(Disclaimer: I did a quick search to see if this topic had already been covered, and it doesn't seem so. Apologies if it has been.)
So, we all know that Seth McFarland's space-dramedy "the Orville" is basically "Star Trek" with the serial numbers filed off. He's not subtle about it at all. Naturally, Trekkies who love "the Orville" like to imagine that the latter is set in one of the many alternate universes of the "Star Trek" multiverse. That if Worf had traveled to enough other universes that one time, he might've found himself on the bridge of the Orville, facing Captain Mercer.
This begs the question: does the Orville have an equivalent in the "main" universe?
Does Captain Kassidy Yates have a half-sister named Claire Finn, working as a doctor on a Starfleet ship called the U.S.S. Orville? Are Alara and Talla Romulans, or Vorta, in the main universe? Is Bortus a Jem'Hadar, or Klingon, or Hirogen? Is there are Noonian-Soong droid named Isaac serving in Starfleet?
Or, is "the Orville" set so "far away" into the multiverse, that the ship and its crew are the counterparts of ones we already know (born to different names in this universe)?
Captain Kassidy Yates' counterpart in that universe was named Claire Finn, and chose medical school; Tom Paris was born to the name Gordon Mallory; etc.
OR.... is "The Orville" simply a work of fiction within the (main) universe of "Star Trek?" A contemporary, dramedy sitcom, airing on 24th-Century Earth. The show invents fictitious species, to avoid offending Vulcans/Klingons/etc (much as how a "foreign" character on a 20th Century show might be from a made-up country, to avoid offending anyone). The show likewise replaces the real Federation with a fictitious organization, to avoid causing political offense.
Ideas? Go wild.
So, we all know that Seth McFarland's space-dramedy "the Orville" is basically "Star Trek" with the serial numbers filed off. He's not subtle about it at all. Naturally, Trekkies who love "the Orville" like to imagine that the latter is set in one of the many alternate universes of the "Star Trek" multiverse. That if Worf had traveled to enough other universes that one time, he might've found himself on the bridge of the Orville, facing Captain Mercer.
This begs the question: does the Orville have an equivalent in the "main" universe?
Does Captain Kassidy Yates have a half-sister named Claire Finn, working as a doctor on a Starfleet ship called the U.S.S. Orville? Are Alara and Talla Romulans, or Vorta, in the main universe? Is Bortus a Jem'Hadar, or Klingon, or Hirogen? Is there are Noonian-Soong droid named Isaac serving in Starfleet?
Or, is "the Orville" set so "far away" into the multiverse, that the ship and its crew are the counterparts of ones we already know (born to different names in this universe)?
Captain Kassidy Yates' counterpart in that universe was named Claire Finn, and chose medical school; Tom Paris was born to the name Gordon Mallory; etc.
OR.... is "The Orville" simply a work of fiction within the (main) universe of "Star Trek?" A contemporary, dramedy sitcom, airing on 24th-Century Earth. The show invents fictitious species, to avoid offending Vulcans/Klingons/etc (much as how a "foreign" character on a 20th Century show might be from a made-up country, to avoid offending anyone). The show likewise replaces the real Federation with a fictitious organization, to avoid causing political offense.
Ideas? Go wild.
In-universe, a TV show having fun at the expense of contemporary Starfleet would run into the obstacle that "TV shows" died in the 21st century already, while the Starfleet being ridiculed is the 24th century one. /
Then again, in-universe, "The Orville" might have been done in the early 21st century just like ITRW, only it would be an actual piece of indigenous creative spark rather than a parody (since if Star Trek existed in Star Trek, Lower Decks would already have mentioned it somehow). And somebody at Starfleet would be a fan, and would have a bit of pull in the mid-24th century... /