CharlesPhipps wrote:Politics, gender, representation, and so on are all important for Star Trek.
Yes, but at the same time I want to be able to comment on something that I don't like without someone calling me a Femanazi or a Meninist just because I don't like key characters. This forum is the best I've been to as it's just talking about the annoyance of the small minority who hate something for [X] while everyone here just wants to talk about a shows plot and characters. I personally like Michael for being a very well written character and her redemption arc, though I do wish the rest of the cast could get more attention, and we're less jerks.
I know that this whole thing will pass and sense as you pointed out, politics, gender, representation, and so on are have always been important in Trek I that gives it an advantage as that is part of the series DNA. And at least a lot of fans have been praising the mirror universe story, which I need to watch at some point.
I think my biggest gripe with Dis is that I really think the series should have been set after Voyager and DS9 as the tech and design feels more like a sequel than a prequel. I mean say what you will about the Star Wars Prequels but there really wasn't anything there that was more advance than the original trilogy it was just, prettier. But with Dis you have holographic communicators that weren't created until DS9, which is something the show itself drew attention to. The tech that can allow the Discovery to fly around the galaxy in a seconds which makes Warp look like a kid riding a tricycle and the Klingon's looking like they do in TNG when Enterprise and DS9 made a big deal out of them having smooth foreheads at the time of TOS, (also why are they all bald, the Klingon's can and do have hair).
I really think that this should have either been set after the events of DS9 or been set in the Kelvin Universe which would have solve all these issues or at least have been less noticeable.