Plus a variety of voices on TAS. I think she did dialog for some of the online games too, as the computer.
Yes, she's the only one to have been involved in all the series.
Plus a variety of voices on TAS. I think she did dialog for some of the online games too, as the computer.
But it isnt falling ass backwards, Im happy to assess the franchise as being full of inconsistencies. These are not amongst them.
It takes no effort whatsoever to pick holes in the reasoning which suggests they are. They don't need fans to MAKE them work, they work perfectly well all by themselves with a literal reading of happens on screen. Anything else is fudging the facts to fit.
I'm not sure where you got the idea that science fiction stories always have to predict the future with 100% accuracy, but it's a really limiting one. Are you seriously claiming that those stories are somehow invalid just because nothing like them happened in real life?
If you can't see the beauty of the original design of the Enterprise, I feel sorry for you.
You are attaching a "ethos" to the show that just isn't there.
The only canon reference to monotheism in Trek TOS is Kirk's line in "Who Mourns for Adonais?": "Mankind has no need for gods. We find the one quite adequate." There's no evidence that he speaks for the entire Federation. "Balance of Terror" and "Bread and Circuses" both contain references to humanity having "many beliefs."
The notion that a female First Officer was considered "too progressive" or "controversial" was The Gospel According to Roddenberry, and has long since been debunked. What NBC's executives really objected to was the producer casting his girlfriend -- a relatively unknown actress with limited experience -- in what would have been a regular major role in a weekly series.
And it is better in some ways. Materially comfortable, medically advanced, technologically amazing. At the same time it wasn't perfect by any means. The things I noted in my previous post and more problems beyond those.The show presented a concept of a world better in many ways than that in which it was broadcast.You are attaching a "ethos" to the show that just isn't there.
I'm not, that part is part of the overall mix. I just don't pretend that that part is all there is.but why ignore the other part?
But at the same time in Balance of Terror, of the few symbols on the chapel wall behind the alter, a recognizable cross is one of them. Monotheism.The only canon reference to monotheism in Trek TOS is Kirk's line in "Who Mourns for Adonais?": "Mankind has no need for gods. We find the one quite adequate." There's no evidence that he speaks for the entire Federation. "Balance of Terror" and "Bread and Circuses" both contain references to humanity having "many beliefs."
Sources please. This is one of those things that's he said she said. The network maybe doesn't admit post women's movement to something that made them look bad back in the day, especially if they have a seemingly legitimate reason for their move. Where were the other female starship captains or in-charge professionals on the network's other shows to prove their point?
However, the "myth" of the network wanting to eliminate the female first officer was debunked by Herb Solow and Robert Justman in Inside Star Trek: The Real Story. In the book, they state that NBC supported the idea of a strong woman in a leading role, they only rejected Majel Barrett, feeling the actress is not talented enough to pull off such a role, and "carry" a show as co-star. (Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, p. 60)
I'd rather not we go around in circles. The primary intent of the line was that given the Romulans only have impulse, "Yes, captain, we can still engage them. (We're not going to consider the implications of how long it should actually take them to get around.) Will that be blue phasers or red in this one?" What is your in-universe explanation for happened to the Romulans' warp anyway? The nacelles were there. It'd take years for them to get back home, let alone between attack points. Why no mention of a tug or rescue ship or what have you on their end? Or discussion on the Enterprise about how they could have done what they did without warp or how long it'd take to fix it if they had
I'm not sure where you got the idea that science fiction stories always have to predict the future with 100% accuracy, but it's a really limiting one. Are you seriously claiming that those stories are somehow invalid just because nothing like them happened in real life?
What is presented on screen works the way it is once you remove the assumption scotty's line means no ftl drive.
We don'the actually have anywhere near enough knowledge to fully examine what "simple impulse power" means and all the episode tells us is that it makes the romulans ship slower than the enterprise.
None of this even goes anywhere near suggesting romulans can't produce conventional warp drives, as you point out the nacelles strongly suggest they can, as does the rest of the Canon, merely that this particular ship is using something other than the standard warp drive.
None of this requires me to theorise, merely to distinguish between what we know and what we assume.
At the same time it wasn't perfect by any means. The things I noted in my previous post and more problems beyond those.I'm not, that part is part of the overall mix. I just don't pretend that that part is all there is.
Poor Lori...
Who?
Vice Admiral Lori Ciana. Kirk's wife who was killed in the transporter accident in Star Trek: The Motion Picture. GR (in the TMP novel) said that their marriage was a standard contract marriage (I forget if it was a year or six months or what).
While I remember two friends greeting each other with a hug, in what scene was this "gay character?"Subsequent series/movies did better jobs still (i.e. a gay character in ST: Beyond).
Kirk witnessed a woman using coins to make a purchase from a vending machine, I took his comments to be a reference to physical money.Similarly with money, to bring this clunker back to its original intent, if Kirk says in TVH they don't use money ...
I took it to mean Scotty was on Earth, and used money (on Earth) to purchase a boat that he would then enjoy on Earth.then when Nick Meyer's anachronistic TUC comes along and Scotty says he "just bought a boat," I'm taking it to mean ...
In my head-canon, they were brothers ...........While I remember two friends greeting each other with a hug
I believe it was meant to imply that they were in a relationship and raising a daughter together.While I remember two friends greeting each other with a hug, in what scene was this "gay character?"
WITH HIS BROTHER ????????they were in a relationship
Love instructors, dude. It's all about the love instructors.the more I hear about the TMP novelization... the more bizarre it sounds....
That wasn't Sulu's brother, it was indeed his lover. This has been confirmed by everyone, John Cho, Simon Pegg, Justin Lin and Doug Jung (Pegg's co-writer who also played Sulu's lover in the scene).WITH HIS BROTHER ????????
Where did it say in the movie Star Trek Beyond that the man that Sulu greeted was his brother? I was under the impression, although nothing was explicitly said in the movie (it was in reviews), that it was his partner and their daughter.WITH HIS BROTHER ????????
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