Week 50: December 31-January 6

On Monday Trump responded to overtures North Korea made to South Korea by tweeting that he has a “nuclear button” on his desk and it is bigger than Kim Jong Un’s button.

VOX does something that is always interesting. They ask Republican senators a simple Trump-related question and record their response. This was done a few months ago over what was in their health care bill. This week VOX asked what they thought about Trump’s “nuclear button” threat to North Korea. They were unfazed.

A book called Fire and Fury with unfavorable quotes from people in Trump world broke into the media this week, including quotes from Steve Banon about the Trump sons. Trump responded by releasing a statement that made a full break with Banon, saying that he had “lost his mind.”

Trump dissolved his voter fraud commission: “Rather than engage in endless legal battles at taxpayer expense, today I signed an executive order to dissolve the commission, and have asked the Department of Homeland Security to review these issues and determine next courses of action.”

Three interesting things happened this week that are signs of how the GOP is trying to push back against the Meuller investigation and/or protect Trump from its conclusions. First, FBI director Wray and Rosenstein met with Paul Ryan over Devin Nunes request for information about how the FBI and the DOJ have used Steele Dossier. The FBI had been unwilling to provide this information, but agreed to this week.

Second, we learn that the FBI re-opened an investigation of the Clinton Foundation several “about a year ago.” Some speculate that this is happening as a kind of bone thrown to the Trump administration or to be perceived of as being even-handed.

Third, on Friday Chuck Grassley and Lindsay Grahm sent a letter to the DOJ suggesting that criminal charges may be filed against Steele for lying to the FBI. Currently no evidence exists that he did, and we are left to speculate: Do these two senators have knowledge of such a lie, or are they trying to level a partisan attack on the FBI over the Steele Dossier, or are THEY trying to throw Trump a bone.

David French writes, “it would be reckless to the point of corrupt to refer a man for investigation absent compelling evidence of wrongdoing.” But overall argues that no one in the media has access to the classified information that the senators are using to make their recommendation. Time will tell.

Here is another take by the Washington Post’s Arron Blake: “There is an increasing effort among Republicans and the conservative-leaning media to question the legitimacy of the Russia investigation. Increasingly prominent in that effort are attempts to use the Steele dossier as the basis for a deep-state conspiracy against the president.”

Finally, on Saturday morning Trump responded to the Fire and Fury quotes of his staff and supporters who say he is stupid by tweeting that he is a “stable genius”

David Frum summed it up this way: “Michael Wolff’s scathing new book about the Trump White House has sent President Trump spiraling into the most publicly visible meltdown of his presidency.

Trump’s averaged Approval Rating: 38.8

Week 49: December 24-30

Trump caused a stir by giving a 30 minute on the record interview to a New York Times reporter. He expressed some curious ideas, but not any one statement resulted in a scandal. Reading the transcript has inspired some in the media, mostly liberals to again question his mental state.

A good Washington Post report on how the New York Times interview happened without his staff knowing, and hoe Trump enjoys much fewer constraints in Mar-A-Lago than in the White House.

On the last day of 2017, the New York Times published a story about how the FBI investigation onto the Trump campaign began: in May 2016, Papadopoulos was drinking in a bar with an Australian diplomat and revealed that he had been told the Russians have email dirt on Clinton. Two months later the Australians notified the FBI, which sparked the investigation. This was not known until the Times reported it, and it reveals that it was not the Steele dossier that started the investigation, which Trump applies have been using as an excuse to discredit the investigation.

Here is a list of 10 news items that the Trump administration released in the “news dumps” just before Christmas and New Year’s Eve, they include rolls backs of environmental regulations and the DOJ’s request to alter the census to include questions about citizenship.

Here is Pew’s summary of trends they notice in 2017. One shows how “the average gap between the views of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents and Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents across 10 political values has increased from 15 percentage points in 1994 to 36 points today.”

Week 48: December 17-23

New York Times reports of a national increase in hate crimes  where Trump’s name is being used as a racial taunt of minorities.

Border patrol separated an El Salvador man from his one year old son as they tried request asylum in the United States. The Trump administration is considering separating children from parents to dissuade boarder crossings.

The New York Times reported that in a June meeting on immigration he ranted that Haitians coming into the the country all had AIDS, and that Nigerians all lived in huts.

Saturday afternoon Axios reported that Meuller’s team has acquired tends of thousands of emails from the Trump transition team.

Trump’s lawyers immediately sent a letter to Congress claiming that the emails were illegally obtained, but shortly after midnight Sunday the Meuller spokesman put out a statement that all emails were obtained legally through “the account owner’s consent or appropriate criminal process.”

David Frum writes about the attack this week of a conservative Trump agnostic lashing out at a conservative Trump critic. His analysis is that the agnostics are wrong to think conservatism will snap back after Trump leaves office, but that political ideology is reshaped by the actual people who lead it and follow it: meaning conservatism is being transformed into support of Trump and his policies. Interesting tidbit: only six of the 21 conservative writers in the Spring 2016 “Against Trump” National Review issue are still actively speaking out against the President. Three of them are Mona Charen, Bill Kristol, John Podhoretz.

Similarly, Mathew Yglesias writes about how the passage of the tax bill is further evidence of the dissolution of long held political norms–like being honest about what your legislation does and using an open process to enact it; at least attempting to heed public opinion. He equates this moment to when social breakdowns like power outages temporarily suspend social norms and looting breaks out.

Trump signed the tax bill into law on Friday in the Oval Office, a rushed and unceremonious signing because he did not want to be criticized for not signing it before he went on Christmas vacation in Florida.

Trump made two claims about how the tax bill was sold to the public that may come back to haunt Republicans: that the biggest part of it is the corporate tax cut, and that he told congress not to talk about ending the Obamacare mandate during the run up the the final vote, but now that the voting is done they are all able to crow about it.

Here is a good summary of how GOP consultants plan to try to make the tax bill more popular. Current polling is 24% approval. The expectation is that the GOP will spend a lot of ad dollars to sell the bill in the coming weeks and months. They will want to shape public perception before their opponents do.

Tax experts say the Trump family will personally benefit from many provisions of the tax bill.

The Affordable Care Act enrollment for 2018 was on par with 2017, despite Trump administration attempts to curtail sign ups.

FBI stories:

New York Times reporting on FBI Director Wray trying to navigate leading his agents while avoiding angering the president.

On Saturday night reports came out that FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe will retire in the spring, bowing to political pressure from Republicans that he is biased in favor of Democrats and against Trump. CNN reported that McCabe in congressional testimony backed up Commey’s claim that Trump asked for his loyalty.

In a controversial report by Politico, House Republicans are investigating whether FBI General Counsel James Baker leaked the Steele Dossier. Many journalists and bloggers have come to Baker’s defense saying he was not the leaker, and would not leak. Reports came out this week that he was reassigned within the bureau, and this was widely perceived as either punishment or giving in to Republican demands.

004) Star Trek Discovery – Plot Contrivances or “is that all there is?”

In this podcast, a discussion of the narrative structure of the first half of season one.

Serialized Frame with Stand Alone Episodes

1-2: Premier (Prologue)

3-5: Ripper Arc

6-8: Stand Alone Arc

9: Fall Finale (Chapter 1 Conclusion)

Pacing

Every episode has that fast-paced, must-defuse-the-bomb-in time segment:

Pacing (ticking clock) Moral Decision Point
Premier 1 Vulcan Hello Burnham/Klingon Vessel The mutiny
2 Battle of Binaries The battle Gorgious sacrifice to beam over; Burnham’s life sentence
Ripper Arc 3 Context is for Kings Mystery of Dsc, and Ripper attack Burnham/ Lorca’s decision to stay on Dsc
4 Butcher’s Knife Figuring out Spore drive to save the dilithium mine Using Ripper
5 Choose your Pain Lorca escape from Klingon ship Using Ripper/ Stamets
Stand Alone Arc 6 Lethe Rescuing Sarek Sarek’s choice
7 Magic Mudd’s Bomb None
8 Si Vis Fight Saru Saru’s decision to strand them on Phavo
Fall Finale 9 Into the Forest Battle with Koll, 133 jumps Lorca’s decision to push Stamets to jump + Stamets decision to quit

Plot Contrivances

A plot contrivance happens when a writer needs something to happen–an action sequence, getting two characters into a room together, etc–and there is no previously established reason for that to happen.

Contrivances have a negative connotation because we want our stories to have meaning, and we want our storytellers to follow a set of narrative rules and standards, ie not just making it up without any attempt at craft or artistry. We want a story.

This creates problems: the insertion of story elements to juice up the action that seem significant in the moment but are not used again. They do not carry meaning beyond their immediate purpose. This creates bad feelings for two reasons: 1) we feel a bit cheated by the hollowness of the moment; 2) we know we don’t have to ever think about this again, which means, as Trek fans, or any genre fans, we don’t need to hold it very high in our head canon.  

These kind of Contrivances work when:

  1. The resulting action is satisfying enough that we overlook the contrivance
  2. The contrivance is elevated to something greater through integration with other narrative elements such as character or theme

List of Plot Contrivances:

T’Kuvma (and the Klingons)

His ships: Sarcophagus and Clever

Space Bugs (Species GS54)

Ripper

Dilithium Mine

Lorca’s Escape from the Prison Ship

Sarek in Distress

Mudd’s Time Bomb

The Phavans

Kol

Week 47: December 10-16

Alabama Senate Race

On Sunday Richard Shelby, senator of Alabama, said on CNN that he could not vote for Roy Moore and instead wrote in a “distinguished Republican” on his absentee ballot. This turned out to matter because on Tuesday Jones beat Moore by 1.5% and the Write-In vote was 1.7%.

Here is how Trump dealt with the Alabama loss and spun his involvement in it: “Aides to the temperamental president reported being pleasantly surprised that he did not rage against the setback in private, as he is wont to do in moments of difficulty. But neither did he concede a mistake.”

Here is Charlie Sykes, former right-wing talkshow host, on how accepting Trump in 2015 and ’16 has brought the GOP to this loss: A GOP Tragedy in Four Acts.

In an Atlantic piece about how Republicans will have a hard time finding winning candidates even after the Moore loss, McKay Coppins interviews a Republican official in Ohio who explains the reason the GOP keeps nominating out-of-the-mainstream candidates: “Part of the problem is we’ve trained our base to only respond to very specific messaging. We’ve fine-tuned what these people need to hear.”

Also on Tuesday, Trump tweeted that Kristen Gillibrand, who recently called for him to resign, used to beg him for campaign funds and “would do anything for them.” USA Today printed an unusually scathing editorial attacking Trump for the sexually suggestive tweet:  “A president who would all but call Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand a whore is not fit to clean the toilets in the Barack Obama Presidential Library or to shine the shoes of George W. Bush.”

David Ignatius opines about Congress’s rushed job passing their tax bill. An important thing to remember in the coming years as the tax bill is implemented: “Without a clear legislative history, tax lawyers at the Internal Revenue Service won’t have adequate guidance when they try to write regulations implementing the law. Courts won’t have a record of congressional intent, other than news conferences, tweets, and hurried floor and committee statements.”

On the Russian Front

Among rising right-wing clamor to discredit Meuller as partisan, Rosenstein holds his ground in congressional testimony.

A big Washington Post expose on Trump’s response or lack thereof to Russia hacking. One shocking quote: “Current and former officials said that his daily intelligence update — known as the president’s daily brief, or PDB — is often structured to avoid upsetting him.”

The Republicans leading the House Intelligence Committee has apparently decided to wrap up its investigation of Russia’s 2016 election interference. The final interviews are being rushed and several high value witnesses are being interviewed next week in New York during the tax bill vote, which means House members won’t be present for the interviews.

Week 46: December 3-9

The week began with a Billy Bush editorial in the New York Times reminding everyone that yes Trump did indeed admit to sexual assault on the Access Hollywood tape. This is happening now because 1) the report last week that Trump is privately denying it is his voice on the tape, and 2) now that politicians are resigning for sexual misconduct allegations, many in politics and media are trying to return the focus to the many women (up to 20 by some counts) who claim Trump harassed or assaulted them.

After three weeks of equivocating, Democrats finally take a hard line on sexual harassment claims against Conyers and Franken, both of whom announce resignation.

Alabama Senate Race

Monday both Trump and the Republican National Committee gave full support to Roy Moore despite the fact he has been accused of child molestation. Despite having initially pulled support, the RNC, headed by Ronna Romney McDaniel, reversed course and began funding Moore’s campaign again. (In a bizarre side story, McDaniel, who is Mitt Romney’s niece, stopped using the name Romney joined with her married name because Trump did not approve of her keeping the name of his former and current rival.)

New York Times reports that Trump’s turnabout endorsement of Roy Moore is indicative of a wider problem for the 2018 midterms: the White House and RNC lack a top-down strategic structure in place to direct and support GOP candidates–it’s all Trump and his Twitter account.

Tax Bill

Republicans who have spent the Obama years calling for “dynamic scoring” of tax bills to show how tax cuts pay for themselves trashed the Joint Committee for Taxation’s report, which uses “dynamic scoring” because it shows the tax bill would still add a trillion dollars to the deficit.

Here is Ramesh Ponnuru on how all independent analyses of the tax bill show it will reduce revenue not increase it as the GOP claims.

Jerusalem Decision

Trump’s decision to claim Jerusalem is Israel’s capital city and the lack of serious backlash shows how Middle East geopolitics has become less focused around the fate of Palestinians.

Here is Robert Fisk on the wording of Trump’s Jerusalem announcement.

On the Russian Front

Trump’s personal lawyer John Dowd to the credit (or blame) for writing Trump’s Saturday tweet that he knew Flynn had lied to the FBI before he was fired and asked Comey to go easy on him. We learn in this reporting that Trump knew (or suspected) that Trump gave the same lie to the FBI as he did Mike Pence about not having discussed sanctions with the Russian ambassador. There is lack of clarity over whether Sally Yates told the White House counsel that Flynn had lied to the FBI. Yates’s supporters are saying she never discussed the FBI investigation with the White House, but the White House says that she gave them the strong impression Flynn had told the FBI the same thing he told Pence.

Also this week, John Dowd begins to make the argument that a president cannot obstruct justice, while another Trump lawyer says that is not the White House’s legal strategy.

Eugene Robinson draws a line from the return of official RNC support for Roy Moore to the potential that the GOP will stand by Trump no matter what the Meuller investigation concludes. The question: if you support an accused pedophile for partisan gain, you will support just about anything.

 

Week 45: November 26-December 2

Maggie Habberman reports that Trump is telling people in private that he does not think the voice on last year’s Access Hollywood tape, in which he brags about committing sexual assault, is his voice. He is also bringing up his old lie that Obama’s U.S. birth certificate is a fabrication. Some in the media are using this reporting to further speculation that Trump is suffering dementia. But Habberman doesn’t think so. She told CNN that he has for decades had a habit of verbalizing his idealized reality in hopes of making it the accepted version of his self image. Also, he has not said these things publicly, which suggests he knows it would come off as crazy.

On Wednesday morning Trump re-Tweeted a British hate group’s anti-Muslim video. It created a uproar in the United Kingdom, and ensures that Theresa May’s offer of a state visit, so far unscheduled, will probably never happen.

The week ended on Friday with Michael Flynn pleading guilty to lying to the FBI about his Russia contacts before Inauguration. Flynn made a statement that revealed he has accepted a plea deal and will provide information to the Mueller investigation. Here are two views on the matter: Lawfare blog, as usual, sees this as a serious development and a danger for Trump;  while the National Review’s Andrew McCarthy downplays the significance.

Finally, Matt Lauer was fired for sexual assault this week. Many have made a connection to the men in political media who have recently lost their jobs over their treatment of women–Lauer, Charlie Rose and Mark Halperin–and these same mens’ treatment of Hillary Clinton during the 2016 election.

20) Star Trek Season 1: “Arena”

In this podcast:

An analysis of “Arena” with strong elements of science-fiction, theme, and world building (including the first mention of the Federation and Photon Torpedoes).

Plus a major Star Trek: Discovery easter egg: how to watch “Arena” as a companion piece to Discovery’s two-part premier.   

Roddenberry’s Curse: “Starfleet Nice” is not canon

Some fans who are reacting against Star Trek: Discovery‘s “dark tone” often talk about the characters being the source of this darkness. I’ve even heard one fan theory that the crew of the Discovery is actually from the Mirror Universe. In the essay below I argue that these fans are confusing psychological complexity for darkness, and this is keeping them from seeing that most of the main characters–from Burnham to Lorca to Samets–openly espouse core Starfleet values. Others have made the case that in our troubled times Discovery has an obligation to avoid treating questions of human morality wth pat and easy answers. I want to look at this from a storytelling perspective: the franchise’s habit of crafting appealing but 1-to-1.5-dimensional characters simply had to be updated to the standards of TV drama in 2017. “Starfleet Nice” is still with us, but now combined with the full range of human emotion.

Let’s look at the history.

In the summer of 1966, Gene Roddenberry fired off a memo to the writer of “Court Martial”–the 14th episode produced in the Star Trek franchise–that was an early articulation of what would later be called Star Trek‘s No-Conflict Rule. Kirk is on trial for the death of an officer, and Roddenberry took issue with the “harbor master prejudiced against Kirk” and the “ugly antagonism from what seems an unreasoning group of individuals on the base.” In the final script, the harbor master is more sympathetic to Kirk, but the “ugly antagonism” of the officers who shun Kirk in the starbase lounge survived–resulting in a great scene of realism and drama that subtly depicts what is at stake in the this trial for Kirk’s career.

In an earlier episode, “What are Little Girls Made Of,” the mad scientist-turned-android had a line that explained his motivation for wanting to spread android replicants like himself across the quadrant: “Power over minds and thus over everything else … I’ve decided to use it for myself… after all these years of doing things for others.” The line did not sit well with Roddenberry. He explained to Marc Cushman that “his hope for mankind was to overcome petty differences and emotions such as envy, jealousy, and greed.” The line was cut from the script, and a character who could have been a memorable Star Trek villain became nonsensical, evil-for-evil’s-sake. I suppose for Roddenberry it was better for a character to be a wholly defective person easily dismissed (and killed off) than one who acts on base and relatable elements of human nature.

In that memo to the “Court Martial” writer Roddenberry drew a line in the sand that would be barrier to Trek writers for another fifty years: “When you add up the things [in your script], it is hard to have much feeling or respect for Star Trek‘s century.” That we should look to this fictional century as an ideal to strive for was all-important to him from the very beginning. This was part of Star Trek‘s genius that made it endearing to audiences and enduring for half a century. It was also a double-edged sword that Roddenberry and his successors used to hack away at interesting characters and stories until…well, until Star Trek: Discovery chose to set a different course.

Note that while Roddenberry was clear about his standard, he did not apply it consistently even in Star Trek‘s first season. In the first episode–in the first Kirk speech–Roddenberry had Kirk say: “Let’s talk about humans, our frailties. As powerful as [Mitchell] gets, he’ll have all that inside of him. You know all the ugly, savage things that we all keep buried, that no one dare expose.” Kirk suggested that we must learn from those frailties in order to transgress them. A few episodes later, in “The Enemy Within” and “The Naked Time” the express theme was that our baser emotions are essential ingredients to a person’s identity. In “The Conscience of the King” the script spent a lot of time rationalizing the point of view of a mass murderer who engaged in eugenics (though in the first draft the massacre occurred on Earth, but Roddenberry wanted the Earth of “Star Trek‘s century” to have progressed beyond such things, so he moved the massacre to a fledgeling Earth colony. 

Consider this: How how does Roddenberry’s desire to rid his human characters of “envy, jealousy, and greed” synch up with Harry Mudd, a character and early Trek episode he was very proud of?

In “What are Little Girls Made of”–the very script that he struck lines from because they painted too dark a picture of human nature–the android says: “Can you imagine how life could be improved if we could do away with jealousy, greed, hate?” Kirk replies, “It can also be improved by eliminating love, tenderness, sentiment. The other side of the coin, Doctor.” Two other writers started that script, but Roddenberry spent two months rewriting it, so we can assume he approved of that line. As he should. The fact that we “need our pain” is a central theme of Star Trek.     

So in the original series, they were able to manage this tension between an optimistic depiction of humanity’s future with the fact that humans are imperfect and prone to terrible flaws.

That tension was real from the very start. Roddenberry the Visionary wanted to inspire us with perfect people. Roddenberry the Storyteller had to ground his characters in truth, which dictates that no person can be perfect and to force perfection on someone exacts terrible costs.

But by the time he was creating The Next Generation, Roddenberry had spent two decades on the convention circuit giving spellbinding lectures about the state of man and humanity’s bright future. The Visionary had supplanted the Storyteller. The tension was snapped, which spawned a philosophy about narrative and characters that would shape every subsequent series until… well, until Discovery.

It is said that Roddenberry initially conceived of the Enterprise-D crew as each being an allegorical avatar for a single, idealistic human virtue. Picard being the consummate explorer, and so on. This idea was dropped in the development phase. But in TNG‘s first season the characters were constantly reminding us how evolved they were. All trace of negative emotion was stripped from their personality, and whenever they met a character who exhibited that negativity, they were quick to point out how humans had evolved past that “centuries ago.”

I am not suggesting that is not a lovely sentiment, especially considering most science-fiction then and now is painted in shades of dystopia. My point is that this particular narrative philosophy, as applied by Trek writers of the various series, resulted in ship-loads of bland characters.

First, TNG.

This may come off as sacrilegious since many of us grew up worshiping the crew, but even as a child I was aware of the mismatch. At a convention my dad purchased for me two pencil drawings, one of the seven TOS crew members, and another of the seven TNG crew members, each one arrayed in a semicircle in the same style like they were meant to be displayed together. I remember thinking that the faces on the TNG poster did not quite measure up to the ones on the TOS poster. Is Will Riker an interesting character? Is Geordie LaForge compelling? As characters, what is there to sink our teeth into and chew on? To be certain, they are pleasant. We enjoy being around them. They did not need to be anything more than pleasant so long as the story wrapped around them was interesting, which is why TNG worked so well. It is well documented how the writers’ room struggled writing for these characters, especially after season three when Roddenberry stepped back and Michael Piller took over creatively, but by then the characters were already established.

With the next spinoff series, Deep Space Nine, Roddenberry was ailing and no longer involved in the franchise. But the expectation he established for how a human character must speak and behave in “Star Trek‘s century” was deeply entrenched. Since DS9 was predicated on being different from TNG–which for two years aired episodes on the same night–and after feeling burned by the no-interpersonal-conflict rule imposed on the TNG writers’ room, Piller and his writers figured out how to inject conflict and dynamic characters into DS9. Of the eight top-billed regulars, four were full aliens, the most of any series before or since. Between Kira, Quark, Odo and to a lesser extent Dax, DS9 was able to explore jealousy, envy, greed, hate, and lust.

Since they were looking in from the outside, those characters were able to comment on the nature of their milquetoast Starfleet companions. In a famous scene two of our resident aliens, Quark and Garak, compare them to root beer: “so bubbly, cloy, and happy.” As the writers gained more independence, the human characters grew more complex, some might argue darker. Dr. Bashir was basically rewritten mid-series thanks to some genetic engineering. Sisko committed war crimes.

But DS9 was a one-off, and practically ignored by the wider culture (if you need further proof of that, note the review of Star Trek: Discovery that heralded Soniqua Martin-Green as the first African-American lead of a Trek series). If DS9 needed to set itself apart from TNG, the third spinoff, Voyager, was supposed to be just like TNG. The premise offered some DS9-style potential for conflict by adding a pack of defectors/terrorists to the crew, but that was dropped by the end of the pilot when they all donned crisp, clean Starfleet uniforms. The characters were all cut from the same cloth that Roddenberry fabricated back in TNG‘s first season. Show-runner Rick Berman felt obligated to carry on Roddenberry’s mantel, probably out of personal loyalty as well as the fact that TNG‘s formula had made the all very wealthy. But he also added his own wrinkle. Some of the Voyager actors of human characters have said that they were told to tone down their performance, that their characters had to be bland so to make the alien (and holographic) characters stand out.

By the time VOY ended, TV’s next golden age was just dawning. Shows like The West Wing and The Sopranos were showing just how far you could go with characters on a scripted drama series. By now, Star Trek Enterprise‘s show runners–Berman and Brannon Braga–openly admitted that the TNG-era method of character development was a straightjacket. Making ENT a prequel was their solution to escape it. They claimed that writing a prequel series set only 150 years from present day would mean their characters could be more relatable to modern TV audiences. I will leave it to people who actually watched this show to argue over whether they were successful. Since I did not watch it, here is how the (favorable) New York Times review put it: Captain Archer’s “fellow travelers include some appealingly one-dimensional characters,” each of which he went on to label as “cocky,” “wide-eyed,” “brilliant,” and “jolly” (if you can match all four, good for you ENT fan). The review closed by saying ENT does not “reinvent Gene Roddenberry’s wheel, they just give it a spirited turn.”

Here we must pause to consider just how entrenched Roddenberry’s character rules were. Writers and producers who had created countless Star Trek stories under those rules believed that the only way to write complex, dynamic Trek characters that can have emotions resembling what their 21st Century human audience would recognize was to have those characters be born well over one hundred years before Kirk ever met Spock. Star Trek’s chief executive was admitting that there was no way to write captivating Trek characters so long as they were humans living in the 23rd, 24th or 25th Centuries.

I am not suggesting that the only way to make characters interesting is to imbue them with negative emotions and dark intentions. What I am suggesting is that no modern Trek series has succeeded in complimenting its ships with psychologically complex, compelling characters who also adhere to Roddenberry’s optimistic, all-positive view of human nature in “Star Trek’s century.” Maybe it can be done–but it has not been done.

This is all prologue to a defense of Star Trek: Discovery. I believe that all of the above is the reason DSC‘s “tone” is throwing some long-time fans for a loop. The characters seem so “dark” primarily because they are being compared to the plucky crews of the 1701-D, the Voyager, and the NX-01. Especially after viewing the fifth episode, “Choose Your Pain,” it is clear the show-runners and writers are showing us–like DS9 did before–that this Trek series is different from what we are used to.

But it is wrong to say it is not Star Trek. It may not be your Trek, but that is because you elevate tone–specifically the TNG-era tone–over the many other elements of the franchise. It is as if some fans think that having pure, innocent and bland human characters is an ironclad rule of canon: Trek cannot have a human with negative emotions and drives as surely as transporters cannot beam through shields. Other fans say no, that is not canon, it is poor writing based on strained implementation of some half-baked memos that Roddenberry scrawled in 1988.

And even if you set out to honor those memos, modern TV drama is predicated on complex characters. Characters who, as David Milch described, must spin against their own drive. Nearly all of DSC‘s characters succeed in that, where nearly all of modern Trek’s characters have failed. With DSC, the curse of Roddenberry’s genius has been lifted,  and the blessings of it are still there for those who are open to viewing it through a different lens.