What did it say then?
couldn't find it on google cache, but oddly enough, the post here referencing the tweet already is a google search result. wonder if activity on the thread or searches of it are somehow giving it a higher spider priority.
What did it say then?
Mr. Peters is a lot like Mr. Trump. A lot of people wish we would go away, but spend so much time thinking and talking about him that he doesn't. It's like clapping for Tinkerbelle around here. 702 pages of clapping.I bet Alec hates this tweet...
Mr. Peters is a lot like Mr. Trump. A lot of people wish we would go away, but spend so much time thinking and talking about him that he doesn't. It's like clapping for Tinkerbelle around here. 702 pages of clapping.
Anyway, I wonder if CBS minds at all if the proceedings don't take place before the movie is out.
LOL on Tinkerbell. But I think he is more like a fish on a hook. They are playing him, letting him run out the line, and he still thinks he can unhook himself.Mr. Peters is a lot like Mr. Trump. A lot of people wish we would go away, but spend so much time thinking and talking about him that he doesn't. It's like clapping for Tinkerbelle around here. 702 pages of clapping.
Anyway, I wonder if CBS would mind at all if the proceedings don't take place before the movie is out.
whatever it was, its already gone
What did it say then?
couldn't find it on google cache, but oddly enough, the post here referencing the tweet already is a google search result. wonder if activity on the thread or searches of it are somehow giving it a higher spider priority.
Mr. Peters is a lot like Mr. Trump. A lot of people wish we would go away, but spend so much time thinking and talking about him that he doesn't. It's like clapping for Tinkerbelle around here. 702 pages of clapping.
Anyway, I wonder if CBS would mind at all if the proceedings don't take place before the movie is out.
It was a tweet from Star Wars setting out all of the rules for this year's Fan Film contest
http://cdnvideo.dolimg.com/cdn_assets/3a519829d95bfb651c3e3a0140d46b8faaa409fc.pdfPlease do not include any references to Star Trek®.
Bunch of folks from CBS have started following @AxaMonitor on Twitter. Jus' sayin'…
Also, last night I published a response to that silly 'Kobayashi Maru' blog post from Kryptonradio alleging that only by buying Axanar could Paramount save itself from certain doom. It's called, "Which Kobayahi Maru?"
Gosh, Carlos, that was another impressive article. It read like you and I had read the same Watkins article because while I read yours I kept shaking my head yes and telling my computer screen "Yes! That's exactly what I was thinking when I read the Watkins one!"Also, last night I published a response to that silly 'Kobayashi Maru' blog post from Kryptonradio alleging that only by buying Axanar could Paramount save itself from certain doom. It's called, "Which Kobayahi Maru?"
I can't read through that thread - the GIANT MASSIVE INSANELY LARGE signature boxes drive me crazy.
Bunch of folks from CBS have started following @AxaMonitor on Twitter. Jus' sayin'…
/lurkcloakoff
Quick side question: In all of this Axanar drama, I thought I read somewhere Alec saying he'd read and follows all of CBS' rules regarding fan films. Am I remembering this right? Did he actually say / write that? Does anyone have a link if so? Friends have suggested that if he said it anywhere, he said it here.
Thank you!
"However, CBS expects fan films to act in a manner that does not infringe CBS Intellectual Property and when one production does so, as in this case, it imperils every production."
Those are in his first two posts; #1 & #6. I believe there are more so that thread may be an easy place to start looking."And the point is, since nobody is licensed, and CBS is not in talks with anyone to license any fan films, and since we all exist at the pleasure of CBS who could shut these ventures down in a heartbeat, playing by the rules is essential, or else we all could suffer.
I think that is a pretty simple concept to grasp."
"I have been working on "Axanar" now for almost two years, slowly writing the script with John Muenchrath and now Dave Galanter. James Cawley has been supporting this project and commited Phase II sets to the project.
It was James who got the ball rolling when he asked me to portray Captain Garth in "The Protracted Man" in a great scene where Garth and the Admiral are watching young Kirk blow up the Kobayashi Maru. The Admiral thinks Kirk is trouble, but Garth sees potential.
That lead to me writing a treatment, which Marco Plamieri, the former Star Trek editor at Pocket Books, reviewed and gave feedback on. Before writing the script, I took a Robert McKee seminar (the godfather of screenplay writing) with Doc John, read McKee's book and the script is now almost done. Dave Galanter and I have been working it for 6 months now.
This past summer I played a restored Captain Garth in the "Going Boldly" vignette, and that story, of how Garth comes back to Starfleet, will be featured in our first vingette, which is a bumper story, set on the Enterprise just after "Whom Gods Destroy". In the vignette, titled "Heroes", Kirk and the Enterprise pick up Captain Garth from Elba II and bring him back to Starfleet, and we see Garth dealing with what has happened.
"Axanar" is a one-shot feature and will be about 75 minutes long. It will be shot both at the Phase II sets, and here in L.A. at my warehouse, which we are emptying out for use as a sound stage.
It has a rather large budget for a fan film, all funded by me, and being based in L.A., we hope to be able to attract a lot of talented people. Christian Gossett, who created "The Red Star" graphic novel, which is in development at Warner Brothers, will be directing."
Also, last night I published a response to that silly 'Kobayashi Maru' blog post from Kryptonradio alleging that only by buying Axanar could Paramount save itself from certain doom. It's called, "Which Kobayahi Maru?"
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.