When you have to adhere to 50+ years of continuity, that becomes increasingly harder to manage. Which is why DSC should have been a reboot.
It is only hard when one tries!

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When you have to adhere to 50+ years of continuity, that becomes increasingly harder to manage. Which is why DSC should have been a reboot.
Or they come up with something they like better.Star Trek proves that some writers stuff up time and time again.
I really think that is at the heart of it. I mean these are people, creative people who mostly love the show and the thrill of being part of it... the joy to contribute would be irresistible to not add one's own signature. All that canon stuff is for us to pounce onOr they come up with something they like better.
If canon is whatever is aired, and if two things aired contradict, what takes precedence? What was aired first, or what was aired last? This is the problem with this definition of canon, it bucks the idea of permanence of anything established. It's all subject to revision.
T'Pol on Enterprise said, "The Vulcan science directorate has concluded that time travel is impossible."
But Burnham in Discovery says, "Time crystal, we learned about those at the Vulcan science Academy."
T'Pol on Enterprise said, "The Vulcan science directorate has concluded that time travel is impossible."
When you have to adhere to 50+ years of continuity, that becomes increasingly harder to manage. Which is why DSC should have been a reboot.
There is a difference between writing a novel and writing a TV show.
TV Shows spend less time on backstory, and they need to worry more about new viewers.Obviously there are myriad differences. But how does it make keeping to existing continuity harder?
TV Shows spend less time on backstory, and they need to worry more about new viewers.
I somehow missed this. Thank you for the kind words!![]()
For example the holodeck could have gotten some narrator exposition; explaining how it is (could be) developed from tech seen in Enterprise but how you couldn't talk to holograms like you can in the 24th century. If Lorca just said "Good thing that Archer found thoes holodeck-building people back in the 2150s" and then Tyler answered "Yeah. A Pity we can't talk to holograms. Maybe in a hundred years..." that would come off as really unnatural, but a narrator in a novel could easily explain those facts.Obviously there are myriad differences. But how does it make keeping to existing continuity harder?
When you have to adhere to 50+ years of continuity, that becomes increasingly harder to manage. Which is why DSC should have been a reboot.
So canon is whatever gets established, but not contradicted. The moment someone decides to change something they didn't like that was previously established, itNeither. They both are canon.
Bad example.Really? In every episode when she said that was time travel stuff. How can you don't understand context so badly and bring this as contradiction?![]()
I prefer Ron D. Moore's term reimagining which he used to describe his version of Battlestar Galactica, which wasn't a sequel, or prequel, but a new iteration that used elements of the old in the new like making the Cylon design of the 70s series what the Cylons looked like in the first Cylon/Human war. Reboot implies starting fresh, a clean break or slate from previous versions w/c Discovery isn't. Examples of reboots are James Bond every couple of years, Nolan's Batman trilogy, Zack Snyder's Man of Steel, Star Trek (2009), etc.It is effectively a reboot with vastly different sizes, tech, values, asthetics, tone, etc... The problem is that they don't want to admit that it is both to fans and to themselves. I agree that it should have gone (for better or worse) full reboot and been upfront about it. I'm not personally a fan of DISCO myself but being lied to under the guise of being supposedly catered to makes my opinion of it worse.
I prefer Ron D. Moore's term reimagining which he used to describe his version of Battlestar Galactica, which wasn't a sequel, or prequel, but a new iteration that used elements of the old in the new like making the Cylon design of the 70s series what the Cylons looked like in the first Cylon/Human war. Reboot implies starting fresh, a clean break or slate from previous versions w/c Discovery isn't. Examples of reboots are James Bond every couple of years, Nolan's Batman trilogy, Zack Snyder's Man of Steel, Star Trek (2009), etc.
What is "great Star Trek? And why did Nicholas Meyer get to write Star Trek at all?Or maybe they simply don't care about producing great Star Trek and prefer to complain about canon rather than admit that they'd rather be writing (or would be better qualified to write) something else.
There are indeed. As @eschaton and @Jinn noted, to some extent we can attribute that to having more time to work and more narrative space for exposition... and to some extent it's also easier to finesse because the visual element simply isn't there. Still and all, that doesn't account for everything. It seems to me that many of the best Trek novelists simply have more interest in telling stories that fit into the larger tapestry, flesh out what came before, develop backstory, and/or expand on intriguing elements left unexplored in canon.Star Trek novelists have been working within established canon for decades and have produced a fantastic library of amazing stories.
So canon is whatever gets established, but not contradicted. The moment someone decides to change something they didn't like that was previously established, it
No, Canon is everything that is produced and shown on tv and in the movies. That can't be contradicted. Continuity can be contradicted. Episode A says that something happened one way. Episode B says the same thing happened in a different way. If they are official productions, both are canon. The contradiction is a violation of continuity.So canon is whatever gets established, but not contradicted. .
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