Right, but my point is that it still holds up even then. It still holds up with the original effects, too. Maybe the death of the mid-budget production is the real issue here, because if I were running the show I would aggressively slash the fuck out of the VFX budget to make room for additional episodes over a longer shooting schedule, and the idea of sacrificing eye candy and having the show just look decent doesn't really fly anymore. I think even a showrunner with serious weight to throw around would still promptly be fired for shooting a science fiction show that went 5 to 10 episodes without a major action setpiece because he wanted to film people calmly talking about ethical dilemmas in a room with flat, even TV lighting.
I agree with your points about overworking the cast and crew, but that's not actually necessary either: it's well within Paramount's power to spend the money on doing it right and take the time on doing it right and treat people like they aren't animals. And if wishes were horses, beggars would ride.
Ultimately, there is one person at whom the buck stopped and the decision was made—there always is—and I still want to smear dog shit on the door handles of his car.
Don't get me wrong, SNW is great: in my mind, it's the first good Star Trek show to broadcast since VOY went off the air (not a high bar to clear, I know, but it's still meant as a compliment), and I just wish there was more of it instead of the other stupid shit Paramount incinerates money on.
Right, but my point is that it still holds up even then. It still holds up with the original effects, too. Maybe the death of the mid-budget production is the real issue here, because if I were running the show I would aggressively slash the fuck out of the VFX budget to make room for additional episodes over a longer shooting schedule, and the idea of sacrificing eye candy and having the show just look decent doesn't really fly anymore. I think even a showrunner with serious weight to throw around would still promptly be fired for shooting a science fiction show that went 5 to 10 episodes without a major action setpiece because he wanted to film people calmly talking about ethical dilemmas in a room with flat, even TV lighting.
I agree with your points about overworking the cast and crew, but that's not actually necessary either: it's well within Paramount's power to spend the money on doing it right and take the time on doing it right and treat people like they aren't animals. And if wishes were horses, beggars would ride.
Ultimately, there is one person at whom the buck stopped and the decision was made—there always is—and I still want to smear dog shit on the door handles of his car.
Don't get me wrong, SNW is great: in my mind, it's the first good Star Trek show to broadcast since VOY went off the air (not a high bar to clear, I know, but it's still meant as a compliment), and I just wish there was more of it instead of the other stupid shit Paramount incinerates money on.