Difference between revisions of "Wesley Crusher"

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While he was on the show, Wil Wheaton was largely unaware of fan opinion towards the character he played. In later years, he became one of the many critics on the character of Wesley Crusher. He includes several criticisms of his character on his [http://www.tvsquad.com/bloggers/wil-wheaton/ TV Squad Blog].
While he was on the show, Wil Wheaton was largely unaware of fan opinion towards the character he played. In later years, he became one of the many critics on the character of Wesley Crusher. He includes several criticisms of his character on his [http://www.tvsquad.com/bloggers/wil-wheaton/ TV Squad Blog].


<blockquote>''"My god, a lot of the hate mail I used to get suddenly makes a whole lot of sense."'' <br />
<blockquote>
''"I have never been more grateful that there wasn't liveblogging in 1987 as I am right now."''</blockquote>
*''"My god, a lot of the hate mail I used to get suddenly makes a whole lot of sense."''
*''"I have never been more grateful that there wasn't liveblogging in 1987 as I am right now."''
*''After watching this episode ("The Battle"), I finally understand -- no, I grok -- exactly why so many people hated Wesley so much. Hell, I played him for seven years and probably have more invested in him than anyone else in the world, and even I hated him after this.''
</blockquote>




[[Category: ST Characters]]
[[Category: ST Characters]]

Revision as of 22:07, 4 August 2009

Wesley Crusher
Wesley Crusher.jpg
Quote:

"Let me show you my science project."

Race:

Human

Affiliation:

United Federation of Planets

Gender:

Male

Born:

unknown

Died:

unknown

  [Source]

Wesley Crusher is a close second to Neelix for the most hated character in Star Trek. The son of Jack and Beverly Crusher, Wesley is a child prodigy with an intuitive understanding of many Federation technologies.

Ensign Know-It-All

Everyone's favorite Wesley moment.

Gross mishandling of the character by the writers of Star Trek: The Next Generation turned him into an egotistical nerd, and repeated plots in which he either saved the ship with his science project or nearly destroyed it with the same quickly got old with fans. Later writers tried to correct these problems, but their efforts were too little, too late.

He is said to be the self-insert of series creator Gene Wesley Roddenberry.

Going My Way?

Early in TNG, an alien called the Traveler befriended Wesley, impressed with the boy's great mental prowess. This alien turned out to be another super-being who could affect reality with his thoughts. In TNG's final season, he took Wesley with him to a higher plane of existence. Given the Traveler's appearance and the intense hatred of Wesley, fans like to think there were other reasons behind the relationship.

The Scene We Never Got to See

In the original script for Yesterday's Enterprise, Wesley was supposed to be decapitated in the battle.

Wil Wheaton

While he was on the show, Wil Wheaton was largely unaware of fan opinion towards the character he played. In later years, he became one of the many critics on the character of Wesley Crusher. He includes several criticisms of his character on his TV Squad Blog.

  • "My god, a lot of the hate mail I used to get suddenly makes a whole lot of sense."
  • "I have never been more grateful that there wasn't liveblogging in 1987 as I am right now."
  • After watching this episode ("The Battle"), I finally understand -- no, I grok -- exactly why so many people hated Wesley so much. Hell, I played him for seven years and probably have more invested in him than anyone else in the world, and even I hated him after this.