Theories are based on the facts as they are, and are changed to fit new facts. Ignoring facts you don't like isn't theory, it's ideology.
And for the record, I completely favor exclusionism in any fandom. Buffy ended after Season 5. Babylon 5 never had any sequels. No one in Star Trek ever said, "Get this cheese to sickbay." Life is better that way.
And for the record, I completely favor exclusionism in any fandom. Buffy ended after Season 5. Babylon 5 never had any sequels. No one in Star Trek ever said, "Get this cheese to sickbay." Life is better that way.
It's all canon. Especially the cheese.
And for the record, I completely favor exclusionism in any fandom. Buffy ended after Season 5. Babylon 5 never had any sequels. No one in Star Trek ever said, "Get this cheese to sickbay." Life is better that way.
It's all canon. Especially the cheese.
I just hate that kind of warring-camps approach to Trek fandom, that exclusionistic mentality pitting different parts of the franchise against each other. Star Trek isn't some unchanging fossil, it's a living, growing thing that's always evolving and adding new ideas. That's a feature, not a bug. Sure, not all the ideas are gems, but they never were. There are good things and bad things in every incarnation of Trek.
And they all begin with the derivative crap known as "Balance of Terror", from a cringeworthy show traditionally dismissed by many. But they couldn't be discussed without acknowledging that piece of non-art first.
And they all begin with the derivative crap known as "Balance of Terror", from a cringeworthy show traditionally dismissed by many. But they couldn't be discussed without acknowledging that piece of non-art first.
Them's fightin' words.
Kor
Sure, for Christopher, who has to follow the terms of his contract. For a fan who is into ST for enjoyment and not a paycheck, there is no reason to countenance such cringeworthy crap. Why should I struggle to overcome the stupidity of Threshhold or TFF when I have the freedom to ignore them?
This is an attitude the licensors must support. It would cost them dollars if, say, Star Wars fans were forced to accept the prequels with equal standing to the originals in their hearts, killing their desire for Star Wars merchandise the way Anakin killed those kids.
Also, with the reboot movies, TPTB are basically asking everybody to ignore all previous Trek series, movies, books, and whatever else, in favor of this new vision of the franchise. Is that factionalism as well?
That's needlessly melodramatic. Nobody's being "forced" to do a damn thing. This is recreation. You're not employees of Lucasfilm or CBS or whoever, so they can't make you do anything. But they have the right to tell their stories the way they choose. They're under no obligation to change their approach to telling stories just because certain individuals may not like their decisions. Stories need to have their own integrity, to be shaped by what the storytellers themselves feel is right for them. Some people are going to dislike some of their decisions, that's inevitable. And different people are going to dislike different things. So it would be counterproductive for storytellers to try to chase after fan approval or make certain parts of the story "optional" to pander to exclusionists. They'd drive themselves crazy trying, and it would only hurt the integrity of the work. The whole thing is already optional anyway. You could just walk away and be a fan of something different. Saying they're "forcing" you to do something is ridiculous.
If you're talking about The Clone Wars and Rebels, they are very much part of the Star Wars canon. Just because their animated doesn't mean they're directed at kids, they're pretty much on the same level as the movies. Rebels is pretty light, but by the end TCW got surprisingly dark and fairly violent.Well, Star Wars is just a handful of movies; all the rest is in the fuzzy "extended universe" territory where feuds of this sort seldom gain relevance. Few fight to make the televised Wars "canon", largely thanks to them all being animations directed at kids (except for the Christmas Special, the mentioning of which must be followed by a cleansing ritual).
Sure, for Christopher, who has to follow the terms of his contract. For a fan who is into ST for enjoyment and not a paycheck, there is no reason to countenance such cringeworthy crap. Why should I struggle to overcome the stupidity of Threshhold or TFF when I have the freedom to ignore them?
Granted, there are individual episodes I disregard because they make no sense or are contradicted by other episodes. But disregarding whole series seems like throwing the baby out with the bathwater. Every series has its duds, and every series has its gems. I can understand an approach that would disregard "The Alternative Factor" and acknowledge "Similitude," say -- my own approach does that -- but I cannot see the value in an approach that would do the reverse. Making the decision on a series-wide level means that you're including a lot of garbage and excluding a lot that has value.
This is an attitude the licensors must support. It would cost them dollars if, say, Star Wars fans were forced to accept the prequels with equal standing to the originals in their hearts, killing their desire for Star Wars merchandise the way Anakin killed those kids.
That's needlessly melodramatic. Nobody's being "forced" to do a damn thing. This is recreation. You're not employees of Lucasfilm or CBS or whoever, so they can't make you do anything. But they have the right to tell their stories the way they choose. They're under no obligation to change their approach to telling stories just because certain individuals may not like their decisions. Stories need to have their own integrity, to be shaped by what the storytellers themselves feel is right for them. Some people are going to dislike some of their decisions, that's inevitable. And different people are going to dislike different things. So it would be counterproductive for storytellers to try to chase after fan approval or make certain parts of the story "optional" to pander to exclusionists. They'd drive themselves crazy trying, and it would only hurt the integrity of the work. The whole thing is already optional anyway. You could just walk away and be a fan of something different. Saying they're "forcing" you to do something is ridiculous.
If you're talking about The Clone Wars and Rebels, they are very much part of the Star Wars canon. Just because their animated doesn't mean they're directed at kids, they're pretty much on the same level as the movies. Rebels is pretty light, but by the end TCW got surprisingly dark and fairly violent.
Really? Just last page, didn't you tell Uniderth that he couldn't choose to dismiss the canon he dislikes, even from his 'personal canon'?
I always years ago Lucas said that the original trilogy was meant for "the kid in us," not specifically for those of child-age.
In recent years (especially with The Phantom Menace, he has been more insistent that the whole thing was always for kids.
But The sight of barbecued Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru in Star Wars (1977) is a little grim for children's viewing, in my opinion.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.