So, its less "stupid leap in logic" then "extremely contrived plot point"? At least with the leap in logic explanation it felt like they were trying to make him seem "smart". If the Rebels character only caught Hera because the writer(s) invented a stupid item that literally only one person in the entire universe cares about so even a brain dead mynock could have caught Hera based on it, then that's actually more insulting. So, at most, the fake Thrawn is "smarter" then other imperials because he read about Twi'lek customs one time, while most imperials wouldn't have bothered, and that let him notice blatantly obvious evidence of someone's identity. Rebels keeps managing to find ways to be worse. I'd be impressed if I wasn't infuriated.
I get the feeling that you've made your mind up and will not change it, regardless of what the show actually does in the future.
People can state anything. Since he's not even remotely like the real Thrawn, they were obviously lying. That's what they do, lie and make a terrible show. I honestly question whether the people on the show have even seen the movies sometimes, much less care about Thrawn. Their blue guy is not Thrawn created by Zahn. Its generic "smart" villain from every garbage cartoon for the last 30+ years with a Thrawn paint job.
Hold that thought.
It won't effect the movies or main books. It already has completely ruined a classic EU character, and will probably continue doing so. It won't effect any main stories, but it will still ruin great things.
I still don't understand what your original point was.
My biggest fear is that the idiots might be allowed to use the Mara Jade name on one of their characters. If you think I rant about Rebels now, having them steal Mara Jade's name would probably drive me to complete incoherent screaming. I just hope they either keep her in limbo or a book writer grabs her before the Rebels hacks do.
I doubt the Mara character will be used in canon, since her backstory would have to be radically changed, while Thrawn's basic character (a smart navy commander) can be carried over with minimal changes. But I'm only guessing.
I doubt Rogue One had planned itself around using a TCW character. They probably had a character written in that slot, and then some story group doofus thought it sounded like an obscure TCW character and had them change the character to fit.
Either way, my point still holds.
You market stuff to the target audience and the people who will buy. YA stuff is being marketed to adults. Why is that? Maybe because the target audience goes beyond the kids?
Also, I'd say the level of quality and complete lack of anything important in the non-GA books shows that the people in charge of the books know what's important and what is fluff.
So that's why we've gotten so many GA books that are fluff and so many YA books with close ties to the movies and TV shows that are the main facets of the franchise now? If anything, YA is more important right now. That's where the bulk of the direct movie tie-ins are being produced. And in either case, all books are equally canonical, so putting one above the other -- esp. since
Star Wars book fans are in the minority -- doesn't really work.
To be fair, the Young Jedi Knights books were good. they weren't written like YA books, they were mostly just shorter GA books. The Boba Fett chapter books were as worthless and unimportant as any of thew new canon kids books, though.
Since you admit to not reading them on principle, I don't really trust your assessment. Having read both, I can say that the average YA
Star Wars book today is better written than the
Young Jedi Knights ones were and actually are much closer, if not indistinguishable from, the GA books in many cases. I will agree that
Boba Fett hasn't aged well, though.
Its fluff because if they thought it was important for people to know, it would be in a real novel. Since its not, I'd argue it doesn't even count.
You really don't understand how
Star Wars canon works, do you? All the books, unless designed to be non-canon or to take liberties, are on an equal footing. That's the way it's always been. Nothing has changed and simply denying this won't change that fact.
Again, the end result shows they're lying. Also, its completely acceptable to insult people. I find it a bit ridiculous that people are so offended by it. Filoni and his minions are liars who say one thing then make a terrible, insulting show. They deserve every insult I can throw at them.
My offense is that your reasoning is flawed. You're making huge character assessments based on art, which means different things to different people. There's no one way to interpret art and storytelling. Different things mean different things to everyone who views it. You can make sound arguments on
Rebels being a good or bad show based on the episodes themselves. Some stuff just doesn't work for people. I like
Spider-Man, but don't like Dan Slott's run on the series. Doesn't mean that it's badly written (although I haven't heard good things about it), but some of the storytelling decisions aren't ones that I want to read about personally. Other fans do like those and can offer good reasons why they do.
Because of that, how can we trust the TV show to be an accurate reflection of the people who work on it, esp. since creators are skilled at telling stories that may not reflect how they personally view the world or their sense of ethics? People who make pirate movies don't believe that armed robbery is okay, for example. What they say and do outside the show is a better judge of that. And you know what, the
Rebels team is consistent on what they say and there's a lot of reaching out to the fans over social media and in conventions.
Whenever you bring this point up, you never offer any evidence, you just state your opinion that the show is awful and use that as proof. That's not proof, and attacking the producers over an opinion is honestly quite cruel. If you have anything solid, present it and let the rest of us take a look.
Also, your reasoning doesn't make sense in and of itself. If the makers hated
Star Wars, they wouldn't be working on the show. If they were incompetent, Disney would've fired them.
That's like saying you won't accept my opinion that stabbing myself in the eye would hurt without seeing me actually stab myself in the eye. Stabbing myself in the eye, coincidentally, would also be more entertaining then watching any more of Rebels. I'm not going to watch the abomination using Thrawn's name. The normal Rebels episode is terrible enough, much less watching more of the fake "Thrawn".
Bad analogy. We can infer that through other sources of information. In the case of the show, there is no other source of information to get the full picture. Refusing to accept or analyze that information means that your assessment of Thrawn is inaccurate, at best, since you do not have all the facts. You're qualified to say that you don't like what you see, but as of yet, you're not qualified to say whether the adaption of Thawn was good or not, since you refuse to give it a fair assessment.