There is such thing as head canon, but that doesn’t change the fact it’s officially canon.
Head canon is an oxymoron.
There is such thing as head canon, but that doesn’t change the fact it’s officially canon.
Head canon is just fanfic that isn't written down.![]()
Things from books, comics and games, until they're contradicted by the show. I don't include any fan fiction.
It would be a total mess without any coherence thoughCanon is utterly totally and completely irrelevant. An artificial standard that holds no significance to or bearing on the finished product whatsoever.
It would be a total mess without any coherence though
Which is why I have no issue with later stuff fitting in with older stuff. It's all quite loose.I always find it funny how many people claim to be "canon purists" and TOS fans at the same time.
There's no way that what happened in TOS - particularly the first half of the first season - really works totally in continuity with what came later without extensive use of "headcannon."
Examples where it is and where it is not...?It is a total mess anyways.
Examples where it is and where it is not...?
I always find it funny how many people claim to be "canon purists" and TOS fans at the same time.
There's no way that what happened in TOS - particularly the first half of the first season - really works totally in continuity with what came later without extensive use of "headcannon."
One word... "Vulcanians".![]()
What sorts of things are you referring to?
The only thing I can think of is the notion that women can't serve as captains according to Turnabout Intruder, but we know even in TOS's time that women can serve as first officers (as in Number One from The Cage and Enterprise had a female Starfleet captain.
One can either decanonize Turnabout Intruder or accept that Starfleet at some point reverted to sexism that explicitly put a glass ceiling for women or think that Janice Lester's madness is why she thinks that there is a barrier preventing women from being captains when there isn't (although Kirk seems to confirm this)
Normally I would agree, but since the term hasn't appeared since (I think) TOS Season 1 in over a half-century and hundreds of hours of subsequent canonical footage, I think it's safe to say that "Vulcanians", along with "James R. Kirk" and the other oddities that @eschaton mentioned above were included in the early growing pains of a new kind of show that nobody had ever tried before and generally considered scrapped and forgotten by the show-runners.Someone can refer to someone from London as British, a Brit, Englishman/woman, limey, Londoner, among basic terms in English. It is not ground-breaking that some might call people from the planet Vulcan Vulcans, Vulcanians, or pointy-eared bastards.
What about self referential because Spock is the one saying Vulcanian.What sorts of things are you referring to?
The only thing I can think of is the notion that women can't serve as captains according to Turnabout Intruder, but we know even in TOS's time that women can serve as first officers (as in Number One from The Cage and Enterprise had a female Starfleet captain.
One can either decanonize Turnabout Intruder or accept that Starfleet at some point reverted to sexism that explicitly put a glass ceiling for women or think that Janice Lester's madness is why she thinks that there is a barrier preventing women from being captains when there isn't (although Kirk seems to confirm this).
.
Someone can refer to someone from London as British, a Brit, Englishman/woman, limey, Londoner, among basic terms in English. It is not ground-breaking that some might call people from the planet Vulcan Vulcans, Vulcanians, or pointy-eared bastards.
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