One is just beatified by the owners of the property but the work isn't canonized like the actual script writers and producers of the show. The beatified works are just fanfic glorified by the Holy Church of the IP owners.Hardly.
One is just beatified by the owners of the property but the work isn't canonized like the actual script writers and producers of the show. The beatified works are just fanfic glorified by the Holy Church of the IP owners.Hardly.
He's still not an authoritative voice on canon and has the same knowledge and access to canon materials as every other fan.Christopher doesn't need me to defend him, but I'm going to anyway. He is not a 'fanfic writer'; he's a professional author who was hired to write tie-in fiction for Star Trek and Marvel and who has published several works of original fiction as well.
One is just beatified by the owners of the property but the work isn't canonized like the actual script writers and producers of the show. The beatified works are just fanfic glorified by the Holy Church of the IP owners.
Who knows. The books are just various writers ways of seeing the show, an opinion no more valid than any other fan's opinion, just one the owners agreed to print and make some money from. Nothing the owners have to be concerned with making their shows or that fans have to worry about, either so far as forming opinions on the show are concerned.He's still not an authoritative voice on canon and has the same knowledge and access to canon materials as every other fan.
And why do you keep tagging him? He obviously doesn't care nearly as much about this as you or he would have responded by now.
People argue that the Earth is flat; they'll argue about anything. The Borg Queen's relationship with the Collective, and her identity as an individual, is clear.If it was such then it wouldn't be argued about.
They have to deliver a book on time, within the guidelines their paymasters dictate. It's a service provided for money just like TV or film writing. Fanfic writers literally do whatever they feel like, whenever they feel like for nothing. No oversight, no guidelines. No money.They're both writers. One's paid one isn't and both groups have nothing to do with making the show. So, professional fanfic covers the books perfectly well.
That's immaterial to their opinions being in any way authoritative, Mack included.They have to deliver a book on time, within the guidelines their paymasters dictate. It's a service provided for money just like TV or film writing. Fanfic writers literally do whatever they feel like, whenever they feel like for nothing. No oversight, no guidelines. No money.
And while we're talking about the novels, I assume someone has mentioned that PIC co-creator Kersten Beyer wrote a ton of Voyager novels which took Seven in a totally different direction to the TV series. And I hope someone else pointed out concepts like Control, the Brikar and many others used in TV Trek originated in the books.
Oh, and prolific Trek novelist David Mack was a consultant on Disco and Prodigy![]()
Let's move along.........shall we?That's immaterial to their opinions being in any way authoritative, Mack included.
Besides, little difference to their work being fanfic, too. They're just playing in someone else's sandbox with someone else's toys just like any other fanfic writer.
What has this got to do with the thread topic or current line of dicussion?(fan subset rationalization): " 'I don't have a son' is literal, in that 'he"' has since become 'she' " (I am NOT dissing LGBTQI, BTW; just inventing a justification for a line of dialogue neither delivered or written).
In re: LGBTQI, however, here's something interesting. Years ago, when my university employer recognized the addition of I (intersex), I got a bit curious. "Inclusivity of all is essential (again, no sarcasm intended: it is and should be), but how many I's can there be?" (FYI:
Intersex is a general term used for a variety of situations in which a person is born with reproductive or sexual anatomy that doesn't fit the boxes of “female” or “male.” Sometimes doctors do surgeries on intersex babies and children to make their bodies fit binary ideas of “male” or “female”.
Turns out, about as many as there are folks with red hair:
https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2018/10/its-intersex-awareness-day-here-are-5-myths-we-need-to-shatter/#:~:text=Myth 2: Being intersex is,intersex people are massively underrepresented.
...which I find personally fascinating. The general population may think I's (or "sex swappers," as I saw that called on a tabloid magazine cover) as rare and thus "weird" as albinos...but no! (no one exclaims "Hey! Look at that redhead!" in anything other than an...appreciative sense)
>When Trek fans argue about canon, I often feel the urge to fire one
Is that an incitement? (ducks)
Perhaps you should use the actual quote function so that people know what you're responding to. Even you can't bother going back to search for the post.trekkist said: ↑
(fan subset rationalization): " 'I don't have a son' is literal, in that 'he"' has since become 'she' " (I am NOT dissing LGBTQI, BTW; just inventing a justification for a line of dialogue neither delivered or written).
In re: LGBTQI, however, here's something interesting. Years ago, when my university employer recognized the addition of I (intersex), I got a bit curious. "Inclusivity of all is essential (again, no sarcasm intended: it is and should be), but how many I's can there be?" (FYI: ETC
>What has this got to do with the thread topic or current line of dicussion?
I was responding to an earlier post (which I'm not going to search for) which mentioned Seven's having met Q's son, and what damage could be done to canon were she to mention that to Q, to Q's response "I don't have a son." As I said (and as you quoted of me) I was (in my post's opening):
>just inventing a justification for a line of dialogue neither delivered or written).
The rest of my post was free-associating from my having made damn sure after my "justification for a line of dialogue neither delivered or written" that I didn't come across as LBGTQI-phobic citing a fact I suspect most people don't know, regarding a group of people whose general acceptance by society is about as far from reality today as was a Negro (sic; time-of-broadcast term) on the bridge in 1966.
Does that answer your question?
Sorry to say, I find your messages very difficult to follow. Also, using the quote function let's people know you replied.I'll learn to use that...but I think the message you're quoting was pretty easy to follow...
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