Regardless, mainly due to the Stargate being all over the place, I'm still not including TAS in this list
Not to mention that authors count when defining canon. TAS was perceived as a continuation of TOS because it was largely created by the same team, and Roddenberry was involved. So its perception was different than, say, that of the Gold Key comics. Paramount could come out and say that all pre-Kurtzman series are non-canon now. But if nobody perceived this as true, what difference would it make?Eh. It aired, it's canon. One can always "decanonize" any Trek that one doesn't like, but at the end of the day, it doesn't matter. It was just fun entertainment that has lasted a surprisingly long time.
These are stardates, not Earth time.![]()
Oh, right. But the year assignment is non-canonical. They're getting assigned to the same year, because whoever made that list assumes a certain correspondence between calendar year on Earth and episode stardates.LOL. I was commenting "Errand of Mercy" and "Day of the Dove" are in the same year in the OP's list. There should be at least a 3 year gap between the two.
I agree with this. Given the look, I always place it in 2264 (even tho it was filmed in 1965).Not to dampen enthusiasm, but this is not a new idea. I’ve heard it floated years ago.
I also think it’s a fair idea because it addresses a few things. One is the obvious aging of the characters over the course of the series. It also allows more believable time between events.
I have also long held the notion that the three seasons were actually showing us the bulk of the 5-year mission if not exactly all of it given occasionally we hear references to events we never actually see. You could include TAS and it still works.
My one exception would be to place WNMHGB outside of this framework. My reasoning is the different look of the uniforms, the ship, different cast and the tidbit of no narration at the beginning of the episode declaring the 5-year mission. I’m reasoning WNMHGB happened not too long after Kirk takes over from Pike and several months to a year before the ship is refit and embarks on the 5-year mission we see depicted in TOS.
Interesting idea. My version of this was the date referred time passage aboard ship since it set out on the 5-year voyage. But like your idea if you referred to the actual log entry by Stardate the actual corresponding Earth date would be there as well.In my head canon, the stardate is just a kind of page number, an index point, in the ship's navigation log. A stardate pertains only to the logs of the specific ship, base, or colony that is citing it.
If you open the Enterprise's log and scroll to page 1709, you're going to find the actual date, the ship's location, speed, and direction, and some dictated verbiage about the "Balance of Terror" mission.
Thus there is no useful information in the stardate number itself, except maybe "this episode happened before that one." I'm sure there are bits of dialogue here and there that go against me, especially franchise-wide, but I can't think of a better reason to say "stardate" (which implies both place and time), instead of just noting the time.
I'm just going to stop you right there. I'd assumed when I wrote my earlier posts that it was common knowledge that when TOS was written and produced, the view was that what you wrote there was decidedly not the case. Memory Alpha's article on stardates quotes several passages, including one from the series bible and another by Gene Roddenberry for The Making of Star Trek, which I'll quote from below.I assume that stardates are a Starfleet common dating system linked to an Earth standard time frame; where 1000 stardates
Yep, I believe the same thing and it's one of the main guidelines I've used for my Star Trek Chronology. I mean, c'mon, the Stardates on TOS start in the 1000s and end in the high 5000s. This isn't rocket science.I believe that TOS covered all 5 years of James Kirk's 5 year mission on the Enterprise (NOT just the first 3 years). Hear me out: going by the stardates given in most episodes, the stardates at the beginning of the series are in the 1xxx/x range, at the end of the series they are in the upper 5xxx.x range. Theory (mine): the first digit corresponds to which year of the 5 year mission. Therefore we have actually seen all 5 years of Kirk's famous tenure.
Yes. Here's what I wrote in the intro for my Chronology:Also the highest stardate being in the mid 59xx range fits with Star Trek: The Motion Picture being set on stardate 74xx and Scotty saying in the movie "we have just spent 18 months redesigning and refitting the Enterprise". And before anyone says anything, yes, I know that Stardates are used differently in the movies.
Yep, I've been using this idea in my Chronology for at least 15 years.Not to dampen enthusiasm, but this is not a new idea. I’ve heard it floated years ago.
I also think it’s a fair idea because it addresses a few things. One is the obvious aging of the characters over the course of the series. It also allows more believable time between events.
I have also long held the notion that the three seasons were actually showing us the bulk of the 5-year mission if not exactly all of it given occasionally we hear references to events we never actually see.
Yep, same.I assume that stardates are a Starfleet common dating system linked to an Earth standard time frame; where 1000 stardates = 1 Earth solar year.
Yeah, I think there's undeniably a refit & crew rotation between WNMHGB and the series proper, although I have WNM as a part of the 5YM for simplicity's sake.After WNMHGB, the ship is sent back for repairs, modifications, crew re-assignments for Kirk's 5YM.
Not Folly. Canon has essentially agreed that the Events of Best of Both Worlds take place in 2366-2367.I believe that TOS has great continuity when viewed in ascending Stardate order, however I would include TAS for sure. I also believe that to consider each season of any star trek show to represent the beginning and end of a year to be ridiculous!! For instance BOBW pt1 December, BOBW pt2 January the following year??!! FOLLY.
Considering the collector in Lower Decks has that giant Spock skeleton? Yep. Canonized.To your last point, nope sorry TAS had been re-canonized.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.