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Ronald Moore says Voyager was dead at end of pilot
They felt that Deep Space Nine's grittiness had cost the show viewers. So it was decided that the inherent conflict between the Maquis and Starfleet personnel would not be explored. And Ronald D. Moore, the co-executive producer of Voyager, said that "when the Maquis put on those Starfleet uniforms at the end of the pilot, the show was dead
Ronald D. Moore
Ronald Dowl Moore (born July 5, 1964) is an American screenwriter and television producer. He is best known for his work on Star Trek, as well as on the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica television series, for which he won a Peabody Award, and on Outlander, based on the novels of the same name by Diana Gabaldon.In 2019, he created and wrote the series For All Mankind for Apple TV+.
Star Trek: Voyager Frustrations Led To Creation Of Battlestar Galactica
Ronald D Moore's frustrations with the limitations of Star Trek: Voyager led him to create the critically acclaimed Battlestar Galactica reboot. Ronald D Moore's 21st century reboot of Glen A. Larson's Battlestar Galactica tapped into the post-9/11 zeitgeist to become a sci-fi drama with mainstream crossover appeal.In 1999, four years before BSG aired its pilot miniseries, Moore joined the ...
Ronald D. Moore
Ronald D. Moore (born 5 July 1964; age 59) is a writer and producer of several Star Trek series and films, as well as several other science fiction and genre programs. Moore was recognized for his writing work on the Star Trek franchise with seven award nominations, winning two of them. In his post-Star Trek years, he greatly added to this list of laurels. Moore participated in filming of the ...
Voyager Was "Dead" When Show Made This Big Mistake, Says Star ...
Star Trek: Voyager did, in fact, play it relatively safe in its early seasons, as Ronald D. Moore suggests, but Voyager rose from the metaphorical dead when ex-Borg Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan ...
Exclusive Interview: Ron Moore
Ron Moore: Voyager and Enterprise — they are both essentially the same format. I mean you mix up the crews, you mix up the sort of fundamental mission of it all in each show but you are still ...
This Star Trek: Voyager Pilot Moment Killed The Entire Series ...
Ronald D. Moore's conclusion about the Maquis goes back to the roots of the Maquis storyline. According to Moore, who also worked as a producer and writer on "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine," the ...
Interview: Ron Moore On How 'For All Mankind' Is Building The Road To
Writer/producer Ronald D. Moore got his start in Hollywood on Star Trek, amassing dozens of writing credits from The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and even a couple from Voyager.He also co ...
Exclusive Interview: Ron Moore On Breaking Out of The Box
Over the next week look more of TrekMovie's exclusive interview with Ron Moore, where he talks more about DS9, Voyager, Battlestar, First Contact, Generations, his new shows and JJ Abrams Star Trek.
You Ask The Q's, Ronald D. Moore Answers, Part 2
Ronald D. Moore has been out of the Star Trek game for a long time, but it's a game he loved and remains thrilled to have been associated with, and he won't rule out returning to it one day. Moore, as most fans know, wrote and/or produced The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and, briefly, Voyager, as well as the features Generations and First Contact.
STAR TREK: VOYAGER Cast Reminisce in Documentary Teaser
And then TNG and DS9 writer/producer Ronald D. Moore came aboard in season six, but left abruptly when he realized the freedom he had on the other Treks would not happen on Voyager, which had to ...
Every Star Trek Character Killed By Ron Moore
Ronald D. Moore has been the writer and orchestrator of many of these dramatic deaths between joining Star Trek: The Next Generation in 1989 and leaving Star Trek: Voyager in 1999. Tellingly, Moore's last story idea for Star Trek was Voyager, season 6, episode 3, "Barge of the Dead", which killed off Miral Torres, mother of Lt. B'Elanna Torres.
Ronald D. Moore
Ronald D. Moore. Producer: Battlestar Galactica. Ron Moore was a member of the Kappa Alpha literary society during his time at Cornell University. He dropped out of college during his senior year, after which he moved to Los Angeles, California, with a friend in hopes of becoming a working writer. He was two weeks away from joining the United States Navy when Michael Piller, the co-executive ...
Ronald D. Moore is wrong, Star Trek: Voyager was just starting after
Moore was quoted as saying as such in the book, "The Fifty-Year Mission: The Next 25 Years" (via Screenrant) by Mark A. Altman and Edward Gross, and it's clear that Moore didn't watch the show. "When the Maquis put on those Starfleet uniforms at the end of the pilot, the show was dead. That was the biggest mistake, because they went through ...
Ronald D Moore's original vision for Voyager : r/startrek
Ronald D Moore's original vision for Voyager. Back in the 90s RDM approached Paramount and pitched a much darker version of Voyager, one where the ship would be in a constant struggle to stay alive from week to week with scarce resources and a constant threat of being destroyed by greater forces. Paramount rejected the idea as being "too ...
Ronald D. Moore on Star Trek: TNG, DS9 and the WILD Way he ...
Ronald D. Moore shares some incredible behind-the-scenes stories about working on Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and saving props from garbage.
Ron Moore was right in 2000 and still is today : r/startrek
This is an expert from an interview with Ron Moore back in 2000. Link at the bottom. ... Voyager suffered the same problem, but Voyager was successful because it was riding the coattails of TNG and it aired during Star Trek's 90s peak. By the time Enterprise came along, TNG had ended 7 years prior, DS9 had ended 2 years prior, the films were ...
Interview: Ron Moore On Why Star Trek Is An Uncomfortable Fit For The
Now for the second part of our interview, Ron Moore talks about the current state of Star Trek, including his thoughts on a possible Section 31 series and the challenge facing Paramount regarding ...
Interview of Ron Moore about Voyager : r/startrek
The writer-producers of VOYAGER maintain that they don't want continuity, so people can watch the shows out of order, for example, now in five-nights-a-week syndication. This is an interesting quote. Since then, episodic TV has almost completely disappeared. All of the best shows have continuity now. Moore was ahead of his time, especially in ...
Ronald D. Moore is wrong, Star Trek: Voyager was just starting ...
Former Star Trek writer Ronald D. Moore is among those, to the point that he thinks the series "died" after the pilot. Continue reading. Moore was quoted as saying as such in the book, "The Fifty ...
Ronald B. Moore
Ronald "Ron" B. Moore (born 11 September 1945; age 78) is a visual effects (VFX) coordinator and supervisor who worked on Star Trek: The Next Generation, the movie Star Trek Generations, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise. In a smaller capacity, Moore has made, as a script supervisor, uncredited contributions to other Star Trek movies as well, breaking down scripts for the VFX ...
Ronald B. Moore
Ronald B. Moore is an American visual effects producer and five-time Emmy award winner. Moore was the visual effects supervisor on Star Trek spin-off series Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Enterprise.He was involved with such films as Ghostbusters and Birdman.. He is not to be confused with Ronald D. Moore, one of his co-workers who served as a scriptwriter on ...
Ron Moore's Voyager
Rear Admiral. Apr 24, 2009. #1. Earlier into Voyagers run, Ron Moore of BSG fame moved over from DS9 and became an executive producer on Voyager for all but 1 or 2 episodes. He left because it essentially was a false bill of goods. When Voyager was presented it was presented as a crew desperate to get home, lost with limited supplies.
Star Trek: Voyager And TNG Have One Huge Borg Thing In Common
Voyager's first major Borg episode, "Scorpion, Parts 1 & 2" bears a lot of similarities to TNG's most famous Borg episode "The Best of Both Worlds, Parts 1 & 2."Off the bat, both episodes are two ...
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They felt that Deep Space Nine's grittiness had cost the show viewers. So it was decided that the inherent conflict between the Maquis and Starfleet personnel would not be explored. And Ronald D. Moore, the co-executive producer of Voyager, said that "when the Maquis put on those Starfleet uniforms at the end of the pilot, the show was dead
Ronald Dowl Moore (born July 5, 1964) is an American screenwriter and television producer. He is best known for his work on Star Trek, as well as on the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica television series, for which he won a Peabody Award, and on Outlander, based on the novels of the same name by Diana Gabaldon.In 2019, he created and wrote the series For All Mankind for Apple TV+.
Ronald D Moore's frustrations with the limitations of Star Trek: Voyager led him to create the critically acclaimed Battlestar Galactica reboot. Ronald D Moore's 21st century reboot of Glen A. Larson's Battlestar Galactica tapped into the post-9/11 zeitgeist to become a sci-fi drama with mainstream crossover appeal.In 1999, four years before BSG aired its pilot miniseries, Moore joined the ...
Ronald D. Moore (born 5 July 1964; age 59) is a writer and producer of several Star Trek series and films, as well as several other science fiction and genre programs. Moore was recognized for his writing work on the Star Trek franchise with seven award nominations, winning two of them. In his post-Star Trek years, he greatly added to this list of laurels. Moore participated in filming of the ...
Star Trek: Voyager did, in fact, play it relatively safe in its early seasons, as Ronald D. Moore suggests, but Voyager rose from the metaphorical dead when ex-Borg Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan ...
Ron Moore: Voyager and Enterprise — they are both essentially the same format. I mean you mix up the crews, you mix up the sort of fundamental mission of it all in each show but you are still ...
Ronald D. Moore's conclusion about the Maquis goes back to the roots of the Maquis storyline. According to Moore, who also worked as a producer and writer on "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine," the ...
Writer/producer Ronald D. Moore got his start in Hollywood on Star Trek, amassing dozens of writing credits from The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and even a couple from Voyager.He also co ...
Over the next week look more of TrekMovie's exclusive interview with Ron Moore, where he talks more about DS9, Voyager, Battlestar, First Contact, Generations, his new shows and JJ Abrams Star Trek.
Ronald D. Moore has been out of the Star Trek game for a long time, but it's a game he loved and remains thrilled to have been associated with, and he won't rule out returning to it one day. Moore, as most fans know, wrote and/or produced The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and, briefly, Voyager, as well as the features Generations and First Contact.
And then TNG and DS9 writer/producer Ronald D. Moore came aboard in season six, but left abruptly when he realized the freedom he had on the other Treks would not happen on Voyager, which had to ...
Ronald D. Moore has been the writer and orchestrator of many of these dramatic deaths between joining Star Trek: The Next Generation in 1989 and leaving Star Trek: Voyager in 1999. Tellingly, Moore's last story idea for Star Trek was Voyager, season 6, episode 3, "Barge of the Dead", which killed off Miral Torres, mother of Lt. B'Elanna Torres.
Ronald D. Moore. Producer: Battlestar Galactica. Ron Moore was a member of the Kappa Alpha literary society during his time at Cornell University. He dropped out of college during his senior year, after which he moved to Los Angeles, California, with a friend in hopes of becoming a working writer. He was two weeks away from joining the United States Navy when Michael Piller, the co-executive ...
Moore was quoted as saying as such in the book, "The Fifty-Year Mission: The Next 25 Years" (via Screenrant) by Mark A. Altman and Edward Gross, and it's clear that Moore didn't watch the show. "When the Maquis put on those Starfleet uniforms at the end of the pilot, the show was dead. That was the biggest mistake, because they went through ...
Ronald D Moore's original vision for Voyager. Back in the 90s RDM approached Paramount and pitched a much darker version of Voyager, one where the ship would be in a constant struggle to stay alive from week to week with scarce resources and a constant threat of being destroyed by greater forces. Paramount rejected the idea as being "too ...
Ronald D. Moore shares some incredible behind-the-scenes stories about working on Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and saving props from garbage.
This is an expert from an interview with Ron Moore back in 2000. Link at the bottom. ... Voyager suffered the same problem, but Voyager was successful because it was riding the coattails of TNG and it aired during Star Trek's 90s peak. By the time Enterprise came along, TNG had ended 7 years prior, DS9 had ended 2 years prior, the films were ...
Now for the second part of our interview, Ron Moore talks about the current state of Star Trek, including his thoughts on a possible Section 31 series and the challenge facing Paramount regarding ...
The writer-producers of VOYAGER maintain that they don't want continuity, so people can watch the shows out of order, for example, now in five-nights-a-week syndication. This is an interesting quote. Since then, episodic TV has almost completely disappeared. All of the best shows have continuity now. Moore was ahead of his time, especially in ...
Former Star Trek writer Ronald D. Moore is among those, to the point that he thinks the series "died" after the pilot. Continue reading. Moore was quoted as saying as such in the book, "The Fifty ...
Ronald "Ron" B. Moore (born 11 September 1945; age 78) is a visual effects (VFX) coordinator and supervisor who worked on Star Trek: The Next Generation, the movie Star Trek Generations, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise. In a smaller capacity, Moore has made, as a script supervisor, uncredited contributions to other Star Trek movies as well, breaking down scripts for the VFX ...
Ronald B. Moore is an American visual effects producer and five-time Emmy award winner. Moore was the visual effects supervisor on Star Trek spin-off series Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Enterprise.He was involved with such films as Ghostbusters and Birdman.. He is not to be confused with Ronald D. Moore, one of his co-workers who served as a scriptwriter on ...
Rear Admiral. Apr 24, 2009. #1. Earlier into Voyagers run, Ron Moore of BSG fame moved over from DS9 and became an executive producer on Voyager for all but 1 or 2 episodes. He left because it essentially was a false bill of goods. When Voyager was presented it was presented as a crew desperate to get home, lost with limited supplies.
Voyager's first major Borg episode, "Scorpion, Parts 1 & 2" bears a lot of similarities to TNG's most famous Borg episode "The Best of Both Worlds, Parts 1 & 2."Off the bat, both episodes are two ...