Sidebar:
not to be a total shill for
Saga, but it got me back into readings comics.
Anything written by Brian K. Vaughan is well worth checking out!
Now, onward...
The weird thing is how many people I see arguing that all Trek really needs is to return to "the formula" and shed canon/continuity. ... In contrast, DS9 kept to the same time and space that TNG did, but told much different stories, because it messed with "the formula" by pulling away from following a crew of Starfleet officers on a moving ship.
Basically, "Starfleet crew explores the galaxy" is a procedural formula as much as any cop show.
Hear, hear. What Trek needs is to keep the continuity (worldbuilding is hard work!), but shed the formula. The opposite approach leads to something as stale as, e.g., the Bond franchise. James Bond in Fleming's books is a person with a specific past, linked to real-world events and experiences (military and otherwise), operating in a specific historical context (the Cold War), however sensationalized. On film, though, for the sake of extending the longevity of the cash-cow "franchise," Bond has become a cipher, divorced from any personal history or human characteristics beyond a handful of behaviors and verbal refrains, going through endless iterations of the same basic formulaic story, in a world where it doesn't even make sense for him to exist.
That might be a perfectly marketable approach. But it's not a fate I want to see for
Star Trek, or any of its characters.
Voyager 6 is a really minor fudge. If you told most people that there was such a probe, they would believe you. They do not remember how many probes there were and how they were named. It is thing that easily could have existed
Again, I don't want to speculate about what "most people" think, not only because it's unknowable, but also because it's irrelevant. (Actual data: most people don't believe the theory of evolution is true. So what?) If most people think four more Voyager probes "could easily have existed," they would be
wrong... because of both the science and the politics of the 1970s. The ones that actually exist were launched within a fairly narrow window of opportunity where it was possible to chart a path out of the solar system that intersected the orbital locations of the outer planets. Later ones would have had less exploratory potential, and the political atmosphere of the time, turning against the space program, would have made it impossible to secure funding.
I really see no point clinging on that reference to 90's as if you want to keep Trek roughly in line with real history (and I do)
Why do you? How does that improve it in any way?
So I'd rather keep the essence of EW (it was a huge global world war involving genetically enhanced superpeople and probably nukes) and ditch the date
Why not keep both the essence and the date, and thereby keep Trek intact as a larger fictional construct, simply by ditching the conceit that it's consistent with events that are now in our own "present" but far in the future of when its stories were told?
But this is just how I generally view the canon. I try to maintain the general gist of things, rather than need every minutiae matching. ... But to each their own.
Fair enough... except that "to each their own" really doesn't work in this case. If the actual producers take that attitude and only care about the broad strokes, the "general gist" of Trek history, but ignore the details, they'll wind up doing significant and compounding damage to the larger fictional construct of Trek that a lot of us enjoy. It'll become the sort of generic franchise Bond has become, as I described above.
Short of a complete reboot of all trek canon, there's no way to keep compounding all the differences as minor date differences. ... Trek has to be understood in its own time with very little to do with ours.
Hear, hear. Elegantly and succinctly put.
And yet every time the show returns to the contemporary "present day" as it went on, it showed the present as the audience saw it out the window
It really doesn't. Beside 1968 (which I've mentioned), for instance, the 1996 visited by Voyager was also markedly different from our reality. (Of course it
looked a lot like it, because they shot things on location, for heaven's sake, but the details weren't the same. Even beyond Chronowerx, others have already mentioned Rain Robinson's possession of a miniature DY-500.)
and when traveling to the 'past' from the viewer's perspective, it matched the history books
Again, it really doesn't. At least, not unless you're reading history books written by conspiracy theorists. Among other examples, in Trek's reality, Earth
really has been visited by ancient aliens (multiple times!), and the US government
really is hiding the truth of an alien landing in Roswell in 1947.
Yes there are fictional elements to the story being told, weapons platform projects, Edith Keeler's peace movement, fake tech companies and the 'millennium gate' but the setting is very obviously our world.
This sentence literally makes no sense to me. Logically, those elements are precisely what mark it as
not our world.
Star Trek is still an imagined version of our future. We live in the past of that world.
No, we don't. We live in a world that
superficially resembles (parts of) the past of that world. It resembled it somewhat more in 1960, but as time goes by, the divergence becomes more obvious.
Trek's been doing that since the movies at least, rewriting its own past to account for reality catching up and, generally, failing to live up to their predictions.
I'd argue the exact opposite, actually. From the 1980s forward, when it became clear that Trek could be an ongoing franchise, with first the movies and then especially TNG, Trek began putting far
more effort into maintaining its larger fictional construct than it ever had before. Whatever one thinks of the Berman era overall, no one can dispute that it invested a
lot of energy into intricate worldbuilding.
If Trek is still being made come First Contact Day, that'll be ignored as well.
If that were to happen, it'd be a damn shame. To the extent you're right (or might eventually be) about Trek erasing its past and undermining its own foundation for the sake of accessibility to contemporary audiences, that would be an approach driven entirely by marketing needs, not by creative integrity.
And (hey, look! the original topic!) to the extent that's the approach that DSC has been taking so far, or might take under new leadership, that's one of my big reservations about the show.