Could be an alternate MU and not THE MU.I was just looking around at Memory Alpha and found out that in Prodigy Season 2, which I haven't watched yet, that they brought back the Terran Empire in the MU, which I don't really like. I much prefer the more peaceful Galactic Commonwealth that the Rebellion turned into in the books, it just seems strange to me that after everything they went through with the Alliance, and with the influence that the Federation had on them, that the Terrans would just go back to the Empire.
I was just looking around at Memory Alpha and found out that in Prodigy Season 2, which I haven't watched yet, that they brought back the Terran Empire in the MU, which I don't really like. I much prefer the more peaceful Galactic Commonwealth that the Rebellion turned into in the books, it just seems strange to me that after everything they went through with the Alliance, and with the influence that the Federation had on them, that the Terrans would just go back to the Empire.
The Coda novels explain the novel stuff and its fate.Yeah, that seems like a reasonable explanation, especially if the episode involved doesn't directly contradict anything from the books.
I was just looking around at Memory Alpha and found out that in Prodigy Season 2, which I haven't watched yet, that they brought back the Terran Empire in the MU, which I don't really like. I much prefer the more peaceful Galactic Commonwealth that the Rebellion turned into in the books, it just seems strange to me that after everything they went through with the Alliance, and with the influence that the Federation had on them, that the Terrans would just go back to the Empire.
Ah. Well the Coda books have MU scenes. That’s why I mentioned themI haven't read the Coda books yet.
But it's not really the contraction that's my main point, I just find the choice to go back to an Empire strange on the characters' part.
Oh, I like that idea, I really enjoyed those.I assumed the MU we see in Prodigy was based on the one we see in the IDW comics, where the Terran Empire continues to exist in the 24the century, it's just extremely smaller and the reason why the characters on DS9's MU episodes think the Terran Empire is defeated is due to propaganda the Klingon-Cardassian Alliance is feeding them.
I'm more surprised he didn't look at Lower Decks- with its serious-Trek-but-also-comedy-parody-moments tone and tendency to explore the weird, goofy, and obscure side of Trek, and go 'oh, they're just ripping off the format of New Frontier (but with less sex)!'Peter David doesn't seem to have been aware of the use of the Brikar and seems to think Prodigy is ripping off Space Cases: "Okay, I've read up on it now. A show about a group of alien kids who discover a ship in space and use it to go on adventures. Wow. I wish I'd come up with a program like that. Oh wait: I did." (Link).
I'm more surprised he didn't look at Lower Decks- with its serious-Trek-but-also-comedy-parody-moments tone and tendency to explore the weird, goofy, and obscure side of Trek, and go 'oh, they're just ripping off the format of New Frontier (but with less sex)!'
I do think PD deserves credit for basically creating the template for Lower Decks (even if coincidentally and unintentionally) several decades ahead of his time. Between that and the Brikar, modern animated Trek owes a lot to Peter David.
I think we read their tones a bit differently. But no, my point was simply that if he was going through claim something exceedingly general as a ripoff of his work (as in the cited example with Prodigy), I would have seen *this* general similarity as the lower-hanging fruit.Whaaaaa?? Lower Decks is an out-and-out sitcom that sometimes has a more serious side. New Frontier was a drama-adventure series that often had a snarky and comedic side. They bear only a vague tonal resemblance to each other, and nobody would attempt to claim ownership of a tone, let alone a format.
I suppose I see the similarity less in the cast and assignment of the crew, as much as the lens through which the Trek universe is viewed. The satirical but loving look at the universe the defaults to outright comedy but also contains serious and dramatic moments and real stakes in the process.I don't see where you're getting that. The two series had very different casts, with NF featuring a mix of original and established characters while LD's cast was all original. They had very different formats and missions, with NF's characters being the command crew of Starfleet capital ships patrolling an important sector of space, while LD's main characters are the junior officers of a lower-tier Starfleet ship on a variety of routine missions. They're by no means the same template.
If any prose Trek series is similar in concept to LD, it's the S.C.E./Corps of Engineers series, which focused on a smaller vessel and crew generally assigned to routine or followup missions. The Cerritos is even an engineering-division ship.
I think we read their tones a bit differently.
But no, my point was simply that if he was going through claim something exceedingly general as a ripoff of his work (as in the cited example with Prodigy), I would have seen *this* general similarity as the lower-hanging fruit.
Which is notable as a consistent trend across all Trek series pre-CBS (a major reason I was a detractor of the Discovery 'visual reboot' explanation, and relieved by the potential TCW explanation there). Every series that revisits TOS (save for Discovery/SNW) universally affirms that the TOS/TOS film era looked exactly the way it looked and wasn't merely a matter of budget or interpretation.In light of these questions of artistic design (especially considering how some tie-ins have endeavoured to walk the line recently between the ways in which TOS and DSC/SNW have depicted the same era), what I found most interesting was that the Enterprise bridge consoles and shuttlecraft were recreated entirely in the TOS style, with no visual references to those later interpretations--even though the visual artists were modelling those objects from scratch and could've chosen to go in a different direction.
Lower Decks did as well kinda. When they showed TOS era stuff it was usually in TAS style.I hadn't considered that Prodigy joined that lineage (TNG, DS9, VOY, ENT, Kelvinverse, and PRO!), but I am glad that it did!
None of the new shows, other than Lower Decks, has shown anything from the movie era yet.TOS film era looked exactly the way it looked
Every series that revisits TOS (save for Discovery/SNW) universally affirms that the TOS/TOS film era looked exactly the way it looked and wasn't merely a matter of budget or interpretation.
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