Considering how dark and grainy all the effects are on this show, they should have already been doing that anyway.VFX supervisors really should consider polishing those resumes right now
But... Pegg didn't write the first JJVerse movie...Kinda like when Simon Pegg, the movie’s writer, said that Nero’s temporal incursion send ripples to time and changed everything both towards and backwards through time.
But the same fans that accept the DSC producers intentions as canon don’t accept Pegg’s statements as true because "we didn’t see/hear it onscreen".
But... Pegg didn't write the first JJVerse movie...
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Suddenly many UI artists feared for their safety![]()
This is the Prime timeline as stated by the people making the show. The fans don't get to decide what's set where. So it's canon now.
Pretend all you want, but it's still the Prime timeline. I'm not sure why a vocal minority have such an issue with this. The designs changed, nothing else. We're even getting direct references to Archer and the NX-01, what more do you need? Other than a return to fifty year old sets and costumes?The official canon was the live action movies and TV shows the last time I heard. The official canon includes only the Star Trek productions, not what the creators say about the Star Trek productions. What the creators say about Discovery tells us what they want it to be. What it will be depends on what they have made it and what they will make it in the future. If they make a Discovery series that can fit into the Prime timeline then we can accept their statement that it is in the Prime timeline. If the creators create a Discovery series that can NOT fit into the Prime timeline then we MUST accept that it is in an alternate universe.
Star Trek: Discovery may be canon, but Fateor didn't say it was not canon. Instead they claimed that it is in an alternate universe to the Prime timeline. If Star Trek: Discovery can fit in the Prime timeline, we can accept that the creators succeeded in their intention to fit it into the Prime timeline. If there is no possible way for Star Trek: Discovery to fit in the Prime timeline, the failure of the creators to fit it into the Prime timeline is total and their intention to fit in it is irrelevant.
Time and many plot developments will tell if Star Trek: Discovery is or is not in the Prime timeline, not the intentions of the creators. The road to Hell is paved with good intentions, the road to storytelling failure is paved with good storytelling intentions.
Indeed. I was the only one in my HVAC engineering design class in college that knew what an AU was during a discussion of solar angles - our professor didn't even know.Funny you mentioned that actually, I mentioned this particular cock up to two friends who watch the show, both have engineering backgrounds so definitely made it out of grade school. Got blank looks. I'm guessing it's not as general knowledge as us Trek nerds think it is.
The official canon was the live action movies and TV shows the last time I heard. The official canon includes only the Star Trek productions, not what the creators say about the Star Trek productions. What the creators say about Discovery tells us what they want it to be. What it will be depends on what they have made it and what they will make it in the future. If they make a Discovery series that can fit into the Prime timeline then we can accept their statement that it is in the Prime timeline. If the creators create a Discovery series that can NOT fit into the Prime timeline then we MUST accept that it is in an alternate universe.
Heh. Maybe I've just spent too much of my life reading SF and other genre fiction, but I tend to operate on the implicit assumption that every TV series takes place in its own alternate reality (unless there are explicit connections, as for example with All In The Family and The Jeffersons)....Much of this is specific to scifi, because any other type of writing would carry the assumption that the World is the World rather than a series of conflicting continuums. A cop show doesn't try and distance itself from other cop shows: even in the absence of actual crossovers The Wire doesn't try to actively pretend that it exists in a different universe than Shield, because there really is just this one World.
Naturally YMMV; I'm not saying anyone else (or the mythical "typical viewer") has to see things this way. I just find it part and parcel of my suspension of disbelief to assume that anything I'm viewing or reading as fiction is at least a fraction of a degree separate from our reality (and from most other fiction as well). It's actually easier for me that way; it helps explain away a lot of things that would otherwise be inexplicable divergences from reality.Law and Order theoretically takes place in the X Files universe, so anything is possible, but I certainly tend to see fiction which is grounded in reality or near reality being set ostensibly in our world. I think to say "well, Law and Order can't happen in a world where there was a TV show called Law and Order" is taking literalism a little too far. It's a cop show in modern day New York, I don't think we need to invoke a parallel world to suspend disbelief...
Directly, it didn't, but it did feature John Munch of Homicide: Life on the Street, who later moved to SVU. He's actually the linchpin of a sprawling network of shows which can be linked to the same fictional universe with different degrees of certainty, and from that, to all being part of the dream that is the ending of St Elsewhere.(When the heck did Law & Order cross over with X-Files?)
Detective Munch from L&O also appeared on X-Files and several other shows.Naturally YMMV; I'm not saying anyone else (or the mythical "typical viewer") has to see things this way. I just find it part and parcel of my suspension of disbelief to assume that anything I'm viewing or reading as fiction is at least a fraction of a degree separate from our reality (and from most other fiction as well). It's actually easier for me that way; it helps explain away a lot of things that would otherwise be inexplicable divergences from reality.
(When the heck did Law & Order cross over with X-Files?)
Directly, it didn't, but it did feature John Munch of Homicide: Life on the Street, who later moved to SVU. He's actually the linchpin of a sprawling network of shows which can be linked to the same fictional universe with different degrees of certainty, and from that, to all being part of the dream that is the ending of St Elsewhere.
Like The Simpsons and Futurama, EastEnders and Doctor Who have crossed over, though I don't believe it's canon in either show.For instance, Doctor Who has been repeatedly mentioned as a TV show within the soap EastEnders, and EastEnders has been mentioned as a TV show within Doctor Who.
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