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How can these episodes (from TNG, DS9, and ENT) be canon any longer?

Honestly, I don't see the radical changes folks are talking about. Is the captain's chair still in the middle of the bridge, facing the viewscreen? Are the helm and navigation stations still in roughly the same place? Is the basic layout the same? Does the Enterprise still have a saucer and two nacelles in more or less the same places?

Sounds like the Enterprise to me. I'm not going to lose sleep over whether the guardrails are exactly the same color or if all the blinky lights in the background are in the same place. It's not as though they swapped out a Star Trek ship for the Millennium Falcon or the Battlestar Galactica. It's still recognizably a Star Trekky spaceship.

And as for the precise physical dimensions . . . how often does it really matter, plot-wise, if a ship is 430 or 378 meters long? Most of the time we just get an establishing of shot of a big shiny ship in space, which is good enough to get the idea across. When was the last time you heard dialogue such as:

"Bad news, Captain! The alien tractor beam is just big enough to capture the entire ship, all 386 meters of her!"

"Blast it. If only the radius of our saucer section was 16.2 meters wider! That would make all the difference!" :)
 
It matters to licensed, official, even production-related tie-ins such as technical manuals, models or blueprints. There’ve been people such as Franz Joseph, Todd Guenther, Rick Sternbach and many others who have broken ships into individual decks given a certain length, then figured out exactly what fits where and how, resolving real-world production glitches in the process. And if DSC decides to drop engineering continuity and bump its Enterprise from 289m to 442m to make it look better next to Discovery, no problem, that version of the ship can be labeled DSC, but there would still be one exact design (TOS) and another exact design (DSC), not some kind of VagueVision that can work in less precise contexts.
 
The precedent had been that TMP’s reimagining was one that needed a two-parter on ENT to explain, so naturally, if DSC throws a wrench into the works, what’s the explanation now?

I would argue that ENT didn't "need" to explain the TMP Klingon makeups. Star Trek managed fine for twenty-five years without an "explanation" beyond "Oh, they changed the makeup. Looks cool."

"Oh, they changed the makeup" was good enough in 1979. It's good enough now.
 
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Honestly, I don't see the radical changes folks are talking about
New set didn't strike you as significantly larger?
A new corridor circling the bridge (which went where?).

I noticed both of those differences within seconds.
 
And as for the precise physical dimensions . . . how often does it really matter, plot-wise, if a ship is 430 or 378 meters long?
If the Enterprise D obviously changed size between the end of season 4, and the beginning of season 5, that wouldn't matter (to you)?
 
Well, “Trials” on DS9 could’ve gone as far as rebooting only the bar scenes with new designs, which would’ve forced us to accept that Klingons did always look that way. But that’s not what the show did: instead the crossover established the existence of explanation, which ENT then decided to follow up on. Precedent established, DSC does something new, people wonder “Now what?”

The definition of irony is "tie-in-splaining" to the author of 16 Star Trek novels.

Oh, I’m sure Greg is well aware of other aspects of fandom, but he still holds a story-centric view of Star Trek, so it seems I have to restate the obvious for more than one person here, which is that Star Trek has always had tie-ins which deal in meters and feet, years and stardates, and they’ve been just as licensed and often higher-profile than novels (especially when developed by people involved in production such as Rick Sternbach or Mike Okuda). We just have to accept that if some people are OK with a vague but sorta unified view of things, others want the detail and separate the visions when they can’t physically fit. Why pretend that only one view is enough?
 
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New set didn't strike you as significantly larger?
A new corridor circling the bridge (which went where?).

I noticed both of those differences within seconds.

Honestly, I was paying attention to the story, not the scenery.

Again, it's like Dracula's castle. As long as it looks like a spooky Transylvanian castle, I'm not going to worry about whether the main stairwell or the dining room looks just like it did in the last movie. Just give me cobwebs and gargoyles and I'm happy. It's all about creating the proper atmosphere, not treating this stuff as though it's non-fiction.

Reminds me of a conversation I had with another fan when the 2009 movie came out. He complained that he had trouble getting into the movie because the insignias on the Kelvin uniforms were wrong.

My honest response: "Seriously? A massive Romulan dreadnought has just come through a black hole, George Kirk is valiantly sacrificing his life even as his newborn son draws his first breath . . . and you're fretting about the frigging insignias?"

I don't get that.
 
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And surgical alternation of Klingons to look human was specifically noted in Trials and Tribble-ations (DS9) - one of 'gold standard of respect' episodes frequently refered to by the DSC-haters as the 'better' way of doing things:


[Mess hall]http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/42.htm

WORF: His real name is Arne Darvin. He is a Klingon altered to look human.
DAX: His surgeon does nice work.
ODO: We're assuming that he came aboard the Defiant for the express purpose of gaining access to the Orb.
O'BRIEN: Any idea why he brought us back to this point in time?
WORF: We have a theory. This is Darvin as he appeared during that time period. At this moment he is aboard space station K-seven, posing as a Federation official.
BASHIR: So you're saying he's a spy?
ODO: The younger Darvin's mission was to derail Federation colonisation efforts by poisoning a shipment of grain which was, which is being stored aboard the station. However, eighteen hours from now, James Kirk will expose him and he will be arrested.

Actually goes back to "The Trouble With Tribbles":

KIRK: Obviously. Mister Baris, they like you. Well, there's no accounting for taste. (and back to Darvin) They don't like you, Mister Darvin. I wonder why. Bones?
MCCOY: (scanning him) Heartbeat is all wrong. His body temperature is. Jim, this man is a Klingon.
BARIS: A Klingon?

http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/42.htm

It isn't said that Darvin was surgically altered to look like a human. But McCoy does say that Darvin has a different body temperature and heartbeat than a human, establishing that TOS Klingons are not a variety of humans. Darvin would have to cut his eyebrows and beard, and probably color his skin, to look like a human. He might use make up or some sort of surgical or genetic alternations.

And altering a TOS era Klingon to pass as human seems a lot more realistic and plausible than altering a TNG or DISC era Klingon to pass as human would be.
 
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If the Enterprise D obviously changed size between the end of season 4, and the beginning of season 5, that wouldn't matter (to you)?

Well, I think a change between seasons is different than a change between two productions filmed decades apart, but I certainly wouldn't consider it a deal-breaker. I mean, they revamped the engineering room set between seasons on TOS and I'm not sure I ever noticed as a kid, even with the episodes being shown out of order in syndication.

(Heck, if I could accept Julie Newmar turning into Eartha Kitt on BATMAN--by way of Lee Meriwether--revamping a spaceship set is not going to faze me.)

And, honestly, just watching the show, how are we supposed to tell that a ship is bigger anyway? It's a big shiny object floating in a vacuum with no reference points to give it a sense of scale. As long it's not suddenly bigger than the planets in the background, it's just going to look like a ship in space.
 
Honestly, I was paying attention to the story, not the scenery.

Again, it's like Dracula's castle. As long as it looks like a spooky Transylvanian castle, I'm not going to worry about whether the main stairwell or the dining room looks just like it did in the last movie. Just give me cobwebs and gargoyles and I'm happy. It's all about creating the proper atmosphere, not treating this stuff as though it's non-fiction.

Reminds me of a conversation I had with another fan when the 2009 movie came out. He complained that he had trouble getting into the movie because the insignias on the Kelvin uniforms were wrong.

My honest response: "Seriously? A massive Romulan dreadnought has just come through a black hole, George Kirk is valiantly sacrificing his life even as his newborn son draws his first breath . . . and you're fretting about the frigging insignias?"

I don't get that.

Dracula’s castle has a precedent of being reimagined with every adaptation if need be, whereas the precedent for 2233 had been a compromise between ENT and TOS in style as well as substance, the TOS part of the precedent going back to TNG at least. It need not hamper enjoyment of the story, but such changes do make people think about scenery. As much as I liked the movie for what it was, I mean, hey, Robau says “Stardate? It’s 2233.04” and sure, the chronological me is out of the moment and I think “oh, so stardates were used then, they were years and 04 is probably a fraction of the year”. If we wanted to avoid that skip, he might’ve simply said “Stardate?”, and many fans would’ve been amused by the injoke.
 
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Well, I was thinking specifically of Dracula's castle as seen in sequential movies like the Hammer Films series, where the movies are supposed to take place in the same continuity, just like STAR TREK. Again, I can't say it ever bothered me if the castle's layout varied from sequel to sequel. Heck, watch enough Hammer films and you start to see the same sets recycled from one series to another. "Hey, that's the same library set from that Mummy movie I watched last night!" Doesn't spoil the movie any. Even if you notice, you just shrug and go with it because it's not like you're not aware that you're watching a movie or TV show.

Another example: I recently rewatched SON OF FRANKENSTEIN (1939) for the umpteenth time. The lab set in that movie bears little resemblance to the lab set in the previous two movies, filmed a few years earlier, even though they're supposedly the same location. Doesn't hurt the movie one bit as far I was concerned. It's still a classic.
 
Whoever said that “magical” surgical alteration was unprecedented? Let’s not invent prevailing criticism. The issue was with Fuller’s need to radically reimagine a mostly settled makeup and costume design while still insisting it’s the same continuity. The precedent had been that TMP’s reimagining was one that needed a two-parter on ENT to explain, so naturally, if DSC throws a wrench into the works, what’s the explanation now? An entire “orthodox Klingon” subculture that was prominent only in the 2250s, but otherwise well-hidden in the depths of the Empire?
Because it is a Klingon Empire.
Well, “Trials” on DS9 could’ve gone as far as rebooting only the bar scenes with new designs, which would’ve forced us to accept that Klingons did always look that way. But that’s not what the show did: instead the crossover established the existence of explanation, which ENT then decided to follow up on. Precedent established, DSC does something new, people wonder “Now what?”
Hopefully more alien looking aliens!
Why pretend that only one view is enough?
I don't. I just don't see the other view as necessary, only highly analytical to the point of nitpicky.
My response: "Seriously? A massive Romulan dreadnought has just come through a black hole, George Kirk is valiantly sacrificing his life even as his newborn son draws his first breath . . . and you're fretting about the frigging insignias?"
Exactly. This is what confuses me.
If the Enterprise D obviously changed size between the end of season 4, and the beginning of season 5, that wouldn't matter (to you)?
Nope.

I'm not watching the show to figure out the size of the ship. I watch the show for characters and their interactions and imaginative tech and stories, not the precise details of made up tech.
 
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If the Enterprise D obviously changed size between the end of season 4, and the beginning of season 5, that wouldn't matter (to you)?

I mean, it magically gained a new deck on the saucer when they switched from the 6-foot model to the 4-foot model, but shockingly the show and its tie-ins survived.

Oh, I’m sure Greg is well aware of other aspects of fandom, but he still holds a story-centric view of Star Trek,

Yes. Because that's what Star Trek is: a story.

Everything else is just icing on the cake.

so it seems I have to restate the obvious for more than one person here, which is that Star Trek has always had tie-ins which deal in meters and feet, years and stardates, and they’ve been just as licensed and often higher-profile than novels (especially when developed by people involved in production such as Rick Sternbach or Mike Okuda). We just have to accept that if some people are OK with a vague but sorta unified view of things, others want the detail and separate the visions when they can’t physically fit. Why pretend that only one view is enough?

Because the story-centric view is enough. Everything else is great, but it's not essential.

ETA:

To put it another way: The Sopranos was one of the most successful and revolutionary series ever produced. It changed the face of American television. And nobody ever demanded that HBO publish the blueprints for Tony's house or the Bada-Bing Club or for a comparison of the exact dimensions of the two.

Star Wars is probably the most successful film series ever. Everyone knows the vast influence it has had on American cinema. And there is no way in Hell all the interior sets of the Millennium Falcon can fit inside a ship as small as its exterior establishes. But no one cares.

Why?

Because a good story is more important than technical minutiae.
 
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Digressing: back when I was reviewing submissions for Tor Books, my heart would sink a little if a manuscript began with a couple pages of maps and glossaries and genealogies and such. It wasn't a deal-breaker, but it was sometimes a red flag that possibly the author had put more effort into world-building than telling a compelling story. As I used to tell authors, "it's good that you know this stuff, but it doesn't necessarily have to go in the book."

And this applied to SF as well as high fantasy sagas.
 
Digressing: back when I was reviewing submissions for Tor Books, my heart would sink a little if a manuscript began with a couple pages of maps and glossaries and genealogies and such. It wasn't a deal-breaker, but it was sometimes a red flag that possibly the author had put more effort into world-building than telling a compelling story. As I used to tell authors, "it's good that you know this stuff, but it doesn't necessarily have to go in the book."

And this applied to SF as well as high fantasy sagas.
Exactly. I love Heinlein and wish there was a visual guide, but I can still read those books forever. And Heinlein was a guy who would run orbit calculations as part of his writing process. But, we didn't see those.
 
The story is just the core, not the only part that really matters. The discussion here is on the level of telling people to ignore the minute contributions of production designers, VFX or makeup artists as nebulous epherima surrounding the script. No. Everything matters because Star Trek is an audio-visual, multimedia franchise, not even one (soon to be two) series like The Sopranos. (Besides, that series is very much about the real world, not about sci-fi world building with associated tie-ins.)

The Star Wars example is way off because not only has the MF been recreated in every detail (right down to the exterior/interior size discrepancy, which has been resolved in-universe in favor of the larger interior), but designers had to make sure that Lando’s version could be physically transformed into Han’s. On top of that, Lucasfilm can’t release a film or a series without naming almost every minor character, drawing up starship cross-sections or compiling visual dictionaries showcasing the most obscure prop. Those then provide inspiration for all kinds of tie-in stories, games or cosplay. Franchises can’t afford to focus on only one thing: it’s about the marketing strategy with the story deep in the core, and everything else emanating from there as essential components of the whole. You’re not interested in certain aspects? Fine, but don’t downplay them based on your personal focus.
 
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