Books?Even the Enterprise E was going to be called the USS Sentinel before the D was destroyed.
Books?Even the Enterprise E was going to be called the USS Sentinel before the D was destroyed.
I know but she should still do her years at the academy. It’s only fair.
Yorktown isn't canon, and the Sao Paulo was atleast implied to be brand new.Tell that to the USS Yorktown. Or the USS Sao Paulo.
Acting credits on shows and movies are very tightly regulated by the Screen Actor's Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. Starring, Co-Starring, Special Guest Star, "featuring ____", "and____" aren't left up to the producers, but rather a function of union negotiation with the studio about how labor translates to compensation. This matters more for bit players, character actors and unknowns than it does the biggest stars, but it's standardized across all productions so everyone's labor rights are protected. Hollywood has a long history of fucking performers when it comes to compensation.You've got a full cast of "Special guest stars" sapping up budget and time. Shaw, Seven and Raffi are lucky to get the time they got!![]()
Yeah, I know. It was a comment on screen time not billing.Acting credits on shows and movies are very tightly regulated by the Screen Actor's Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. Starring, Co-Starring, Special Guest Star, "featuring ____", "and____" aren't left up to the producers, but rather a function of union negotiation with the studio about how labor translates to compensation. This matters more for bit players, character actors and unknowns than it does the biggest stars, but it's standardized across all productions so everyone's labor rights are protected. Hollywood has a long history of fucking performers when it comes to compensation.
Even things like "short" intros without credits in film and TV, and "intro titles" being moved to the end of the show (like Picard) only started to happen in the last 20 years because of negotiations between studios and the union. Any examples before this century were negotiated on a case-by-case basis. Some productions had to get special dispensation on provable artistic grounds for moving around credits and what credit people recieved. It's also not even up to the performer, but rather the guild. Though performers can take roles uncredited, which is what John de Lancie did for Q in the finale. If he elected not to, he would get a Special Guest Star tag too, likely in an additional credits sequence (this is what happened in Loki in the after credits scene when Old Loki, Kid Loki and Boastful Loki were revealed.
The "Special Guest Star" label, was likely tied to the TNG actors only receiving compensation for the Episodes they were involved in, whereas Picard, Seven and Rafii all got paid for every episode (and indeed, were in every episode). They were contracted for the season, whereas the TNG cast was contracted for episodes (Frakes, as a director would have another contract specifically for that, through the Directors Guild.
It's not canon but the Enterprise-E was likely a renamed ship too, because it was at nearly done building, and maybe even in shipbuilder trials, when the Enterprise D was destroyed. The D's crew got a finished ship that very well might have been the second sovereign ever built that wasn't going to be "Enterprise" either.
No. What's fair is that she qualifies to perform all of her duties. She does. Preparing cadets for duty is the purpose of the Academy. She's more prepared than almost everybody serving in Starfleet, top to bottom.I know but she should still do her years at the academy. It’s only fair.
-_-Yorktown isn't canon, and the Sao Paulo was atleast implied to be brand new.
Yes, naming is arbitrary, but the idea that changing Titan to Enterprise reflect honor and respect doesn't hold water. It would be laughable if someone suggested renaming the broken hull on the bottom of Pearl Harbor from Arizona to Valley Forge.EIther way you cut it, this "nuhhh it should be the TItan" shit is literally the worst of Star Trek, where the "rules" are arbitrary and selectively ignore precedent because fans don't like the decision and more than that, they want to straight jacket the story for some reason.
Indeed but the Yorktown thing isn’t on screen canon as wellBooks?
Yup. It's a funny thing, Enterprises were always early ships of their class.Various novels have listed the Enterprise-E's intended name during construction as Honorius or Sentinel.
So non-canon then? Call me when someone makes either one canon.Indeed but the Yorktown thing isn’t on screen canon as well
Which producer? Gene was more a less a guy who got a check.It was Gene's idea. It was producer intent.
Where has this ever been stated?The 1701 was an early Constitution.
Again, not canon.The 1701-A, being renamed, was the exception
The Frontier Day fleet had a whole bunch of them.The 1701-F was one of only three known Odyssey classes (two, strictly speaking, since the "Odyssey-class" name is non-canon, technically, it's "Enterprise-F-type").
But that's not what's happened here. Starfleet isn't renamed an honored wreck that has deep emotional and historic significant. They're renamed an Active Duty ship.Yes, naming is arbitrary, but the idea that changing Titan to Enterprise reflect honor and respect doesn't hold water. It would be laughable if someone suggested renaming the broken hull on the bottom of Pearl Harbor from Arizona to Valley Forge.
Where has this ever been stated?
Again, not canon.
The Frontier Day fleet had a whole bunch of them.
Yeah but the Enterprise-E would've been over 30 years old at that point, and has seen quite a bit of action, from First Contact to Nemesis and Prodigy. So at least a case could be made for its retirement. I guess I just really, really like the Odyssey class.Honestly, with all the Sovereign classes in the fleet we saw, there would have been no need to retire the E even.
Just upgrade it, refresh it's infrastructure with replicators and transporters, and keep it running for another 100 odd years.
This frequent change in ships (for no good reason) just doesn't make sense in-universe wise.
Yet they never seem to show up at meetings.It’s safe to assume that Starfleet made more than 13 Constitutions both in original and Constitution II class.
Anecdotal of course
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