Funniest in-joke was Jeffrey Combs playing both Weyoun and Brunt in the same episode of DS9 ("The Dogs of War").
Wasn't Bashir originally older, as well. Then they changed the character because they liked Siddig?I remember the original Voyager "Bible." Tuvok was an elderly Vulcan who was a mentor to B'Elanna. The EMH was named "Doc Zimmerman." And we weren't allowed to mention what kind of animal Chakotay's spirit guide was because that hadn't been decided yet.
Clearly, everything was set in stone from Day One.
Similarly, the original DS9 "Bible" contained no mention of the Dominion, Founders, Changelings, Vortas, pagh-wraiths, Jem Hadar, or any hint of Odo's origins. All of that came later.
Wasn't Bashir originally older, as well. Then they changed the character because they liked Siddig?
Not to mention that when they are in make-up for aliens it is hard to tell their characters apart. I didn't recall picking up on J.G. Hertzler being both the Vulcan Captain in "Emissary" and Chancellor Martok until he made that comment on the DVD bonuses about how his last DS9 appearance was as a random, human extra in the end scenes of the finale.
Wasn't Bashir originally older, as well. Then they changed the character because they liked Siddig?
I don't know about that, just that he was going to be named Julian Amoros instead. Maybe what you're thinking of is that they initially wanted Siddig for Sisko because of the commanding power he conveyed in a certain role, then were surprised when they found out he was much younger than they thought, too young to be the father of a teenager.
True (much like Armin Shimerman does) - but if you never went to go back and rewatch "Emissary" after Martok shows up, you're not likely to twig onto his having been on the show four years earlier.Personally, I find Hertzler has a very distinctive voice, which made it clear he was the Vulcan captain in Emissary.
Shoot, I thought they were canon too. I thought that was the point of the new comics being done by JJ's people.
Having to defer to a central authority on which fiction is "real" and which is the "fake fiction" is beyond silly.People put too much stock into what is and isn't canon. Given the creators and producers can't come to a consensus, why should we?
Having to defer to a central authority on which fiction is "real" and which is the "fake fiction" is beyond silly.
Having to defer to a central authority on which fiction is "real" and which is the "fake fiction" is beyond silly.
Having to defer to a central authority on which fiction is "real" and which is the "fake fiction" is beyond silly.
But the reverse is also silly. Imagine telling a Hollywood screenwriter that his new movie script can't be used because its whole premise was invalidated by a few panels in a tie-in comic that was seen by less than 1% of the viewing audience and has been out of print since 1972.![]()
But you know as well as anyone that there are a chunk of fans who enjoy a work of fiction set in the Star Trek universe less if it isn't authoritatively declared "canon." There are fans who, for some reason, need that distinction made by an outside arbiter. My point is that that's silly.Having to defer to a central authority on which fiction is "real" and which is the "fake fiction" is beyond silly.
But the reverse is also silly. Imagine telling a Hollywood screenwriter that his new movie script can't be used because its whole premise was invalidated by a few panels in a tie-in comic that was seen by less than 1% of the viewing audience and has been out of print since 1972.![]()
Bingo. That's the whole thing in a nutshell. As I've written before, this isn't a philosophical or artistic choice; it's a simple matter of practicality. No one in their right mind is going to let a movie or TV episode intended for millions of viewers be affected by something that was written in an old Greg Cox novel fifteen years ago . . .![]()
The only people who use "canon" as a standard of what's admissible to enjoy are fans who impose that standard on themselves, and delude themselves into thinking they're being instructed by some higher authority.
Shoot, I thought they were canon too. I thought that was the point of the new comics being done by JJ's people.
The point was to keep them as consistent with canon as they could, which isn't the same thing as actually being part of the canon. But I think Bad Robot underestimated how difficult it would be to keep the tie-ins consistent with an ongoing canon.
Well so far they've done a decent job of it seeing as the only major contradictions are a few lines of dialogue.
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