Who said anything about saving the universe? 
Sometimes you just wanna build a gaudy hotel and casino and drill for oil.

Sometimes you just wanna build a gaudy hotel and casino and drill for oil.
Was Picard 3 easier for you to swallow then?And some people love this franchise so much that they'll swallow anything as long as the Star Trek name is on it. But it's a huge distraction for people who care about continuity and consistency. And it's all unnecessary.
Was Picard 3 easier for you to swallow then?
But you know as someone who's also been watching Star Trek since it first aired way back in the before times, I knew even as a child that some inconsistencies were easier to ignore if I really really liked the story being told. And, so far, with SNW, I like the stories well enough to ignore those things that strain credibility - like how did they afford that hotel room, etc?
*cough* Stuart-Houston *cough*If someone had their surname "Hitler" I certainly wouldn't blame them if they changed it to Smith, Jones, or whatever.
the money I can accept, checkin in without ID, crossing the border twice without ID? not so much- Playing chess nets them enough money to sleep in a fancy hotel instead of Sleep-Eazy Motel. Most unrealistic part of the episode.
Making a period episode (with associated costumes and sets) would have been a lot more expensive. Perhaps the budget or shooting schedule just couldn't accommodate that.Why didn't they have La'an and AlterKirk go back to the sixties when OG Khan would have been a boy? They could have done that and left out the whole sliding timeline business. They chose not to do that. If nothing else, Picard Season two taught us that a fictional future comes with its own fictional past and we shouldn't have a problem with that.
Money is actual magic. It can do ANYTHING.the money I can accept, checkin in without ID, crossing the border twice without ID? not so much
Totally agree. Doctor Who, which is just as much a cultural signifier to British audiences as a science-fiction series that explored the human condition as Star Trek is to American audiences, isn't undermined because the Daleks never invaded London in the 1960s.I think the idea that Trek can only be a hopeful, optimistic take on our future if it could literally be our future is hopelessly immature.
I've read plenty of inspiring works of alternate history that help me realize how humanity could do better.
Totally agree. Doctor Who, which is just as much a cultural signifier to British audiences as a science-fiction series that explored the human condition as Star Trek is to American audiences, isn't undermined because the Daleks never invaded London in the 1960s.
This is why I find the "updating for modern audiences" excuse really stupid. People that like and love Star Trek will accept all of the weirdness and cardboard sets that came before because it's a part of Star Trek, the same way Who fans accept the Doctors with question marks on their clothes who wore celery as a fashion accessory and stopped multiple alien invasions of Earth that never happened.
Isn’t everyone’s? That’s just science.Are you seriously telling me that your plan to save the universe is based on Back to the Future?
You just saved me whole lot of typing. TY.About continuity I have always been a "broad strokes"-guy:
At this risk of sounding extremely flippant it's because change. Not just change as a bad thing, but because it undoes measures of suppositions that many people and fans have taken for granted, or as a part of a timeline that perhaps has been memorized, or other facts that are expected to frame in the box marked "Star Trek." It's a difficult place to adapt to when "that's the way it's always been" is the watch word of Star Trek.Doesn't moving Khan forward a few decades just make the story possibilities better. Why wouldn't fans like this?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.