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Title: The Ballad of Wesley Crusher
Song: mewithoutYou - In a Sweater Poorly Knit
Source: Star Trek: The Next Generation
Length: 3:30
Warnings: Brief strobing between 2:37-2:41, otherwise fine.
Made for:
thirdblindmouse, Festivids 2013
Summary: You set out on a journey that wasn't your own. Now, it's time to find a path that is truly yours.
Vimeo Password: wunderkind
Download 32MB MP4 (right/ctrl-click and "Save link as...").
Notes: You can trace the exact root of this vid do a post by the AV Club: Hold this thread as I walk away: 15 songs about sweaters. I was bored at work and started poking through because I always thought that Wesley Crusher would make a good vid subject. It wasn't until the final entry in the list that I found something even vaguely appropriate -- the song in use here -- and even then I had to listen to it a couple of times before I figured out the general arc.
From that point, I had two weeks to make the vid. That includes clipping a show which, while I'd been utterly obsessed with it in the 1990s, I hadn't actually seen that much of. Bear in mind that when I was at the height of Trek obsession, I was a preteen living in the Midwest without a lot of money and streaming wasn't a thing yet (heck, DVDs weren't a thing yet). I owned a lot of TNG books and action figures and other memorabilia, but I had precious few opportunities to watch the show. So it was kind of like going in as a new fan, but with a mental crib sheet.
Here's the deal with this vid: Wesley Crusher got screwed. Here's this boy genius engineer who is so excited about someday exploration and discovery, but because of his background and current situation, that excitement gets translated into an adoration for Starfleet, which is exactly the wrong place for him. Wesley Crusher is not cut out for the military, no matter how benevolent it might be. Star Trek has a tendency to show that joining Starfleet is the pinnacle of human achievement and takes a dim view of the civilian (human) consultants that wander in and out. In a universe full of possibilities, though, Starfleet cannot be the solution for everyone. It certainly isn't for Wesley.
And the show, unwittingly I suspect, goes on to demonstrate that. Once Wesley becomes an acting ensign, his role becomes an increasing series of "course laid in" statements. He's tasked to fly a ship that, canonically, can fly itself. In a couple of episodes, he's basically used as Engineering Tech #1, working in the background and saying a line or two of generic dialogue so they won't have to pay another actor the extra money that comes with having lines.
I really don't blame Wil Wheaton for leaving the show in Season 4. They'd given him precious little to do and denied him the opportunity to work on other projects at the same time.
All of this is why I'm really glad that Ronald D. Moore wrote Journey's End for Wesley in Season 7. My understanding of it was that RDM saw Wesley much the same way that I do. The show was coming to an end and Wesley was still at Starfleet Academy. RDM basically said, "Hey, before we close out the show, can we fix this Wesley problem and show that there are other paths than Starfleet?" And so they did.
Thanks to Franzeska, Elipie, echan, diannelamerc, and lizbetann for sanity checks, cheerleading, and beta-ing.
Song: mewithoutYou - In a Sweater Poorly Knit
Source: Star Trek: The Next Generation
Length: 3:30
Warnings: Brief strobing between 2:37-2:41, otherwise fine.
Made for:
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Summary: You set out on a journey that wasn't your own. Now, it's time to find a path that is truly yours.
Vimeo Password: wunderkind
Download 32MB MP4 (right/ctrl-click and "Save link as...").
Notes: You can trace the exact root of this vid do a post by the AV Club: Hold this thread as I walk away: 15 songs about sweaters. I was bored at work and started poking through because I always thought that Wesley Crusher would make a good vid subject. It wasn't until the final entry in the list that I found something even vaguely appropriate -- the song in use here -- and even then I had to listen to it a couple of times before I figured out the general arc.
From that point, I had two weeks to make the vid. That includes clipping a show which, while I'd been utterly obsessed with it in the 1990s, I hadn't actually seen that much of. Bear in mind that when I was at the height of Trek obsession, I was a preteen living in the Midwest without a lot of money and streaming wasn't a thing yet (heck, DVDs weren't a thing yet). I owned a lot of TNG books and action figures and other memorabilia, but I had precious few opportunities to watch the show. So it was kind of like going in as a new fan, but with a mental crib sheet.
Here's the deal with this vid: Wesley Crusher got screwed. Here's this boy genius engineer who is so excited about someday exploration and discovery, but because of his background and current situation, that excitement gets translated into an adoration for Starfleet, which is exactly the wrong place for him. Wesley Crusher is not cut out for the military, no matter how benevolent it might be. Star Trek has a tendency to show that joining Starfleet is the pinnacle of human achievement and takes a dim view of the civilian (human) consultants that wander in and out. In a universe full of possibilities, though, Starfleet cannot be the solution for everyone. It certainly isn't for Wesley.
And the show, unwittingly I suspect, goes on to demonstrate that. Once Wesley becomes an acting ensign, his role becomes an increasing series of "course laid in" statements. He's tasked to fly a ship that, canonically, can fly itself. In a couple of episodes, he's basically used as Engineering Tech #1, working in the background and saying a line or two of generic dialogue so they won't have to pay another actor the extra money that comes with having lines.
I really don't blame Wil Wheaton for leaving the show in Season 4. They'd given him precious little to do and denied him the opportunity to work on other projects at the same time.
All of this is why I'm really glad that Ronald D. Moore wrote Journey's End for Wesley in Season 7. My understanding of it was that RDM saw Wesley much the same way that I do. The show was coming to an end and Wesley was still at Starfleet Academy. RDM basically said, "Hey, before we close out the show, can we fix this Wesley problem and show that there are other paths than Starfleet?" And so they did.
Thanks to Franzeska, Elipie, echan, diannelamerc, and lizbetann for sanity checks, cheerleading, and beta-ing.