I liked it, though the writing was uneven and it never reached any star like the theme song promised.
Captain Quantum Leap was a likeable enough lead character, and any show with time travelling alien Nazis isn't all bad.
It was made in the days when men were comfortable being men and the audience wasn't yet socially awkward nerds who prefer their female eye candy characters to also be implausibly kick ass boss babes and/or slay kweens because it relieves them of the burden of even having to fantasize about initiating sex with women (that came later, starting from the late 70's I think? When the space race was over, normies were losing interest, and sci fi started retreating back to its own ghetto)
Now even the nerds have been dumped in favor of whoever actually watched Picard for the purposes of entertainment and not just to bitch about it on YouTube - all 12 non-binary Tumblr trekkies and their cats maybe.
It's the mid-20th century US Navy.... in spaaaace! Roddenberry flew B-17's in WW2 and was a cop so knew something about how men behave in military and quasi-military organizations. Kirk was well written as the sort of man who could believably command men. I don't think Picard was as realistic (too professorial and passive to be believable as somebody who got into a bar fight with aliens) but the character was saved by Stewart's acting skills and splendid accent.
Now we've got guys like Alex Kurtzman, who has no experience of anything outside living in LA and writing for a living, and it shows.