Unless you want to find out how I feel reading shit like that, knock it off.That's how I felt reading shit like this.
Unless you want to find out how I feel reading shit like that, knock it off.That's how I felt reading shit like this.
This might be a good thing to consider. TOS and the films were my first introduction to those changes, and so Star Trek (to me) was pretty fluid. Even TNG to DS9 was a change, including with uniforms. So, for me, change in Star Trek is pretty much part of the experience. But, I am coming to find that it is not always the experience of others.Whether or not a new show or movie looks or feels like it can fit into the illusion of the "ongoing saga of Star Trek" is not something that troubles me, and never has. I find it odd that it troubles so many people, though...and I was wondering about it recently.
I actually think perceptions like these are a matter of when and how you were "raised" in the franchise, to be honest.
I was "raised" as a Trek fan on the early TOS movies, for example. Yes, I started out as a small child watching TOS re-runs in the late 70's, but the movies (particularly I, II, and III) and the premier of TNG were the big hitters during my formative years. That's what really fired me up about Star Trek and solidified me as a fan. And, since TMP and TWOK were both essentially visual and tonal reboots of TOS, and TNG was a totally different animal... I'm just used to that and it doesn't bother me one bit when it happens now. It's just expected and business as usual for me.
But, if you were "raised" on TOS right from the start in the 60's or (and I think even more powerfully) if you were "raised" on Trek in the 90's, where everything was written and designed by the same people over 4 whole series, you may have an extremely hard time swallowing changes.
That's kinda where I'm coming from, too, and not just with regards to STAR TREK. Pushing sixty as I am, I'm used to seeing beloved pop-culture properties get makeovers every other decade or so. It's standard operating procedure, whether we're talking movies, TV shows, comics, theater, etc. Everything changes and that's fine. Why should STAR TREK be any different?
So, no, I don't come to DISCO expecting it to look or feel like TOS, or the 90s stuff, or the various different cycles of TREK movies. There is no one "definitive" version or continuity of anything. It's all fluid as you say.
When ENT was on and the did the Xindi arc everyone was upset by this "new" war and species because it had never been mentioned before. How much do you personally know about the Spanish-American War? The war of 1812? I'm a history buff and my personal knowledge is very limited. I just look at new stuff in that vein.
I do occasionally reference the sinking of the Bismarck or the Red Baron.Heck, "The Wounded" on TNG introduced a whole Cardassian war we had never heard about before. I admit that bugged me at the time, but the Cardassians turned out to be a great addition to the universe, so it all worked out okay.
And, yes, I sometimes go months at a time without ever mentioning the French or Indian Wars or the sinking of the Lusitania . . .![]()
I love "The Wounded" because it ends on a morally ambiguous note (turns out the "crazy" captain was right all along) and portrays flesh-and-blood human beings with emotional scars and baggage, not "evolved" paragons of virtue. One of my favorite TNG episodes--even if the Cardassians came out of left field.![]()
Unless, y'know, they're into that sort of thing....But that should not be a set of handcuffs for the writers.
“I’m not going to win this one, am I, Chief?”I love "The Wounded" because it ends on a morally ambiguous note (turns out the "crazy" captain was right all along) and portrays flesh-and-blood human beings with emotional scars and baggage, not "evolved" paragons of virtue. One of my favorite TNG episodes--even if the Cardassians came out of left field.![]()
MAXWELL: He died at Setlick, didn't he?
O'BRIEN: Yes, sir.
MAXWELL: What was that song of his? The one he always sang, the one I liked?
O'BRIEN: (sings) The minstrel boy to the war has gone. In the ranks of death you will find him.
BOTH: His father's sword he hath girded on and his wild harp slung behind him. Land of song, said the warrior bard, tho' all the world betrays thee. One sword at least thy rights shall guard.
O'BRIEN: One faithful harp shall praise thee.
MAXWELL: I'm not going to win this one, am I, Chief?
O'BRIEN: No, sir.
yes exactly especially the movies (especially I, II and III) and the prime minister of TNG were the hitters of my youth it's my favorite movies in all timeWhether or not a new show or movie looks or feels like it can fit into the illusion of the "ongoing saga of Star Trek" is not something that troubles me, and never has. I find it odd that it troubles so many people, though...and I was wondering about it recently.
I actually think perceptions like these are a matter of when and how you were "raised" in the franchise, to be honest.
I was "raised" as a Trek fan on the early TOS movies, for example. Yes, I started out as a small child watching TOS re-runs in the late 70's, but the movies (particularly I, II, and III) and the premier of TNG were the big hitters during my formative years. That's what really fired me up about Star Trek and solidified me as a fan. And, since TMP and TWOK were both essentially visual and tonal reboots of TOS, and TNG was a totally different animal ... I'm just used to that and it doesn't bother Pnr Status TextNow VPN me one bit when it happens now. It's just expected and business as usual for me.
But, if you were "raised" on TOS right from the start in the 60's or (and I think even more powerfully) if you were "raised" on Trek in the 90's, where everything was written and designed by the same people over 4 whole series, you may have an extremely hard time swallowing changes.
Dammit! Right you are. It’s not in the Kindle version of the novelization, which I have just searched. That’s what I get for relying on my memory. I wonder where I got that from? Maybe from the old thread referred to above?Out of curiosity, I googled every permutation of this "novelization" and got nothing. Me thinks I'm being practiced upon.![]()
Dammit! Right you are. It’s not in the Kindle version of the novelization, which I have just searched. That’s what I get for relying on my memory. I wonder where I got that from? Maybe from the old thread referred to above?
ETA: Bwahaha! That was me in 2009, spreading the same disinformation. Sorry about that, chief!
There is no canon. It’s not a religion, it’s a TV show, produced across many decades by different writers and show runners to meet different expectations of the viewers and sponsors.
Here's a novel idea
Why not just restrict canon to Star Trek (TOS)
The "apparatus" consisted essentially of a glowing doorframe, just as in DSC and every other series set after ENT (where forcefield tech was explicitly still being perfected):Forcefields in TOS had large apparatus surrounding brig doors, or machines on walls in ENT.
In TNG era tech, they magically spring to life wherever needed. The only other time we see a hull breach sealed by forcefield mid-battle as in "Battle of the Binary Stars" is in Star Trek Nemesis or "Year of Hell".
Sure did...Actually, the Enterprise B had them in Generations.
A singularly odd and faulty conclusion to jump to, considering such would still be a standard launch procedure on Voyager. See for example "Threshold" (cue "or don't" jokes) and "Innocence" (VGR), where Janeway's order of the day rings out loud and clear: "depressurize the shuttlebay and open the space doors."Atmospheric forcefields did not exist in the Trekverse until The Motion Picture. Otherwise, why would the classic Enterprise need to decompress and recompress the shuttlebay?
Genuine question because my memory is shit; did the classic Enterprise ever have a hull breach in TOS or TAS that would be in need of sealing?
No sign of decompression resulting from any of the extensive damage to either Enterprise or Reliant in TWOK; quite the opposite, as fumes/flames/smoke invariably threaten to fill every compartment hit, growing progressively more concentrated in the atmosphere, rather than blowing out into vacuum. (And not only during the nebula sequence, but in the earlier open space scenes as well...so it's not just fantastically dense Mutara gasses rushing in from outside the ship, either.) The iconic big door comes down to seal off sections surrounding the warp core, just like it still does on the Enterprise-D in GEN:I think the first time it would be useful would be Wrath of Khan. Instead we get the iconic big door coming down to seal the breach.
No sign of decompression resulting from any of the extensive damage to either Enterprise or Reliant in TWOK; quite the opposite, as fumes/flames/smoke invariably threaten to fill every compartment hit, growing progressively more concentrated in the atmosphere, rather than blowing out into vacuum. (And not only during the nebula sequence, but in the earlier open space scenes as well...so it's not just fantastically dense Mutara gasses rushing in from outside the ship, either.) The iconic big door comes down to seal off sections surrounding the warp core, just like it still does on the Enterprise-D in GEN:
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-MMoM![]()
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