Since when?It's almost like these stories are all just made up or something . . .
Must have been the Disney buyout. Fictionalised the whole damn franchise . . .Since when?
Must have been the Disney buyout. Fictionalised the whole damn franchise . . .
Their evil knows no bounds!DAMN them! Making a fictional universe fictionalized!
WRT GR and TAS, it was because in 1987 when TNG was going into production; Filmation asserted that any elements taken from TAS for use in TNG (IE - character references, or story references to things which occurred in TAS), would mean Filmation was owed royalty payments per use.Especially when the creator / producer / showrunners never stick to or change what's canonical depending on which way the wind blows (see: Roddenberry regarding TAS; when produced, he considered it canon. A decade or so later, he said it was not, and post-Roddenberry, many TAS elements ended up seen or referred to in the Berman Trek era).
WRT GR and TAS, it was because in 1987 when TNG was going into production; Filmation asserted that any elements taken from TAS for use in TNG (IE - character references, or story references to things which occurred in TAS), would mean Filmation was owed royalty payments per use.
So, in response, GR and Paramount declared TAS non canon and told everyone on staff that nothing in TAS was to be referred to in any way.
The day that every fan of every franchise realizes that canon means absolutely nothing will truly be a day of enlightenment.
A day long remembered.The day that every fan of every franchise realizes that canon means absolutely nothing will truly be a day of enlightenment.
And this is where we learn that companies are run by people, not omnipotent god machines made of wibbly lights. People with attention spans, and finite time to spend on monitoring media just in case there's a single mention of a thing that's legally actionable. Is it really that astonishing that a few things slipped by over the years?
All that "canon" ever really means in this context is "what shit do the current writers kinda-sorta mostly have to pay attention to here and now, and what can they ignore if they want." And that can change from project to project as priorities shift, management changes, and eventualities eventuate.No one is astonished by it. The point is that companies--especially those with larger fantasy-based IPs issue statements about what is not canonical to a property, when such statements do not hold up to even a moment of scrutiny, as in the case of TAS.
Terrance DicksDidn't a Doctor Who show runner once say that canon was what he remembered?
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