I meant, of course, so those who are paying full attention can watch the way they want to instead of the way those who aren't want to.
That's the Roddenberry way. Ignore whatever you want.The actor did a good job with the character, but ignoring what has come before for the sake of ignoring seems off to me. What other surprises are in store for viewers?
Hopefully, we get good stories.
Evolving the franchise's lore isn't ignoring it.The actor did a good job with the character, but ignoring what has come before for the sake of ignoring seems off to me. What other surprises are in store for viewers?
Hopefully, we get good stories.
I genuinely don't understand the insistence that Star Trek remain static and unchanging. It's crazy how a show that is about exploration and being open to new possibilities, has so many rigid and closed-minded people watching it.The actor did a good job with the character, but ignoring what has come before for the sake of ignoring seems off to me. What other surprises are in store for viewers?
Hopefully, we get good stories.
Certain things need to remain static for it to be Star Trek in my head space. If you change enough stuff, it's no longer Star Trek to me. It's become something else while still calling itself Star Trek.I genuinely don't understand the insistence that Star Trek remain static and unchanging. It's crazy how a show that is about exploration and being open to new possibilities, has so many rigid and closed-minded people watching it.
Which things are those?Certain things need to remain static for it to be Star Trek in my head space. If you change enough stuff, it's no longer Star Trek to me. It's become something else while still calling itself Star Trek.
So the franchise can never evolve and change and introduce new things? Jem'Hadar being given the freedom and ability to have children makes star trek not star trek?Certain things need to remain static for it to be Star Trek in my head space. If you change enough stuff, it's no longer Star Trek to me. It's become something else while still calling itself Star Trek.
Indeed you would be correct it does never state that.I'd point out that it was never stated in any Deep Space Nine episode that Jem'Hadar were sterile.
I'd also point out that there was one Jem'Hadar free from the Founders control that possessed a genetic mutation which allowed his body to produce its own White.
NopeCertain things need to remain static for it to be Star Trek

The character is clearly played by a Black actress. Everything else is an excuse.I don't understand all this hate/vitriol online suddenly about the female Jem'Hadar/Klingon hybrid character from Starfleet Academy.
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