That was In the Name of Honor by, hm, well, how interesting...I seem to recall at least one book referenced Captain Taggert as a historical ship captain.
That was In the Name of Honor by, hm, well, how interesting...I seem to recall at least one book referenced Captain Taggert as a historical ship captain.
Maybe Forbidden Planet had a series of sequels and a spin-off television series in the Star Trek universe?That's interesting, though... Galaxy Quest is a loving send-up of Star Trek, so I wonder how it comes about in a universe with no Star Trek?
He was, according to SNW. Specifically in the episode The Elysian Kingdom he's the author of the book M'Benga reads to his daughter.I also like to think Benny Russell was a real person in the Star Trek universe
I feel like my brain completely blanked out that episode. This is the second time in the last month I've forgotten a detail from that episode... :facepalm:He was, according to SNW. Specifically in the episode The Elysian Kingdom he's the author of the book M'Benga reads to his daughter.
He was, according to SNW. Specifically in the episode The Elysian Kingdom he's the author of the book M'Benga reads to his daughter.
Okay, that bugs me as a word person... how can it be both the kingdom of Elysian and the Elysian kingdom? "Elysian" as an adjective implies that the kingdom is named Elysia, but if Elysian is its proper name, then analogy with other country names ending in "-an" would suggest an adjective form of Elysianian, Elysianese, or Elysiani.
Wait till you find out the two wizards in the story are the brothers Pollux and “Caster”…
You mean as a fictional TV series?OT, but is there any canonical evidence that Star Trek TOS existed in the PU?
Should be Elysian Kingdom and the Kingdom of Elysium.Okay, that bugs me as a word person... how can it be both the kingdom of Elysian and the Elysian kingdom? "Elysian" as an adjective implies that the kingdom is named Elysia, but if Elysian is its proper name, then analogy with other country names ending in "-an" would suggest an adjective form of Elysianian, Elysianese, or Elysiani.
I tend to be bugged when people and words have names ending in -i, when the planet should end in -o or -a, or the last consonant. In TOS: Ex Machina, we have the Fabrini of Fabrina and the Lorini of Lorina. In STO it's the Lukari of Lukari, the Kobali of Kobali. Urgh, why not Lukar and Kobal?
You mean as a fictional TV series?
Canonical, no. But IIRC the TMP novel implied the TOS adventures were exaggerated.Yes I did.
Sensible, on both accounts.Well, there's no reason to expect alien names or languages to follow human conventions. It's only an issue with "Elysian" because that's a book by an English-speaking human author, using a variant of a pre-existing word.
And of course, human languages have many different conventions for demonyms. For instance, in Japanese, the Lorini would be the Lorina-seijin (literally "people of the planet Lorina").
Talosian action figures in the background of 1996 scenes in Voyager's "Future's End", perhaps?Mr. Ward, is there a reason you chose Galaxy Quest as the movie?
OT, but is there any canonical evidence that Star Trek TOS existed in the PU?
Just geeky Easter eggs. LD is loaded with 'em, up to and including a certain toy helmet sold (as I recall) by Radio Shack.Talosian action figures in the background of 1996 scenes in Voyager's "Future's End", perhaps?
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