Sure, but the production people know what it was, so they're clearly familiar with the episode where it was featured, which strongly implied Starfleet had never heard of it before and had no idea what it was.
Are we going to have a moment where Discovery deliberately tries to resolve this relatively minor contradiction? Of course not. Because they don't care.
I don't think that follows at all. I think it more probable that they have a specific rationale in mind for each and every element that's being put into the show, including (perhaps even
especially) the things that seem contradictory.
Here's a window into the thinking of the current production team and the extraordinary extent of the efforts they are undertaking to remain consistent. Lorca having a secret room full of anachronisms may well be quite
deliberate, showing us that he is privy by one means or another to things that Kirk wasn't. What specific reason is there to think that the contents of this room (in aggregate, if not each individually)
aren't indeed included in the "
everything that appears to be a deviation from canon" of which they are "wildly aware" and "will close out" in one way or another? What exactly is your
evidence for this negative claim?
Fuller left production before the pilot episode even finished filming; if he had any intention of actually dealing with the cloaking issue, it would have been at the Battle of the Binary Stars. The people who actually put the episode together either didn't follow through with this intent or don't share it.
So beyond "Vulcan Hello", Fuller's plan for what Discovery might have become is LONG dead.
I don't believe that's accurate. If you are talking about his initial idea for it to become an anthology series with each season being set in a different time period, that was shelved almost immediately in favor of focusing on a serialized prequel to TOS, telling "one story over thirteen episodes," and they had "the arc of the first season entirely written" in at least rough form
well before Fuller left. While there would undoubtedly be at least
some modifications as production went on, it was subsequently
indicated by Kurtzman that they still intedned to "continue that through not only this season of
Trek but hopefully set up things that are coming next season," with "much of what’s there in terms of story and certainly in terms of set-up, character, big ideas, the big movement of the season" having been based on discussions with Fuller before his departure.
They aren't using Balance of Terror" as their bookend here, and it's questionable how literally even THAT intention actually was, considering the Klingons weren't even IN that episode
No. No, they weren't. And the Romulans are a "no-go" area. Hmm...gee, I wonder what
other element of that story could possibly have been the "touchstone" Fuller was talking about...? It's a total mystery.
(Seriously, it
is also possible he was referring to something as broad as the point of view shifting back and forth between Starfleet and its enemy, or the "no provocation will be considered sufficient" philosophy, etc.
Of course it's possible that's all there is to it. But it's no less possible that the
fact of cloaking and the development of countermeasures against it having affirmatively
been an integral part of DSC's story thus far—and a thread not yet fully resolved—is no mere coincidence. Indeed, I'd consider it
at least as likely as not at this point, all things considered. But we'll see.)
Neither will the writers of Discovery, considering that the augment issue in "Affliction" has been ignored completely in favor of a makeup design that makes NO attempt to reference the augment virus.
Still, I won't conclusively rule out their using the augment virus as an explanation for how Voq managed to transform into Lieutenant Tyler as quickly as he did. It's a plausible explanation, but it's probably not the one they're going to use.
You continue to assert negative claims without negative proof. Why not just wait and see what they do or don't do before claiming you know what they have or haven't ignored?
Kurtzman
says "be patient" and, like me, suggests that "introducing a new idea...doesn't negate the old ideas." You can say "oh but he's not talking about
this bit or
that bit, only
these other bits" but you have no way of knowing that. Not unless you actually
are Alex Kurtzman, or have personally discussed these specifics with him. And even if DSC
were to end with a host of loose ends left dangling...there would be nothing to preclude a future production coming along later and tidying them up somewhere down the road.
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MMoM