No, but the statement alone is enough to rile the canonistas.Novels aren't canon.![]()

No, but the statement alone is enough to rile the canonistas.Novels aren't canon.![]()
Excellent point. Also, a cloaked ship still would have a measurable displacement.Cloaking never made much sense in Star Trek. The object still has mass so any kind of sensor beam should bounce off of it.
Sulu was initially the ship's botanist (I just rewatched Where No Man... a few days ago) but became the helmsman (his interest in botany nicely maintained in S1 of TOS). No reason why she can't have multiple interests/roles.She's mentioned as the senior tactical officer in David Mack's book, but calls herself a xenoanthropologist in the episode.
Whoops!
Saddle up, it's nearly time.
A discussion thread for the pilot, please remember to be respectful of others' opinions, and set phasers (or canonical equivalent) to stun.
Let's see what's out there...
But they still know where the Klingons live... 4 days from Earth, in a hundred year old ship (They told us this in Broken bow).
Yes, but... that was one of the most egregiously stupid things in "Broken Bow" (which is saying a lot), wildly at odds not just with Trek's entire history of Fed/Klingon relations but also with simple math, and it's fair to say that just about everyone has written it out of their head-canon.It was a big surprise when 16 years ago this very evening we learned that the Klingon Homeworld was just four days away at maximum warp, and not just maximum warp but the fastest vessel of that time period.
I'm inclined to agree here (and it's also one of the things I didn't like about Abrams' version of Trek). Trek at its best was always about meeting challenges through cooperation, with violence as a last resort. (In the TNG era this sometimes got taken to absurd extremes, besting challenges through the process of "tedious committee meetings =>> deus ex machine of the week", but never mind that.) People weren't perfect, but they aspired to live up to their highest ideals. I'm not thrilled about the notion that STD's entire first season will be dedicated to a war between the Federation and the Klingons — not only is it pointless, as we know in advance that it'll end without any decisive victory and leave them in a cold-war stalemate a decade later, but it's thematically tricky to pull off. I was disconcerted by the subtext in the premier ep(s) implying that it was naive for Georgiou and the Admiral to even think of meeting the Klingons with diplomacy rather than violence. It smacks of cultural essentialism and a somewhat neoconservative, clash-of-civilizations worldview. I can only hope that this was a feint to set things in motion, and that the rest of the season will develop its themes in more sophisticated ways.The entire look and feel of this show isn't Star Trek to me, too grim and angsty. To focused on conflict and battle. It didn't feel like TNG OR TOS to me because both of those series are fun to watch, enjoyable, entertaining and gave me hope for the future. ...
For me, this isn't Star Trek. If I wanted to see bleakness and the building of a war I'll turn on the news. I need, now more than ever, a hope for the future. I need to see people working together to do GOOD things, working for science and exploration. I don't need to see ideological conflict and hostilities over cultural differences, and conflicts between military leaders over courses of aggressive action.
It's interesting that you say this, inasmuch as I see almost nothing by way of Trek-like visual elements. Aside from the delta symbol and ships with nacelles, what have you got? It could be almost any SF show. There are story elements that mark it much more clearly as Trek, but the production design is IMHO a disappointment so far.There's nothing objective about either side. I see nothing of TOS in Discovery. If you stripped away the Star Trek visual elements, I would have a hard time connecting it to any Star Trek.
I've heard people say that there are sequels to The Matrix, too. Scurrilous rumors. ;-)I know what you mean. Sometimes, a movie is so bad that you block it out. People keep telling me that M. Night Shyamalan did a move based on Avatar: The Last Airbender, but I don't remember it at all.
You're still misinterpreting me.An attitude that I'm entirely happy a show made today ignores as the sexist drivel that it was. That episode is horrible.
Besides, Kirk not calling her out doesn't mean anything. People say horribly sexist things about jobs 'not being for women' today and don't get corrected. Spock says in Wolf in the Fold that women are more easily and deeply terrified and no-one calls him out for that bit of tripe - should we respect that as canonically true too?
I don't disagree that it makes no sense that there weren't any female starship captains. But in that case, somebody should have told her, "Now, Janice, you know that's not true; there have been women starship captains, but you didn't get to be one because you're simply not qualified, and it's wrong to blame Kirk for that."It's completely ridiculous that in the history of Starfleet up to the end of TOS not one woman reached the captain's chair, especially as female first officers had been canon since The Cage. It's the sort of thing that should be immediately dismissed as the ravings of a mad character in an episode made in a sexist time. There's a difference between what characters say and what is factually true within the universe.
It's more than a handful. You don't honestly think that the only people on the planet who agree with me are all posting right here, do you?A handful of objectively wrong opinions isn't a "camp".
All of these attempted-"gotcha" posts are getting really tedious. I have no idea who Erika Hernandez is. I assume that's a character from the Enterprise series? I haven't seen more than a handful of that series, and I can barely even name the series regulars, let alone be able to identify all of them by looking at a cast photo.How about Erika Hernandez, captain of the NX-02 Columbia?
Or Captain Phillipa Georgiou of the Shenzhou?
Nope.I am, but thanks. It is clearly the Prime timeline.
Kevin J. Anderson once asked me why I continued to read his nuDune books if I hated them so much (talk about canon violations; his drivel is practically nothing but canon violations). I told him, "Because I keep hoping they'll improve, and so far you keep disappointing me."You seem to be awfully concerned about this show, down to timeline nitpicks, for someone who claims to not like and won't be watching it.![]()
I really don't care what the "official" position is. If the "official" position doesn't make any sense, I feel free to disregard it.Newsflash: In TOS the Enterprise travelled to the outer barrier of the galaxy. Twice. And in STV they travelled to the center of the galaxy.Within days.
Yet, 100 years later, the Enterprise-D isn't capable of reaching the Delta-quadrant, and the Voyager would need 78 years to traverse the galaxy.
HOW HAS TECH SO REGRESSED??? HOW CAN TOS BE MORE ADVANCED THAN TNG?? THAT CAN'T BE THE SAME UNIVERSE!!! TNG WAS A REBOOT!!!!11111oneoneoneeleven!
It's simply that: canon inconsistencies. And the tech of DIS may LOOK more advanced than TOS, but it simply isn't. It's actually in the perfect sweetspot between ENT and TOS.
ENT is the same continuity as is TOS as is DS9 as is DIS. Despite there being major differences in style, tone and depiction of technology in all of these. Either all of them are canon, or none is. And the official position is: ALL of them are. Except the JJverse stuff.
I sit corrected. Yes, both of those are real stars. Mintaka is a multiple-star system consisting of stars that seem rather large and bright to be suitable for the planet shown in the episode. Fun fact: Mintaka is 1200 light-years from Earth, and if TNG uses the same warp drive scale as Voyager, it should take over a year to get from Earth to Mintaka.I can think of two examples where that's not true off the top of my head: Mintaka and Wolf 359.
"Officially" can go fly a kite. If they want me to believe it, they'll have to do a hell of a lot better than they've done so far.But officially, it's still all the very same continuity with the same canon.
You might want to check out the articles in the Best of Trek books by Mark Andrew Golding. He made extremely detailed and meticulous lists of every single inconsistency in TOS, and said that IF you take each inconsistency as meaning that the episode took place in a separate universe, that would mean that the entirety of TOS happens in several dozen separate universes.This is not a matter of "to each their own"; it's a matter of being seen as reasonable versus being seen as ridiculous.
According to your viewpoint, every single crossover appearance (or reference) that we've seen across the width and breadth of the Star Trek franchise means absolutely nothing. It's silly in the extreme.
That whole "goshwow, this is so cool" attitude just really annoyed me. Please, don't have yet another series in which the female anthropologist comes off looking like a ditz. Honestly, I majored in anthropology in RL college, and "Wow!" is not a technical term we were taught. If she's really that good (and apparently she's good at a wide variety of things to the point where her superiors gush about her - just like any good little Mary Sue character - then surely she should be able to muster up a proper report of what she's found.She acts much more like a tactical officer, as the episode progresses. I guess she could be both. But the super characters that are awesome in multiple disciplines are kind of cliched.
Or someone just tossed xenoanthropology in there at the last minute.
That's what Phone-A-Friends are supposed to do. Apparently Spock Prime didn't have anything better to do than wait around for nuSpock to call him, either.I can't imagine him hanging by the phone like a teenage girl waiting for her bestie to ring up.
Actually, I can. It's funny.
I suspect that TV as we know it in that sense won't be around for much longer.
No it doesn't. As you pointed out, it is canon that Janice Lester said that the world of starship captains doesn't admit women. That doesn't make it factually true in universe that there are not female captains of starships. It only makes it true that she said that line. If women can be first officers over a decade before, it makes no sense whatsoever that they can't be captains. It does make perfect sense that Janice Lester was mad, and wasn't accurate in her assertion. As has been pointed out, plenty of TOS characters made ludicrous comments that weren't challenged but we quietly ignore. This should be no different.Canon says that up until the end of "Turnabout Intruder" there were no female starship captains.
But your argument is that we must accept at face value that what is presented in canon is true. The second warp 5 ship was therefore canonically captained by a woman. Actual visual evidence of female captains has to trump a comment made by a mad woman bent on taking someone else's life?My personal view of Enterprise is that it's not really a prequel to TOS.
Nobody is 'throwing anything in your face'. They are presenting counterpoints to your assertions. The Saratoga is relevant because it presents a female Captain of a starship in the TOS Movie era and in order to reconcile it with the interpretation that Janice was correct, you must somehow accept that 60s sexism persists in Starfleet for all that time and then just disappears for no reason allowing female captains from then on. It seems infinitely more logical that Janice was just wrong. And that Kirk was a sexist ass, for which there is a whole body of evidence.I really wish people would stop throwing the Saratoga, etc. in my face
No it doesn't. As you pointed out, it is canon that Janice Lester said that the world of starship captains doesn't admit women. That doesn't make it factually true in universe that there are not female captains of starships.
There are objectively true facts, but an opinion is an opinion. You and I have different opinions.
My personal view of Enterprise is that it's not really a prequel to TOS.
Kevin J. Anderson once asked me why I continued to read his nuDune books if I hated them so much (talk about canon violations; his drivel is practically nothing but canon violations). I told him, "Because I keep hoping they'll improve, and so far you keep disappointing me."
If he didn't start laughing at you, he should have.
You can disagree with someone and still be friendly about it.![]()
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