Stargate SG1 was amazing until about S9+ where Anderson left the show and we got an obnoxious thot to help fill the gap. The shows afterwards got pretty woke as well.
Yes. Great show, a lot of the core plotlines and characters still hold up today. The writers originally made Samantha Carter an insufferable feminist, until midway through season 1, her actress (Amanda Tapping) went to the writers and told them that genuinely capable women don't talk or act the way Carter did. The writers then not only changed course, but made it so that losing the feminist chip on her shoulder was in-universe character progression.
I genuinely cannot fathom this happening in a mainstream TV show today.
It's funny cuz I have only watched it through season 5 before the actors leave. It is good.
It's a show where you don't feel like you have to consult the Wiki every 5 minutes (cough House of the Dragon). They have so much screen time -- 22 episodes a season, that they actually tell everything onscreen instead of all the details being in books you'll never read.
'Waah, an actor for a show I used to watch doesn't parrot my opinions!'
Welcome to what the 95% of us have to endure.
I'm just glad there's no current talk of bringing Stargate back as they'd likely fuck it up.
Stargate SG1 was amazing until about S9+ where Anderson left the show and we got an obnoxious thot to help fill the gap. The shows afterwards got pretty woke as well.
Richard Dean Anderson was the backbone of that entire franchise and no one can convince me otherwise. None of it works without him.
I agree.
Claudia Black? Yeah, I didn't care for her character. And she was rough looking even for someone in her 30s.
Shit, I thought I was the only one.
Huh she is also the voice of Morrigan in worst Dragon Age entries.
Jesus, she was only in her 30s?
And the Ori were just a sadder version of the Goa'uld.
Still worth getting into? I'm always on the hunt for old for "new" shows I never watched, especially with how shit shows are nowadays.
Yes. Great show, a lot of the core plotlines and characters still hold up today. The writers originally made Samantha Carter an insufferable feminist, until midway through season 1, her actress (Amanda Tapping) went to the writers and told them that genuinely capable women don't talk or act the way Carter did. The writers then not only changed course, but made it so that losing the feminist chip on her shoulder was in-universe character progression.
I genuinely cannot fathom this happening in a mainstream TV show today.
Ohh... Okay. Because I tried to watch it and found her to be an insufferable feminist.
If I start with season 2 will I have missed much?
It's funny cuz I have only watched it through season 5 before the actors leave. It is good.
It's a show where you don't feel like you have to consult the Wiki every 5 minutes (cough House of the Dragon). They have so much screen time -- 22 episodes a season, that they actually tell everything onscreen instead of all the details being in books you'll never read.