Yay, the novelverse is temporarily saved again!
Or maybe she's a human that identified as a spiky alien and had surgery to become one after "The Cage".
Yay, the novelverse is temporarily saved again!
Colt used Kralls life extension tech between the Cage and Discovery on a hapless spiky alien.It's not just saving the novelverse. It's saving DSC's status as being part of the prime timeline.
Obviously, Colt is either human OR alien. She can't be both. If "The Cage" shows her as human, and DSC depicts her as an alien...then which is it? They can't both be correct.
It just seems to me that that theory was made up by someone who didn't understand that "Number One" is an old British Navy term of address for a first officer -- that it wasn't specific to her but was a title for her position. Which we now know because of the multiple other characters it's been used for, starting with Riker.
New Frontier references are always appreciated.Am I the only one who want her to be Morgan Primus then?
(Probably)
Also, I imagine spiky alien being Colt is probably in the credits, so Discovery made it canon...
Or maybe she's a human that identified as a spiky alien and had surgery to become one after "The Cage". She's trans-species.
Or she's just come back from a survey mission of a pre-warp planet where she was disguised as one of the natives, and she hasn't had time to remove her prosthetics.
Or maybe she's Yeoman K'oll't Ap'ostro'fee instead of Yeoman J.M. Colt, a redheaded human who just had a coincidentally similar name.
Yup, I was the one who put that notion into the mix. It was also intended by me as a sly nod to fellow Star Trek novelist Una McCormack.To give credit where it's due, I believe it was Dave Mack who came up with Una when he and Kevin and Dayton and I were plotting the LEGACIES trilogy. I just got to use it first because I wrote Book One.
And the idea isn't that "Number One" or "Una" is her actual name. It's that her actual name is impossible to pronounce so she early on picked up on the nickname of "Una" because as she aways first in her class, number one in athletics, and so on.
Basically, we were riffing on the old idea (from D.C. Fontana?) that her alien name was too hard to pronounce. And having her go by "Una" just seemed cooler than revealing that she was named Janet or Susan or something.![]()
By saying both of those things, didn't you just kill the possibility that they could ever be used, because of the Fucking Lawyers (tm)?
if an author is the one suggesting it and then writing it
And the idea isn't that "Number One" or "Una" is her actual name. It's that her actual name is impossible to pronounce so she early on picked up on the nickname of "Una" because as she aways first in her class, number one in athletics, and so on.
That's the part that seemed incongruous to me. DSC's take on Number One seems to be a lot more down-to-Earth than her being from another planet where she is categorically the top-ranked person, concieved as Spock before Spock was Spock. Having a good ol' American cheeseburger in her first cameo, and then in this episode, complaining that fellow space-pilot Detmer had the temerity to use geometry when describing specific helm-things and preferring she just give a general idea of "Fly close enough to make the good thing happen, but far enough away so the bad thing doesn't happen," which seems far less useful to me, a person who covets precise instruction in these sorts of situation and also understands how measures of arc work.
It seems weird to humanize her to the point of giving her an "In english, please!" line, but then nod to her old backstory of being so embarrassingly superior to everyone else on the ship, and possibly in the whole fleet, that you can just call her the Number One and everyone knows who you're talking about.
I have no idea if they’ll ever explain the apparent Colt discrepancy, but if we’re invoking how things are spelled in the credits, Kirk was attached by a “Gumato” in “A Private Little War” and the Enterprise communications officer in Star Trek VI was “Uhuru.”
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