You are correct, of course. I will turn in my Trek card on my way out!
Uh-oh. I probably should have turned in my card a while ago. I've made my fair share of boo-boos with my Star Trek 'facts.'
And I once created quite a stir when I confused Marvel and DC Comics. Apparently a pretty significant faux pas

In 1983, another zine explained "This story was originally written to explain why Spock went to Gol [for Kolinahr studies] the end of the five-year mission. It's therefore set between then and ST-TMP, and during it, the uniforms change. It also explains why the Enterprise needed an extensive refit. However, presumably because of the time that has passed since ST-TMP was released, it is no longer presented as an explanation of Spock's retreat to Gol..." ["Communicator", a UK newsletter].
I got the sense that she was trying to give an explanation about some of the changes we see in TMP. It was never explicit, except maybe with Chekov and perhaps a little bit with the new ship changes (though they didn't go as far as TMP).
Perhaps an early attempt at continuity building. Spock deciding to study Kolinahr after those events might make a little sense I suppose. It'd be a stretch, but I guess you can argue Spock's journey required him to re-find his center. He was humiliated (and perhaps even sexually abused in some fashion--at least indirectly, he was forced to allow the female Tomarii disrobe and bathe him for instance), then bullied in prison and then he had to take a role in the Romulan Empire. That can mess with anyone's psyche, even Spock's. But that's certainly not explicit in the novel, or even implicit really. But an early reader might make that inference I suppose.
In some ways it might be similar to "The Crucible" where Spock decided to study Kolinahr after he felt he failed Kirk, and there seemed to need to refind himself as well (though while I liked that trilogy in general, I didn't care for that bit because while Kirk was devastated he had to let Edith die, I think by the end of the 5YM he had moved on, I always had difficulty seeing Spock regretting his actions all those years later). I kind of liked the idea better that Spock felt he needed to purge his human half and felt Kolinahr was the best way to achieve that, rather that some event that caused him to take it up. Of course we learn V'Ger helped him learn to embrace his whole self, something I think Christopher noted was maybe one thing that carried over (even if unintentionally) into TWOK. His finding comfort finally in his own skin.
Not that unusual for movies, I think. ST 3-5 did the same, picking up just weeks or months after the previous films while years passed in real life. And Back to the Future Part II picked up immediately after (indeed, during) the finale of the original film from 4 years earlier.
Yeah, I guess it's not all that uncommon. Perhaps that's why in TWOK and TUC they seemed to do a bit of self-correction, adjusting the time line to account for the actors age so it didn't get too out of whack.
...The thing is, the reporter is absolutely correct in her statement. This is the first Enterprise that isn't blessed with Kirk commanding her, never mind for how long (except of course she soon gets the blessing anyway!);
Yeah, I never thought much bout that comment from the number of years perspective, other than as you noted the reporter seemed to be trying to get a rise out of Kirk by pointing out he wasn't in command of the
Enterprise (and perhaps foreshadowing his brief pleasure at sitting in the captain's chair before quickly telling Harriman to stay put). And since I follow the novels, which went with the idea that Kirk commanded the Enterprise for several years after TMP before taking another promotion, in the continuity I follow Kirk was in command for most of those years, with the exception being the 2 1/2 years before TMP and when Spock was made captain some time before TWOK. So in my eyes it's largely accurate however the question is viewed.
And the way the question was phrased was that this would be the first
Enterprise without him in command was accurate nonetheless. There was no expectation that he would ever command this
Enterprise, unlike the last 2.