She just repeated what Book said. You can imply that she had a wealth of knowledge behind her exclamation or she might have just been repeating what Book said.Nope. She already knew without anyone having to explain it to her.
She just repeated what Book said. You can imply that she had a wealth of knowledge behind her exclamation or she might have just been repeating what Book said.Nope. She already knew without anyone having to explain it to her.
She just repeated what Book said. You can imply that she had a wealth of knowledge behind her exclamation or she might have just been repeating what Book said.
There's also an implied reference to the Gorn in the second season of Disco. They are presumably the "alligators on Cestus III" Leland was said to have dealt with.Captain Archer heard of the Gorn from the Orions, IIRC, so Earth knew of them early, and if they did, it is pretty obvious the other older members of the Federation did as well. Knowing of them doesn't imply direct contact, of course.
In the Kelvin Unverse McCoy bragged about delivering Gorn babies, and that would have been before 2259.
Captain Lorca had a Gorn skeleton in his room of horrors in 2256. It all implies there was at least some general knowledge of the Gorn, even if there was no formal diplomatic involvement.
That's a very 21st century approach. In the 23rd century, we've learned not to fear random alien species' names.I made it clear in my previous posts how I interpreted Burnham’s response. If I told you ‘The Shizzpopplemunchers beat me up,” you’re not going to say, “The Shizzpopplemunchers did what?” You’re going to say, “Who are the Shizzpopplemunchers?”
That's a very 21st century approach. In the 23rd century, we've learned not to fear random alien species' names.
I was paraphrasing Uhura.Who said anything about fearing random names? I think you completely missed my point.
There's also an implied reference to the Gorn in the second season of Disco. They are presumably the "alligators on Cestus III" Leland was said to have dealt with.
Unless the Gorn made first contact with the Federation several years before TOS, as suggested in the Kelvinverse (and we know how the timeline is different there), then yes it is.
at the risk of being pedantic, the show has continued to be made since TOS third season, and changes, retcons, and addtions to the universe have needed to be made. Beyond someone's personal imagination, there is no Disco Reality in the series. The altered timeline by the Sphere Builders in ENT was negated.The Kelvinverse, the Disco reality and ENTs temporally altered timeline are all different to TOS!!!
JB
Who is to say that Captain April or Captain Pike, or a different group of Starfleet officers at the time, never had an unofficial first contact with the Gorn though?The Kelvinverse, the Disco reality and ENTs temporally altered timeline are all different to TOS!!!
JB
Canon is whatever CBS and Paramount says it is, specifically whatever makes it to the screen.Things have to be changed I agree even within the years of TOS there is some discontinuity! But if we allow for writers who have no interest in the original series to make changes here and there that affect episodes that were set in that era then we are only watching a sci-fi show and not Star Trek! Canon is personable to the person or people watching it and if a thing is changed just to accommodate the new show then that earlier series is either in another timeline or the original has been erased surely?
JB
Their reality was changed greatly as soon as they encountered a Romulan vessel in the 2230s. That brought the Federation into contact with the Romulan Empire 30 years sooner than in the TOS reality.Then again, the comment about Kelvin being its own thing is valid here: the only reason we involve it here is because McCoy there has had personal experience with the Gorn, which would absolutely necessarily have to be an "alternate history" thing, something taking place after 2233. In Kelvin, contact with Romulans is also implicitly very different, and also implicitly a post-2233 thing.
(In comparison, while Kelvin mentions the Cardassians early on, there's no pressing reason to think this would have happened differently in Prime. No need to declare everything about the Abrams adventures invalid or irrelevant to the Trek lore or anything.)
Timo Saloniemi
Actually you're right I made one mistake. I forgot that they didn't know Nero was a Romulan until he destroyed Vulcan in 2258; 8 years prior to when the Romulans would reappear in the prime timeline.Why would meeting Nero in 2233 bring any sort of contact between the UFP and Romulus?
If the Feds didn't know who the Romulans were before this meeting, they wouldn't know it afterwards, either. Nero never says he's Romulan. He does nothing Romulan (such as, say, speak Romulanese or fly a ship with a bird painted on or activate a holocamouflage device). He doesn't look Romulan, because there is no such thing as "looking Romulan" at that point; he looks Vulcan, just like the man he hunts. And he isn't in Romulan space, or at least we never get any indication of such, and only some random walla on Klingons being nearby.
Also, as far as we can tell, Nero had no interest in allying with or even contacting the Romulans of the day, and went for deniability on that when speaking with Pike.
At some point between 2233 and 2358, Starfleet does learn that Nero's ship was Romulan, and Pike writes a dissertation about that. But apparently only S31 subsequently reacts to this specific threat; the Starfleet we see is no more prepared for it in 2258 than it was in 2233. And it's Klingons that Starfleet in ST:ID worries about, rather specifically.
Timo Saloniemi
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