Allow me to rephrase. The owners have absolute say as to what constitutes canon. And, as you point out, the only people to whom canon really matters are the people doing the shows and the tie-ins.
I blame Bryan Fuller for a lot of design choices. Not all, just the ones we know of.It's not so much 'canon' that's an issue for me. As far as I'm concerned, anything that CBS declares is canon, is canon. My issue, rather, is continuity. I understand that it's not easy to make 50+ years of Trek shows and movies fit all together cohesively. It's just not realistic to expect that the people in charge of DSC are going to remember every little esoteric thing from TOS. That's not the problem. The problem is the people behind DSC have always claimed that it takes place in the prime Trek timeline, even though they've made no effort at all to be consistent with that. They set DSC in a time period where we already knew what everything looked like, and then they went out of their way to make it all look as different as possible.
And before anyone chimes in with "Did you expect a 2019 show to have the same production values as a 1966 show?"...No, of course not. But then if your 2019 show looks and feels nothing like that 1966 show, then don't advertise it as a prequel to said show. Advertise it as its own thing.
TV must've been great in the '50s. 39 episodes per season. No chance for reruns, except for maybe summer, when everyone was outside. Black-and-White TV with terrible reception. No chance to commit the episodes to memory or watch them ever again. Continuity Debates would be reduced to "my memory versus yours". And for visual continuity? "It all looks fuzzy!"
Indeed. An elegant story for a more civilized ageTV must've been great in the '50s. 39 episodes per season. No chance for reruns, except for maybe summer, when everyone was outside. Black-and-White TV with terrible reception. No chance to commit the episodes to memory or watch them ever again. Continuity Debates would be reduced to "my memory versus yours". And for visual continuity? "It all looks fuzzy!"
Allow me to rephrase. The owners have absolute say as to what constitutes canon. And, as you point out, the only people to whom canon really matters are the people doing the shows and the tie-ins.
TOS was never meant to be dissected the way it has been over the years. Which is why I'm comfortable placing either it or Discovery in an alternate universe.
And what is it meant to be now?This.
It wasn't meant to be dissected, it wasn't meant to be examined for continuity, it wasn't meant to be analysed as to what universe it's in.
It was just meant to be enjoyed and maybe provoke the odd interesting question about real life along the way.
And what is it meant to be now?
Well, if those easily led sheep could stop liking things the complainers don't like, we'd all get along fine.Much the same, but an awful lot of people seem very determined to do anything but enjoy it.
Well, if those easily led sheep could stop liking things the complainers don't like, we'd all get along fine.
When Disney bought Star Wars, they declared the Expanded Universe to be non-canon, which made those novels fan fiction. But I don't know if even Disney can declare A New Hope non-canon.
I love Discovery and it looks like I'll like Picard more than I thought. I think it's too bad that some people just don't know how to bow out gracefully when they've had enough.
When corrected on that, the OP's overall follow up has been wondering if some future producer might declare the rebootquel movies apocraphal. Even if you are concerned with that, the rebootquel clearly established in dialogue that it is "an alternate reality," that it is separate from the previous TV shows and movies, and that the original timeline continues to exist independently. The two timelines continue on parallel and separate paths. The Kelvin track has absolutely no bearing on the Prime version. Which means that the OP's continued complaints and wishes are over a non-issue, an incredibly superficial concern of what's at best branding.
The Kelvin timeline has no relevance whatsoever to whether or not PICARD will be good. The Kelvin timeline has no effect at all on whether or not the Prime timeline content will be enjoyable. At this point, I don't even think there'll be another Kelvin timeline production given the underperformance of BEYOND and Chris Pine declining to renegotiate his salary.
It's a bit like refusing to eat a meal you claim to like because you don't like the tablecloth under the plate; it's relentlessly obsessing over something that is not only trivial but has no meaningful effect on the experience whatsoever.
Is it really plagiarism when you own the original?They basically did when they made The Plagiarism Awakens.
No they didn't.They basically did when they made The Plagiarism Awakens.
Is it really plagiarism when you own the original?
As Trek fans we should be familiar with such homages.The term is homage!
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