Editing 2686: Space Adventure

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Exactly how this helps the crew and passengers, is unclear, but being {{tvtropes|GenreSavvy|genre-aware}} ({{tvtropes|WrongGenreSavvy|or not}}) can have implications for how characters manage to handle the problems that crop up in their various plotlines. The title text indicates that the resulting effects "looked cool", which may not necessarily indicate particular accuracy to 'real life' but indicates at least that the {{w|showrunner}}s are taking this fiction ''seriously''. It leads on to the assumption that there is one {{tvtropes|TroubledBackstoryFlashback|key piece of information}}, that one of those present possesses, which has some bearing on their current predicament. And they are going to be in peril from all kinds of {{tvtropes|MonsteroftheWeek|'monsters of the week'}} or other nemeses at least until they learn what that is, so perhaps they could skip much of the danger just by a more immediate revelation.
 
Exactly how this helps the crew and passengers, is unclear, but being {{tvtropes|GenreSavvy|genre-aware}} ({{tvtropes|WrongGenreSavvy|or not}}) can have implications for how characters manage to handle the problems that crop up in their various plotlines. The title text indicates that the resulting effects "looked cool", which may not necessarily indicate particular accuracy to 'real life' but indicates at least that the {{w|showrunner}}s are taking this fiction ''seriously''. It leads on to the assumption that there is one {{tvtropes|TroubledBackstoryFlashback|key piece of information}}, that one of those present possesses, which has some bearing on their current predicament. And they are going to be in peril from all kinds of {{tvtropes|MonsteroftheWeek|'monsters of the week'}} or other nemeses at least until they learn what that is, so perhaps they could skip much of the danger just by a more immediate revelation.
  
“Prestige TV” is another name for {{w|Golden Age of Television (2000s–present)|the present Golden Age of Television}}, which started around the year 2000. Golden Age television shows are more likely to have better special effects (more high-quality post-processed {{w|Computer-generated imagery|Computer-generated imagery (CGI)}}, rather than {{w|Chroma key|'green screen'}} background replacement or even a purely {{w|practical effect}} such as {{w|Creature_suit#Giant_monsters|'suitmation'}} or other {{w|Miniature effect|modelling}}) which contrast greatly with the effects of earlier eras. The ability to show weapons being fired, and even some more intuitive-looking emulation of physics, has improved as the production technologies have improved, and potentially made sufficiently good-looking special effects cheaper — certainly more ubiquitous. This then may be considered a co-indicator towards the tendency of newer and more 'cool' looking shows to also develop complex interwoven season-long (or even whole-series) story arcs, which build upon multiple cliff-hangers and situational developments for the characters involved. This is as a contrast to the more traditional stand alone episodes of drama, from earlier decades, that almost always resolve in precisely the conclusive manner that leaves the characters mostly in the same frame of mind as in the start – such that they arrive fresh in the next episode, or indeed ''any'' further episode, under virtually the same pretextual scenario.
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“Prestige TV” is another name for {{w|Golden Age of Television (2000s–present)|the present Golden Age of Television}}, which started around the year 2000. Golden Age television shows are more likely to have better special effects (more high-quality post-processed {{w|Computer-generated imagery|CGI}}, rather than {{w|Chroma key|'green screen'}} background replacement or even a purely {{w|practical effect}} such as {{w|Creature_suit#Giant_monsters|'suitmation'}} or other {{w|Miniature effect|modelling}}) which contrast greatly with the effects of earlier eras. The ability to show weapons being fired, and even some more intuitive-looking emulation of physics, has improved as the production technologies have improved, and potentially made sufficiently good-looking special effects cheaper — certainly more ubiquitous. This then may be considered a co-indicator towards the tendency of newer and more 'cool' looking shows to also develop complex interwoven season-long (or even whole-series) story arcs, which build upon multiple cliff-hangers and situational developments for the characters involved. This is as a contrast to the more traditional stand alone episodes of drama, from earlier decades, that almost always resolve in precisely the conclusive manner that leaves the characters mostly in the same frame of mind as in the start – such that they arrive fresh in the next episode, or indeed ''any'' further episode, under virtually the same pretextual scenario.
  
 
The other portion of the title text seems to refer to a relatively common trope of internal conflict being somehow related to external conflict, and the increasingly common trope of having a character with a *mysterious past* they've conveniently forgotten slowly rediscover, and grapple with, who they were, the culmination of that character arc often setting up the group of protagonists to be able to defeat the Big Bad Evil Guy ({{wiktionary|BBEG}}) or somehow escape the situation they're in.
 
The other portion of the title text seems to refer to a relatively common trope of internal conflict being somehow related to external conflict, and the increasingly common trope of having a character with a *mysterious past* they've conveniently forgotten slowly rediscover, and grapple with, who they were, the culmination of that character arc often setting up the group of protagonists to be able to defeat the Big Bad Evil Guy ({{wiktionary|BBEG}}) or somehow escape the situation they're in.

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