Good interview. It certainly piques my interest in this crossover.
If done wellDoctor Who/Transformers could be crazy fun if handled correctly.
I remember "The Next Doctor", that is as close as I need to get to a Doctor Who / Transformers crossover.If done wellDoctor Who/Transformers could be crazy fun if handled correctly.
And yet there was a so-called 'canon-keeper' in the 1980s hired by John Nathan-Turner. He was called Ian Levine. How good he did his job, however, is another matter entirely...LOL
Thankfully we've all moved on from those days. Well, except for Ian. (Who I'm honoured to say once called me The Biggest Cunt In Doctor Who Fandom for daring to suggest that his plan to get fans to recolour Ambassadors Of Death and then sell it to the BBC wouldn't come to anything.*)
Comic Book Resources has up an interview with the Tiptons about the crossover. They talk about why it's a TNG story (25th-anniversary, airing currently on BBC America) and the profound differences between the Borg and the Cybermen, amongst other things.
First Contact itself did that with the BOBW flashbacks...Hmm. They're engaging in a bit of retconning there, using First Contact/VOY-style Borg instead of the TNG designs even though it's set during TNG.
First Contact itself did that with the BOBW flashbacks...Hmm. They're engaging in a bit of retconning there, using First Contact/VOY-style Borg instead of the TNG designs even though it's set during TNG.
First Contact itself did that with the BOBW flashbacks...Hmm. They're engaging in a bit of retconning there, using First Contact/VOY-style Borg instead of the TNG designs even though it's set during TNG.
the Tiptons interview had one of them saying that as far as he's concerned, it's canon and his definition of canon is: "if i like it, it's canon."
Scott: My position on the "canon" question is always a simple one: If I like a story, if it had an emotional impact on me, then it happened, at least for me. When you get right down to it, every reader has their own "canon" of stories that matter, and ones that don't. We're just trying to create one that matters.
Yeah... that's a little misleading.... here's the WHOLE quote:
Scott: My position on the "canon" question is always a simple one: If I like a story, if it had an emotional impact on me, then it happened, at least for me. When you get right down to it, every reader has their own "canon" of stories that matter, and ones that don't. We're just trying to create one that matters.
I think the important bit is: "every reader has their own "canon" of stories that matter, and ones that don't."
No, we have a personal continuity. By definition there's no such thing as a personal canon.I was going to make the same point. Don't each of us have our own personal canon? If we hate a story, we ignore it. If we like it, we tend to fit it into our own personal view of the universe.
No, we have a personal continuity. By definition there's no such thing as a personal canon.
No, we have a personal continuity. By definition there's no such thing as a personal canon.
I have a personal cannon...if the police ever find out I'm screwed...
Don't each of us have our own personal canon? If we hate a story, we ignore it. If we like it, we tend to fit it into our own personal view of the universe.
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