this post was submitted on 30 Mar 2026
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It's hard to imagine a world in which writers are not allowed to express any harsh criticism of the work of other writers. I guess it would produce some really bad writing. If that's really how it works in American film and television, perhaps it explains a few things.
Is he criticising mordern Trek though or basically just pushing the "its woke" nonsense narrative?
Like, there are critisims. Discovery felt incredibly out of place before they time traveled. Academy spent 4 of its 10 episodes on metaplot and ignored several of its characters (reminder, Tarima has a brother). All of it has too much "ThE gAlAxY iS At StaKe" overpowered plot constructs.
That is criticism.
Being angry they have gay Klingons is stupid.
Crossing my fingers it gets leaked 🤣
Are there a lot of fields where the professionals regularly tear into each other? Aside from politics, none come to mind.
Music
Heh, fair enough. Not sure I agree that recording industry beef is a model to be followed (and it would open up a whole 'nother conversation about how much of that is genuine), but fair enough.
Not just beefs. Artists and critics talk shit about music they don’t like all the time.
This stuff happens in creative fields. It doesn’t happen in other fields, because those generally involve tasks with predefined goals and ways of going about achieving them, and everyone is pretty much producing the same kind of output.
That's an interesting thing to bring into the conversation - Weir certainly isn't one.
Everyone's a critic.
He’s an artist
It depends on context. A random podcast is not a venue for harsh critique