I'm trying to make a list of every Star Trek episode, movie, novel, short story, comic book and video game. I'm also planning on making similar lists for Doctor Who, Star Wars and other franchises to see which franchise has the greatest number of stories and how much larger it is than the second-largest franchise.
But I've run into several problems:
Should I count the remastered versions of the TOS episodes and TNG episodes as separate stories from the original versions?
Should I count the various ports of Star Trek: Strategic Operations Simulator as separate stories? There are at least 5 versions of the game, all of which have different graphics but identical gameplay.
What do you guys think?
franchise
ˈfran(t)ʃʌɪz/
noun
noun: franchise; plural noun: franchises; noun: the franchise
1.
an authorization granted by a government or company to an individual or group enabling them to carry out specified commercial activities, for example acting as an agent for a company's products.
"Toyota granted the group a franchise"
synonyms:warrant, charter, licence, permit, authorization, permission, sanction; Moreconcession, privilege, prerogative;
seal of approval
"the company lost its TV franchise"
- a business or service given a franchise to operate.
"fast-food franchises dot the roadside"
- a general title or concept used for creating or marketing a series of products, typically films or television shows.
"the Harry Potter franchise"
There are *some* discrepencies between TOS and TOS-R, where the Remastered teams have taken a liberty or two in replacing one type of spaceship with another or replaced details on a planet from what they were originally and so forth. To be sure, a pedant could argue that the fiddling at the edges by the remastered teams might change the occasional context here and there...But I wouldn't say the ''base episodes'' are any different from the un-remastered originals, therefore they shouldn't be regarded as 'seperate' to them.
Just trivial differences of detail. Like I said, these are stories we're being told, and every telling of a story has its own idiosyncrasies.
Mostly, TOS-R just replaces stock-footage reuses of things from earlier episodes, like replacing K-7 in "The Ultimate Computer" with a new station, or replacing the Rigel fortress in "Requiem for Methuselah" with a (gorgeous) new mansion for Flint. And I think that's closer to the original intent. The makers of those episodes didn't want Flint's mansion to look exactly like the Rigel fortress right down to the moons in the sky; they just didn't have the budget to do a new matte painting, so they approximated it as best they could with the available stock materials. To me, it's always been a given that Flint's mansion didn't really look that way, that what we were shown was just a prompt for our imaginations, a stand-in that we were supposed to look beyond. So the (gorgeous) TOS-R version is like finally seeing the real thing instead of the stand-in. So I don't consider that a change in the story at all, just a refinement in the way the story is presented.
I'm trying to make a list of every Star Trek episode, movie, novel, short story, comic book and video game. I'm also planning on making similar lists for Doctor Who, Star Wars and other franchises to see which franchise has the greatest number of stories and how much larger it is than the second-largest franchise.
But I've run into several problems:
Should I count the remastered versions of the TOS episodes and TNG episodes as separate stories from the original versions?
Should I count the various ports of Star Trek: Strategic Operations Simulator as separate stories? There are at least 5 versions of the game, all of which have different graphics but identical gameplay.
What do you guys think?Franchise is a horrible word to use.franchise
ˈfran(t)ʃʌɪz/
noun
noun: franchise; plural noun: franchises; noun: the franchise
1.
an authorization granted by a government or company to an individual or group enabling them to carry out specified commercial activities, for example acting as an agent for a company's products.
"Toyota granted the group a franchise"
synonyms:warrant, charter, licence, permit, authorization, permission, sanction; Moreconcession, privilege, prerogative;
seal of approval
"the company lost its TV franchise"
- a business or service given a franchise to operate.
"fast-food franchises dot the roadside"- a general title or concept used for creating or marketing a series of products, typically films or television shows.
"the Harry Potter franchise"
It means the Star Trek shows and things are just a thing to be slapped on a lunchbox to get money.. a commodity..
This is avcourse true. But us people who are talking about and enjoying the stories shouldn't be using that term. Leave that to the fat cats..
Is there not a better word in English to use to talk about the collected series and books?
But us people who are talking about and enjoying the stories shouldn't be using that term.
This is just an unbelievably fascinating thread that I missed back in August before I became a member of TrekBBS.
Christoper, I understand and agree with everything you have posted here.
I do have one question that relates to this. Say for example, we hear Scotty say in "The Savage Curtain", that "Lincoln died 3 centuries ago" which would put the TOS in the 22nd century. However, in "Q2" we see that Kirk's 5 year mission ended in 2270. Also in "Trials and Tribble-ations" we have a canon date of 2268 for the events in "The Trouble with Tribbles". So according to what has been discussed in this thread do we go with the TOS actually taken place in the 23rd century and take what Scotty says in "The Savage Curtain" as inaccurate??
I do have one question that relates to this. Say for example, we hear Scotty say in "The Savage Curtain", that "Lincoln died 3 centuries ago" which would put the TOS in the 22nd century. However, in "Q2" we see that Kirk's 5 year mission ended in 2270. Also in "Trials and Tribble-ations" we have a canon date of 2268 for the events in "The Trouble with Tribbles". So according to what has been discussed in this thread do we go with the TOS actually taken place in the 23rd century and take what Scotty says in "The Savage Curtain" as inaccurate??
I seem to also recall a certain scene in which they made a certain character shoot first, thereby destroying another character's cred as a badass.And in the star wars redos, all that happened was they fixed post editing mistakes in transparency and added in somewhat useless scenery that had no impact on the movie.
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