Correct. From the transcript:No, he said Sarek's son. It was never said to be Spock onscreen, although Spock's page on the official Trek website says that it is him.
Begs the question now... Did Sarek have another son with his new wife, post-Amanda, or was he indeed referring to Spock? If the latter, who was Spock eventually married to? And why the hell didn't he just say "Spock" and keep it all wishy-washy secret?RIKER: I remember studying his career in school. The treaty of Alpha Cygnus Nine, the Coridan admission to the Federation, the Klingon Alliance.
PICARD: I met him once, many years ago, very briefly at his son's wedding. I can tell you that was quite a moment for a young lieutenant, standing in the presence of such history. I remember he spoke to me and I just stood there grinning like an idiot.
It should. But for some reason Trek fandom doesn't consider the official site canon. Note for example that it says Will Decker is Matt's son--Memory Alpha just treats this as speculation.As the idea of canon is basically what the IP owner considers "what happened", does the official Trek website not qualify as canon by default?
This is one of those "Soft Canon" moments that seems a little stronger than the usual "Head Canon" references, but not fully "Hard Canon". I think it's pretty much generally accepted apocrypha throughout the vast majority of the fandom that Will is the son of Matt.The question of a potential relationship between the two Deckers was addressed in the "Star Trek Report" by Susan Sackett in the July 1979 issue of Starlog (#24, p. 31), which featured a few fan questions. Sackett's printed response was "There is no mention of Commander Decker's parentage anywhere in our script; however, Gene did have this in mind when he created the character, and I believe you will see certain father-son similarities of character and integrity." She repeated this information as a footnote in the reference book, The Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, where she identifies Will Decker's father as "Commodore Matthew Decker of the Star Trek television episode 'The Doomsday Machine'." It was again reiterated in the April 1988 issue of Starlog (#129, p. 24).
As the idea of canon is basically what the IP owner considers "what happened", does the official Trek website not qualify as canon by default?
Because only what actually makes it into the TV shows/movies is canon.But for some reason Trek fandom doesn't consider the official site canon.
As the idea of canon is basically what the IP owner considers "what happened", does the official Trek website not qualify as canon by default?
There's no rules about what constitutes "canon." It's a thing that doesn't exist.
because, again, there are no rules, and none of it is real.
A representative from CBS's trek department stated in the mid 2000s that canon is whatever appears on screen.
Ah I see what you mean now.That's about right. And the issue there is that things onscreen contradict other things onscreen, and fans want some kind of ruling on which supercedes which or is more important than what, or some way of explaining explicit contradictions away. And those things are not available, at least not in any durable way.
The whole ceremony used old language and traditional lines, so the property thing was probably something they meant way back when, but is only still said because it's tradition, like "so help me god".Becoming the "property of the victor" is barbaric, but it was intentionally so for the writers of "Amok Time". They were trying to contrast the fact that the supremely logical Vulcans were very illogical when it came to their mating traditions. It was also to emphasize the mysticism and mystery of the Vulcans, which I'm concerned that SNW may be trying to de-emphasize somewhat.
They changed the character. It's a retcon. Let's move on.She's not the same character at all. She's much more quiet and reserved only 8 or 8 years later. I don't buy it.
Fanwank and anciliary publications are NOT "canon".Canon says Spock is married to Savvik
A representative from CBS's trek department stated in the mid 2000s that canon is whatever appears on screen. They have one rule, and it's that only the movies/shows are considered canon.
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Canon#The_history_of_defining_canon
Totally agree. That statement from 20 years ago is overriden by an official website that's still up and running. This is like Star Wars fans trying to prioritize Leland Chee's canon statements from 20 years ago over Disney's current official stance on canon on their Star Wars Databank.And who's to say a statement from someone nearly 20 years ago still counts? Is the canonizer valid until contradicted? Since you are using an authority given by the IP owner as the ultimate spokesperson, isn't that what I just said? Is the official website not implicitly considered the word of the IP owner? Isn't the dismissal of the website kind of apocryphal? (I don't care about the website. I am just wondering about where these absurd "rules" come from.)
I very much agree with Serveaux. People look for authorities where there are none as if someone saying what is canon is immutable and fixed and not just as arbitrary as a fan's view on anything else.
No, he said Sarek's son. It was never said to be Spock onscreen, although Spock's page on the official Trek website says that it is him.
Well, it's obviously not Sybok, so therefore it must be Spock. Sarek had no other sons.
That we know of, anyway.
So, because it's outside of personal experience it must not happen at all?So she goes from a loud care free nurse who knows as much as a doctor and is having sex everywhere to a mousey quiet reserved nurse who barely talks or takes medical initiative and can barely talk to Mr Spock all in 8 years?Yeah that's happened to a load of people I've known. Lol
He also had a new wife. So, there's no need to adjust dialog if Picard is thinking of Perrin vs. Amanda.Sarek is famous enough that if he'd had any other sons, we would have seen them.
They would have at least been mentioned when he died, anyway.
And if Sarek had had multiple sons (not counting Sybok), Picard would have adjusted the line accordingly.
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