And donuts.
Fair point on the Friendship 1 arrowhead -- but I don't think that invalidates my speculation about the Kelvin's mission patch. One could interpret the scenario as being as follows: The Kelvin adopts the Friendship 1 arrowhead in honor of early Earth extrasolar missions (perhaps in conjunction with sister ships that adopt as their mission patches the designs of early Vulcan, Andorian, Tellarite, etc., missions); the Kelvin, having been retired from service (or lost) by 2245, inspires the Starfleet to assign that arrowhead to the Enterprise and other ships by the 2240s; those other ships and especially the Enterprise herself become so well-known and accomplished that by the 2280s, Starfleet adopts it as its overall emblem.
So I still think my speculation that the Kelvin's use of the arrowhead inspired its use on the Enterprise is consistent with the canon and could suggest that the Kelvin was considered a special ship, even in the Prime Universe history.
I just don't think it makes sense to think that a single ship's patch would be adopted fleetwide to "honor its accomplishments" or whatever. Isn't that kind of a slight to all the other ships and crews in service at the same time? It seems quite petty to me. It's one thing to honor the best; it's something very different to treat everyone else as though they don't even count.
Besides, has that ever actually happened in reality? The entire organization adopting the insignia of just one vessel within it? I can think of analogies in the corporate world -- National Comics renaming itself DC after the initials of its most successful title Detective Comics, or Warner Bros. Pictures using an arrangement of "As Time Goes By" from Casablanca as its title-card music (or using Bugs Bunny and "Merrily We Roll Along" on its younger-skewing movies' title cards for a while), or various companies that own TV networks renaming themselves and some of their other holdings after those networks. But every NASA logo has been for the agency as a whole, and each NASA space mission has had its own distinct logo. And every US Navy logo has been for the Navy as a whole. And so on.
To me, it just makes far more sense for the general insignia of the institution to be something that was created specifically for that purpose, either for the agency itself or for a precursor agency. There's no appeal to me in these notions that any single ship was so much better or more important than every other one that it deserved special recognition in that way. I think it's far more likely that while we're watching a TV show that focuses on one particular ship and its crew doing heroic and important things, what we're not seeing are the numerous other ships and crews that are doing equally heroic and important things elsewhere in the galaxy. If Starfleet is an organization capable of producing officers as gifted as the ones we see on the Enterprise or whatever, surely it wouldn't concentrate them all on a single ship. The very existence of the ultracompetent crews we see pretty much mandates the existence of other equally gifted and noteworthy crews. So I'm sorry, but the idea of the whole organization adopting the insignia of a single ship as some kind of special "honor" strikes me as not merely ridiculous, but downright distasteful.
Well, really, every single Trek story could be compacted to fit on Kirk's Enterprise.But the era of the Kelvin wouldn't be too different than that of TOS. Any plot you could do with the Kelvin, you could probably do with the Enterprise. The difference is in the new characters and in my opinion there was nothing about the characters that was very fascinating.
Plus 5 condoms.And donuts.
Plus 5 condoms.
When Michael and I pitched a ton of stuff back in 2010, one of them was a Kelvin novel. Jamie Costas had the most positive reaction to the Kelvin story and what became A Choice of Catastrophes, and asked for more on both, though ultimately S&S and CBS decided to go forward with A Choice of Catastrophes. So it's not impossible for it to happen, or at least it wasn't then.
Someone had a positive reaction to the idea back in 2010 but then the franchise chose to commission another book instead. That doesn't make a Kelvin likely, that makes it less likely. The franchise has essentially already chosen not to pursue this idea.
Even then, we now know the idea was pitched and rejected.
I think the Kelvin scenes in STXI were powerful, and had a unique atmosphere. The gigantic ship, with a cavernous engineering section so big, guys were rapelling down from the upper levels. Dozens and dozens of shuttlecraft.
I think the Kelvin scenes in STXI were powerful, and had a unique atmosphere. The gigantic ship, with a cavernous engineering section so big, guys were rapelling down from the upper levels. Dozens and dozens of shuttlecraft.
Just a thought - when we first see the Kelvin it is before Nero arrives from the future and changes the timeline. This is in effect the universe of TOS.
How then, does the size and ships compliment of the Kelvin fit with the (smaller ?) TOS enterprise ?
I think the Kelvin scenes in STXI were powerful, and had a unique atmosphere. The gigantic ship, with a cavernous engineering section so big, guys were rapelling down from the upper levels. Dozens and dozens of shuttlecraft.
Just a thought - when we first see the Kelvin it is before Nero arrives from the future and changes the timeline. This is in effect the universe of TOS.
How then, does the size and ships compliment of the Kelvin fit with the (smaller ?) TOS enterprise ?
I'm honestly not sure what the issue here would be. The Kelvin's size is actually unclear, but even if it weren't, so what? You'd have a ship that's larger than the Constitution class yet more primitive. No big continuity issu here.In fact, there's already precedent for earlier ships being nearly as large as the Constitution class yet being more primitive -- the D'Kyr class from ENT was seen in "In A Mirror, Darkly" to be very nearly as large as a Constitution class, yet more technologically primitive, especially in weapsons and defensive systems.
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