The record was deleted in the final episode, thus rendering all "It's not canon, Spock said there's no record of a mutiny" canon discussions that occured over the past six-ish months meaningless. I had a good lough![]()
God that is fucking stupid.
The record was deleted in the final episode, thus rendering all "It's not canon, Spock said there's no record of a mutiny" canon discussions that occured over the past six-ish months meaningless. I had a good lough![]()
God that is fucking stupid.
The record was deleted in the final episode, thus rendering all "It's not canon, Spock said there's no record of a mutiny" canon discussions that occured over the past six-ish months meaningless. I had a good lough![]()
Given that Spock served with his crewmates for 3 years before mentioning that his father was the Vulcan ambassador, and another 25 years before mentioning that he had a brother, it's bewildering that anyone finds it implausible that he never mentioned his adopted sister. Oh, and let's not forget Kirk never telling anyone he had a son, Sulu never mentioning a daughter, etc.
Eh, don't worry, I figured that you meant that the "explanation" was stupid and not that me finding it all very funny was stupidWasn't meaning to be rude, @Jinn.
Well, the way I understood it they erased her mutiny from official Starfleet records, like, they have a spreadsheet with "name", "rank", "ship", "date" and "reason for mutiny" and deleted the colon that had Burnham in it; plus they deleted the information from her official file. They probably didn't go through all Federation newspapers and force them to delete their articles on her. And Spock only quotes there being no record of a mutiny, which I understood as reffering to Starfleet records. I do think that it was unneccesary to explain it in the first place, but to their credit I think the scene works pretty well regardless of the Spock line in TOS and doesn't forced in for continuity reasons.It is just that is stupid on so many levels. I mean, everyone still knows Burnham mutinied, it is no secret, so it fails as an explanation on that level.
Yeah, but that was Then, and everything that was Then was good, unlike the things that are Now which are bad. Of course Then used to be Now and then Then was also bad, but that was then and now Then is Then and not Now and thus redeemed.I'm not really clear what fans fixate on one thing and not another - the Klingons are federation members in season 1 and 2 of TNG and then... Aren't.
This isn't a separate excuse, it's an excuse for why he wouldn't talk about any family member.No, as I said, I just find it a waste of effort to try to "explain" a behavior that is 100% in character. Spock has never talked about any member of his family until he was forced to by circumstance. This is no different, so it doesn't need a separate excuse.
This isn't a separate excuse, it's an excuse for why he wouldn't talk about any family member.
I got curious about Trek character's rarely appearing siblings so I set out to Memory Alpha and found out thatUnmentioned relatives popping up out of nowhere are an enduring trope of series fiction going back generations.
No we don't need one, but now we have one. The whole premise of "Lethe" was to explain a thing about Sarek we didn't need an explanation for because it was already explained in "Journey to Babel," and I thought it was one of Discovery's best episodes. Christopher, you've built your entire tie-in career explaining things we didn't need an explanation for, so I'm surprised to see you take this stance.Do we need one? He's a private person. That's reason enough. And it's not like the other TOS characters are all that garrulous about their families either. Unmentioned relatives popping up out of nowhere are an enduring trope of series fiction going back generations.
So, except for Kirk we got all siblings in movies or later shows, TNG mostly introduced siblings when they were neccesary to the story, DS9 felt the need to intrdocue every sibling in season 2 (except for Ezri obviously), Voyager and Enterprise barely had siblings in any capacity and Discovery only has the Spock connection.
Memorable in-universe or in real life? Personally I don't find her connection to Spock all that memorable, I tend to think of her as the doughter of Sarek, not the sister of Spock (although both are true of course). What I found memorable about her was her mutiny, how she freed the tardigrade and the end of the Klingon War, but of course YMMV.The only thing memorable about Burnham so far is her connection to Spock and the lifting of Worf's backstory.
I got curious about Trek character's rarely appearing siblings so I set out to Memory Alpha and found out that
- Kirk's brother was first mentioned early in season 1 and died later in it, Spock's half-brother was established in the fifth movie, his foster sister was first seen in Discovery and Scott's sister was established in the second movie.
No we don't need one, but now we have one. The whole premise of "Lethe" was to explain a thing about Sarek we didn't need an explanation for because it was already explained in "Journey to Babel," and I thought it was one of Discovery's best episodes. Christopher, you've built your entire tie-in career explaining things we didn't need an explanation for, so I'm surprised to see you take this stance.
Well, okay, I agree with you, and I haven't done such a thing. (In fact, I've published multiple positive reviews of the show.)It's just that this is one of those things where fans attack a new show for a supposed "continuity error" that's actually entirely consistent with pre-established facts that they just don't remember, or that they don't care about because they have an agenda. I hate the double standard of people criticizing the newest Trek for things that are already part of earlier Treks. Over the years, I've seen so many people damn the newest incarnation for "violations" that are perfectly consistent or explainable to anyone who actually knows the facts, or at least no worse than the continuity errors that Trek has always, always had. And I'm sick of it.
Worf also has a foster brother, first mentioned in the first season, first seen in the seventh.Worf's brother was introduced in season 3 of TNG;
When will Now be Then?Yeah, but that was Then, and everything that was Then was good, unlike the things that are Now which are bad. Of course Then used to be Now and then Then was also bad, but that was then and now Then is Then and not Now and thus redeemed.
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