If you're going to be a Trekkie, you have to be a bit flexible about lore and canon. Though being on the autism spectrum myself, I know that can be hard.
If you're going to be a Trekkie, you have to be a bit flexible about lore and canon. Though being on the autism spectrum myself, I know that can be hard.
This is one point that sticks in me more than any other as a pet peeve. This notion that a story ceases to matter because a later story contradicts it. I feel myself wanting to scream to the heavens "How!?" How does it cease to matter just because future installments were written differently?2). Does it really matter that it "matters"? I admit that that is a pet peeve of mine when it comes to comics fandom: the weird idea that a great old story or issue is no longer worth reading just because it doesn't fit into the current continuity anymore. Or, worse yet, that they wasted their time reading an issue that doesn't "matter" anymore. The story is still as good as it was, right? Has the quality of the art changed, or the writing? Did it provide you with an enjoyable experience up until now? Who cares if doesn't figure into the current storylines? As long as the story is still enjoyable its own, right?
A show should be consistant within its own show.
But inconsistencies between stories?
This might be the correct answer.
Especially if the series take place between long periods of time. With TNG and the series that aired right after it it's more difficult but I guess it would be smart to think all series as their own, even if there's a connection in the pilot episodes and few other things.
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Since day one (not kidding: check for yourself), since the actual very first episode (NO, not Where one (Wo)Man (equal rights to all!!! :P ) has Limped Behind, no :P ), but the two earlier (Wagon Train and The Cage) which was the original idea, but that got shot of in cold "kirk-style", due to ... believe it or not ... "too intellectual".
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I remember reading one of Shatner's or Nimoy's books that reframed the "too cerebral" line for me in a way that was a little bit more understandable. Basically, the execs felt the audience couldn't connect with the characters in an emotional way, that it was "too cerebral" as in too impersonal of characters for audience investment.In fact, Solow and Justman revealed that the "too cerebral" line was just a vague, handwavy party line, and that the frank approach to sexuality was a much bigger concern for NBC.
And it's not a documentary.No because it's a television show.
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