we never actually see the moment of Trip's death; we see him rolled into the treatment chamber
Doesn't Trip actually WINK at that point?

we never actually see the moment of Trip's death; we see him rolled into the treatment chamber
Except this was supposed to be a history docudrama, so it would purport to tell a version of actual events (though not necessarily an accurate or honest version).
History docudramas have been known to stretch the truth.![]()
Yes, I acknowledged that. But they're rarely "Choose Your Own Adventure" games as you suggested. Don't move the goalposts.
I was saying that holodeck programs would be typically like "Choose Your Own Adventure" games.
Yes, obviously, but not this specific one because it's supposed to be historical. General argument and specific argument are two different things.
I guess the other thing is that the controversial finale story had been hanging around for a while and - had a Season Five gone ahead - the showrunners have already said that Connor Trinneer was not being written out.
Honestly, given how weird Trip's Romulan War plotline was, it probably would've been preferable to leave his death six years in the future and just try to make it less contrived when the books finally caught up to it.
The fact things didn't play out the way the holoprogram showed wasn't revealed until the early 25th Century, so Riker wouldn't have known either at that point.With Trip, its only written into the program that he died. Plus the line of Trip not making it back was said by Troi, who admitted to getting the museum ships mixed up and that she’s never run the program before (even though she recommended it), and therefore might not be as familiar with the final days of Enterprise's mission. The line was not said by Riker, who is clearly a fanboy of Archer and rest of the crew and would know if that was true or not.
Though my investment in Trip was so low I didn't really care if he got resurrected or not, the novels' decision to move the "death" by six years stretched the bounds of credulity for me-- did Section 31 just make up six years of fake adventures for him with corroborating evidence? It's a pretty implausible undertaking.
The fact things didn't play out the way the holoprogram showed wasn't revealed until the early 25th Century, so Riker wouldn't have known either at that point.
I would love to see the shows bring in their own versions of Christine Vale, and Elias Vaughn.
Since low ranks to keep a low profile were a thing with Elias Vaughn, I wonder what would be the reason to keep Reed, Sato, and Mayweather under the radar for the holoprogram? Since, 10 years is a long time to not be promoted. I think even Harry Kim got promoted when Voyager returned to the Alpha Quadrant after being stuck in the Delta Quadrant for 7. And in alternate timelines, Kim gets promoted even faster.
I hated the initial Enterprise relaunch and the choices made. But I plan to re-read it one day and see if my opinions have changed with time and distance from my preconceptions of how things "should" have gone.
My personal head canon is that Riker's 220 year old footage was actually a few years off. The images of Hoshi, Travis, and Reed were circa 2155, not 2161, hence the lack of change in their appearance and rank. That should be implemented along with Trip's "death" being a ruse.
Its also my understanding that in the relaunch novels that they replaced the ambassadors named in the “Its Federation Day” clipping from GEN with the ambassadors from the Terra Prime arc in ENT for the Federation Charter signing. And also retconned Sarahd from being an Ambassador from Andor as now being an ambassador of the Coalition of Planets.
Spock coming to McCoy on his death bed from a comic book.
Something from the relaunch novels that should be canon – transporters being suspended indefinitely in the 22nd century due to causing decaying neurological damage.
Is that the transporter psychosis that Barclay was worried about?
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