languatron
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Life could be this beautiful without NBC-TV in it.
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The LACK OF ORIGINALITY in Ronald D. Moore's format would seem to say so. I always understood that "Creative Vision" meant some sort of original thinking involved when engineering the premise of your television series. Since Ronald D. Moore's production has NO ORIGINAL THINKING whatsoever, then it's inaccurate for Bonnie Hammer and Ronald D. Moore to state that there was some "Creative Vision" devised and implemented here. Bonnie Hammer even went so far as to say that she "would not turn the creative vision of this project over to the fans." At the conclusion of Ronald D. Moore's FRACTION of a first season, I'm STILL WAITING for any sort of "Creative Vision" to manifest itself.
What is painfully true and all too apparent about Ronald D. Moore's production, is that Moore REDEFINED what "Creative Vision" meant in order to justify his endless THEFTS from hundreds of movies and tv shows. In this particular instance, what Ronald D. Moore REALLY MEANT by the term "Creative Vision" is COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT. And we're talking NUMEROUS INSTANCES of COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT here, from "Star Trek", to "Babylon 5", to "The Thing", to "Invasion Of The Body Snatchers", to "Terminator 3", to "In Harm's Way"-(according to Ronald D. Moore), to BITS & PIECES, SCRAPS & BONES, and TATTERED REMNANTS of endless Prime Time dramas, Soap Operas, Teen Angst Dramas, and watered down adult, pornographic fare.
What was the "Creative Vision" here, if we are defining "Creative Vision" LITERALLY? Where is the ORIGINAL THINKING in Ronald D. Moore's production? Where are the BRAND NEW IDEAS?? Where are the FRESH IDEAS that have never been seen previously in any other movie or tv show?? "Creative Vision" CANNOT be applied to Ronald D. Moore's production if we are using the LITERAL definition and NOT Ronald D. Moore's "Jury-Rigged Definition." You CANNOT attach the term "Creative Vision" to a production that is NOTHING MORE than a "HODGEPODGE FLEA MARKET" of ideas already thought of by Glen A. Larson, Leslie Stevens, Gene Roddenberry, J. Michael Stracyzynski, John Carpenter, Rick Berman, James Cameron, Aaron Spelling, Leonard Goldberg, George Lucas, Phillip Kaufman, Howard Hawkes, Ridley Scott, Agnes Nixon, and James Wong.
The excuse.....
CONVENTIONS OF THE GENRE
......is wearing pretty thin at this point, isn't it Ronny Boy? 

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