No argument here!If the Bonaventure is a non canon so is April.

No argument here!If the Bonaventure is a non canon so is April.
I mean this with all sincerity......Would have been exactly what you said, and not pissed off purists for no reason at all
Wow, it's a good thing I went with the 'TAS is non-canon therefore April is fine' side of the argument not the 'SNW is wrong because he is canonically white' side, as I'd hate to suddenly become a racist and get banished from the fandom.I mean this with all sincerity......
If Robert April being a black man in SNW bothers anyone in the fandom, they can go straight to hell. We do not need them in the fandom. We're far better off without them. There's the door, get out.
Sorry, but as Wormhole said, making April a black man means something. Its significance should certainly matter more to people than honoring a one-off appearance from a Saturday morning cartoon from the 70's. If some fan takes series issue with that? Fuck 'em.Wow, it's a good thing I went with the 'TAS is non-canon therefore April is fine' side of the argument not the 'SNW is wrong because he is canonically white' side, as I'd hate to suddenly become a racist and get banished from the fandom.
Is April significant at all to anyone who didn't watch that Saturday morning cartoon from the 70s? It introduced him and it's his only appearance before SNW. Aside from being a name on Saru's high score table.Sorry, but as Wormhole said, making April a black man means something. Its significance should certainly matter more to people than honoring a one-off appearance from a Saturday morning cartoon from the 70's. If some fan takes series issue with that? Fuck 'em.
Marvel has done this with Nick Fury. Samuel L. Jackson's version of the character is based on the Ultimate Universe version. But the original (616) version is white.I don’t mind April being black. Actually I didn’t even know that he was white before I read about it on here. It’s a pithy detail.
But where’s the line? Would people accept a black Kirk? Or a white Uhura? If a character is more established, does that mean it can’t be done or are we alright with it?
Not meaning to kick a hornets nest. Genuinely asking.
Marvel has done this with Nick Fury. Samuel L. Jackson's version of the character is based on the Ultimate Universe version. But the original (616) version is white.
If they're saying in-universe that they've changed their appearance, then I'm fine with it. David Tennant can become Ncuti Gatwa in sci-fi.But where’s the line? Would people accept a black Kirk? Or a white Uhura? If a character is more established, does that mean it can’t be done or are we alright with it?
Not meaning to kick a hornets nest. Genuinely asking.
There's two ways of looking at this.Sure, and I have no problem with it at all.
It’s not an Apples/Apples situation though because Marvel has explicitly had its stories take place over a multiverse for decades before even Ultimate became a thing.
If SNW takes place in the so-called Prime Universe, is it okay to have a black Scotty, even though he’s been established as white in earlier shows?
Or in other words, is it okay to do this for characters who are more established, as opposed to minor players like Kyle or April?
My view is that unless ethnicity is intrinsic to the character (e.g., Magneto being a Jewish holocaust survivor, Black Panther being the king of an African nation, etc.), then casting should be wide open to whomever the best actor is for the part.
Any stage production really as you draw up on the population you have. I played a rabbi in a Holocaust based play in highschool, though I'm hardly Jewish. My Irish friend played a British aristocrat.People who know more about Broadway and stage productions can probably give a better answer, but I believe having people of different ethnicities play established characters that don't match their own personal background is a common thing.
Same here. And feels extraordinarily arbitrary.I think this is the correct answer.
The fact that people even bring up April as some sort of problem (or Alternate Timeline!!) is ridiculous beyond belief.
This is more relevant to when people do stage productions of Trek episodes, not the episodes themselves.Any stage production really as you draw up on the population you have.
It's always relevant in casting considerations if race is not a critical feature of characterThis is more relevant to when people do stage productions of Trek episodes, not the episodes themselves.
Does it affect the timeline...
But that said: it's done, dialogue can be ignored or looped over with new ADR and it still all fits and works for me.
It's a critical feature if we've seen them before.It's always relevant in casting considerations if race is not a critical feature of character
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