And I would say yes. There are several bands that I consider myself a fan of but only really know one or two songs.We could also ask, can somebody who knows just one song be a fan of the band?
And I would say yes. There are several bands that I consider myself a fan of but only really know one or two songs.We could also ask, can somebody who knows just one song be a fan of the band?
The insecurity comes from fearing fan reaction now. Once bitten, twice shy as it were. Now they have to say "We promise its really Star Trek everyone! We promise. Please don't hate us!"And when they do that, I think it betrays an insecurity in the ideas. If these ideas for stories and character variations were strong enough in-and-of themselves, they could stand on their own. You'd want to create it as something different that you're adding on to Star Trek, instead of just re-imagining the giant lizard people that someone else thought up decades ago. At least Prodigy had the guts to do that with their antagonist. They didn't try to say: "Oh these are mutated Kazon seeking revenge for Voyager's trip through their space."
Species 10-C. You're welcome.Name something on the level of the Borg, Dominion, Q, or even Cardassians and Ferengi, that any of these shows have created and made their own the way the TNG era did? Something that some future iteration of Star Trek can say: "let's go back to that and explore some more about it."
I'd say there's a genuine argument to be made in favour of the Kelpiens being a decent contribution to the franchise. The Ba'ul as well.Species 10-C. You're welcome.
SNW and Early-DSC take/took place in the Pre-TOS Era. They can't exactly introduce someone without people screaming, "Why didn't we hear about them before?!?!!??" That's the problem with prequels.
Later-DSC... I like the concept of the Emerald Chain. It's made of up different species and was perfect to be competition for the Federation. I already mentioned Species 10-C. As far as the Breen, hardly anything was done with them before. It's not as if the Breen were overused like the Klingons or the Romulans. When they introduced these species, they weren't intended to never be used again.
PIC is a special case. It was always more about giving Picard and TNG a better ending than Nemesis.
I think they were an interesting concept and idea, and admittedly Discovery's writers did create something new and different with it. But, frankly, they're closer to a one-off alien Star Trek civilization than they are something with permanence. They're too "alien" to work beyond the mystery of that season, in the same way no one has really figured out a way to go back to V'GER beyond what you see in The Motion Picture. That's evident by the fact there's 12 episodes in season 4, but only 2 or 3 of them deal directly with the concept of Species 10-C. Because once we know they're starfish aliens that twinkle to communicate, and somehow confused that they were killing other lifeforms when they were using their extragalactic hoover vacuum, there's nowhere else to go.Species 10-C. You're welcome.![]()
If you're going with a vision that "reinterprets" the past, there's no reason why you can't add to that past.SNW and Early-DSC take/took place in the Pre-TOS Era. They can't exactly introduce someone without people screaming, "Why didn't we hear about them before?!?!!??" That's the problem with prequels.
At a certain point Star Trek starts to have the same problem Star Wars has with letting go of the Skywalkers and everything around the original trilogy if all it ever does is just a recurrence of the same concepts in different makeup and costumes. Disney has learned the hard way that once you're locked into a cycle of Jedi good, Sith bad, and how does all of this connect to either the Death Star, Luke Skywalker or Darth Vader, the potential of the IP becomes very limited creatively.I think some of you just want to have that feeling you had in 1989 and 1990 with the Borg or 1994 with the Dominion. Or, if you're old enough, 1966 or 1967 with the Romulans and Klingons. I hate to break it to you, but that's not happening again. Why? Because you're not the age you were back then. You're not going to be as blown away by anything they come up with now, because you can't be. To quote an episode of Mission: Impossible from the 1960s, "When you're 10, everything feels more so."
You already know what I think of prequels. It's very rare that one interests me. (Better Call Saul, Prometheus, early-Discovery and that's it.) I'm just saying that's what I'd expect the response to be. Don't blame the messenger.If you're going with a vision that "reinterprets" the past, there's no reason why you can't add to that past.
Well, that's why I liked DSC's use of the Breen. They're NOT the Klingons or the Romulans or, yes, the Borg.At a certain point Star Trek starts to have the same problem Star Wars has with letting go of the Skywalkers and everything around the original trilogy if all it ever does is just a recurrence of the same concepts in different makeup and costumes. Disney has learned the hard way that once you're locked into a cycle of Jedi good, Sith bad, and how does all of this connect to either the Death Star, Luke Skywalker or Darth Vader, the potential of the IP becomes very limited creatively.
Other than being in one of the best episodes of the series nope no Tellarites.But then the series barely mentioned the Andorians either and I'm not sure we saw a single Tellarite.
I don't agree with that.TNG barely mentioned the Enterprises and their Captains that preceded that series.
This, along with the way they look, really makes me think it would have been better if they'd eventually been revealed to be the Hur'q.I honestly think some of the ideas they had for the season 1 Klingons are interesting. A religious, xenophobic species that comes into conflict with the Federation because they want to "make their empire great again" is a good jumping off point for a story. Voq, as a member of an underclass within that society, who arguably becomes radicalized against his own interests is an interesting character for a story that touches on identity, cultural purity, and coexistence.
The problem was always that none of what they wanted to do with that really fit the history of the Klingons that we knew.
So, all the previous Enterprises and their Captains were mentioned and name-checked. Not all the time obviously, but they were all still accounted for.
Just like I know for a fact that the Enterprise isn't mentioned in every episode of Discovery or Picard. Kind of has to be seen and mentioned in every episode of Strange New Worlds.Depends on your point of view of the word "barely."
It's not like previous Enterprises were mentioned every other episode or even every season. You referenced instances out of 176 episodes plus movies. Out of all that, 4 references to previous Enterprises might be considered rare by some people.
I'm not quite sure how we got here, but the point I was trying to make was they were accounted for
Not seeing that message in what is being done. They literally used footage from The Cage in DISCO. Nor has anyone said "TOS never happened". That's something a segment of fandom has come up with.I don't think new producers are doing anyone any favours by reimagining classic characters and contradicting old stories. It's basically telling new fans "Oh don't bother watching TOS, that never happened, and it's too archaic for you anyway".
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