The Genius Move That Made TNG Great Explained By Star Trek Writer

Summary
  • Michael Piller's innovative decision to focus on the characters in each episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation transformed the show and made it beloved by fans for generations.
  • The character-centric approach had never been done before in the Star Trek franchise, and it brought a new depth and personal connection to the series.
  • This character-episode formula continued to be successful in other Star Trek series, including Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise, and is still being embraced in current iterations like Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.
The genius creative move that turned Star Trek: The Generation into one of the greatest sci-fi shows ever is explained by writer Ronald D. Moore. Star Trek: The Next Generation started with a notoriously rocky season 1 that was married by massive upheaval in the writer's room. Showrunner Maurice Hurley came in to right the ship in TNG season 2, but he only lasted one year. Executive producers Gene Roddenberry and Rick Berman tapped Michael Piller to become TNG's head writer in season 3, and Piller's innovation made a huge positive difference in the quality of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
In the oral history "The Center Seat: 55 Years of Star Trek," Ronald D. Moore breaks down the late Michael Piller's brilliant decision to focus on Star Trek: The Next Generation's characters in each episode. This allowed audiences to get to know Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and the crew of the USS Enterprise-D on a more personal level, which is what made the characters so beloved by generations of fans. Read Moore's quote below:
Michael’s edict was “We’re going to tell stories about the Enterprise characters.” Every show had to have an idea of whose episode it was. This week is a Worf episode, this week is a Troi episode. That focus to the show hadn’t really happened before. There had been various stories told about the different characters, but it didn’t really come from this character-centric point of view that Michael brought to the table. That philosophy guided the rest of the run.
The rest of the Rick Berman-produced series, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise continued to follow Michael Piller's character-episode formula.


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