Whew. Life moves pretty fast...
Is it that you think that Kirk and Mitchell met for the first time at the academy?
Mitchell's supposed age and the fifteen year thing makes me think that they met prior to Mitchell entering the academy.
Hmmm.
"Gary told me that you've been friends since he joined the service."
Mitchel is meant to be a little to a lot younger than Kirk. (Lockwood is six years younger than Shatner.) If we keep the relative ages then that would make Mitchell REALLY young when they meet. Even if we age Mitchell up to thirty-ish just as Kirk was aged down.
Mitch is an interesting character in that we ascribe a LOT of importance to him (people got upset that he wasn't in '09) but he was really a throwaway character. He just FEELS like a long running character.
Agreed! I have Kirk turning 49 in TWOK for the same reasons, which pushes his birth year to 2234 on my timeline.
I'm avoiding a lot of headaches by keeping the dates relative rather than absolute. Even so, if I put TWOK in 2282 (following the convention of the episodes being 300 years after their air date) then Jim's DOB shakes out at 2233. But I'm more interested in time between events than "This happened in 22 something something." I'm much more a fan of TOS being in the 29th century.
Also Kirk and Spock are the same age and I have the CANON references to back it up.
I have them at 4 years apart, or rough contemporaries. I'm convinced that they just missed each other at the Academy, though. For one thing, Kirk had Dr. John Gill as his history instructor at the Academy while Spock only studied from the text Gill prepared. So at the very least, they weren't in the same history class.
Heh. I never considered John Gill.
The single datapoint I have for Spock's age is Yesteryear. Spock is 7 when he takes the kahs-wan. It's thirty years ago. Which is the same age as Kirk (Assuming TAS is a year after third season TOS).
The script has him turning 49. The exact age was cut from the film at William Shatner's request. And you don't necessarily have a midlife crisis according to an exact timetable. I remember I got more depressed about turning 28 than I did about turning 30 because I was now in my late 20s and 30 was right around the corner. Kirk being 49 also puts him at exactly 15 years older than 34, which was his age given in "The Deadly Years."
And I don't believe in having subsequent productions like ST09 determine dates for TOS unless there's no other data to work from. Especially since they only used 2233 to be consistent with the Okuda Chronology.
I'm just quoting this because I agree with all of it.
My theory is that Constitution refit was a testbed for new technology, Mirandas and Constellations were the new classes built using that technology. That's why those two are still in service in 24th century, while Connies aren't.
Besides, it is really not reasonable to train the cadets to use outdated tech. When they get on their first assignment on a Miranda or an Excelsior, they would be confused because there wouldn't be any jellybean buttons anywhere.
Well, except it's a Constitution / Enterprise class Starship. You don't see aircraft carriers made into training ships. So never mind the timing, it's a silly idea. Especially since the text of the film indicates that they'll put a new crew back on her and she's off to the frontier again.
In TOS the Enterprise was always meant to be the best and the brightest (certainly one of the 12). TMP indicates that she is now so special that they can't even find people trained on her tech. Much as I hate the TNG parlance of "Flagship of the Federation" let's just say she is now meant to be so far ahead that other ships can't even see her anymore.
Also (again according to Roddenberry) the Enterprise was the only ship to return from a Five Year Mission. Whether or not that means all 12 Starship (Constitution) Class ships or not is another question of course. GR also makes it clear that there was ONE FYM. It was so significant that in the 23rd century he made something called "Star Trek" about it.
TMP the film leaves it fairly clear that Kirk is going to be CAPTAIN now. The novel is more explicit. Kirk has clout with Nogura and he intends to use it.
It's not too much of a stretch to think that five or so years later Kirk is muscled out of the Center Seat again / takes himself out and by TWOK has convinced himself that he can't pull the same trick twice.
Of course Vonda McIntyre takes the tack that Kirk has conned himself / been conned that throwing his notoriety around would be wrong. So no second five year mission after TMP.
In my mind it takes place 10 years after the TV series 2279
Putting TMP in '79 is certainly valid. It keeps the character's relative aging consistent with the actor's aging. (This can't be done with TSFS-TFF since they all lead off of TWOK.) I think that going that way takes a second command for Kirk after TMP off the table.
Returning to the actual topic, the only reason TOS, TMP, and TWOK have any disparity is the production design. On the written page there really aren't any discrepancies. If you go by what's in dialog (where TMP happens shortly after TOS) and then have TWOK a bit later it makes sense. If you want TMP to happen as far away from TOS as the movie was and then have TWOK a little sooner after then that works too. It's only when you start playing uniform musical chairs that you have any issue at all.
Hell, how many times did one read a Pocket book in the Olden Days and wonder if this was post-TMP or during the FYM?
Someone pointed out that TWOK doesn't contradict TMP but it doesn't acknowledge it either. That's fair. Of course most episodes of TOS didn't make note of other episodes. That's why our head spins when By Any Other Name continuity checks two or three other episodes.
It's just Star Trek.
Things don't always match up from episode to episode, and movie to movie. That's the way it's always been, and the way it will always be.
You'll all be much happier and have much better, more productive lives when you all understand and accept that simple fact.
But since that won't ever happen, carry on. LLAP.
Thank you. And thank you.
Okay, I'm posting this damn book before someone else adds to the thread. And I'm still not ignoring TMP.