Was that on his blog, or in an interview, or in one of the About Time books...? Sounds familiar but I can't place it.
It was an essay in About Time.

Was that on his blog, or in an interview, or in one of the About Time books...? Sounds familiar but I can't place it.
[...]
This reminds me of one of my personal favorites. Even though TNG had come into existence by 1989, Star Trek V made only base overtures towards acknowledging it... to all extents and purposes, treating the newcomer as still being the second-tier Star Trek. 1991's The Undiscovered Country, however, repeatedly throws forward to things established in the spin-off, eg the Alpha and Beta quadrants are only ever namechecked in TOS era in that one movie. The crossover was much stronger, because by then, The Next Generation had well and truly re-written the boundaries, so now TOS was being forced to play by TNG's rules instead of the other way around....
Oh please - they stopped caring at TNG when GR went on a retcon rampage to try and erase TOS (which he had sold to Paramount and thus had no further royalty or merchandising stake in). Hell, you should have seen his original concept for 'New Trek' and TNG which involved a Generation ship that had long left the Milkyway Galaxy behind and would even have zero mention of any previous Star trek races like Vulcans, Klingon, Romulans, etc.Actually, this largely worked for a long period of time. Yes there were a few minor errors. But 99.99% of Star Trek made sense in terms of a single continuity. It wasn't until they stopped caring(yes a generalization) with Enterprise, then JJTrek, and the Discovery that made it impossible to reconcile. It doesn't require memorizing every fact in the Star Trek franchise to get it right. The Star Trek encyclopedia worked for most of us for many years. Need to know about something, just look it up. It's really not that hard to keep track of what's going on. Which just emphasizes the laziness of modern TV shows that can't even keep track of their own continuity.
People want to shoehorn 50+ years of Star Trek history covering several TV series and movies into some kind of coherent continuity and it's just not possible. Too many contradictions and there was never any attempt by any of the people in charge of the franchise over the decades to even attempt to create anything like that. The whole idea of trying to tie it all together is pure folly. They were, and are, mainly interested in telling what they hope are entertaining stories. They aren't concerned that Klingons used to be treacherous and are now honorable, or some bit of trivia that took place in one episode of TOS but is contradicted by a later series. They aren't concerned that the ships in Discovery are far more advanced looking than the TOS Enterprise was. They weren't concerned with the inconsistencies in how Data's ethical program was presented in different situations. These are writers and producers who want to tell stories, not create a unified history.
And at the time, I also thought it was so awesome and forward-thinking that the Enterprise-A had this advanced engine room just like the one that would be on the Enterprise-D decades later.
Kor
The thing to start with is to remember that this is a TV series (or several). Each one had a writers bible to go by. If you look at that it answers a lot of these issues. A lot of times in Television (and the further back you go the worse it is) they ignore the bible to tell a good tale.
And for TOS, TMOST is like a writer's bible on steroids.
Oh please - they stopped caring at TNG when GR went on a retcon rampage to try and erase TOS (which he had sold to Paramount and thus had no further royalty or merchandising stake in). Hell, you should have seen his original concept for 'New Trek' and TNG which involved a Generation ship that had long left the Milkyway Galaxy behind and would even have zero mention of any previous Star trek races like Vulcans, Klingon, Romulans, etc.
^^^
He had to be talked back from that big time; and ultimately was, but it didn't stop him from trying to dump everything previous to the new TNG series into the dumpster.
When TMP came out, TOS was retconned in-universe as a television producer's interpretation of Kirk's "real" missions (as per the novelisation penned by Gene himself).
Roddenberry was always moving forward with his creations. When TMP came out, TOS was retconned in-universe as a television producer's interpretation of Kirk's "real" missions (as per the novelisation penned by Gene himself). When TNG came out he planted his flag there, insisting it was his "true" vision of the future as everything before had had too much studio interference.
Yeah, like I said. Except you said it betterI'd say, rather, that the novel offered that as a conceit for the sake of Roddenberry's introduction. It's only mentioned in the prefaces rather than the body of the story, so it's not really "in-universe." Sometimes a narrative conceit is just that, a stylistic choice for how the story is narrated. Like, Sunset Boulevard is narrated by a dead man, but we're not supposed to believe we're literally watching a ghost story -- it's just a stylistic conceit for presenting the narration in an interesting way.
But yes, Roddenberry did refine his ideas for how best to present the story called Star Trek when he got the chance to go back to it. Each time, he tried to do it better, to get closer to how he envisioned it and distance himself from the compromises and flaws of its earlier iterations.
Not quite TOS, but TAS (and now Discovery) have holographic tech in the 23rd century at least visually on-par with the 24th, yet Riker in "Encounter at Farpoint" and others are amazed at it's existence in early TNG.
The only thing I will add is that what he envisioned as "Star Trek" in 1987 was not the same as in 1964, with his thoughts having been moulded by years of college lecture tours espousing the "Roddenberry philosophy". He was changing his "ultimate vision" as he went along. So, even if he had been given unrestricted freedom to produce "Star Trek" in 1964 exactly how he wished, it wouldn't have resembled what he finally developed in 1987 which is when he arguably had the most creative freedom of all.
Thing is that Romulans only appear in two episodes of TOS (Balance of Terror and The Enterprise Incident (and are mentioned in The Deadly Years but with no Rom characters on-screen, IIRC). Are two on-screen appearances of Romulans really enough to get a full/valid sense of what these guys are about? Don't think so.And as someone else pointed out earlier, the Romulans in TOS were about as honorable as Harry Mudd. All the TOS Romulan stories had the Romulans given over to passion and their society was full of Roman style intrigue (and if you study much about that it includes poisonings and other forms of assassination and a lot of political games).
Well I did say "the most freedom" (comparatively) rather than unfettered but I had completely forgotten about the TAS situation - probably because GR farmed it out to to DCF!I'll disagree about your last clause, though. Roddenberry didn't have unfettered creative freedom on TNG; indeed, he was talked down from a great many things he wanted to do (as Noname Given said in post #63) and talked into a lot of things he was reluctant to do (like casting Patrick Stewart and having a regular Klingon character). The series where Roddenberry did have absolute, unfettered creative freedom was TAS. I read a while back that part of the deal that convinced him to make the animated show was that he'd be given total creative control without being answerable to network notes -- a level of freedom unmatched by just about any other TV show until The Simpsons. But what he wanted to do at the time was just more of what he'd done on TOS, albeit with more freedom to depict exotic aliens and fantastic settings and situations. Also, rather than taking full advantage of that absolute creative freedom, he just handed the responsiblity off to D.C. Fontana, though he still had final approval over the choices she and Filmation made. Which made it a real jerk move later in life when he started saying that TAS wasn't "real Trek" as he envisioned it. His younger self had been smart enough to delegate and trust others; by TNG, he'd bought too much into his own hype, that he was this great visionary whose ideas were superior to everyone else's.
By the way, I just finished reading "Star Trek: The Official Guide To the Animated Series". I loved it. Especially the artwork, background interviews and interesting tidbits on every episode. Highly recommended. I'm quickly becoming a TAS canon fan...(with limitations.)Well did say "the most freedom" (comparatively) rather than unfettered but I had completely forgotten about the TAS situation - probably because GR farmed it out to to DCF!
So, TAS is 100% Gene's vision made real, eh? Take that, canon police!![]()
On the broader topic of continuity errors, former Doctor Who showrunner Steven Moffat once wrote a great short story featuring Sylvester McCoy's incarnation of the Time Lord, explicitly titled "Continuity Errors", in which our hero uses his time travel abilities to gradually and subtlely rewrite events to go in his favour. The title comes from the story relying on the conceit that it continually contradicts itself and it's characters as it unfolds, and perhaps a reader won't notice until a second read through exactly what is going on. It's one of my favourite pieces of official Who fiction, as well as being a hilarious use of continuity errors themselves as a fictional construct.![]()
By the way, I just finished reading "Star Trek: The Official Guide To the Animated Series". I loved it. Especially the artwork, background interviews and interesting tidbits on every episode. Highly recommended. I'm quickly becoming a TAS canon fan...(with limitations.)
Are two on-screen appearances of Romulans really enough to get a full/valid sense of what these guys are about? Don't think so.
They're solid and look perfect when in "mirror" mode and also when Lorca and Tyler were in the simulated Klingon ship environment.Discovery-era holograms are translucent and intangible, able to simulate living beings visually but not to the touch
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