Carpeting on a starship looked tacky.
We don't decide canon.No carpets AGAIN. This can not be canon.
We don't decide canon.No carpets AGAIN. This can not be canon.
I think it kinda loses all meaning when every single ship is a call back.I can somewhat understand (but still not a fan of it) why Starfleet would recycle class names a 1000 years later. But this is unnecessary fan service IMO and the Roman numerals feel rather clumsy. Well, at least the class name is as unoriginal as the ship design.
My biggest WTF is still why they use the new Titan at all...?
My biggest WTF is still why they use the new Titan at all...?
I mean they introduced a perfect "present day juggernaut ship" with the Stargazer already, which even is a great callback to Picard's first command, and, hell, they're even using the same filming sets anyway!
I really liked the names in the early seasons of Disco. They at least deanglisised the names if not dehumanised.
I feel like since then they have lost their bottle and memberberried everything.
How about Non Human ship names and Class Names? Homo Sapiens Only Club Indeed!
150 member species, but every starship is named after Earth people, places, or moons..
When everything is a callback, then nothing is.
My impression was old British and American warships was usually the order of the day before but I just had a look now and almost every early Disco ship is an astronaut or 20th century space vessel. Even a few I thought were non English are just American pilots.Calling something the Neo Constitution Class is a memberberry? Nooooo.
Also, not sure what you mean exactly? We've had non-aglicised named ships before, stuff like the Danube Class Runabouts had very few of their on screen counterparts not be African or Asian rivers.
In Discovery the main ships seen are the Crossfield Class, which is named after an American Test Pilot.
The Shepard Class (Gagarin and Glenn) is named after Alan Shepard an astronaut (hence the names of the class are presumably all astronauts) as is the Walker Class (Shenzou).
Not very deanglisised.
My impression was old British and American warships was usually the order of the day before but I just had a look now and almost every early Disco ship is an astronaut or 20th century space vessel. Even a few I thought were non English are just American pilots.
How? Most of the ship names in season 2 have never appeared in any of the series/movies before. It would only be nostalgia for those who have played STO or read any books/wiki pages. One of them is even named after a Klingon.and from Season 2 its all "memberberries" the whole way down.
DSC Season 1 had a USS Shran.Considering how intertwined Vulcans, Andorians and Tellerites are to the supposed very core of the Federation...
It's definitely reaching the point of annoying we don't see a Shran Class, a Sarek class, a T'pol Class, Gral class etc.
But I suppose the thinking is its too internally self-referential while a more casual audience might at least pick up on "Oh cool! They named them after Astronauts! And rivers! And cities in California!"
I find that very unlikely. And Terry has not said it’s the same Titan as far as I’m aware.Because quite a few fans have been asking to see the Titan, ya know, the ship that Riker served on. If not a more Rikery themed show for a while.
So to appease said fans he's put it on the Titan-A which is a completely different class and ship from the Titan which Riker served on. But to add confusion has also said its the Titan that Riker served on.
What is this supposed to mean?Because Matalas said so. And you better not disagree with him.
Terry really liked the Shangri-La.My biggest WTF is still why they use the new Titan at all...?
I mean they introduced a perfect "present day juggernaut ship" with the Stargazer already, which even is a great callback to Picard's first time command, and, hell, they're even using the same filming sets anyway!
A majority of ships in these series aren’t call backs.I think it kinda loses all meaning when every single ship is a call back.
I wonder is Shackleton the first ship in Star Trek with an Irish name.Picard probably gets a bit closer to "deanglisising" but still very, very human.
You have the La Serena, which is a Kaplan Class Fast Frieghter (Kaplan is a popular name in Star Trek, not sure if its a reference or a company)
USS Zeng He is an Inquiry Class and its on screen counterparts are named after the various explorers of earth. With Magellan, Nathan Hale and Shackleton getting named alongside Zeng He and from Season 2 its all "memberberries" the whole way down.
PIC season 2 and Disco 3 certainly felt that way.A majority of ships in these series aren’t call backs.
Did you read the list of ship names in the link above? A majority of the ship names in season 2 were not call backs.PIC season 2 and Disco 3certainly felt that way.
So far season 3 looks that way.
Yup. It's about making it accessible and Star Trek is the story of the human adventure.But I suppose the thinking is its too internally self-referential while a more casual audience might at least pick up on "Oh cool! They named them after Astronauts! And rivers! And cities in California
How many of those ships were actually named in the show. I remember hearing Excelsior, Stargazer and Uhura.Did you read the list of ship names in the link above? A majority of the ship names in season 2 were not call backs.
I didn't say shared the same name I said call backs.DSC Season 3 as well, only 2 ships shared names from previous series.
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