The marijuana is mine, officer, but the wind must have blown that cocaine into my car.Depends on the excuse. I’ve heard some good ones over the years.
The marijuana is mine, officer, but the wind must have blown that cocaine into my car.Depends on the excuse. I’ve heard some good ones over the years.
Yeah, this is a strange sort of self-subverting argument that I see again and again when it comes to matters of continuity (and not just concerning Star Trek). People insist that "average viewers," "general audiences," "casual fans," don't know or care about details of continuity. And that's often put forward as if it's a reason to change things.\Do you honestly thing the general audience cares whether or not it's the TOS Enterprise with more surface detail or this revised version? Of course not. They're interested in the entertainment value. So that immediately renders your argument nonsense. Only the fans know the difference between this Enterprise and the TOS one, so who is it hurting to do something just a little but closer? Nobody is the answer.
Brace yourself.I'm not looking forward to when people (could be anywhere, not just here) start complaining about why the Enterprise interiors don't look as colorful as in TOS. I'm betting a lot of people won't know, or remember, that the interiors weren't nearly as colorful in "The Cage", so having a lot of silver and grey will actually be the way it did look.
They implied at wonder-con that the Enterprise crew would have their own uniforms. But I can’t see them using the Cage ones as they’re not as iconic.By that they wear the proper TOS uniforms or the bland STD ones? The novel stated they should be wearing the former.
So in your world it is impossible to do something that can please both?
Do you honestly thing the general audience cares whether or not it's the TOS Enterprise with more surface detail or this revised version? Of course not. They're interested in the entertainment value. So that immediately renders your argument nonsense. Only the fans know the difference between this Enterprise and the TOS one, so who is it hurting to do something just a little but closer? Nobody is the answer.
They're in for a Hell of a disappointment.
Yeah, this is a strange sort of self-subverting argument that I see again and again when it comes to matters of continuity (and not just concerning Star Trek). People insist that "average viewers," "general audiences," "casual fans," don't know or care about details of continuity. And that's often put forward as if it's a reason to change things.
But it's not, of course. The logical upshot of it, if true, is that the "casuals" will be just as happy (or not) either way, so overall you'll please more people if you also please the fans by being true to continuity.
We're rabid! Rabid I tell you!Given the rabidness of the fandom and the state of television these days I would say that it's very difficult, yes.
Well after all, once you do a redesign, you pretty much open yourself up to nitpicking by anyone and everyone who thinks you (or they) could've done a better job of it. Stick to the original, and the only people who will complain will be those who never liked it in the first place.But closer by who's standard? In this very thread we've had fans tell us it's too different and others tell us it's too similar. None of these is entirely pleased by the result.
Yeah, that proposition is the second (sudden whiplash!) aspect of the argument I was talking about: the casual viewers don't care about these kinds of details, except that they supposedly wouldn't like the classic designs. I don't buy it, and never have. It's just a small (rabid?) subset of the fandom projecting its own contrarian opinions onto a conveniently mute general audience.As for changes, if the general audience would find your classic designs silly...
I highly doubt that. I have absolutely no evidence for such an opinion, but the idea that "only people who hate the original design" will complain is being rather black and white.Well after all, once you do a redesign, you pretty much open yourself up to nitpicking by anyone and everyone who thinks you (or they) could've done a better job of it. Stick to the original, and the only people who will complain will be those who never liked it in the first place.
I would prefer Pike and any 1701 Crew be wearing Cage uniforms or WNMHGB uniforms. Keep the DSC ones away!
I'm curious. "Pick up" in what way?Non-fans that I know... pick up on odd design choices, like my mom with the USS Kelvin, or my wife with the TMP Enterprise.
That depends. Is your point that some of their components are 100% the same? If so, then yes, they must be 100% the same.Again, you're playing with words. Is the standard really that they must be exactly, 100% the same in order for you to see my point?
Not that I know of. As far as I can tell, they started with one of the early (discarded) concepts for the Shenzhou and finished it independently. Kind of like Jeffries originally built the Klingon battlecruiser from an early discarded concept for the Enterprise, as did Sternbach for what became the Daedalus class and, eventually, the Pasteur.They said they started from the Shenzhou though, didn't they?
I won't be surprised if they wheel out the tri-coloured DSC prototypes (identical but for lack of bling) in mustard, light blue and grey as the USS Enterprise uniforms.They hinted at Wonder-Con that the Enterprise crew would be wearing different uniforms.
I won't be surprised if they wheel out the tri-coloured DSC prototypes (identical but for lack of bling) in mustard, light blue and grey as the USS Enterprise uniforms.
Nah, you can see an andorian extra that forgot to wear her gloves and had non-blue hands.Someone was saying that those people in the background were blurred out because they were not-fully-rendered cg extras.
They found it distracting.I'm curious. "Pick up" in what way?
(I'm sure on an individual level people do notice and have opinions about such things. Unless there's some large-scale systematic pattern to the kind of opinions they hold, though, they can't and shouldn't be used to justify any particular creative decisions.)
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