And yet she was entirely sympathetic. Not an easy thing to pull off.All the while she was interested in very little except gaining likes and income from her podcast.
And yet she was entirely sympathetic. Not an easy thing to pull off.All the while she was interested in very little except gaining likes and income from her podcast.
And yet she was entirely sympathetic. Not an easy thing to pull off.
Why would they be mentioned in Star Trek IV? I have no issue with that movie.And, seriously, would that movie have been improved by including ominous references to Khan or Shaun Christopher or Gary Seven or whatever, in order to clearly set it in the years leading up to Eugenics Wars of the 1990s?
I think not.
Why would they be mentioned in Star Trek IV? I have no issue with that movie.
So were those “immortal” aliens in the movie era section something from previous books or original here?
As a kid who was born in ‘83 and whose first movie was IV or V (his father is worthless for this kind of information) but at the very least had IV as one of the only VHS at his house, IV works because it was totally the world outside his house.And, seriously, would that movie have been improved by including ominous references to Khan or Shaun Christopher or Gary Seven or whatever, in order to clearly set it in the years leading up to Eugenics Wars of the 1990s?
I think not.
Star Wars has never been mentioned as well.It just occurred to me, late last night, that there's another major difference between the 20th/21st century reality we are living in, and that of ST-IV and the present opus (and VOY: "Future's End, for that matter):
In our reality, there's a television, movie, online, and print franchise called Star Trek.
Star Wars has never been mentioned as well.
In the PU, is there a replacement for Star Trek media?
I actually really love how Strange New Worlds answered the "accurate canonical state of affairs" for the early 21st century. It made for both a brilliant episode, and a great way to explain how we can still have present day adventures in "our" 21st century such as in "Lost to Eternity".Besides, "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" canonized the fact that the 20th- and early 21st-century timeline has been modified by Temporal Cold War hijinks. So that is the "accurate," canonical state of affairs now. It's not an error, it's an in-universe change.
People give PICARD season 2 a lot of shit, but one thing it did manage to not fuck up on was being mostly consistent with the alt history established for the Star Trek version of the early 21st century. It doesn't completely affirm the Eugenics Wars in the 1990s, but it doesn't contradict it either. "Past Tense" is even quasi-referenced, just without some retro-cyberpunk fashion choices (well, San Francisco does have its tech subculture bubbles...). Clearly genetic engineering is banned for... international accord reasons. And it does manage to tie in with the Soong / Augments story line from ENT season 4, which clearly mentions 20th century genetic engineering.Speaking about the Saturn stuff, didn’t Picard season 2 have something similar? Picard’s ancestor went out there and found the “Protomolecule” or something like that.
I actually really love how Strange New Worlds answered the "accurate canonical state of affairs" for the early 21st century. It made for both a brilliant episode, and a great way to explain how we can still have present day adventures in "our" 21st century such as in "Lost to Eternity".
They presented the space program as being more robust than it is in the real world, but otherwise, Picard's 2024 is basically the same as our 2024.People give PICARD season 2 a lot of shit, but one thing it did manage to not fuck up on was being mostly consistent with the alt history established for the Star Trek version of the early 21st century.
???It doesn't completely affirm the Eugenics Wars in the 1990s, but it doesn't contradict it either.
SNW's decision to move the date of the Eugenics Wars and when Khan lived was based on Adam Soong's last scene in the Picard S2 finale.
IIRC, at the time the Picard S2 finale aired, Goldsman did say that scene was set up for something which would be picked up on "soon." Given the SNW episode aired a year later, it's my belief that's what he was referring to.Still, given that Akiva Goldsman was the writer of the PIC S2 finale and the co-showrunner of SNW, it does seem likely that both were meant to establish the same revised timeline, as nonsensical as it is in the case of the PIC scene.
IIRC, at the time the Picard S2 finale aired, Goldsman did say that scene was set up for something which would be picked up on "soon." Given the SNW episode aired a year later, it's my belief that's what he was referring to.
Most likely. It still doesn't make sense, though. I wish they'd labeled the folder something like "Eugenics Project" rather than "Project Khan."
On the other hand... Hm. "Tomorrow and..." established that Temporal Cold Warriors have been competing to alter history one way or the other. It seems as if one group tried to erase Khan and the eugenics program from history, and another worked to restore it in some form, even if it happened later in the timeline. Since the time travelers knew in retrospect that Khan was the most important eugenics superhuman, they would've prioritized his recreation, hence the "Noonien-Singh Institute" being created to get the name right (aside from that extraneous hyphen). So they could've been the ones behind the "Project Khan" folder.
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