In any case, you have to appeal to the masses to make the show successful. Networks will simply not continue to air a show with low ratings in this day in age. If Star Trek only caters to the diehards then Star Trek will die.
Kor said
No, according to TOS, Kirk was considered "a stack of books with legs" at the Academy. In his class, "you either think or sink."
Police forces generally have all of this.NASA also doesn't have ranks like Admiral, it doesn't have uniforms, aside from spacesuits, it doesn't make subordinates call their superiors "sir", they don't have insignia on their clothes to denote their position, if you disobey an order you'll probably just get fired, you won't get thrown in the brig or brought up on charges and court martialed. NASA doesn't have an academy with cadets, people who work for NASA don't stand watch or have to be the officer of the deck. There isn't a "special forces" division, they don't put the prefix USS in front of their craft, they don't operate from "bases".......and so on and so on. Guess which kinds of organizations have all these things and many more that star fleet features????
Spot on very much agree with this as the OP.What Star Trek 'baggage' would I lose?
Selective Star Trek fans who declare that one series, or set of movies is the 'real' Star Trek, and disparage fans who like another series or set of movies. Get over yourself.
Vulcans, Ferengi and Romulans, . They're just over-used ,and I hate big, fake rubber ears.
Enterprise destruction. - Come on, they lose the Enterprise more often than my younger brother gets his car repossessed.
Time Travel. I think other comments have accurately described how I feel. Time to ditch this plot convenience device.
The Enterprise destruction thing is dead on. When they did it in TSFS is was shocking and original. Then the A and B were both destroyed non canon the C and D bought it canon and I don't know about the E but they tried to destroy it in FC.....it's the unluckiest name in the fleet.
Since I don't read the novels, I must have missed the destructions of the A and B.
I think some people here aren't fully understanding what "baggage" means. I've read a lot of comments about specific aliens, items or events that people would drop if they were retconning or rebooting Trek. This seems like not seeing the forest for the trees.
From my point of view, baggage is something big and large that Trek has been carrying around for quite some time. Baggage is something that can be dropped without rebooting Trek. I'm talking big, sweeping concepts or tropes that people think must be in Star Trek.
Technobabble was a good example someone through out a few pages ago. Time travel. Overly white/European/North American culture and characters. Overused aliens such as the Borg. Those are all good examples of baggage that have made Trek stale.
Rebooting is different than getting rid of baggage. We could have a brand new Star Trek series set in the Prime Universe that pays attention and doesn't retcon the past Treks and still lose a lot of baggage.
I think the stack of book with legs left with Vucanians and UESPA.Kor said
No, according to TOS, Kirk was considered "a stack of books with legs" at the Academy. In his class, "you either think or sink."
He was also 'never a Boy Scout.' Pick your backstory, or meld them together to make your own!
Starfleet is a mix of exploration, humanitarian, pure science, diplomatic, law enforcement and military.
I think the stack of book with legs left with Vucanians and UESPA.Kor said
No, according to TOS, Kirk was considered "a stack of books with legs" at the Academy. In his class, "you either think or sink."
He was also 'never a Boy Scout.' Pick your backstory, or meld them together to make your own!![]()
Starfleet is a mix of exploration, humanitarian, pure science, diplomatic, law enforcement and military.
StarFleet is without a doubt a military force. All militaries throughout history have conducted exploration and humanitarian and diplomatic missions
And what do you two think this thread is about?I get tired of "fans" demanding what they want or don't want to see in Star Trek.
+ a whole bunch
The US Coast Guard is a branch of the US military.The coast guard which is directly the best example have alot of this as well.
Where please?That's ignoring a larger ark where starfleet seems to take the place of organized labor(unions).
I most definitely would not say all militaries do exploration/humanitarian/diplomatic missions (i.e. those militaries resulting from several dictatorships or violent coups over civilian rule), but your point is made.
Religion: The idea that humans literally become secular over night isn't realistic. Religion is as old as humanity itself, yet somehow, it's shed by the 22nd or 23rd century, and the only religious people left are aliens? There should be Earth religions that are still prominent. I think it would be interesting to see how space travel and aliens affected Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and indigenous cultures across Earth.
Religion: The idea that humans literally become secular over night isn't realistic. Religion is as old as humanity itself, yet somehow, it's shed by the 22nd or 23rd century, and the only religious people left are aliens? There should be Earth religions that are still prominent. I think it would be interesting to see how space travel and aliens affected Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and indigenous cultures across Earth.
I apologize, in canada our coast guard is independent of hte military. Either way you get the idea.And what do you two think this thread is about?I get tired of "fans" demanding what they want or don't want to see in Star Trek.
+ a whole bunch
The US Coast Guard is a branch of the US military.The coast guard which is directly the best example have alot of this as well.
Where please?That's ignoring a larger ark where starfleet seems to take the place of organized labor(unions).
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Starfleet has alot of military based structure, however it clearly does things typical military do not do.
TNG was the only Trek series that tried to say humans no longer practiced religion, and even they backtracked on that once Roddenberry was gone. Otherwise, we know human religion does exist well into the 24th century, DS9 indicated Christianity still exists, and we know from Voyager (and TNG, for that matter) that Native Americans still practice their spiritual beliefs. Even in TOS the Enterprise had a chapel on board and in Enterprise Phlox once talked about his fascination with religion and all the various religions he observed being practiced on Earth.
TNG was the only Trek series that tried to say humans no longer practiced religion, and even they backtracked on that once Roddenberry was gone. Otherwise, we know human religion does exist well into the 24th century, DS9 indicated Christianity still exists, and we know from Voyager (and TNG, for that matter) that Native Americans still practice their spiritual beliefs. Even in TOS the Enterprise had a chapel on board and in Enterprise Phlox once talked about his fascination with religion and all the various religions he observed being practiced on Earth.
I missed that -- what episode was that in?
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