The same one where Sybok is mentioned.
Was Michael Burnham mentioned in STV? I must have missed that.
STV is a piece of crap that I prefer not to remember; the only remotely decent part of that movie was the scene where McCoy has to deal with the pain of helping his father die, then not long after that, knowing that a cure is available.
I'm still waiting to hear all about the Vulcan Monarchy.
What about STIV with its female Captain?
What about it? That has nothing to do with events that happened decades before, when Janice Lester was whining that Starfleet didn't allow women to be captains. If Discovery is canon and this is "how it's always been, we just didn't see it on screen in TOS", why didn't Kirk tell Janice the equivalent of "Starfleet has always allowed women to be captains, but the reason
you didn't get to be one is because
you just aren't good enough"?
Instead, he spouts some sexist drivel about how Janice's life "could have been as rich as any woman's" - presumably if she'd just have given up the silly notion of wanting a
man's job.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Michele
Born 1966. How unrealistic.
So that was a common thing? I've met people with unisex names, but changing names around isn't something I'm familiar with, unless it's something like a nickname or a foreign name.
Agreed. And don't forget that she was a black female captain.
So what? I'm talking about events that occur long before that point. You're twisting my post to say something I didn't say.
I'm not saying there weren't any female captains in Starfleet; obviously there were, but we didn't see them until
after the TOS TV series ended. Janice Lester said there were no female starship captains, and if Discovery is supposed to be "how it always was" then Kirk should have set her straight. He didn't.
Let's be honest here: The difference between TOS and DIS is AT LEAST as big as the difference between TOS and TMP. If you're okay with TOS and TMP being in the same universe, despite all the differences in tone, visuals, storytelling and aesthetics, even though they are officially even closer in time, you shouldn't have a problem with DIS being in the same universe as well.
It's amazing how people persist in missing the point.
TMP took place AFTER the TOS series. Not before. So I don't have a problem with the change in uniforms, more advanced ship, etc. And the characters are played by the same people and display the same basic traits, speech patterns, motivations, abilities, etc.
But having tech in a TOS prequel that is more advanced than what can be done in TOS (never mind what it looks like for the moment) is bad storytelling. It's like you're saying that historical TV series (ie. Rome or The Tudors) should have all the characters running around with smart phones just because modern audiences are used to smart phones and can't imagine how anyone could ever manage to live without them.
Which is the oficial, canon position btw. Everyone is free to have his 'head-canon' (hell, I have mine regarding certain things), but that doesn't change the official, canon position from being: DIS is part of the prime timeline.
Every inconsitency between those two is just another part for the pile of already existing canon inconsistencies. Period.
And some inconsistencies are big enough to drive ten freight trains through, and it's just too much to take seriously. It reminds me of the shenanigans the Doctor Who writers did during the Matt Smith era. When they realized they'd written themselves into a corner, they just had the Doctor trot out, "I lied. Remember: The Doctor always lies." And then they'd wave away the corner and expect the audience to accept the new version.
Sorry, I expect better, no matter which franchise it is.
Did Sarek disapprove of Starfleet as an organization, or just of his (half)Vulcan son joining it (as opposed to the Vulcan Science Academy) and wasting his potential, in Sarek's opinion? Perhaps his objections would not apply to a fully human adoptive daughter joining.
I think it's both. Sarek is a diplomat who is dedicated to preserving peace, and of course as a peaceful, logical, Surak-following Vulcan he would approve of peaceful means to achieve his diplomatic missions, rather than threatening to shoot with a phaser.
I think it's time to acknowledge that Starfleet
is a military organization, at least in part. To a pacifist, military = violence, and violence = Bad Thing.
As for the Vulcan Science Academy, just look around in RL at all the parents who want their kids to carry on the family tradition of attending a certain university, and they may be highly annoyed if their kid chooses to go somewhere else, or chooses a different career entirely.
There's no reason why Sarek couldn't disapprove of both Starfleet
and the fact that Spock turned down the offer to attend the Vulcan Science Academy.
BeatleJWOL said:
Can't comment on the Turnabout Intruder angle as I've never heard any justification for actually watching that episode
Not even to witness what may be Shatner's greatest feat of hammy overacting in the entire series?
There's an interesting account of some of the behind-the-scenes stuff to do with that episode in the book
Star Trek Lives!. It's Joan Winston's account of spending a week on the set during the filming of "Turnabout Intruder" (partly as Deforest Kelley's guest, which is why she was allowed onto a closed set at times when no other fans were). It's very fannish, but also quite interesting.
Was it in some dialogue I missed, or in part 2, that Michael Burnham is confirmed as Sarek's ward, or adopted daughter, or whatever? Couldn't it just be a remarkably close student-teacher relationship that survived past graduation? Mentor/Mentee? Even friends? Or is this legal guardian or ward thing carved in stone somewhere?
I see no particular reason why Spock would be or should be made aware of her, given where he is. I don't see any hypocrisy or inconsistency in Sarek having a good relationship with a former student in Starfleet.
What am I missing?
Sarek disapproves of Starfleet. Sarek disapproved of Spock joining Starfleet, after taking his higher education at Starfleet Academy instead of the Vulcan Science Academy. Sarek was so pissed off about these things that he refused to speak to Spock for EIGHTEEN YEARS.
This is all explained in the TOS episode "Journey to Babel."
So it's just really incredibly jarring and hypocritical of Sarek to get chummy with a girl he helped raise, who also joined Starfleet - the organization that the peaceful, logical, civilian diplomat Sarek disapproves of.
There's no such thing as "the reboot camp".
Considering that there are several of us here who are adamant that it is a reboot, yes, there is a "reboot camp."
Your denial isn't going to make our posts disappear.
Pft. Don't be silly.
Everybody knows Captain Georgiou and Michael are in love. #ForeverShippingEverything
The fanfic writers are slow. I just checked fanfiction.net, and there aren't any slash stories posted yet. In fact, they haven't created a category for Discovery stories.
But I predict there will be one within the next couple of weeks, and sooner rather than later there will be Georgiou/Michael stories.
Yeah, that's why it's wrong. They're many light-years away from Earth. The stars
shouldn't be the same.
How did the Klingons get the beacon in there, then? Did they build a super-powerful beacon with it's own guardian to be used once and then discarded?
The boots in Discovery are totally different from the ones in TOS, so it's a re-boot!
Yeah, otherwise Uhura and Spock will never...Oh, wait...Wrong timeline.
Perhaps she's why Spock and Uhura never got together in the Prime timeline!
Prime Spock was bonded to T'Pring when they were both 7 years old (after Spock passed his Kahs-wan test).
So do you think his penis is too big for one woman or not?
3 inches per wife.
Actually, if I can be serious about Vulcan mating rituals, as a 7 year old, Sarek was betrothed to a Vulcan princess, and because their kid was batshit loony toons, their union was (maybe) annulled, and never spoken of again.
1. That girl from when he was seven grew up to be an asshole, but if he doesn't do it with her every seven years Sarek will die. So he can either be very unhappy trying to share a life with an asshole or Sarek can look for a mistress. That being said a Vulcan's mistress (or the male equivalence), is about everything except sex. They are looking for a friend, between moments when they have to have sex with someone that they loath.
2. If the psychic connection is is annulled along with the marriage (imagine if they still had to bone every seven years, still even after a messy divorce), maybe Sarek doesn't do Ponfar anymore? If his psychic connection with that princess is cut, then it's possible that there is no dating pool to look for sex after marriage, because everyone compatible is still paired off with someone which they've been mentally stapled to since they were 7. No Vulcan woman (who is wife material) will marry Sarek, or ease him if they are already spoken for.
3. You may be expected to die from Pon far if your mate dies.
4. Sarek is defective. No Vulcan woman wants to have laughing children.
5. The Royal family is a pack of spiteful bitter assholes, and they punish any one who thinks about touching Sarek's penis, because although he does not belong to that princess anymore, it doesn't mean that they, or she, is cool with anyone else having him.
6. Remember how gays used to get married in Vermont, and then return home (across the country) to where their marriage was not legal? Without the telepathic bonding, which may be beyond a humans deficits, is it really an honest and legal marriage by Vulcan standards? Legally on Vulcan, Amanda may be Sarek's girlfriend, even if they have human paperwork to say otherwise.
7. If Sarek married an alien from the world he was the ambassador to, maybe he's done it before, and maybe even it's a DEMAND of the Job, that every Vulcan ambassador marries into the culture of the species that they are assigned to.
8. Sarek married Amanda to get the job. "Why should I get this post? Have you met my wife?" If the marriage was more tactical than loving (in the beginning), then maybe he needs another woman to take care of his other needs, like stimulating conversation form someone who doesn't have half his IQ. (This would mean that Spock must have "married" a Romulan... Which according to the novels, he did.)
9. We saw Vorrik who was almost 30 bond with a grown woman. What if the psychic bond is not one to one, but a group thing (it clearly is, but they winnow down the numbers with murdersports) so every time a Vulcan husband and wife can't quite get all the way home to bump fuzzies, a new person is added to the group, and then in seven years they all have to have a threesome/orgy or they will all die, so after a century of marriage, there could be 12 people, or more in the wedding bed.
10. Vulcans do it once every 7 years. Humans can do it 5 times a day, every day, until their knees give out. The human sex drive, even though Sarek is more than 3 times stronger and resilient than Amanda, is repetitively tedious and emotionally exhausting. Sarek may have needed a mistress or second wife who would not be continuously unbuckling his trousers the moment she thinks no one is looking. Dude needs a break, to talk about the weather.
...
No.
Honestly, just no.
Vulcans can mate any time they want to, but they
have to do so at least once every 7 years, when pon farr occurs.
I'm still waiting for an explanation of Vulcan's monarchy that we never heard about until Star Trek V, when Spock was reciting his rather glib "explanation" of who Sybok was.
After all, if Sarek was aristocratic enough to marry a princess, I'm sure his peers and the rest of the clan were just
thrilled when he married a human commoner!
(And the "Turnabout Intruder" thing is really just your interpretation of one line, anyway. It's just as reasonable to watch the scene and conclude that Janice wasn't speaking literally, and there's plenty of later canonical evidence — yes, retcons! — to confirm it.)
Oh, FFS.
I never said that there were no women starship captains.
Janice Lester said there were no women starship captains. Up until that time (3rd season TOS), that was true (or Kirk or someone else should have pointed out that she was incorrect). Whether or not they were
allowed is a different issue; it could simply be that up until that time, no women had met the qualifications to hold the captaincy of a starship.
My own private opinion is that the first female starship captain was probably Number One, and then people would have
had to know her name (since it would be awkward as hell to be known as "Captain Number One"; people would be wondering where the rest of the captains were!).
The stuff you're trotting out refers to events that happened AFTER "Turnabout Intruder" - things Janice couldn't possibly have known about, because they hadn't happened yet!
Just because these things were not mentioned does not mean they did not exist. By your logic, every single event, character, issue not identified by the original series crew is not cannon. That's simply not true. #NotAReboot
By my logic, if it's something that fits in without undermining continuity or making me have a "WTF?!" reaction, it's fine. For example, McCoy's father's name was never mentioned in the TV series, either TOS, TAS, or TNG. It was mentioned in STIII, but so unobtrusively that it didn't matter. No plot point hinged on what McCoy's father's name was, or that he'd even known his father.
But Sarek having a ward he doesn't mind talking to, while ignoring his own son, even though both of them are part of a military organization Sarek profoundly disapproves of isn't something that fits.
I do know what a retcon is; soap operas do retconning all the time. General Hospital is in the middle of a storyline that's retconning a character's history for at least the half-dozenth time in as many years. But I accept that because it's a soap opera, and that's what soap operas do.
I expect better of science fiction dramas that expect the audience to take them seriously.
I feel like the TNG era was really good at making space feel vast. It isn't hard to do, though, when your flagship is boldly going in every direction and your space station is out on the fringe and your explorer ship is way, way, way beyond said fringe. They all gave Child!Me the impression that it would be weeks and weeks to get to some of those big empire capital worlds, and Child!Me ooh'd and ahh'd and wrote fanfiction.
One thing I noticed about TNG was that they no longer used the names of real stars, and their planets' names were incredibly unimaginative.
But given that most Hollywood SF writers never even bother to crack open a basic astronomy book, it's probably just as well. Some of the old TOS stories take me right out of it when they mention some planet of Rigel (a star we now know is a blue supergiant that will go supernova some day), Betelgeuse (a star we now know is a red supergiant that is in the process of going supernova - yes, the astronomers now have photographic evidence), or Vega (a giant star we now know is far too young to have planets at all, let alone planets with intelligent life, and it will supernova before it ever does have planets that can support intelligent life - assuming intelligent life there would take billions of years like it did on Earth).