd points by correctly guessing the example flaw you were leading up to each time 😁
    FOR VOYAGER POINTS:
    1. Captain crazy-caffeinated Janeway. She’s the captain I grew up with, and as a little girl my and best friend bonded over how much we cherished and idolized her. O Captain , my captain.
    2. Tuvok. Vulcans are the shit but there hadn’t been a kickass Vulcan since Spock until Tuvok. 🎶Tuvok I understand. 🎶 You are a Vulcan man 🎶
    3. B’Elanna. Laugh at me all you want, her episode character arcs made me cry. I was a mixed race girl growing up in a very racist school in the 90s. I felt rejected and other-ized by both sides of my family, like i didn’t belong to either of my races. This was not a social issue I saw discussed or represented anywhere in society. Then B’Elanna episodes. I felt seen.
    That means something. Remember, if someone doesn’t think representation in media matters, they are almost certainly someone who IS represented already.
    Thank you Voyager for that. Also helping me pass my vocabulary test question on ‘assimilated’

    • @utubinator
      @utubinator Před 6 měsíci +2

      Absolutely agree. Even id voyager's eriting could have been better its still star trek and it forwarded the series' goal of telling diverse stories. Im very happily especially that we at least got one show with a woman captain lead, it would feel wrong if star trek never had one

    • @dm121984
      @dm121984 Před 5 měsíci

      Agreed. And apparently at least some native Americans like Chaktay even though he's not great representation. I don't like Discovery very much but I will grant them, they went out of their way to expand representation and did a good job adding many diverse characters who felt like actual people.

  • @carlrood4457
    @carlrood4457 Před 6 lety +169

    The reason the strictly episodic nature hurts Voyager more than it did in TNG is due to the premise. TNG, like TOS, was a series of missions. They'd get orders to go somewhere or deal with something, complete the mission, and move on. It was the job. Voyager was supposed to be on a 70 year trip to get home, travelling through completely unknown space, with no allies or ability to re-supply at a nearby starbase. Add in that a portion of the crew held resentment, at minimum, and hostility at most towards Starfleet and the Federation and there should have been a gradual shift to being a single crew.
    In other words, the basic premise of Voyager should have encouraged storylines about change, growth, and dealing with scarcity and isolation. However, most episodes could have been TNG episodes with minimal rewrites because it was : arrive at planet, there's a problem, deal with problem, move on to the next job.

    • @JoanieDoeShadow
      @JoanieDoeShadow Před 5 lety +19

      Some of Voyager scripts were actually unused TNG scripts rewritten.

    • @DSFII
      @DSFII Před 5 lety +9

      JoanieDoeShadow that explains a lot.

    • @ConvergenceMedia
      @ConvergenceMedia Před 5 lety

      You make a good point. Unfortunately, too many stories like that don't make for very exciting television.

    • @jaredkebbell443
      @jaredkebbell443 Před 5 lety +8

      My thoughts exactly: Wasted Premise!

    • @NotThatGuy_YepThatGuy
      @NotThatGuy_YepThatGuy Před 5 lety +1

      Absolutely agree and was somewhat astounded that he left that out

  • @kasession
    @kasession Před 5 lety +151

    I loved Voyager. I watched all the episodes. However, the one thing that 'annoyed' me was the fact that the warp core went offline ALL THE TIME!! It was Tom Paris's constant line. Especially when they knew they were coming up on a stressful period. They'd do all this work to prepare, and BANG, someone would flush the toilet, and it would go off line. It drove me crazy!!! That was really lazy writing.

    • @thedank0r162
      @thedank0r162 Před 5 lety +2

      Karen Session What toilet?

    • @BigJeremyBeyer
      @BigJeremyBeyer Před 5 lety +19

      Actually, it made sense.
      It was established right away that Voyager's warp core was basically a beta test of a prototype design for a new warp core. Upon capturing Chakotay, they would have returnes to Utopia Planitia for extensive diagnostics and inspections to determine how it held up in actual use. Torres even told her engineering 2nd that she was going to rely on him because he was more familiar with the new design than she was.
      For it to need constant aggravating care under the circumstances actually makes perfect sense, especially when tied with the (also beta testing) bioneural gel packs.

    • @eyedunno8462
      @eyedunno8462 Před 5 lety +3

      @@thedank0r162 Space toilet!

    • @thegreenmanofnorwich
      @thegreenmanofnorwich Před 4 lety

      There were a lot of warp cote failures of one type or another. I like the beta testing idea, but even so, I think I'd be reluctant to serve on a ship that didn't seem very able to control the large quantity of antimatter it was sitting on (I mean even less control than the average ship, which wasn't exactly safe)

    • @mainiac430
      @mainiac430 Před 3 lety

      Cause you lack imagination. Think about it...they are stuck in the delta quadrant. You can't simply pull up to a dock station for repairs. Plus all the battles they were subjected to as well as the fact they were squeezing every ounce of the core to get home...even modifying the core to squeeze a few light years. Not to mention species steeling it.

  • @BiowareKaiserGirl
    @BiowareKaiserGirl Před 4 lety +81

    The only way to gage janeways character development is her haircuts haha

  • @meliannhawke3318
    @meliannhawke3318 Před rokem +12

    There is actually only one set of episodes in the series that really stuck with me and that I remember in awe up to this day:
    It's the ones with Lt. Suder (Brad Dourif). He just appears this shortly, but oh my goodness is his character arc gutwrenching!
    So great writing ... ❤

    • @igmusicandflying
      @igmusicandflying Před 8 měsíci +2

      If you made a movie called "Brad Dourif Eats a Pastrami On Rye" I would watch it. He's played so many great characters in such a compelling way, there's even a few stinker movies I've seen where I agree that it sucked "but Brad Dourif rocked it!"

    • @stevenserna910
      @stevenserna910 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Suder the serial killer? He had to become a killer all over again to save the crew.

    • @jmparker78
      @jmparker78 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Well, that was helped by Brad Dourif being in it. Everything is helped by Brad Dourif when he shows up. But he also represents a big problem that Steve didn't touch on and I wish he had; Voyager had a horrible problem introducing new characters, making us think they'd be around for a while, even sometimes bringing them back, only to F*CKING KILL THEM. Or at least never bring them back, ever. Jal Cullah was almost the Dukat of Voyager. But they killed him 2 seasons in. If Cullah had to go, they could have kept Seska, but no, they killed her, too. Hogan, Jonas, and yes, Suder. How about the Learning Curve guys? A whole episode devoted to helping them fit in with the crew and then...nothing. Okay, Chell shows up in one episode toward the end of the show but by then it's too little, too late. Carrey was an interesting foil for B'Elanna, so naturally past the first season we never see him again unless it's an episode set in the past, implying (even seeming to outright state at one point) that he had died offscreen. But here comes "Friendship One" which reveals he's been alive the entire time, only to...kill him. The officers who came aboard from the Equinox? Never seen or heard from again. Vorik, who at one point seemed primed to be that show's O'Brien? A grand total of eight appearances. He doesn't even appear at all in Season 6. The "lost sheep?" Celes gets one other very minor appearance, but the rest get bupkis. In fact, the only recurring characters guaranteed to come back are the ones borrowed from TNG (Barclay, Q, Troi, the Borg Queen).

  • @JDODify
    @JDODify Před 6 lety +362

    I get the problem with the reset button on Voyager - after a few seasons the ship should have been looking like something out of Mad Max. Ironically, one of the best episodes of Voyager; Year Of Hell, was set up to be a reset button episode.

    • @JohnSams
      @JohnSams Před 6 lety +25

      The pilot explicitly says that the ship is self healing

    • @richardludwig3673
      @richardludwig3673 Před 6 lety +25

      Not really. I'm rather fond of the idea that Technology has gotten to a point in the 24th century that Voyager would be able to handle itself well (which is why I thought the idea of "replicator rations" was so stupid). I understand it happening to the Equinox, because it was more like trying to drive a Smart car from the north most point of North America to the southern most point of South America, but I would have been disappointed if Voyager fell apart right away.
      Remember, these starships aren't supposed to be these fragile things that fall apart the instant you drive it off the lot - these are tough ships, especially the long-rang exploratory vessels like Voyager. Given it was "only" in the Delta Quadrent for 7 years, it shouldn't have needed much more than the occasional tune-up and oil change.

    • @MrBranboom
      @MrBranboom Před 6 lety +8

      When i first saw warship voyager, i was like "oh boy! they changed the ship! haha, nope.

    • @JosephDickson
      @JosephDickson Před 6 lety +5

      John Sams the only piece of Star Trek tech that doesn't break down 🖖

    • @DanMcLeodNeptuneUK
      @DanMcLeodNeptuneUK Před 6 lety +1

      When?

  • @ivorybooker8957
    @ivorybooker8957 Před 6 lety +89

    Thank you, Steve, for acknowledging Harry Kim's promotion problem. The man saved the ship more times (and more substantially) than Wesley Crusher did on the Enterprise. As far as the monotony problem, blame Rick Berman. He was a company man through and through.

    • @anthonysanchez1313
      @anthonysanchez1313 Před 5 lety +4

      For some reason the Federation values risk-takers (people who just don't follow orders). Not just any risk-taker. No value for a "Risk" taker who was wrong. (I guess you are risking if you career progresses or regresses) There seem to be significant value for someone who Risked their career with insubordination but was correct and proved the Federation wrong. (Even Data an A.I. recognizes this and with his first command disobeys orders to retreat and is later congratulated for an exceptional job by Picard) I also get the sense that the Federation values redemption. There are several references. Different franchises have commented on how the federation don't just want captains that follow orders nor captions who have not experience the consequences of not following orders. besides Lt/Ensign Paris, there is an episode on TNG that illustrates what would have happened to Picard had he not been stabbed in the heart in a bar fight. Picard would not have been a risk-taker and would be a very old ensign (explained by Riker and Troi). Sadly, Harry Kim is punished in this way because he is the perfect, obedient officer.

    • @Yellowgookpimp
      @Yellowgookpimp Před 5 lety +5

      Ivory Booker That’s the one thing that bugged me... Nog got promoted to ensign and eventually Lt...

    • @beejcarson
      @beejcarson Před 5 lety +1

      I think comparing nog to Kim is difficult because one was in a war and then other wasn’t. Nog got promoted because he survived when so many were killed. You need someone to lead all the recruits and draftees which means he has be a higher rank then those coming in behind him. Not promoting Kim was doubt but at the same time there was new influx of people behind him. So if he got promoted nothing would really change.

    • @DenSanAZ
      @DenSanAZ Před 5 lety +2

      How would it be possible to promote people in a 7 year period when none of the Senior officers ever died? Obviously, off screen, when Red Shirts were killed, lesser people would obviously have to be promoted to replace them. But the Senior Staff can't all be Captains or First Officers by the time they get home! Besides, what good would a promotion do? It's not like they get a pay raise or a change of position. Paris was able to be promoted because at the beginning of the series, he had no rank at all, so he was simply reinstated, then demoted, then reinstated again.

    • @andrebrynkus2055
      @andrebrynkus2055 Před 5 lety +5

      I understand that they can't promote everyone but if that's the case why do they keep giving Harry responsibilities that are obviously more important than his rank? He's seen giving orders to people that are lieutenants in times that are not crises. He's allowed to be the night watch officer in the captain's chair - seriously, there can be three shifts and there's no way there aren't other people to do that.

  • @mikeaudette2823
    @mikeaudette2823 Před 4 lety +10

    Voyager's greatest flaw was that it resolved the tension between the 2 crews (Federation and Maquis) far too early. There could have been a wealth of character growth as the two crews learned to set aside their differences in pursuit of a common goal.

    • @scottgauley7722
      @scottgauley7722 Před 10 měsíci +2

      A lot of interpersonal conflict would have been nice, until the two crews realize they are truly alone in the Delta Quadrant and need to put aside their differences, work together, and survive. They have to become a family, even if it's a bitter pill to swallow initially.

  • @beberivera7011
    @beberivera7011 Před rokem +8

    You know I agree with your analysis of voyager. I never really gave it deep thought bc I think I was too hungry for something star trek like to fill a nerd void.
    Tysmfs!

  • @PaulSmith-fi1vg
    @PaulSmith-fi1vg Před 6 lety +80

    How can you say Captain Picard was static as a character? He was French for the first few episodes.

    • @arachnophilia427
      @arachnophilia427 Před 6 lety +8

      Paul Smith janeway was also almost french (canadian). they filmed the pilot with genevieve bujold, and then axed her. the same actress also almost played ellen ripley in the alien franchise.

    • @darknightbegins85
      @darknightbegins85 Před 5 lety +1

      Sounds like that actress had some big near misses on pay day

    • @lorcannagle
      @lorcannagle Před 5 lety +2

      Bujold quit Voyager three or four days into filming, she couldn't handle the stress of a TV production schedule. They cast Mulgrew by the end of the week Bujold quit, and she was on-set the following Monday

    • @AtomicDwarf1961
      @AtomicDwarf1961 Před 5 lety +5

      @@billkeithchannel , actually I do understand about
      Picard's accent. Years ago I met a fellow I assumed was British. He was actually born and raised in France. He evidently learned English early. Maybe bot languages spoken when he was you. If you think about it, a non-british European is like to have more of a British accent when they speak English as that's the accent they have more exposure to.

    • @chrisschembari2486
      @chrisschembari2486 Před 5 lety

      Paul Smith 😂😃😀

  • @andymac4883
    @andymac4883 Před 5 lety +180

    The big issue with Voyager's firm adherence to status quo is the fact, I think, that the setting is the least appropriate to maintaining a status quo that you could get on a Star Trek show, save an actual war. The ship and crew have a set goal that they need to actually make progress towards, in a situation that was supposed to make it so that their actions would have lasting consequences. In one episode, they point out how they have a severely limited number of torpedoes on board and no means of replacing them, and the issue just goes away by the next. The crew are supposed to be on rationing, can't use the replicators to much and need Neelix with his kitchen, but use the holodecks every other episode. From the scenario that was set up by the show itself, they should have been more like the reimagined BSG than the TNG clone that we ended up with.

    • @connorhorman
      @connorhorman Před 5 lety +4

      Holodecks have there own powersource.

    • @GreyFang9
      @GreyFang9 Před 5 lety +9

      @connor horman What was it? Infinitium? If the Holodecks have their own power, why not devote it to the overriding goal of travelling as fast possible without damaging the vessel?

    • @chrisschembari2486
      @chrisschembari2486 Před 5 lety +8

      @@GreyFang9 Harry Kim mentioned, in an early episode where the officers were trying to solve energy shortage problems, that the holodecks had their own power source and it couldn't be tapped for other uses in the rest of the ship. No further details were given, AFAIR.

    • @GreyFang9
      @GreyFang9 Před 5 lety +11

      @@chrisschembari2486 I don't doubt you. It is that kind of hand-wavy bullshit which makes no sense, that made me not like the show...
      It would make sense in the way that you can't tap your cell phone, tablet, and watch batteries to power a vehicle. The problem would be _using the vehicle's power to recharge those devices._ --which is what the crew did on the regular.

    • @chrisschembari2486
      @chrisschembari2486 Před 5 lety +11

      @@GreyFang9 indeed, and since my last comment here, I saw a Spacedock CZcams video that pointed out that Voyager and other later TNG era Starfleet ships are supposed to be more capable and tougher than earlier TNG era ships, due to encounters with the Borg, the Dominion, etc. In that framework, such an energy incompatibility is doubly idiotic.

  • @alqu6375
    @alqu6375 Před 4 lety +50

    Can Star Trek, in general, stop with the whole “forehead aliens”, especially for the delta quadrant. It not a lore thing, it’s a CBS won’t give money to us just paste a forehead on a dude. The delta quadrant, expection of the borg, should not have “human aliens”. They all should have had stuff like the Gorn, tholins and Bree.

    • @hellacoorinna9995
      @hellacoorinna9995 Před 3 lety

      @@omnientertainment5852
      True.. but that stuff can get expensive.
      In truth, animated (either "traditional" or Starship Troopers/Reboot/Beast Wars style) is easier to get more varied aliens.

    • @RyanPoehls
      @RyanPoehls Před 3 lety

      That's because they're humanoid alians.

    • @Kataquan
      @Kataquan Před 3 lety

      The New Trek shows seem to be getting away from that tired trope!

    • @bobjason7540
      @bobjason7540 Před 3 lety

      humanoid aliens are consistant no matter where in the galaxy you are. That precursor race seeded the entire galaxy with their dna

  • @mattm7378
    @mattm7378 Před 4 lety +6

    I felt it was a missed opportunity to potentiality have them travel through a peaceful region of space, like a federation, for half or even a whole season where they could get comfortable, complacent, engage in research, maybe travel with a partner friendly ship for support for several episodes etc).

  • @kwetzler624
    @kwetzler624 Před 6 lety +106

    In my weird little world, by season 7, Voyager (the ship) would have been a practically unrecognizable hodgepodge of mismatched alien technology, as they scraped to replace damaged parts with whatever they could trade for, steal, or scrounge. Kazon armor, Hirogen pulse cannons, maybe a Malon warp nacelle, and lots and lots of Borg bits and pieces covering the hull. But no, they had to have a misplaced sense of integrity.
    The characters should have been like that too. A mixture of dangerous experiences and traumatic events, that should have made them difficult people by the end.

    • @grayscribe1342
      @grayscribe1342 Před 6 lety +5

      My thoughts have been along those lines as well.
      It was just a fan fantasy and I knew it wouldn't happen, but I still imagined Voyager returning to the climax of DS9 with some technology that tipped the scale in the battle while Starfleet could identify Voyager only by the ID code, but not visually because the ship had changed too much.
      I stopped buying the Video Cassettes with the end of the first season because I was so disappointed by 'The 37's'. I didn't mind too much that none of the crew stayed behind. I could live with that, but still a missed chance to do something new. No, I was disappointed that none of the people they found wanted to go with Voyager. That this was the best chance to introduce something new, a new culture travelling with them, maybe some new technology. Something. Anything.
      P.S. I also find the greatest mistake was riding on the point that Janeway destroyed the Array. There was no choice. Tuvok said that he needed, what was it? An hour to prepare the mechanism? They'd be drowning in Kazon ships by then. They managed to destroy one of their big ones by sacrificing the Maquis ship. A several of the small ones or another big one and they would need to flee anyway.

    • @normanbuchwald
      @normanbuchwald Před 6 lety +8

      The 37's would have served more of a purpose if Amelia Earheart went with them (and to be honest that is exactly what I think she would have done!)

    • @otnat2094
      @otnat2094 Před 6 lety +6

      Kevin Wetzler. That's a pretty cool idea about the ship...and it would have made sense given everything they went through and everywhere they went.

    • @kraig800i
      @kraig800i Před 6 lety +6

      lol right ? Just to think in comparison Geordie La Forge changed the the Enterprise more than enough in it's Five year mission that the designer of the vessel chewed his ass off for it. They have all the replacement parts they needed with a full service history of getting overhauled and tuned up at regular intervals. Yet he still had time to tweak around enough, that it earned him a dressing down in front of his engineering crew.

    • @kadajawi6567
      @kadajawi6567 Před 6 lety +2

      They could have used Neelix ship to destroy the array, with one crewman (Janeway?) staying behind to do it. They could have brought explosives on board of the array, with a timer, then left the place. They could have figured out a way to use the array to fight the Kazon... in order to buy them time. Of course the show would have been over by then, but at least they should have tried harder, to then fail and come to the conclusion they came to in VOY.
      I mean consider how high the consequences. Getting stranded in the delta quadrant. And they give up so easily?

  • @TheDeadAlewives
    @TheDeadAlewives Před 5 lety +32

    The biggest sin of Voyager was definitely how they betrayed the budding romance between the Doctor and Seven of Nine and then, out of nowhere, they shoehorn in a relationship between her and Chakotay. What the hell were they thinking?
    Not to mention, Chakotay is one of the dullest characters ever in a Star Trek series.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před 5 lety +5

      Dead Alewives
      If there was ever a redundant character it was him. I believe he was originally set up as an antagonist for Janeway, a Baltar figure if you will. But than they wimped out.

    • @joshhoover1202
      @joshhoover1202 Před 4 lety +8

      @@alanpennie8013 Chakotay was very dull. Plus what did he bring to the table besides describing things that are occuring with goofy metaphors?

    • @ancientmb23
      @ancientmb23 Před 4 lety +6

      Agree!!! Where did that come from? Everyone knew and I mean everyone knew Chakotay and Janeway loved each other and were devoted to each other and their crew. Hooking up with Seven? What the heck people?

    • @michro2911
      @michro2911 Před 4 lety +3

      And I was shipping The Doctor and Seven so hard too... You are my sunshine. 😭

    • @Shadx27
      @Shadx27 Před 4 lety +5

      The actor who played Chakotay brought that up many times, and they ignored him. Rumor is, that since they never wrote stories to truly develop his character, he started playing the character as blandly as possible as well.

  • @maumendoza
    @maumendoza Před 3 lety +3

    Hats off to DS9 for taking the other route. Sisko mouthing off Picard, Q getting punched and never coming back, O'Brien saying that he prefered working on the station than the Enterprise, the borg? Nah bro we have enough problems with the dominion.
    Also the writers really cared for the characters to give each one of them really good arcs. I mean they made me care for not one but three ferengi, THREE!!!

  • @PaulTenorio71
    @PaulTenorio71 Před 3 lety +7

    Just completed a 2 month binge and I mostly agree with the assessment of this video. Also, still enjoyed because its still Star Trek. I have now completed all series. Onward to Discovery.

  • @captainobvious9233
    @captainobvious9233 Před 6 lety +90

    The main thing I didn't like about Voyager is that the ship looked as new and pristine in the final episode as it did in the first episode. They missed a great opportunity to make the ship look worn, battered and have a mix of alien technologies to replace systems that were destroyed. The 'unlimited shuttlecraft' issue could have easily been fixed if they had kept using alien craft that they perhaps traded for with other materials.

    • @dimensionlordgambitmccoy9727
      @dimensionlordgambitmccoy9727 Před 6 lety +12

      Captain Obvious Absolutely, it's like having a brand new car and you drive it from all the way from Key West and then go all the way to Utah. But stop "every" stop on the way and with no roadside assistance, it will be a piece of junk by time I get there.

    • @danielyeshe
      @danielyeshe Před 6 lety +11

      Absolutely. They could have had the necells replaced or something and have issues that they didn’t live up to Starfleet specs.

    • @darthglobe4285
      @darthglobe4285 Před 6 lety +11

      I agree. There is an extent to which duranium alloys could be replicated on board. A sort of worn look which the original Enterprise had after the battle of Mutara nebula would have added a greater sense of victory for the crew of the Voyager.

    • @scaper8
      @scaper8 Před 6 lety +10

      Captain Obvious And that goes right back to the status quo problem. They couldn't or wouldn't risk changing anything, even when the very premise they gave us demanded it.

    • @tonyforbes4666
      @tonyforbes4666 Před 6 lety +9

      "Equinox" did just that. The crew was on the verge of going mad (some HAD actually gone mad), the ship was a wreck, and in the end it wound up being destroyed, with the Captain and almost all of the crew dead.

  • @exorphitus
    @exorphitus Před 5 lety +79

    The "reset button" problem came as a direct result of the UPN executives interfering with the show. They decreed that Voyager had to be the same kind of show as TNG. single episode self contained "issue of the week" stories rather than sweeping story arcs like DS9. Basically they wanted Voyager to be a "sequal" to TNG. Unfortunately that flew directly in the face of the premise of the show which was a ship lost in uncharted space years and years from home. The studio also put the kibosh on the starfleet vs maquis storyline as again they wanted the show to be like TNG which to them meant no crew conflict since the TNG crew was supposedly like a big family. Basically most of voyagers problems can be paid at the feet of executive meddling.

    • @ok-nd1cf
      @ok-nd1cf Před 5 lety +17

      Executive meddling ruins all good things

    • @Sidharthavicious
      @Sidharthavicious Před 5 lety +4

      @@ok-nd1cf I think All Good Things turned out really well. ;)

  • @fredkelly6953
    @fredkelly6953 Před 4 lety +7

    You've made a fair assessment of Voyager's shortcomings. It makes me think of what could have been done if they looked at the story over say 5 years. Take Harry for instance, he starts as a newbie ensign and ends as a bitter 2nd in command. How did he get there. Shoot the entire crew would have ptsd at the very least and yet bonded in way only those that have been in active duty for a long time can know. Yes opportunities lost.

    • @dm121984
      @dm121984 Před 5 měsíci

      Harry is a mascot for the whole show. Missed opportunities and status quo. Ensign Kim can't be promoted; he wouldn't be ensign Kim then!

  • @startounz
    @startounz Před 3 lety +4

    I definitely agree Voyager was Trek’s weakest series. The majority of characters were static as you say with only the Doctor and Seven getting any real development. But the fact is they were practically this series’ Data, as now that there were two characters who are aspiring to be more human. The majority of other characters aren’t all that appealing themselves. Harry Kim the Yes Man, Tuvok the bore, B’Elanna, the angry half-breed, Chakotay becoming nothing more than a background character, and Janeway herself, who claims to be the by the book Starfleet captain, but is more than willing to violate the Prime Directive, even when enforcing it.
    The fact is, Voyager Jumped the Shark in season 2, particularly with the whole Warp 10 thing resulting with Paris and Janeway becoming a pair of salamanders, which was similar to TNG’s crew devolving into primitive lifeforms in “Genesis”. At least with that series, they waited until the final season to have that and other dumb episodes. Voyager continues with its stupidity in that same second season with the whole Paris bad boy act to expose the spy, which resulted in Seska and the Kazon becoming more cartoonish and never becoming a serious threat to the crew, even when they took over the ship. The end result was they’d be stupid enough to lose their prize and are never seen again.
    And you even have to admit the majority of Voyager villains were terribly dumbed down, even the Borg. If the latter were anything like the Borg on TNG, Voyager certainly wouldn’t have survived the Delta Quadrant. The series was definitely too dependent on time travel and the reset button. And they seemed to somehow have a limitless stock of shuttles and torpedoes even though it was stated otherwise. The series was an overall disappointment as it just didn’t have the quality story that DS9 or Enterprise did, even though the latter ran for only 4 seasons.

  • @Mark761966
    @Mark761966 Před 5 lety +36

    The USS Voyager and it's amazing shuttle replicator.

    • @jcarry5214
      @jcarry5214 Před 4 lety +2

      @@evanparker but not the photon torpedoes? and food? I buy your point, just acknowledge that they were using the replicator to make parts not ore from scavenging.

  • @OsirisMalkovich
    @OsirisMalkovich Před 6 lety +64

    "Cochrane Muffler" is actually my safeword.

  • @thirdimpacted
    @thirdimpacted Před 4 lety +7

    Secondary characters like The Doctor and Neelix had far more character growth than the main characters.

  • @elimgarak4667
    @elimgarak4667 Před 3 lety +7

    You nailed it right on the head. Every thing you discussed is damn near exactly how I feel about Voyager as well. Great vid as usual.

  • @Asher8328
    @Asher8328 Před 6 lety +137

    My biggest problem with Voyager is that they abandoned their premise almost immediately after the series began. It's supposed to be a crew of Starfleet personnel fused with Maquis, but any conflict arising from that disappears by about episode 3 and is rarely seen again. And being lost in the Delta Quadrant was supposed to mean watching them struggle with things that other shows never did, like having limited resources. We rarely saw that happen in Voyager either. Finally, I thought Janeway was written very poorly, which is too bad because I thought Kate Mulgrew did a great job with what little they gave her to work with.

    • @krim7
      @krim7 Před 6 lety +10

      The only reminder we ever had about limited resources was the fact that they actually had to have a cook.

    • @DrewLSsix
      @DrewLSsix Před 6 lety +10

      jdslyman. Two ships....

    • @justinmusser8886
      @justinmusser8886 Před 6 lety +11

      @krim7 Which, lets be honest, was only so they could have an excuse to bring Neelix on the crew and have Janeway make complaints about not having "real" coffee.

    • @BlownMacTruck
      @BlownMacTruck Před 6 lety +16

      So much this. It could’ve been such a dynamic show with so many conflicting character motivations and experiences, and a struggling crew trying to scratch their way home. Instead it’s a luxury liner in space casually making it home. There’s no sense of danger or being lost. Oh and what a waste of Kate Mulgrew.

    • @Grizabeebles
      @Grizabeebles Před 6 lety +10

      I too feel like there was a complete failure to deliver on the premise of a space-ship stranded more than 50 years travel away from home -- as the crow flies no less!
      Unfortunately, _actually delivering_ simply wasn't possible at the time: Shows weren't written for the first run, they were written for syndication. Syndication means Voyager was crafted from the ground up to be watched twice a month and out of sequence. Usually in the middle of the episode or at two in the morning. Avoiding "double-beats", multi-episode continuity and anything else that required prior knowledge was an ongoing _priority._
      The long-form continuity of later sci-fi shows like Star Trek: Enterprise and The Expanse probably happened in part *because* Voyager abused cliches like "the reset button" until the regular audience was utterly sick of them.
      Today we have had all sorts of great shows that make heavy use of long-form continuity -- Person of Interest, The Office, The Newsroom, Parks and Recreation, NCIS, Game of Thrones, the list goes on. Voyager is _intentionally_ not in these shows' league. It's like Relic Hunter, nothing but single episode action-adventure. Meanwhile, NCIS has been on the air so long that characters they've arrested in previous seasons have repeatedly _completed their jail time and become repeat-offenders._
      Voyager's whole underlying premise was simply strangled in its crib by the limits of its format. It was simultaneously ahead of its time in concept and woefully behind in execution. Which also happens to be the most common reviews for shows starring Johnny Lee Miller -- Don't hate me, I'm a fan. The poor guy is usually the best thing about those doomed shows.

  • @kingbeauregard
    @kingbeauregard Před 6 lety +44

    "Voyager's" biggest problem was, it didn't take advantage of its premise AT ALL. Suppose I pitch this show to you: a Federation ship kicked to a remote part of the universe, where half the ship is Federation officers and the other half is Maquis rebels. What sort of themes spring to mind? What kind of events naturally flow from that premise? You can be sure "Voyager" didn't do any of that. Now if you want a show with a comparable setup (a ship alone in potentially dangerous territory with a crew with divided loyalties), and really ran with it, that's "Farscape"; go watch that to see the "Voyager" that might have been. You will also see a ton of character growth, and honestly a lot of that comes simply from making use of the premise.

    • @kingbeauregard
      @kingbeauregard Před 6 lety +5

      ... and by the way, if there had been any real tension between Federation and Maquis loyalties on "Voyager", that would have gone to making Chakotay a much stronger character. It would have given him something to do. It would have made him more or less the guy who intercedes between the Maquis and the Federation. He could have been the guy who uses Federation principles to keep Federation types in line, and alpha maleness to keep the Maquis in line. Maybe something like that, maybe something else; but it sure would have given him a purpose.

    • @fnsmike
      @fnsmike Před 6 lety +2

      Farscape is a great example. The other show I'd always described as "Voyager, but they stuck with the premise" is Stargate: Universe

    • @kingbeauregard
      @kingbeauregard Před 6 lety +3

      ... pilot episode of DS9, it was established that Sisko ASKED for a Bajoran national to be his second in command. And the conflicts between Sisko and Kira added depth and context to the show, for the season or two where they regularly butted heads. Now, I'm not saying that "Voyager" should have tried to exactly mirror the Sisko / Kira situation, because mere mimicry rarely works. However, it illustrates that a little conflict that makes sense, is often a good thing. One thing "Voyager" could have done differently is, the command structure of Voyager could have included a council, so that things weren't decided by the Star Fleet captain but by Federation and Maquis figures collectively. That's not the Star Fleet way of doing things, but that's kind of the point: Voyager, all alone in the Delta Quadrant and with a half Maquis crew, cannot reasonably function like Picard's Enterprise does.

    • @anthonysanchez1313
      @anthonysanchez1313 Před 5 lety +1

      all star trek shows had too much "fluff"!!! Voyager is the only franchise i can think of that even illustrates internal starfleet dramas that escalate. example the maquis, The equinox crew, Lon Suder.

    • @locutic1
      @locutic1 Před 5 lety +1

      Voyager is not Farscape. Also even the Maquis were from the federation at some point which means they SHOULD be professionals at getting along and working with each other.

  • @alongfortheride84
    @alongfortheride84 Před 4 lety +8

    "captain, someone is saying our episodes became cliches of themselves"
    "can you create a feedback loop?"

    • @bluebull399
      @bluebull399 Před 3 lety

      Most of the technobabble in Star Trek is pretty poor but feedback loop is the one that annoys me. A feedback loop is at least real but they overuse it to the point of cringeworthyness.

    • @theavocado6061
      @theavocado6061 Před 2 lety

      Reverse the polarity of the Cochran muffler!

  • @Sklz711
    @Sklz711 Před 4 lety +6

    Wasn't the entire point of the final episode how different Janeway was from the opening episodes? Initial Janeway: We're staying stuck forever far away from home because we need to do what's right by people we really don't know. Final Janeway: I'm going to commit heinous time travel violations and rewrite history just to help my people get home faster.

  • @zilentis1835
    @zilentis1835 Před 5 lety +129

    Star Trek Enterprise Season 3 is what Voyager is SUPPOSED TO BE.
    -enterprise's condition gets worse and worse and by the end of the season its practically ripped apart and has to spend months just being repaired let alone upgraded
    -the crew goes from "explorers on a diplomatic mission" to "militaristic pirates doing ANYTHING they can to stop Earth from being destroyed"
    in Voyager they are still explorers by the end of the show and their ship (other than 2 cargo bays and a new sensor room) is completely unchanged.

    • @jaredkebbell443
      @jaredkebbell443 Před 5 lety +20

      I totally agree. I think the Voyager episode "Year of Hell" should've been the whole show

    • @OnTheVergeOfHubris
      @OnTheVergeOfHubris Před 5 lety +12

      Battlestar Galactica is what Voyager should have been, though.

    • @thestock8672
      @thestock8672 Před 5 lety +1

      @@OnTheVergeOfHubris You mean BattleGateVoyager90210?

    • @thestock8672
      @thestock8672 Před 5 lety +4

      Oboy, that was a nice season. There were some shitty episodes, but the whole thing feeled exciting.

    • @WesStacey
      @WesStacey Před 5 lety +11

      Agreed! Season 3 was when enterprise came into it's own in my opinion. They transitioned from clueless wide eyed explorers to be more militaristic and just more realistic overall. The harder edge that Archer showed in season 4 as a direct result of season 3 was a nice touch that made the show more believable.

  • @johnmiller7682
    @johnmiller7682 Před 6 lety +237

    The Doctor, Seven of Nine, Tom Paris, B'elanna Torres, all had growth and were completely different at the end of the series.

    • @XDanW91
      @XDanW91 Před 6 lety +15

      Swish Fish Belanna struggled with her Klingon heritage quite a bit Voyager. There's a lot of episodes about it, but by the end of the series she's much more content and comfortable in her own skin.

    • @mattpotter8725
      @mattpotter8725 Před 6 lety +16

      I'd go a lot further than this. Half of the crew were terrorists/freedom fighters at the start of the show. I think there was tremendous character development for Chokotay. As for nothing happening in the previous episode what about Ceska, and the different clan whose space they are travelling through? I'm not a huge Voyager fan, but what is this guy talking about. The ship is travelling through space and will never go back so once its gone it is gone. Voyager is far from perfect, but shows are made like this so that any episode can be watched in the future as a standalone. There will be some overall story arcs, and character arcs. I think that this guy is missing the whole point of any Star Trek, that it is about the characters and how they interact with each other, and they do grow, and you do learn more about them as time goes on, some leave, others come in, but there is friction between characters, there is a range of characters, which means some episodes can contain just Tom and Harry, with a bit of B'elanna, or one about Chokotay and his ancestry, or there are some about Seven of Nine, others about the Doctor, others about Janeway. I wish this guy had spoken more about all of the characters, but he couldn't because it would have invalidated a lot of his points. I wish he had done some research, scripted this, and actually mentioned some episodes by name. I do wonder if he has even watched a lot of the episodes, apart from doing a binge watch. There is a problem binge watching a lot of shows in one go, especially those that weren't made for Netflix, they blur into each other. As I said Voyager is not the best, it is probably one of the worst. I would put it down there maybe just above Enterprise and Deep Space Nine, but below The Next Generation and the Original Series.

    • @trueshy
      @trueshy Před 5 lety +4

      I don't think anyone can argue that Janeway & especially Kes had changed as well by the end run. Also not everyone changes over a 7 year span so I think Kim & Chakotay represent those folks.

    • @mitchellhorton9382
      @mitchellhorton9382 Před 5 lety +5

      The issue was any growth was very sporadic.

    • @scaper8
      @scaper8 Před 5 lety +2

      Mitchell Horton ^Sporadic and not always consistent.

  • @JRMcCarroll
    @JRMcCarroll Před 3 lety +17

    I think my two biggest problems with Voyager are:
    1) It has this huge setup with a mixed Starfleet/Maquis crew, which reportedly was in the works for years before they launched it. Like, the Maquis were introduced in Next Gen partially to help prepare for this storyline. Whether that's true or not, it's a very interesting premise that could make the feel of the show really new and different. But, it pretty much doesn't. There are a few episodes relating to problems with integrating the two crews, but for the most part they just become normal Starfleet and stay that way. It's like they had this great idea but then wouldn't commit to it.
    2) It's the worst show in terms of internal consistency.

    • @10054
      @10054 Před rokem

      Its internal consistency was so much that I could almost guess the theme of the next episode based on the little snippet they give at the beginning of each episode. Yeah, I'd say it was a bit too consistent.

  • @louiseedie8154
    @louiseedie8154 Před 4 lety +10

    Chakote's name was even stolen from ds9 rewatching the series in season 2 there is an admiral chakote

    • @AnArchyRulzz
      @AnArchyRulzz Před 3 lety +3

      There is also an Ensign Janeway mentioned in TNG

    • @TaraZaraChara
      @TaraZaraChara Před 3 lety

      @@hydrolito *Chakotay, Maquis
      Hope this helps.

  • @gothatfunk
    @gothatfunk Před 6 lety +16

    Taste is subjective. I recognise many of _Voyagers_ shortcomings, but for me the series as a whole has some of the best episodes of any Star Trek. You mentioned the Q episode _Death Wish,_ which confronts some pretty heavy existential ideas. There are numerous episodes across each series which simply tower over the more run of the mill episodes.
    I understand your objections, and the only one that I'd really say is unfair is that its wrong of the show to include stories from other Star Trek series'. Its just an attempt to sew it into everything else, and I think its not necessarily due to lazy writing. Or, to be more accurate, I don't think the lazy writing problems on the show are best exemplified by that tendency. I absolutely agree that the character development is glacial, with notable exceptions like The Doctor, and 7of9.

  • @LexYeen
    @LexYeen Před 6 lety +47

    2:52 "But I hope we can still be friends."
    Sure, as long as I can still make fun of Enterprise's "It was ALL A HOLODECK SIMULATION!" ending.

    • @SteveShives
      @SteveShives  Před 6 lety +18

      You can as long as you don't mind company.

    • @richardludwig3673
      @richardludwig3673 Před 6 lety +8

      You can ALWAYS make fun of Enterprise's ending... I can't recall a more terrible ending to a series.

    • @zeekutartheimmortal
      @zeekutartheimmortal Před 6 lety +1

      I've watched the complete trek in chronological order several times.
      There are only 2 episodes I don't watch.
      The Enterprise Season finale is one of them.
      Trust me, the penultimate episode makes a better final episode.

    • @AegisNova
      @AegisNova Před 6 lety +6

      Why does almost everyone take "Enterprise" as a simulation? I took it like reading a history book--it was a history.

    • @shanehudson3995
      @shanehudson3995 Před 6 lety +1

      Richard Ludwig I simply don't understand why they did that. It was so petty.

  • @TheOneAndOnlyTeknocat
    @TheOneAndOnlyTeknocat Před 3 lety +3

    How about Janeway’s highly questionable and completely inconsistent moral compass? “We must observe the prime directive! Oh, but not in this case but that’s my decision and you don’t have to agree with me, but you’d better not follow my example here because I still expect you to observe the prime directive whenever it’s up to you...”

  • @jimcourter5633
    @jimcourter5633 Před 4 lety +1

    Great channel! I biggest problem occurred in the first 15 minutes of the very pilot. One minute Voyager is battling the Maquis. Then, BOOM, they are in the Delta Quadrant. Then, BOOM, they are one big happpy crew. All conflict was resolved in the first 30 minutes at the most. I would have love to see that relationship grow over at least a whole season.

  • @allrightsreserved4m1
    @allrightsreserved4m1 Před 5 lety +21

    The only thing that I didn't like was how it ended. I thought there should have been welcome home scenes back on Earth.

    • @douglashrogers
      @douglashrogers Před 4 lety +1

      I feel the same way...To me it was a let down.

  • @tonts5329
    @tonts5329 Před 5 lety +10

    I found the static-state of the show really did kill my excitement for it. The use of previous Star Trek elements does mean Voyager feels like it borrows heavily from the older Star Trek series. I didn't mind it in certain cases though, like that one episode where they come across the two Ferengi exploiting a planet of less advanced people. The Voyager crew comes across some interesting threats that only ever show up once and never return. The Swarm for instance, a highly territorial species that attack as one big massive swarm. I could already see those guys being properly developed into like a Tyranid type threat, that swarm and raid their neighbours for resources and have a high birth rate to consistently replace their numbers. VOyager coming across dead worlds or destroyed fleets that the swarm ravaged. That time Voyager entered Dark Space, with no stars could have literally been an arc or short series of episodes dealing with threats in that region of space. That one episode where Voyager got trapped in like a void with other ships could probably have been lumped into that series as well.
    The Borg were definitely overused, it made sense to encounter them more, given this was the region of space they presumably originated in. But they diminished the threat of the Borg, we should have had more episodes where Voyager had to actively avoid or try to get around Borg vessels. Or even encounters that left lasting impacts, like say Harry Kim getting abducted and assimilated along with maybe 30% of the crew. Voyager changing its shape and design as the story progressed would have been brilliant, going from an exploration vessel to something closer to a scavenger/war vessel during the journey.

  • @jonbeamer7082
    @jonbeamer7082 Před 2 lety +23

    This is why Deep Space Nine will always be the best of the 90's star trek era!

    • @akosbarati2239
      @akosbarati2239 Před rokem

      Sure except it had not been made if Rodenberry was still alive. Old enough to remember that the whole war with the Dominion, going against utopian core Trek principle was cooked because of the DS9 creators jumped ship for creating Babylon 5 and a ratings war had to be waged.

    • @MadelineHere
      @MadelineHere Před rokem

      Well lots of shows might not have been made - I can think of tons of reasons I could not have been born - and they are big possible ones - not tiny twists of fate which makes it almost infinite-

  • @jimd385
    @jimd385 Před 4 lety +19

    Voyager is awesome, Kate Mulgrew made that show.

  • @spluff5
    @spluff5 Před 5 lety +66

    The Hirogen were a fairly compelling antagonist unique to Voyager I think.

    • @yosefmacgruber1920
      @yosefmacgruber1920 Před 5 lety +8

      The Hirogen were much worse that "warrior" Klingons. The Klingons almost seem civilized compared to the Hirogen.

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před 5 lety +7

      @@yosefmacgruber1920
      I think they had the problem the Klingons do only worse
      Namely how did such brutes ever become space farers?

    • @manofsan
      @manofsan Před 4 lety

      @@yosefmacgruber1920 I wonder who'd win in a fight between Hirogen and Jem'Hadar

    • @richyachinski2159
      @richyachinski2159 Před 3 lety

      The Hirogen were never really developed either.

    • @fallingintime
      @fallingintime Před 3 lety

      How did the hirogen develop there communications system while appearing more primitive than the Klingons( also why didn't voyager still use it)

  • @firefly4f4
    @firefly4f4 Před 6 lety +30

    The worst example of the lack of continuity in Voyager may be "Twisted", where it ends with a a lot of data about the area being dumped into their computer, and yet they continue to talk about not knowing anything about the area in following episodes.

    • @bpmm0171
      @bpmm0171 Před 6 lety

      firefly4f4 that episode really annoyed me because of that!

    • @weldonwin
      @weldonwin Před 6 lety +8

      I'd argue that Year of Hell is even more infuriating, because so much happens, yet it all gets reset back to zero

    • @scaper8
      @scaper8 Před 6 lety +3

      weldonwin And to add insult to injury is that "Year of Hell" is such an amazing two episodes, and nothing comes of it.

    • @firefly4f4
      @firefly4f4 Před 6 lety +6

      The entirety of "Year of Hell" should have been what Voyager actually was. Why was the ship always in such good repair? How many times did it take fire damage, etc, and then it all got fixed off screen in between episodes? The ship really only has cosmetic changes from year one to year 7, and most of those are internal like the Borg enhancements. Where's the EXTERIOR changes? You're telling me they matched everything identically as they patched up damage?
      I'll give Enterprise THIS much -- more than once the ship got damaged, and that damaged continued until it got fixed (the show had other problems, but at least it addressed that).
      Imagine if they had an actual PLAN laid out for Voyager. Every time the ship took damage, they'd have to fix it. Eventually, there's major patchwork all over the ship, and they'd have to hold up for some time to sort it all. This starts off as mostly interior restructuring, but over time external changes become noticeable as well. Some plates are discoloured, mismatched and scavanged parts are fused to the hull, and the ship gradually changes as they make their way home picking up new technology or even just substituting in what happens to work. Actually make it ADDRESS what was supposed to be the part of the point of the show: a crew stranded far away from their usual supply lines, just struggling to make it back to familiar territory.

    • @weldonwin
      @weldonwin Před 6 lety +7

      Remember that time the Videans, ripped *TWO GREAT GAPING HOLES IN VOYAGER'S HULL?!?!?* Yeah, if Starfleet officers got paid, Belana should have got a 300% salary raise and six months paid leave on Rysa for fixing that with not a single mark to show for it

  • @TrackerNeil
    @TrackerNeil Před 4 lety +4

    I think that the "nothing ever changes" problem applies to most of Star Trek, although Voyager may be a particularly egregious example.

  • @billcox6791
    @billcox6791 Před 2 měsíci +1

    What I wanted from Voyager: Farscape
    What I got from Voyager: Star Trek Lite
    And I mean that in the best way. In a way, it’s everything a casual viewer wanted from Star Trek when it came up while flipping channels.
    They could’ve leaned into the interpersonal dynamics and the pressures of never being able to return to base and restock. That could’ve been great. Farscape was great!
    As a kid, Deep Space 9 is the one I had to catch because I wanted to follow the story, Voyager was the one I’d land on while in my pajamas having a bowl of popcorn before bed.

  • @WesStacey
    @WesStacey Před 5 lety +14

    15:46 You mean like the finale? That was kind of a disappointment, "OH Great we're home." "Welcome back!" ROLL CREDITS!!!!!
    The three TNG era shows were hit and miss with Series finales, TNG did the best job of this by tying the finale back to the first episode and had just enough time with the characters after the climax to have a good send off. DS9 despite being the best show overall took a bit TOO long after the climax to wrap things up. They had an entire episode take place after the climax of the multi-part episode which consisted of everyone saying good bye to each other and most people leaving DS9 which in the end drug out too long and made it feel really sad overall. Then there's Voyager who wen the entire other direction which practically ended abruptly after the climax, which came probably 10 min or less before the end of the show.
    I'd argue that Voyager was the one that should have spent the longest coming down from the climax as this was a moment that they had been building to for the ENTIRE show everyone knew how Voyager would end, as you mentioned the characters had been through a lot and to not show them enjoying the fact that they're home seemed like kind of a cheap trick to pull at the every end.

    • @BioGoji-zm5ph
      @BioGoji-zm5ph Před 3 lety

      At least those series HAD a their own finales. TOS and TAS never even got that far.

  • @FreulerAZ
    @FreulerAZ Před 2 lety +3

    You are right Steve. I think its part of modern television storytelling that good shows DO elicit change (significant) and growth in the characters. And not change for the sake of change, but real motivated and welcome changes in characters that make you come back week after week.
    Thanks as always.

  • @kirkwagner461
    @kirkwagner461 Před 4 lety +2

    The ship never showed the wear and tear of years away from proper (standard) maintenance facilities. Non-standard parts should have impinged on function or at least appearance, and could have been good fodder for plot lines and running gags. Tremendous missed opportunity. (Imagine warp drive needing a bulky alien shunt device that cuts off half the width of a hallway. Crew members complain about it off hand, walk around it without comment, hide behind it in fire fights.) Add a couple of those per season and, when the ship returns home it really LOOKS it.

  • @rahulshah1408
    @rahulshah1408 Před 5 lety +47

    Babylon 5 also hurt voyager. The politics make the sci fi so much more. That’s why ds9 was so much more memorable and enjoyable.

    • @JK-uy8yi
      @JK-uy8yi Před 4 lety +4

      Which is funny, because the guys who did B5 pitched it to the studio that did Trek first, who liked the idea enough to make it the backbone for DS9. Everything from a station located by happenstance near mysterious hostile aliens to the station commander becoming a messiah figure to a primitive-yet-much-older-than-Earth religious society. DS9 had a better production value and the sets are more aesthetically pleasing than B5's dirty and dingy look, and overall messy Aliens style of 'if it's the future it's gotta be dirty and at least one smoke machine going in the background'.

    • @grendelum
      @grendelum Před 4 lety +2

      *Babylon 5* is _amazeballs._

  • @JoshuaHillerup
    @JoshuaHillerup Před 6 lety +145

    My biggest problem with Voyager is a bit different from yours. The characters are so inconsistent. It's not just being static, but characters will be written very differently from episode to episode, but not as an example of character growth. Janeway is the most talked about example, but really all but 7 and the Doctor do weird shifts.

    • @qsquared8833
      @qsquared8833 Před 6 lety +13

      mikeonthecomputer grumpiness is illogical

    • @Andrew0you0tube
      @Andrew0you0tube Před 6 lety +2

      Joshua Hillerup What weird stuff?
      Gime me an example please)

    • @jeffreytaylor6463
      @jeffreytaylor6463 Před 6 lety +5

      A true stoic might seem grumpy to you when their reaction to a situation counters your emotional expectation.

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před 6 lety +8

      Same cause to both: numerous writers with poor coordination.

    • @a.hollins8691
      @a.hollins8691 Před 6 lety +11

      Chakotay suddenly is a boxer, Tom loves the ocean, Harry goes from being a doormat to standing up for himself back to being a doormat.

  • @steveshumway9735
    @steveshumway9735 Před měsícem +2

    I think recalling every inch of film with Nelix on it and burning it would significantly improve the whole series.

  • @jadynduropan
    @jadynduropan Před 3 lety +3

    Biggest question is what happened to naomi wildman when the ship was captured or deserted lmao

  • @langjones3846
    @langjones3846 Před 5 lety +9

    I think that the episode where Seven swapped bodies with the doctor was one of the funniest moments in the whole of Startrek, thanks to Jeri Ryan's brilliant acting.

  • @AaronDC83
    @AaronDC83 Před 6 lety +32

    One of the biggest criticisms I see of Voyager is that it didn't really utilize either it "Maquis and Starfleet working together" or "lost in the Delta quadrant with limited resources" premises. I'm susprise you didn't go into it that much.
    Despite its flaws I'm a huge Voyager fan and I credit that with the fact that u watched it for the first time as a kid. I had no benchmark to compare to so it never felt "watered down" or unoriginal by comparison. I didn't really think critically about the media I consumed at the time, I just took it as it was and enjoyed it. Part of what fuels my love for Voyager as adult is nostalgia. I grew to love the characters as a kid so when I rewstch the show as a adult I care about the stories regardless of how weakly they are written sometimes

    • @tbeller80
      @tbeller80 Před 6 lety +5

      This right here was supposed to be the premise of the show. All the PR in the early days of the show strongly hinted that it would take a couple seasons to integrate the Maquis and they would have to get really creative with addressing supply problems. Both of these issues got barely two episodes each over the course of the series.

    • @richardludwig3673
      @richardludwig3673 Před 6 lety

      The problem is that "supply problems" was a stupid premise to begin with. A starship, especially one like Voyager, doesn't leave space dock empty. In fact, it leaves with a device that makes parts and food (replicator). Then the premise is that Power / Energy is an issue... but wait, they have a Warp Core. The only reason the Enterprise visited a Starbase so often is because it's like going to get your oil changed every 3000 miles just to keep your warranty intact.

    • @tbeller80
      @tbeller80 Před 6 lety +1

      That assumes they can just replicate everything. I doubt they can replicate entire torpedoes, major parts of the warp drive, or entire sections of hull that have been phasered one too many times. They lost several shuttlecraft. Even if the parts were available, they'd have to be assembled somewhere. Voyager is a small ship. They have a shuttle bay, not a shipyard. In DS9 they mentioned the existence of "industrial replicators" in order to help an entire world rebuild its economic infrastructure. This would imply there are limits to replicator technology such that a bigger item might need a bigger replicator.
      As far as your oil change analogy, they never did that either. Picard's ship had to go through a radiation deep-clean in Season 5 or 6 due to years of high-warp usage. There was no visit to a dry-dock ever for Voyager. They should have burned out, clogged up, or otherwise broken every part of the ship by the end of the series.

    • @anthonysanchez1313
      @anthonysanchez1313 Před 5 lety

      yes but all the star trek franchises could have used less "fluff" and more intelligent drama. Huge Voyager fan here too. Love how Ensign Ayala is like in every episode.

  • @Sheriff_Ochs
    @Sheriff_Ochs Před 3 lety +2

    Just finished watching the pilot of Voyager for the first time and while it wasn't terrible, it was bad in a really boring sort of way. All the character interactions felt weird, just...off, before the Voyager is sent to the delta quadrant. The absolute worst part is the ending, the whole reason for the show, the reason the crew of the Voyager and the Maquis get stranded in the delta quadrant is because Janeway makes a unilateral decision to destroy the relay, violating the prime directive to boot. She strands everyone in this quadrant to help a race of people she interacted with for all of a few minutes. The only one who raises a word of objection to this is Torres who is quickly shot down by Chakotay, I mean, what hilariously bad writing. The worst part of it is, Janeway could have easily both blown up the relay to help the species she wanted to help AND get her people and the Maquis home: plant explosives on the relay on a timer and set them to blow once it has sent everybody back to the alpha quadrant. Glaring solution to your problem right there, Captain. All this being said, I went into Voyager expecting it to be bad and am looking forward to watching it to see how bad it will get. (Janeway and Paris becoming salamanders here we come!) With this as the pilot, I think I'm in for a fun ride.

  • @2011multisam
    @2011multisam Před 7 měsíci +1

    Voyager was my first foray into Star Trek, it will always have a special place in my heart

  • @DissociatedWomenIncorporated

    Justice for Tuvix! #NeverForget
    ...To be less silly, I kinda disagree with you on Q, he was only in three episodes and his relationship with Janeway ended up being substantially friendlier. I enjoyed all the Q episodes, he gained a real maturity (while still being very much Q) character by the end of them. Great video though!

  • @Yateball
    @Yateball Před 6 lety +21

    P.A.S.T
    Perfectly Acceptable Star Trek

    • @chrisschembari2486
      @chrisschembari2486 Před 5 lety +1

      Gotta append an appropriate adjective/adverb to affix to this phrase, making PASTA. ... Actually!
      Perfectly Acceptable Star Trek, Actually. #Boom

  • @inajar7947
    @inajar7947 Před 3 lety +1

    Steve, let me first say that I could watch your Trek videos over and over again, and I do. My brain does well with something in the background while I work, and your channel is a great source for that. It really gets me thinking about the more complex facets of Star Trek. (Besides appealing to your ego this is also me justifying leaving a comment on a video I watched two years ago. Anyway.)
    You talk about one of Voyager's shortcomings being that it tends to take Picard's enemies and gives them to Janeway, and that the show (as well as these enemies) are worse for it. I agree up to a point, but two particular thoughts come to mind:
    I went into Voyager fully expecting Borg at some point. The Enterprise ran into them in the Delta Quadrant, Voyager is *in* the Delta Quadrant, they're gonna meet. I know that this was more a byproduct of worldbuilding- Gamma quadrant has a wormhole shortcut already, Beta Quadrant is already somewhat explored by Starfleet and doesn't feel "stranded" enough.
    But sending Voyager to the same quadrant that hosts a vast interstellar civilization of cyborg zombies that we've come to fear and anticipate WITHOUT having Voyager meet them would feel... wrong.
    Intentional or not, they kind of set up a Chekhov's Gun effect there, and I would expect it to pay off.
    Now if you wanna talk about the botched *execution* of that payoff, I can get with you there. But I don't think the Borg should be ignored in their entirety.
    As for thought number two: Janeway did need her own nemesis, and I think we had a GREAT one there, it was just... wasted potential. The Krenim. "Year of Hell" could have, and should have, been a season. or two. OR three! How compelling that could have been, with Voyager taking massive damage, the family split up, and even when they're not being attacked they have to deal with the realities of ever-dwindling resources as they struggle to maintain both their ship and their bodies. Anorax could have been one, but not the only KRenim antagonist Janeway had to contend with.
    And no "reset" at the end of this arc. Hell, what the Voyager crew learns from facing down the Krenim (and hell, the Borg too) could feed directly into Endgame (or your better version of Endgame) . Instead of it being "Admiral Janeway gets Time Travel Ex Machina from a Klingon" it could be "Admiral Janeway, B'elanna, and Barclay finally perfect some Kremin tech they've had for 26+ years" or something.
    Ah, what could have been.

  • @jontnorwood
    @jontnorwood Před 4 lety +2

    You can't uncouple the Cochrane Muffler. That will destabilize the Heisenberg Plow.

  • @mulando5232
    @mulando5232 Před 5 lety +43

    Well actually janeway changes a lot during the series. From a strict rule-following captain to a .. well timeline-altering captain. Ok, that happened in the last episodes, but well :)
    Yes, I know what you mean. The doctor was the true hero of the series. Like Data in TNG ;)

    • @joshhoover1202
      @joshhoover1202 Před 4 lety +2

      I think Torres also grew some at the beginning. But yeah not much growth for most throughout the show.

  • @nicodemusthemidnightdiscip2291

    If you want to see a sci-fi show that has massive character development!? Watch and review Farscape as a whole!

    • @jemts5586
      @jemts5586 Před 4 lety +2

      Oh mannnnnn, I LOVED Farscape!!! (Absolutely hated Crichton, but that aside...) So sad it's not on Netflix anymore.

    • @DickRileyTheConquistador
      @DickRileyTheConquistador Před 4 lety

      The Muppets? 😆

  • @alexisgervais8716
    @alexisgervais8716 Před 4 lety +2

    The Maquis angle was immediately dropped, and revisited in a few standalone, no lasting impact episodes. The members of that group were not even a threat. They had to invent one from wholecloth, so they could kill her later. Chakotay's 180 in his acceptance of Federation / Starfleet ideals was a joke.

  • @MrCoolVermonterblade
    @MrCoolVermonterblade Před 7 měsíci +1

    I was bullied and beat up a lot in high school. Voyager was the escape from reality that I needed. I will defend voyager with my dying breath.

  • @richardludwig3673
    @richardludwig3673 Před 6 lety +7

    Regarding the "Borrowed" issue - this is common in Star Trek and the ONLY series that doesn't do this (especially in terms of characters) is the Original Series. TNG brings at least four TOS characters in (McCoy, Spock, Scotty, and Sarek), DS9 brings in O'Brian and Worf, Enterprise brings in Dr. Soong (in ancestor form) as well as the Borg and the Ferengi, and Discovery brings in Sarek (again) and makes one of the main characters Spock's sister! The Borg were going to be an addition to the series anyway - we all knew it was going to happen because they were in the Delta Quadrant. I agree, they could have approached the Borg differently, but we're in their territory - it's natural that they were going to move from "mysterious stranger" to "next door neighbor".
    In general, I think you have to consider the period in which Voyager came out. The "dark and gritty" craze hadn't really come about yet (in the wider audience) and Paramount got a LOT of criticism from people about DS9 being "too dark" (and it looks downright cheerful by today's standards). They probably intended to give Voyager it's own two legs, but people demanded a more "TNG" type show, and that's what we got. I am among those that liked Voyager having a more TNG feeling because of the dramatic intenseness of DS9.
    As far as character growth, I think some characters DID grow (though not nearly DS9 level growth). I saw character growth in Janeway, Paris, and Torres (as well as The Doctor and Seven). Neelix had a couple small spurts of growth here and there, but instead of making the character more interesting, they made the character more bland. Janeway started as trying to be what she thought a Captain should be, to being a Captain of her own style. Her original style was rigid, disconnected, but I think she grew out of that into being more connected to her crew, taking personal interest and interacting with them. I think there were some very interesting development to see the different ways she coped with her guilt of her decision to strand the crew in the Delta Quadrent - even at one point admitting that being in constant turmoil allowed her to push her guilt aside to focus on the job. Tom grows from being a bitter ex con that doesn't feel like he fits to someone who builds a life, and a family, and isn't exactly looking forward to returning home because his life, as he knows it, is on Voyager. I think we get a lot of good explorations of Torres' anger and see how she continues to struggle with her anger and pain - and ultimately isn't cured... she still has it at the end of the series.
    I'm not trying to say there aren't problems with Voyager - the writing could get downright terrible in the first few seasons and I think they could have done a lot more with some of the secondary characters (Chakotay, Tuvok, Kim). I also remember what Voyager's strengths were - and chief among that is the theme of community. I loved Voyager for giving me another Hopeful version of the future - something lacking in today's Trek. As much as I LOVE DS9 and how much they did right, it wasn't that hopeful vision of the future that I liked in TOS, TNG and Voyager (and the first two seasons of Enterprise).

    • @dbehr27
      @dbehr27 Před 5 lety

      I'm old. 46. I've watched everything Star Trek in "real time" since the late 70's and some of you are so right to take that into context. I loved Voyager AND TNG. I sort of hated DS9. I'm too lazy to add much more but I saw plenty of growth in Voyager and really love the boldness of the series to have a female captain. You yutes don't understand how bold that was then. So many people are watching so many of these series and take them out of context of time. Nothing exists without context. As much as I'd like to continue to elaborate and debate all of this, I have a life to live. But I completely disagree with the main point of this video that the characters didn't grow. His whole premise that this show was different from the prior series in this respect is wrong. Both of the prior Star Trek series I would argue were roughly equally static and dynamic.

  • @georgeb8328
    @georgeb8328 Před 5 lety +15

    Tom Paris had some development, he was very different from the first season and the last season, he actually gave a crap

  • @erf3176
    @erf3176 Před 4 lety +2

    After catching a few videos out of order because they were recommended, i'm working my way in order. Some of your "not actually" videos are *actually* better than the scripted ones so far. You do a good job off the cuff.

  • @tehguitarque
    @tehguitarque Před 4 lety +6

    The best story arch of Voyager is Star Trek Voyager: Elite Force

  • @emporergrimes
    @emporergrimes Před 5 lety +85

    I don't know man. The characters of next gen did not progress or evolve either. Characters in Next gen were getting injured, almost dying and the next episode they are all fine. You complain that they showed the borg different but then you are happy that Q changes.
    I'd say it's just a matter of taste.

    • @Fingeroo
      @Fingeroo Před 5 lety +7

      Have you watched TNG?

    • @bladerah
      @bladerah Před 5 lety +16

      I completely agree with you. I think the only characters that have any significant changes throughout the series are Worf and Data. As much as I love Geordi and Riker I don’t see much difference in how they behave at the end of the series compared to the beginning.

    • @HyenaDandy
      @HyenaDandy Před 5 lety +25

      I would say Next Gen characters changed more. But I would also say it's less of a problem if they didn't. In The Next Generation, after all, we're watching a Federation crew, operating in or near Federation space, undergoing strains that are likely the normal strains of life on a Federation starship. It's a shame if a character nearly dies and then is fine the next day, because ultimately, they're near hospitals, have trained counselors (including one ON the ship), and care. If a shuttlecraft crashes, they can get a new shuttlecraft. If the ship gets hit, you can just go repair it. TNG isn't GOING anywhere, either. There's no 'arc' to TNG, nothing that the characters are always trying to achieve. We're told in the last episode the trial never ended and the whole show was trial, but that's retroactive.
      Janeway, though, is alone in space, with a crew that mixes two factions, and far from help or home. Every episode is a step towards that goal, which makes it more of a problem when there's no progression. When Voyager loses a shuttlepod, that should feel more important, because otherwise why is the show even out there in deep space?
      It's not just the issues of 'continuity' there, though, I want to be clear. It's not that you can't explain how the ship gets fixed. It's that the show positions itself as being about a survival situation, and so, ultimately, positions itself as being about one singular, unified story, from beginning to end. A story should have change. TNG doesn't have as much change, but TNG doesn't position itself as one single story.
      The 178 episodes of TNG are 178 days in the life of the Enterprise. But the 172 episodes of Voyager are 172 steps on the road home. The fact that there's little progress made between any two TNG episodes matters less, because the stories aren't supposedly connected. It harms voyager, becuase Voyager wants to tell one story with 172 stories within it, not 172 stories.

    • @SullenSecret
      @SullenSecret Před 5 lety +4

      I think it's a difference of eras in television. In the TNG days, the time period was very heavily planted in the ideas of returning to the same standard status quo, just like any old TV show. Voyager, however, was established on the new concept of changing the show dramatically from beginning to end. Ironically, the first and second episodes broke this concept by forgetting the conflicts between the Maquis and the Star Fleet crews and forcing them with the power of writing to being a well functioning team of crew members. Sure, they mentioned conflicts, but they failed to demonstrate them very well. At the very least, Janeway and Chakotay should have struggled with each other over authority issues. It's like the writers were stuck on the idea of a Star Fleet crew having certain standards in TV production of being an effective team. The irony is that this was their best opportunity to change the characters dramatically from beginning to end, with the exact premise of the show that two crews learn to be one. They somehow failed that. O.o

    • @pchiare
      @pchiare Před 5 lety

      I feel like TNG's more episodic form was kind of waning by the debut of Voyager. What bothers me is how Voyager's premise was totally wasted. I'd say TNG was a different show altogether and that's why Voyager's stagnant feel is so frustrating.
      I wanted to see them LOSE things, sacrifice things. The characters were good, the setting we all love... But the stories have no gravity: the show feels like it's always second guessing itself.

  • @Mneros
    @Mneros Před 6 lety +46

    Shitty, Lazy Writing.... Crew member: "Sir something bad is happening"
    Janeway: "Override" (Which never works, not once did that ever work)
    Crew Member: "Unresponsive"
    Janeway: "Switch to Auxiliary Power!" (again was always a failure)
    Crew member: "Auxiliary Power is off line. and I'm losing control of Blah, blah"
    Janwway: "cut power to that Blah blah and reroute it to Blah blah"
    Crew Member: "done but we are too late! Blah blah blah has/is blah blah
    Janeway: "Transporters!"
    Crew member: Cant get a lock/Offline/too much interference/damaged
    Janeway: Tractor Beam!
    Crew Member: "Not functioning/Damaged/too far away/not enough Power/they have gone to warp"
    Always the same conversation in every episode all those tools at their disposal and it never works as intended, and yet Janeway tries and tries and tries over and over again in every episode.

    • @NimhLabs
      @NimhLabs Před 6 lety +8

      I'm going to dislike that, because you forgot to add the part where Janeway ejects the Warp Core at somebody/something she does not feel that pleasantly regarding.

    • @michaelbell4930
      @michaelbell4930 Před 6 lety

      “Can’t get a lock” was always my favorite. Like unless they said one of the others right after you just have to assume there’s no legit explanation, it just DOESNT WORK. 😂😂😂

    • @TheWarrrenator
      @TheWarrrenator Před 6 lety

      TARGET WEAPON SYSTEMS!

    • @anthonysanchez1313
      @anthonysanchez1313 Před 5 lety +3

      you have described every star trek episode ever. you have to enjoy science and realize or google all the things that star trek has predicted would happen and now have actually happened.

    • @1monki
      @1monki Před 5 lety +5

      *Ensign Ensign:* "Captain, we have a difficult moral dilemma."
      *Janeway:* "I won't accept that, Ensign. I need a solution without any meaningful stakes or emotional fallout."
      *Ensign Ensign:* "Well, we could tech the tech. It's a billion to one. But if we can quantum modulate a tachyon field through the deflector array there will be no lasting repercussions of any kind. It will be like all of this never happened."
      *Janeway:* "DO IT!"

  • @Falstaff0809
    @Falstaff0809 Před 4 lety +1

    Yeah. They toss the ship into the Delta Quadrant, far from home, yet the writers and producers never committed to the reality of being stranded. No one died, no unfixable problems, no tragedy, no commitment.

  • @billmcdonald4335
    @billmcdonald4335 Před 4 měsíci

    Roxann Dawson deserves some kinda All-Time Acting Achievement Award for delivering the line "Get the cheese to sick bay." in an actually believable deadpan. The true pinnacle of bringing drek to life. Bravo, bravo.

  • @Snarfblat
    @Snarfblat Před 5 lety +14

    The doctor isn't static, he goes from a pretty rigid computer program, to a unique individual, learning about music, dating, individuality... Speaking of individuality, seven of 9 went from a borg, to a rude human, to almost personable. And how about harry kim, from a brat, to a more responsible married man, even knocking up a klingon.

    • @uaenruotel
      @uaenruotel Před 5 lety +3

      thats why I think of voyager as a very unbalanced show. The stuff with the doctor and to a lesser extent Seven was gold, but Harry Kim, Tuvok and Chakotay were bland as fuck

    • @XXX-hr5bb
      @XXX-hr5bb Před 4 lety +1

      Not Harry Kim but Tom Paris.

    • @starfox1
      @starfox1 Před 4 lety

      when did harry get some klingon poontang ? must have been a holodeck episode that i missed

    • @TheChimples
      @TheChimples Před 4 lety

      The Doctor was probably one of the best 3 characters in all of Star Trek. Easily the best on Voyager. The other two being Picard and Garak.

  • @bigloudnoise
    @bigloudnoise Před 6 lety +9

    Voyager is my favorite Trek series.
    BUT...I recognize and acknowledge the many, many, MANY flaws that Voyager has. Just because it's my favorite doesn't mean I'm blind to or ignorant of its problems. I know Voyager has many problems, and I'm not going to attempt to defend it by pulling random "but actually..." statements out of thin air. Voyager is one of the most flawed Trek series. It's bad...really bad. Hell, it was Voyager who brought us the disaster episode "Threshold", an episode so bad that THE ORIGINAL WRITERS have come out and stated that it never happened, that it shouldn't be considered canon. When the actual creators for a show are saying bad things about it, then you know it has serious problems. It's like Voyager had contracted an incurable disease, and rather than do the humane thing and put it down early on, they let the disease fester until in the end it simply died of old age.
    Voyager was bad. Very bad...and it is still my favorite Trek series.
    I guess you could call it a guilty pleasure of mine.

  • @StormsparkPegasus
    @StormsparkPegasus Před 3 lety +9

    The only reason Janeway is ANY different at the end than the beginning wasn't because the writing got any better, it's because Kate Mulgrew got fed up and eventually basically demanded more control over her character, or she would leave. The writing for her character had been all over the place to where she might as well have been about 6 different people. She started reigning that in once she got a little bit of control. So that allowed her character to change a small amount, noone else really did other than the doctor. Robert Beltran phoned it in. He hated the show, he hated his character. He liked his co-stars, but he still wanted off. So he kept demanding more and more money, hoping they would just kick him off the show. Instead, they kept giving it to him, at some point he just said screw it and phoned it in until the end.

    • @Poleson
      @Poleson Před rokem +6

      It bugs me they were OK to pay him when he was trying get out yet Terry Farrell, a well liked character/actor, that wanted to carry on was offered basically an insult .

    • @alanpennie
      @alanpennie Před rokem +2

      ​@@Poleson
      Dontcha love that 90s sexism?
      Still I'm glad he at least made some money out of the show.

  • @ThrashMetallix
    @ThrashMetallix Před 4 lety +2

    And you've gotten my subscription. I've really enjoyed your insight into Trek, even if I see things differently.
    I can't say I look at Voyager as the least of the franchise (I tend to think Enterprise takes that category), but your criticisms are completely valid, though again, I think Enterprise had more problems, especially with static characters and no development. I can at least look to people like the Doctor, Tom Paris, Seven, and Torres and say that there's noticeable development (The Doctor is among my favorite characters of all Star Trek his development is that good). But yeah, you're right when it comes to Chakotay, Janeway, and the rest being pretty static. You can tell they were trying to do the female Picard for a long time. It's a shame they held her back as long as they did.
    I'm more reserved on the borrowing from TNG concept, for a couple reasons. The first being that I never minded the further exploration of the Borg, and kinda like what they did. The collective charm kinda rubs off after a while. And I thought Q had some of the best episodes in Voyager, despite only appearing about 3 times...
    The same goes for Reginald and Troi (especially Troi who wasn't much of a character through TNG. Voyager finally gave me a reason to care about her). Did it borrow a lot? Yeah, but honestly for the most part, it looked like they knew what to do with it to make it stand out.
    Now again, your criticisms are completely valid. I look at Voyager much the same, as much of it being this good, but not great show that had an amazing concept (probably my favorite concept of the franchise), and not knowing what to do with it, which is a damn shame. But for what it is, I still have fun when I put it on. May not be as excellent as DS9 or whatnot, but it's still fun.

  • @barbarusbloodshed6347
    @barbarusbloodshed6347 Před 6 lety +31

    I disagree. There are episodes that fall out of the continuity, therefore one might get the impression there isn't any, but that's just not true.
    Tom Paris starts out as careless and then over time learns responsibility and becomes an "adult".
    He and B'elanna get married. She learns, over time, how to handle her temper. In the beginning she is basically a ticking bomb. But she learns restraint.
    Janeway gets more ruthless over time and learns how to live with the hard and sometimes unforgiving decisions a captain has to make all the time.
    She and Chakotay have this growing love that they keep in check from a certain point on, but is hinted at on a regular basis.
    From the beginning there is also that hint that Janeway is a woman who made the choice of her career over family life and being a mother, which she starts to regret... then she jumps at the opportunity to become a surrogate mother for Seven Of Nine.
    The Doctor has a great transformation from being a second Data around the crew to being actually insightful and caring.
    Neelix starts out as extremely unsure of himself and ends up being quite confident.
    The only one who really doesn't change is Tuvok. But that's okay, he's a freakin' Vulcan.