Given his notoriety as it specifically relates to tie-ins, you'd think Richard Arnold would already have a Memory Beta entry--but knowing how many novelists and comic book writers don't have entries there, either, I'm not exactly surprised.
Given his notoriety as it specifically relates to tie-ins, you'd think Richard Arnold would already have a Memory Beta entry--but knowing how many novelists and comic book writers don't have entries there, either, I'm not exactly surprised.
Given his notoriety as it specifically relates to tie-ins, you'd think Richard Arnold would already have a Memory Beta entry
Nah, I'm good. I've heard enough of his perspective to know that I don't want to hear more from him.He is a guest at Virtual Trek Con 2 this month, so if you are interested, you can hear about his Trek work from his own perspective.
Yes, I'm aware there are other wikis with entries for him.He does have a FanLore page:Given his notoriety as it specifically relates to tie-ins, you'd think Richard Arnold would already have a Memory Beta entry--but knowing how many novelists and comic book writers don't have entries there, either, I'm not exactly surprised.
https://fanlore.org/wiki/Richard_Arnold
and a Memory Alpha page:
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Richard_Arnold
There would be signs of a previously-deleted entry under the redlink if one had ever been made. Back when I was more motivated to create such entries on Memory Beta, it seemed like they gathered little notice--there are author pages I created over a decade ago which have never been edited since.Maybe the Overlord CaptainMike keeps deleting it?![]()
What did Arnold do after his Trek connection was “sundered”, to use an expression, and what is he doing now? He’s been off the Trek payroll for what, now, 28 years?
Well, you're way off - Richard Arnold was never credited as a writer or editor of any of Memory Beta's subject matter, beyond an off-hand mention in a couple of comic lettercolumns maybe. There's really no evidence of his influence on Trek in the body of subject matter that Memory Beta pulls from, so therefore, no article. Most "meta" topics like this are usually left to Memory Alpha.Given his notoriety as it specifically relates to tie-ins, you'd think Richard Arnold would already have a Memory Beta entry
Was it Vendetta that Peter David dedicated to him -- "To Richard, the biggest windmill I know"?
I'm not sure anyone really knows but Arnold himself. He'd probably say he was being true to "Gene's vision," but I suspect he filtered it through his own inclinations.
No, tie-ins are work-for-hire, so all rights belong to the studio. Arnold (and Roddenberry?) reportedly just didn't want tie-in characters and storylines overshadowing the canon elements.
Was it Vendetta that Peter David dedicated to him -- "To Richard, the biggest windmill I know"?
And I write, edit, and teach historical fencing. Well, until the beginning of March on that third one, at least.
the "Star Fleet Battles" RPG (once generically known as "a war game").
(Eventually, the RPG renamed the kzinti when SFB was revamped under a new, more contained licence: the Mirak Star League - yet another antagonistic, felinoid Trek race - appeared in the "Starfleet Command" computer game, based on the old "Star Fleet Battles").
Star Fleet Battles is still known as a wargames...
The Starfleet Command game series did rename them (though whether that was due to respect for Larry Niven or because in the 1990s there was a very strict "No TAS" policy or both I have no idea)
They do have a modern license directly from ViacomCBS rather than the Franz Joseph estate, but this wasn't a change that was required in whatever terms they have now, and the Kzinti still continue to show up in their publications.
Which is what upset Gene R.: the use of the term "war". But because the license was with Franz Joseph, and not Paramount/Viacom, neither Gene nor Paramount could stop it.
I wasn't aware they were still publishing the "war game" version. Thanks. As far as I knew, Paramount-licensed Star Trek gaming from other companies began emphasising the "roleplaying" aspects to appease Roddenberry, although he still had reservations about FASA's RPGs.
From my discussions with Richard at the time, it was the only way that the computer game version was going to be permitted. The kzinti had to become the Mirak Star League in that.
I would assume this new licence was signed after Roddenberry's death (and Richard's tenure in the Star Trek Office) in September 1991, and perhaps after Franz Joseph Schnaubelt's death in June 1994?
They may have also come to an agreement with Larry Niven, too? I recall Niven's original problem was Star Fleet Battles' development of the kzinti without any participation/agreement from him, and when he was trying to license "Ringworld" out as an RPG (eventually published by Chaosium in 1984).
And yes, the "no TAS policy" was between May 1988 and September 1991.
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