It doesn't deserve respecting. It is a tool to be used.If they can't respect it, then they should create their own original series.
Also, your reply to me as a quote tag messed up.
It doesn't deserve respecting. It is a tool to be used.If they can't respect it, then they should create their own original series.
If they can't respect it, then they should create their own original series. Oh, but that's hard, isn't it? And there's no built in audience for their efforts to aid in bankrolling a production. Don't think the reasons why poor writers can't respect canon aren't completely understood.
Well that's your controversial opinion. But anything that created that kind of lucrative fanbase does deserve respecting. Unless you are a low talent showrunner who resents having to ride on the coat tails of something they couldn't create on their own, and so disparages it.It doesn't deserve respecting. It is a tool to be used.
Also, your reply to me as a quote tag messed up.
*Checks the thread* Yup, yes it is.Well that's your controversial opinion.
Why though? Star Trek has gone through long periods of ignoring, contradicting or just flat out denying it's status in various shows. If we take Roddenberry's own take TOS was no longer "Canon" but a dramatization of Kirk's logs that could be misinterpreted. TWOK was not canon because it was too militaristic. I am fairly confident that DS9 would be lambasted as well.But anything that created that kind of lucrative fanbase does deserve respecting.
Well that's your controversial opinion. But anything that created that kind of lucrative fanbase does deserve respecting. Unless you are a low talent showrunner who resents having to ride on the coat tails of something they couldn't create on their own, and so disparages it.
Canon didn't create the Trek franchise.Well that's your controversial opinion. But anything that created that kind of lucrative fanbase does deserve respecting.
Canon didn't create the Trek franchise.
Writers did. Starting with GR.
Canon is a tool, one of many, as well as being the hobgoblin of many an unimaginative mind.
Some of my favourite episodes are alien-of-the-weeks like Persistence of Vision, Scientific Method, Course: Oblivion, and Bliss.The weirdest thing about VOY is I've never seen a show jettison its original premise so quickly.
I mean, I know it was mostly due to BTS conflict - that the showrunners wanted to try something new, but UPN was risk-averse, particularly after the somewhat mixed reaction to early DS9, and just wanted TNG 2.0. But it's shocking that they spent so much time setting up the Maquis - planting the seeds in TNG's Journey's End and Preemptive Strike, and a two-parter late in Season 2 of DS9 - only to basically completely neuter any Federation/Maquis conflict past the pilot of Voyager.
This is just the most extreme example, but there are of course others - like usually downplaying the idea that there were any issues which could be cause from being far from repair/resupply, and finding various ways to include Alpha/Beta quadrant plots over time rather than explore something new.
The need of the series to have "recurring" enemies like the Kazon was also pretty head-scratching, given the ship was generally speaking traveling in a straight line across tens of thousands of light years. Alien of the week made total sense under these circumstances. I really wish that VOY had done more to flesh out the secondary crew on the ship - added more people like the Wildmans and Vorik who we would see frequently, not not every week. But if anything, the show moved away from this over time.
Not a controversial opinion, but "Course: Oblivion" is a great episode, and really it's fun to see Janeway snap like a ginger cookie in "Scientific Method."Some of my favourite episodes are alien-of-the-weeks like Persistence of Vision, Scientific Method, Course: Oblivion, and Bliss.
Have we had an elimination game based on them?
There are those who claim that "Broken Bow" contradicts what i said about Klingon first contact in "First Contact."I'm fine with SNW destroying the moral of TNG's Tin Man or having a peaceful first contact with Malcorians.
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Exactly what I expected you to sayThere are those who claim that "Broken Bow" contradicts what i said about Klingon first contact in that latter episode.
I don't think so. But also, as long as they pay me I don't care.![]()
There are those who claim that "Broken Bow" contradicts what i said about Klingon first contact in that latter episode.
I don't think so. But also, as long as they pay me I don't care.![]()
He said he wasn't emotionally invested in the fake crew..Course: Oblivion is great! My only gripe being if I was getting married I'd certainly make use of the holodeck rather than the mess hall...
Can't recall how Garrett Wang felt about it but on Delta Flyers Robert Duncan McNeill really wasn't impressed by it which baffled me. That said, he also doesn't enjoy time travel stories which are my favourite so we must just have different tastes.
Course: Oblivion is great! My only gripe being if I was getting married I'd certainly make use of the holodeck rather than the mess hall...
Can't recall how Garrett Wang felt about it but on Delta Flyers Robert Duncan McNeill really wasn't impressed by it which baffled me. That said, he also doesn't enjoy time travel stories which are my favourite so we must just have different tastes.
A real Klingon would have just walked that off!!!!!!"Centuries ago, disastrous first contact", Klaang being shot by the first human he sees and 216 years are all the same thing.![]()
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