TAS is better than TOS that's my hot take for todayBest thing to do about TAS is skip it.

i can say the same thing about TOS...A lot of canon sucks and should be ignored.
TAS is better than TOS that's my hot take for todayBest thing to do about TAS is skip it.
i can say the same thing about TOS...A lot of canon sucks and should be ignored.
TAS is better than TOS that's my hot take for today![]()
i can say the same thing about TOS...
wow hit a nerve perhaps? cause this is a disproportionate responseOnly for eight year-olds.
I'm saying it about all of Star Trek. You have no point here.
that would explain the captain rank they gave her when we know she's an admiral in nemesisPerhaps Janeway is a holographic captain and the real Janeway is long dead.
They should just rename the whole thing to: "Magic School Bus: The Next Generation"I’m wondering if, despite the Janeway thing, that the show takes place during DSC season 3. Because the concept of a bunch of kids stumbling onto an abandoned Starfleet vessel just reeks of post-Burn antics. Perhaps Janeway is a holographic captain and the real Janeway is long dead.
An interesting question is who should be the antagonist?
By the late 24th century the Romulans and Cardassians are weakened, the Klingons are allied with the Federation and the Dominion and Borg are keeping to themselves. There is always Section 31, the Federation's Black Ops division or the Iconians, more obscure aliens who became the main villains of Star Trek Online. I assume Janeway is pursuing the runaway protagonist teens of this series.
that would explain the captain rank they gave her when we know she's an admiral in nemesis
Since it's animation, we don't know if Janeway is older or younger than she was on Voyager. For all we know, this is about her first command before Voyager, or maybe she's even one of the teen protagonists.
Field tripKirk jumped back and forth between Admiral and Captain.
I don't see why Janeway cannot do likewise.
How does she go from Bloomington. Indiana to a lawless region of space?![]()
I thought Voyager was her first command?
Because in the episode "Shattered" Janeway states that her first command isn't shaping up the way she expected when her and future Chakotay are going through different pockets of time and seeing Voyager at various steps.I continue to be bewildered that people think that. She stated quite clearly in Tuvok's promotion ceremony in "Revulsion" that she first met Tuvok nine years earlier (i.e. six years before the series began) at a review board following her first command.
"The" antagonist? Why should there be only one? Sure, it's fairly common for children's cartoons to have a single main villain for the heroes to fight, but we don't know this is going to be that kind of cartoon format.
I don't think it's been established what the series's time frame is. Since it's animation, we don't know if Janeway is older or younger than she was on Voyager. For all we know, this is about her first command before Voyager, or maybe she's even one of the teen protagonists. Or she could be a holographic recreation of Janeway centuries after the fact, or something something time travel.
The showrunners for Prodigy were heavily involved in Tales of Arcadia for Netflix, the most recent series being set in multiple time periods due to time-travel shenanigans. I know they didn't work on that season, but I don't see why kids would find time-travel hard to understand in a Star Trek cartoon. It's not going to be aimed at pre-schoolers.I do not think you want to make this show too convoluted for kids, Janeway as just a Star Fleet officer that might be chasing after these teens may be easier to explain to kids than having her time travel to the 23rd century or something.
Because in the episode "Shattered" Janeway states that her first command isn't shaping up the way she expected when her and future Chakotay are going through different pockets of time and seeing Voyager at various steps.
A lot of cartoons have one villain faction throughout the season or series that the heroes fight...
The showrunners for Prodigy were heavily involved in Tales of Arcadia for Netflix, the most recent series being set in multiple time periods due to time-travel shenanigans. I know they didn't work on that season, but I don't see why kids would find time-travel hard to understand in a Star Trek cartoon. It's not going to be aimed at pre-schoolers.
Since I didn't recall that it wasn't not obvious to me. So, I appreciate your referencing the other episode.Which was obviously a continuity error if you remember "Revulsion." Same as "Fury" claiming Tuvok was less than 100 years old when that would have made him less than 17 in "Flashback." The later seasons often made a hash of previously established continuity.
Which was obviously a continuity error if you remember "Revulsion." Same as "Fury" claiming Tuvok was less than 100 years old when that would have made him less than 17 in "Flashback." The later seasons often made a hash of previously established continuity.
Obviously you didn't read my entire paragraph that you quoted, because I explicitly addressed that.
The showrunners for Prodigy were heavily involved in Tales of Arcadia for Netflix, the most recent series being set in multiple time periods due to time-travel shenanigans. I know they didn't work on that season, but I don't see why kids would find time-travel hard to understand in a Star Trek cartoon. It's not going to be aimed at pre-schoolers.
Sure, but if it's set in the 23rd century, there are a million other characters that can fit that type of role, if Janeway is time traveling to the past, seemingly to deal with some runaways, there needs to be a good reason for it.
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