No - @Valenti has sent me a message - it was just a random attempt at humour, nothing targeted.So he was mocking me then?
No - @Valenti has sent me a message - it was just a random attempt at humour, nothing targeted.So he was mocking me then?
It's like everything is a comic book debate, where there has to be a set standard from which to prove to everyone how much of a curbstomp battle it will be between your favorite character and the other guy.As I've commented before, the modern obsession with "canon" and such baffles me.
That's certainly the way Koenig played it in the scene.I always figured Chekov forgot until he saw the name SS Botany Bay inside the cargo containers.
I've seen it get quite viscous, especially in certain other fandoms.That's a straw man. Inviting new fans into the tent is not an attack on old fans. And fans who insist that their own narrow tastes define all true fandom are the most obnoxious kind of gatekeepers.
Pretty much me. I would have never become a fan of Star Trek if the first thing I saw was TOS. I saw TNG first and a smattering of the TOS movies, and the tone and production values of both were, in my mind, far superior to TOS.The people who don't care for the original TOS. The people who find it too antiquated in its production values or gender values to be enjoyable.
And, above all, don't tell people you're trying to preserve canon when you're not. Just be honest.Better to rip the "canon" bandage off with one swift yank than suffer the endless torture of countless tiny little continuity glitches. It may sting for a moment, but you're better off in the long run.
Nevermind that the two taste completely different.Someone on another site compared it to going to McDonalds and ordering a Big Mac, and them giving you a Quarter Pounder and insisting they really gave you a Big Mac.
It was a quite a shock.But if you grew up on the ridge-headed Klingons instead of swarthy guys with Fu Manchu mustaches, I can see where it might feel like more of a shock.
And, above all, don't tell people you're trying to preserve canon when you're not. Just be honest.
Nevermind that the two taste completely different.
The comparison had come about there because it seemed like the showrunners were twisting themselves around trying to say Discovery is canon from the perspective that it should fit very neatly into the timeframe it takes place in. One of the examples I had seen is the design of the Klingons. Instead of saying these are just redesigned Klingons, they were instead trying to say these are another sect of Klingons never before seen.
Huh. So someone said it was like McDonalds trying to give you another sandwich than the one you ordered and trying to insist it was the one you ordered. Not a totally accurate analogy, but I get it.
Canon is not something to be "preserved," though. A canon is just a story, and any story that's still ongoing is bound to evolve and change in the telling. The goal of creators of new canon is not to preserve it in unchanging form -- it's to add to it, to expand it, to update it. The only immutable canon is one that's no longer being created. You don't "preserve" a living, working artifact -- you use it. Museum pieces get preserved.
And THIS is why I don't take them seriously. All of that was pure marketing to old fans, which is fine, except don't treat me like I'm so stupid I can't see that pretty much the opposite is happening. If you're gonna do one thing, own it. Don't pretend you're doing something else just to please a small minority who are never, ever going to like what you do anyway. That's what irks me.The comparison had come about there because it seemed like the showrunners were twisting themselves around trying to say Discovery is canon from the perspective that it should fit very neatly into the timeframe it takes place in.
In my mind, it was the precursor to one of the great achievements, but that's just me.TOS was one of the great achievements of the modern age.
At no point in the show have they said any such thing. On the contrary, they explicitly established that Kol was a member of the House of Kor, and thus presumably related to John Colicos's Kor, despite having a radically different makeup from either version Colicos sported. They are just redesigned Klingons, without any explanation given, any more than the changes in Romulan, Andorian, Tellarite, Trill, etc. makeup over the years have ever been explained in-story.
It's more like two different chefs' interpretations of the same basic meal. One restaurant's chicken parmigiana might look and taste a lot different from another restaurant's chicken parmigiana, but you're still getting chicken.
Some of the people that work on the show have said exactly that, that these are just a different segment of the Klingon population that we've never seen before.
Now I know you'll say these are just production people, but when the people that work on the show say something like that, I tend to take them at their word.
But not in the actual show. Offscreen comments are not part of the story. They're a separate thing. Most people will never read or hear those comments -- all they will have is the show itself. So none of it counts unless it's in an actual episode.
You really shouldn't. For one thing, a TV show has multiple creators who may not agree on their interpretation of everything. For another thing, creators change their minds all the time, as better ideas come along. So what they say offscreen at a given point is not binding on what they decide to do onscreen later. For another thing, sometimes the things creators say in interviews are just a bunch of nonsense to appease oversensitive fans.
In this case, I think that whoever said what you're referring to just meant that you could choose to interpret the new Klingon design that way if you wanted to. Like so many things in Trek, you can either just live with the discontinuity or you can try to handwave it, and they were just suggesting a possible handwave.
Perhaps so. I think that the showrunners have to keep a sort of coherent message though.
Their people are going out there and saying things like that which is causing a great deal of consternation.
The message is the show. That's where they say what they want to say.
Among a tiny contingent of people on the Internet. Just because they make a lot of noise in their narrow circle doesn't mean they're actually numerous. And come on, "consternation?" That's silly. These are just stories. If something seems odd to you, use your own imagination and figure it out.
For lack of a better word. When I read the articles over at trekmovie's website, it caused quite a stir judging from the comments. I don't comment much over there anymore because it can get ugly and contentious.
And like it or not but when people involved with the production say things, some people take it as a fact about the show.
And a couple more, later on, which were pretty epic in and of themselves as establishing that into a very wide arcAnd a Kelvinverse version of Gary Mitchell featured in the first two issues of IDW's Star Trek comic series.
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