Oh, I completely forgot about her.
Oh, I completely forgot about her.
I see you didn't read my full post. As I said, I think it's already quite easy to reconcile this with the novels' Control, given what the novels have already established about Control's fondness for feints and false fronts. Since the whole basis of Dave Mack's Control narrative is "Nothing is as it seems," that makes it practically immune to contradiction.
The only Section 31-related thing in the novels that I feel has been invalidated by this season's events is the epilogue of Section 31: Cloak, which had Kirk and other command-level Starfleet officers speaking of Section 31 as a conspiracy they'd never heard of. But the rest of that book is still viable, I think.
The only other main conflict I see is with Burning Dreams and its version of Pike's father, and probably some of its events between "The Cage" and "The Menagerie," including the depiction of Pike's accident. That book probably has to go.
Except the character name was never spoken onscreen and is thus easily dismissed. Until she's explicitly called "Yeoman Colt" in dialogue, then it's just angels on the head of a pin.
That was no doubt the intent -- the script just had a supernumerary character named "Ryan" and Paskey happened to be assigned the gig that day. But fans of the bit background players like to build characters up from whatever fragments are available.
Okay, I see what you mean: "Why is this such a sticking point and not something else?" with Control being an example. Fair enough. I guess, since the novels have a smaller audience and the TV shows do not need to conform with them the way they "have" to with each other, it's not a great comparison. Milage may vary.
In regards to the Section 31 novels, DS9 did state and show that Section 31 was a top secret conspiracy for centuries, so irregardless of the novels, DSC will "have" to address that if they don't want to leave plot holes from their show to the previous ones.
As to why this one is getting so much attention, it could be because it's the most blatant difference that you can't really rationalize away on paper.
Err, this is the "Discovery and the Novelverse" thread in the Trek Literature forum, so I thought we all understood that the topic here was the show's impact on novel continuity.
While "Inquisition" certainly implies that, I think there's wiggle room. When Bashir asks Sloan, "But that was two hundred years ago. Are you telling me you've been working on your own ever since? Without specific orders? Accountable to nobody but yourselves?" Sloan merely replies, "You make it sound so ominous." So it's not explicitly confirmed. True, it's hard to believe a genius like Bashir could be unaware that S31 was once an openly operating branch of Starfleet Intelligence, so it's an imperfect fit, but there are worse inconsistencies in Trek canon.
Of course you can. We've suggested multiple rationalizations already. It's a different character named Yeoman Colt. It's Colt's alien wife. It's Colt in prosthetics from an undercover mission she just got back from. It's Colt after some sort of transformation in the 4 years since we last saw her. It's usually easy to resolve these things if you apply your energy to thinking of fixes rather than just complaining about the problem.
I guess what I'm getting at is that it's kind of a mind-boggling decision, given that all the other returning characters have been cast with people who resemble the original actors and there doesn't seem to be any logic to the decision if it's indeed supposed to be the original Colt (it's not like people who saw the pilot are going to recognize her and be excited for the cameo or anything.)
Openly operating Section 31 also means that Odo is tremendously bad at googling things: "If he's right and Section 31 has existed since the birth of the Federation, they've learned to cover their tracks very well."
Openly operating Section 31 also means that Odo is tremendously bad at googling things: "If he's right and Section 31 has existed since the birth of the Federation, they've learned to cover their tracks very well."
In the novelverse, we can assume that Uraei-Control removed all records of the Section, and that Dax was just not involved with Starfleet matters during the brief period (2240s-2250s) when they operated more brazenly.
I'm still not entirely convinced it's not a miscommunication somehow, but if that is what they did, I can see the logic of it. TOS was pretty human-centric, and DSC is trying to portray a more multispecies Starfleet. So I can see how that desire could lead to reinterpreting a human character as alien, sort of like how comic-book adaptations these days often change the race or gender of originally white male characters to increase diversity. It's odd to do it with Colt, though.
However, I'm not sure that magically turning Colt from a human to an alien is the way for Star Trek to do that.
^ Though I wonder why they would think having an English accent would even be a deal-breaker for fandom by this point, considering other recent successful character-recasts with different accents from the original actor in question (see: "Marcus, Carol").
If true, and I suspect something like it is given the uncertain tone Ms. Paradise gives in the interview, is why even those who like Discovery have trouble trusting the writers. There's still no sufficient explanation for how a Section 31 suit can travel across great distances, stop a Kelpien massacre by the Ba'ul, etc. Everything feels haphazard.I doubt Paradise got it wrong in the interview. The actress credited as Colt is a regular Discovery stuntwoman and background player who always works on the show under heavy alien makeup (and even if she actually isn't the alien science officer and is playing a human deeper in the background, she doesn't have the biggest resemblance to the old Colt, especially compared to Hanneke Talbot's Lt. Mann, who wouldn't be a totally unreasonable recast of Colt).
I'd guess the miscommunication occurred during production. Maybe someone more familiar with "The Cage" decided they should cast a Colt-alike, they found the actress who played "Mann," then they decided the english accent was a dealbreaker and changed her name to another bridge background role, and someone who didn't know "The Cage," needing a credit for the now-nameless alien, just switched them without realizing "Yeoman Colt" was an established character and not a new name like the other three background bridge officers. DSC naming an alien "Mann" (or intending to) doesn't feel out of character to me.
Considering Michelle Paradise also wrote the episode, one would think she'd know who was cast to say the lines assigned to "Yeoman Colt" in the script. Although...But all that is why I'm still wondering if this is just a miscommunication, the interviewed producer mixing up one character for another.
This is something I can see being the case. IIRC, in The Cage Colt wore the beige uniform that looked similar to command gold and was replaced with the red uniforms in the rest of TOS. Mann wears a red uniform, which is also consistent with the majority of the yeoman we saw in TOS. Granted, Mann wasn't really doing anything that would qualify as a yeoman specific duty either, though I imagine they only listed the character as Yeoman Colt to intentionally make it clear she's meant to be the character from The Cage, cut down on "is that Yeoman Colt or someone else named Colt?" And yeah, I can totally see Disco naming an alien character Mann.I'd guess the miscommunication occurred during production. Maybe someone more familiar with "The Cage" decided they should cast a Colt-alike, they found the actress who played "Mann," then they decided the english accent was a dealbreaker and changed her name to another bridge background role, and someone who didn't know "The Cage," needing a credit for the now-nameless alien, just switched them without realizing "Yeoman Colt" was an established character and not a new name like the other three background bridge officers. DSC naming an alien "Mann" (or intending to) doesn't feel out of character to me.
If this story is true then it certainly makes things very ironic. Colt can't be English, so instead they make her alien.^ Though I wonder why they would think having an English accent would even be a deal-breaker for fandom by this point, considering other recent successful character-recasts with different accents from the original actor in question (see: "Marcus, Carol").
Considering Michelle Paradise also wrote the episode, one would think she'd know who was cast to say the lines assigned to "Yeoman Colt" in the script.
Right, but since that info was cut from the released movie (or at least the specific info about London, if not her mother's surname, which I guess could be inferred somewhat from her conversation with Spock), not too many casual fans would be aware of that bit of backstory, as opposed to the more ardent fans who've watched the deleted scenes on the Blu-Ray.But that's an alternate-timeline Carol who grew up in London.
Actually, if the accent was such a deal breaker, why didn't they just have the actress speak with an American accent? Looking over her IMDB, she's done plenty of work in the US and Canada, so it should be an accent she'd be familiar with.
Memory-Alpha, or well some of the contributors have decided to file this Colt a separate character.
If that sticks, who knows. It's not a hive mind.
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