I've never understood this kind of attitude, part of what I love about for tie-ins is that they often can do things you couldn't see on the TV shows.
We forget that licensed tie-ins are bought and read by less than 2% of the viewing audience. I was shocked, throughout 1980, as a newbie Trek fan, how much anger and irritation that novelisations and original tie-ins cause for some diehard fans. Also some fanfic creators and readers are amazingly opposed to licensed fiction.
it was the tie ins that kept Star Trek alive and moving when there were no new shows on the air
Not only. They still represented 2%. A larger group would be comprised of convention attendees, fan club gatherings, fanzines, newsletters, K/S material, fan art, fan craft, plus syndication TV audiences with new fans finding the show every day, etc...
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