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Star Trek fans have held the national stereotype of being way too rabid about things for decades but they’re probably the nicest fan base in all of science fiction and the one least likely to have a large faction of them absolutely lose it over a torpedo being fired by a woman or dumb shit like that

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    • Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Because the first series didn’t age well :( although I loved it at 10… And the second was (controversial opinion incoming) too much of a soap opera for me.

      • VindictiveJudge@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        The writers and showrunners blatantly not having a clue where the plot was going was a bigger problem for me than the soapiness.

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          It’s weird how the show just vanished. Even without all the sequels and prequels Star Wars would still have been endlessly referenced for decades after the 2nd movie. BSG is the cultural equivalent of a night of heavy drinking.

          I remember binge watching it. I remember talking to people about it but nothing this past decade

          • VindictiveJudge@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Even without all the sequels and prequels Star Wars would still have been endlessly referenced for decades after the 2nd movie.

            Not necessarily. Being able to stick the landing is hugely important for a series’ legacy. Game of Thrones disappeared from conversation after its disastrous final season, but would probably be fondly remembered if it had been suddenly cancelled after season five. If ROTJ had been a similar dumpster fire, Star Wars might have gone the same way.

          • Captain Aggravated
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            5 months ago

            Notice how basically no one ever mentions Lost or Game of Thrones anymore?

            These shows were HUGE during their time. “This is AMAZING. Television has never been like this before. You can’t be an adult in society if you haven’t seen last night’s episode because if you say you don’t watch this show the conversation will immediately end.” soon “What the fuck was that ending? The last season turned to shit! Never mention this shit to me again.”

            It’s like VindictiveJudge says, these shows are designed to feel like they’re going places but never actually get there. The writers of Lost put shit in that they thought looked intriguing but they hadn’t thought of any way to resolve it into something. “What do the numbers mean?!” Nothing! Absolutely nothing!

            Those shows are built like big epic stories, they’re not Star Trek type adventure of the week that returns to the status quo, and yet they’re not designed to resolve. Of course you’re going to leave unsatisfied.

      • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        The second seemed like an asset rip to me. It wasn’t bad per se, it just wasn’t Battlestar Galactica.

    • Captain Aggravated
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      5 months ago

      The original old show? It’s meh okay 70’s sci-fi TV. Not into the kid and his robot dog or whatever.

      The 2000s remake? It’s basically what cured my television habit. I was never really into the “gritty realistic” heartburn drama shit anyway, so I gave up on the show itself pretty early, then spent the rest of my time as an SG-1 fan having Katee Sackhoff scream in anguish at me during every single commercial break for years on end. Then every TV show made from then on had to be a dark and brooding show about terrible people being terrible to each other and then I stopped watching TV.