I don't know. I like to think the "current media landscape"'s obsession with "canon" and 100% consistency is just a temporary aberration and is not necessarily applicable to every property and franchise.
I've documented in other threads that a focus on canon, and how/whether pieces of fiction "count" and fit together in a shared continuity, is a practice that stretches back decades. It's more common and well-known now, but (as I've argued) that is an inevitable consequence of the Information Age in which everything is less niche and easier to know about than it used to be.
It could be that pendulum will swing back the other way towards a more laissez-faire approach to continuity, visual or otherwise.
If anything, I think it will continue to trend more in the direction it's already going, as visual and other references become ever easier to access...
We may well remember that it's entirely possible to enjoy a new SPACE IGUANA movie or TV series or comic-book series without fretting endlessly about how it fits with the last seventeen SPACE IGUANA stories.
...but the entire point of my previous post is that there is a spectrum of "laissez-faire" to "100% consistency," that franchises establish where they fall on that spectrum, and that audiences will adjust their expectations accordingly.
People get it. They do. The same person will not have the same continuity expectations, even within the same medium, between a James Bond movie and a
Star Wars movie or between a sequel and a remake. I know because I'm one of those people.
I also question whether the general public really obsesses about this sort of nitpicking as much as portions of "fandom" do.
Are they making really granular observations? Probably not, but they're making some of their decisions about what to consume in a franchise based on their desire to follow a particular ongoing narrative and whether the question of what forms part of that narrative is easy to determine.
I'll give you a personal example: I've stopped trying to follow any releases in the
Transformers franchise because there are too many separate continuities to track, it's too much work to figure out what fits with what, and I'm interested in having a single narrative (or at least a couple of easy-to-distinguish ones) as opposed to multiple extremely-similar fits and spurts of storytelling.
Am I going onto a
Transformers forum to make that known? No, I'm just quietly removing myself from that audience, and I think there are plenty of people in the general public who make these sorts of decisions for themselves without feeling any need to explicitly communicate them--and I think it often takes
less of a hurdle to constitute a dealbreaker when someone isn't as emotionally invested.
I disagree completely. This framing ignores how productions (and, in turn, franchises) set up certain expectations for consistency (or not), how a given audience member can adjust expectations based on what a production is communicating, and how some audience members will self-select out of consuming something if they only want one version of it.
That framing ignores no such thing. It merely asserts that the very expectations you describe are not meaningfully different from the desire some people have to proclaim one version or another of a story to be the "true" or "definitive" version.
I simply don't see that desire expressed in the same way when it comes to the theatre world...where, you know, people understand that it isn't the same fixed visual medium as film and television and more readily expect one script to have a wide variety of possible interpretations. Maybe I'm just not up on my
Cabaret fandom--do people complain
because Alan Cumming's performance doesn't fit into the continuity of Joel Grey's performance, as opposed to just liking one performance over the other?
Reacting to minor continuity differences and aesthetic differences by "questioning the creators words" is a really weird and inappropriate thing to do. Different versions of something set in the same continuity are really common and most audience members know to just suspend disbelief instead of acting as though creators are being somehow "dishonest" by asserting that two shows are set in the same shared universe despite minor discontinuities.
I don't think "they conveyed that this would be the same and it's too different to come across as the same" is that weird a reaction--and you spoke quite eloquently upthread about how you had that reaction to how Pike and Spock are portrayed on
Discovery. For many people, visual congruence is part of that calculation, and their tolerance for what constitutes a "minor" or "major" discontinuity will depend on what the creators of a work communicate to them.
I feel this is even more true in the streaming era, where watching new
Star Trek is a much more deliberate act--in most countries, you can't just stumble on
Discovery whilst flipping channels--but the vast majority of people are having these reactions in their own heads or amongst friends as opposed to talking about them in any sort of public setting.
Whether Star Trek made a big change in 1979 or 1984 is irrelevant to our current media landscape, which has trended much further towards visual congruence within shared-continuity franchises
You mean like the Marvel Cinematic Universe, where the much-touted "it's all connected" tagline and continuity crossovers of
Agents of SHIELD with the films were eventually tossed out the window when the Snappening didn't happen on that show? Or the Netflix Marvel shows, supposedly set in the MCU but depicting events that should have been referenced on other shows but weren't, and which actively depicted Avengers Tower as absent from establishing shots of New York?
Are you under the impression there was no negative reaction to that perceived bait-and-switch, precisely because Marvel had set up an expectation not reflected in the finished products when they could've had the same products with a different expectation?
I mean, hell, even the Hulk/Bruce Banner look totally different and have totally different personalities between The Incredible Hulk and The Avengers.
Again, people understand the difference between recasting and redesign, and how different factors lead to one versus the other. If Marvel could've had a perfect digital Edward Norton for the same amount of effort as recasting him, some people would've argued for doing so--and indeed, digital solutions are becoming more common for these issues as technology makes such options possible.
I don't think anyone has questioned that the discontinuities in DIS are the result of artistic choice rather than ability.
A number of people in this very thread have essentially argued that
Discovery couldn't possibly stick to the same visual aesthetic because makeup/set design/technology have advanced over time--as if we haven't seen other franchises (and
Star Trek itself) do just that.
Except I don't think DIS was marketing itself as tying into TOS nostalgia. I think it was marketing itself as tying into public affection for the Kelvin Timeline films. The aesthetic similarity between the Kelvin films and DIS are pretty blatant; yeah, they played the "10 Years Before Kirk and Spock" card, but I think they were assuming (rightfully) that most people are not going to necessarily take that as meaning TOS nostalgia per se. I doubt most members of the public care much about the distinctions between TOS and the Kelvin film, and probably don't care much about the seeming discontinuities between DIS and TOS.
Again, you've already done a fantastic job articulating why it was artistically arbitrary to set this story in the TOS era, so marketing the nostalgia seems to have been a primary motivation--and if they wanted to market specifically to the audience for the Kelvin Timeline films, then (from that narrow perspective, at least) it was a mistake not to set this in that continuity instead of marketing one and producing the other.