You don't give someone the flagship of the Federation as their first command. If they do make Worf a captain, let it be of another ship. As for the Enterprise, they should bring in a new character for the reasons I already described.
Worf is the most likely candidate to replace Picard in the center chair.
On the issue of the Enterprise-A being decommissioned, that was not what was said. Uhura only said, "we're being decommissioned," and Kirk's final log entry confirmed this by saying (emphasis mine), "Captain's Log, stardate 9529.1. This is the final cruise of the Starship Enterprise under my command. This ship and her history will shortly become the care of a new generation. To them and their posterity will we commit our future. They will continue the voyages we have begun, and journey to all the undiscovered countries, boldly going where no man... where no one has gone before."
Kirk and his officers are being decommissioned, not the Enterprise. We just never knew who took command afterwards.
On topic, I maintain that Worf is the right candidate because of his experience as a front-line war officer, his four years as an ambassador, and his 20 or so years of experience under two of the most capable commanding officers in the entire fleet.
In the novels: The Enterprise-A and her crew are given a post-STVI extension at the end of Best Destiny which lasts through Sarek and maybe one or two other books. After that, The Ashes of Eden sees the Enterprise-A sold and eventually destroyed.^It could have been destroyed.
We just don't know what happened.
Data or Riker's beard.
In the novels: The Enterprise-A and her crew are given a post-STVI extension at the end of Best Destiny which lasts through Sarek and maybe one or two other books. After that, The Ashes of Eden sees the Enterprise-A sold and eventually destroyed.^It could have been destroyed.
We just don't know what happened.
Here in the Treklit forum, that's what happened.
Couldn't the same be said for most of the other characters, especially the TOS characters like Kirk or Spock?On topic, I maintain that Worf is the right candidate because of his experience as a front-line war officer, his four years as an ambassador, and his 20 or so years of experience under two of the most capable commanding officers in the entire fleet.
But the character is worn-out. He's appeared in 250+ episodes of Star Trek, four feature films and countless novels and comics.
There's no reason to needlessly beat your audience over the head with the same characters over and over again (not to mention we got an additional 178 episodes of Klingon non-sense with Voyager). I thought it was a very poor move to begin with, bringing Worf back. Not sure how many more times I can do culture clash stories because humans do things one way and Klingons do it another.
Give Worf a rest. He's earned it.
Couldn't the same be said for most of the other characters, especially the TOS characters like Kirk or Spock?
Doesn't it? Seems fine to me.In the novels: The Enterprise-A and her crew are given a post-STVI extension at the end of Best Destiny which lasts through Sarek and maybe one or two other books. After that, The Ashes of Eden sees the Enterprise-A sold and eventually destroyed.^It could have been destroyed.
We just don't know what happened.
Here in the Treklit forum, that's what happened.
None of that fits in the "Prime" Timeline though.
Doesn't it? Seems fine to me.In the novels: The Enterprise-A and her crew are given a post-STVI extension at the end of Best Destiny which lasts through Sarek and maybe one or two other books. After that, The Ashes of Eden sees the Enterprise-A sold and eventually destroyed.
Here in the Treklit forum, that's what happened.
None of that fits in the "Prime" Timeline though.
On topic, I maintain that Worf is the right candidate because of his experience as a front-line war officer, his four years as an ambassador, and his 20 or so years of experience under two of the most capable commanding officers in the entire fleet.
But the character is worn-out. He's appeared in 250+ episodes of Star Trek, four feature films and countless novels and comics.
There's no reason to needlessly beat your audience over the head with the same characters over and over again (not to mention we got an additional 178 episodes of Klingon non-sense with Voyager). I thought it was a very poor move to begin with, bringing Worf back. Not sure how many more times I can do culture clash stories because humans do things one way and Klingons do it another.
Give Worf a rest. He's earned it.
Someone answer why NOT Annika Hansen?
She's not Starfleet?
I don't know if I'd call Martock as his adoptive father, that would be Sergey Rozhenko. I'm pretty sure they referred to themselves as brothers in the show.I also don't think Worf's diplomacy experience means much since it was to his own people and meant working with his adoptive father.
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