exalted one said:
Why everyone seems so sure that GR disowned TAS, anyway? I have yet to see any solid proof of this. Did any of you have seen any solid proof?
... in later years Gene would express regret at some elements of the show and instructed Paramount not to consider this series as part of the "official" Star Trek universe.
TBonz said:
Too bad. It aired, it's canon... Gene Roddenberry can piss off.
exalted one said:
Why everyone seems so sure that GR disowned TAS, anyway? I have yet to see any solid proof of this. Did any of you have seen any solid proof?
TBonz said:
Too bad. It aired, it's canon.
Babaganoosh said:
Gene is dead, Richard Arnold is irrelevant, and the Star Trek Office no longer exists. Therefore, TAS is canon.
... in later years Gene would express regret at some elements of the show and instructed Paramount not to consider this series as part of the "official" Star Trek universe.
exalted one said:
OK, now that is interesting. So it isn't in fact non-canon, it was simply stuck in "legal limbo" for some time due to Filmation closing?
Although it fits quite well with the "let's throw everything away and start again" attitude of 1987-89.
Therin of Andor said:
The other thing to remember: in 1989, with TNG on the verge of becoming a huge hit, TAS hadn't screened widely on TV in years. It was practically unknown to TNG's new fans. TOS was very accessible; TAS was not.
Redfern said:
So, if anything, a new generation (well, a new decade) of viewers had a chance to see it, just a couple of years before TNG debuted.
Redfern said:
it was M'ress' appearance in the DC comic that inspired Paul Scott Gibbs to script his novels. Too bad those legal issues doomed any chances of Gibbs had submitting the material to Pocket Books.
That's not actually true. The week of 2 May 1987 as an example includes the animated Trek being run twice:Therin of Andor said:
Sure, but it was not on, anywhere when TNG was being written, and why should TNG's writers be beholden to 22 brief episodes of a show that so many adults watching TNG claimed not to know anything about?Redfern said:
So, if anything, a new generation (well, a new decade) of viewers had a chance to see it, just a couple of years before TNG debuted.
exalted one said:
Why everyone seems so sure that GR disowned TAS, anyway? I have yet to see any solid proof of this. Did any of you have seen any solid proof?
Not that canon would matter, since we're starting all over anyway.![]()
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.