at least I wouldn't feel so offended.
If you're offended by a TV show, I think you really need to take a step back, as you're taking it way too seriously.
at least I wouldn't feel so offended.
It's a personal curiosity of mine. When people say "I'm offended" I'm curious what they mean by it.You're a lot more patient than I am.
I saw where this was going and basically said, "I'm done with this."
Hey, I was happy to end it with "I'll stop worrying..." but then people kept responding.You're a lot more patient than I am.
I saw where this was going and basically said, "I'm done with this."
The marketing is what was offensive. Instead of saying, "Look, this not the star Trek you remember, and it is not connected to the Star Trek you remember, but it will be a good Star Trek for a new age, so give it a try," They said "Hey look! It's trek in the prime timeline! Yeah! kirk and company are right there, you know, somewhere, so just watch for them! Yeah, cause it may not seem like it now, but if you pay for streaming and sit through a baker's dozen of hours of this it'll all fit in! Honest injun!"Why is it offensive?
I hate having my intelligence insulted.
Already ready for it. Check the parentheses.Oh boy. Might not want to leave that feed line lying around like that.
The only marketing I saw was this was before Kirk. That's the connection I got. I struggle with finding the offense there, though since I don't see TMP as part of the Prime Continuity I guess I could kind of find that on the same level.The marketing is what was offensive. Instead of saying, "Look, this not the star Trek you remember, and it is not connected to the Star Trek you remember, but it will be a good Star Trek for a new age, so give it a try," They said "Hey look! It's trek in the prime timeline! Yeah! kirk and company are right there, you know, somewhere, so just watch for them! Yeah, cause it may not seem like it now, but if you pay for streaming and sit through a baker's dozen of hours of this it'll all fit in! Honest injun!"
The only marketing I saw was this was before Kirk.
That's the connection I got. I struggle with finding the offense there,
though since I don't see TMP as part of the Prime Continuity I guess I could kind of find that on the same level.
Regardless, it's the offense part that mystifies me. I don't regard TNG as the same as I do TOS but I wasn't offended that McCoy appeared in it. It just didn't feel the same, so I don't regard TNG as Trek. But, I'm not offended. It's a product that I don't care for.
Sorry to be repetitive. This is very confusing.![]()
But they haven’t liedThe offense comes from the totality of the lie
That it is a part of the Star Trek world...that's about all I read it in it.The statement makes implications by inserting the name Kirk.
Roddenberry did the same with TMP. Was that insulting too?The offense comes from the totality of the lie and the expectation I'd buy into it just because Trek continuity as a whole has never been perfect, but there's a difference between comparing the aspects of different apples and painting a kumquat red and asserting it's a Red Delicious. One look is all I need to tell a red kumquat is not an apple, and one episode was all I needed to see to see that STD had nothing to do with the trek I'm a fan of, and its creators insult my intelligence every time they try to explain away the differences.
It's not designed to piss you off. This is a very impersonal process. Taking it so personally is again, rather odd to me.And CBS's marketing and presentation of STD is mostly designed to piss me off, not compel me to give the series the old college try.
Okay then.That it is a part of the Star Trek world...that's about all I read it in it.
Roddenberry did the same with TMP. Was that insulting too?
Secondly, they are not lying to you. I think CBS expects people to watch it and decide, not just go "Oh, Star Trek!" But, I'm sure I'll be corrected for daring to assert that CBS isn't totally malicious in their intent.
It's not designed to piss you off. This is a very impersonal process. Taking it so personally is again, rather odd to me.
I'm not saying like DISCO. Don't. I don't like TNG or TMP-those are my kumquats. And I didn't watch them.
The marketing is what was offensive. Instead of saying, "Look, this not the star Trek you remember, and it is not connected to the Star Trek you remember, but it will be a good Star Trek for a new age, so give it a try," They said "Hey look! It's trek in the prime timeline! Yeah! kirk and company are right there, you know, somewhere, so just watch for them! Yeah, cause it may not seem like it now, but if you pay for streaming and sit through a baker's dozen of hours of this it'll all fit in! Honest injun!"
Okay then.
How could they have done this and told the story they wanted to tell?I have to admit, this has been a sticking point for me. I wish they would've just said "it is Star Trek", and let audiences decide how it all fits together. Instead of constantly telling us it is Prime (it simply doesn't fit for me).
How could they have done this and told the story they wanted to tell?
Maybe the Klingon War part? Honestly, if there were a Klingon war in the 24th century/25th century I would be rolling my eyes super hard. The whole Klingon War in DS9 was bad enough.I'm still struggling to figure out why Discovery needs to be in the Prime Universe from a story point-of-view? Heck, I'm still struggling with why it even needed to be in the 23rd century. You could have changed some names and it would have been indistinguishable from 24th century Trek.
The same way Ron Moore rebooted Galactica and told the stories he wanted to tell: by being upfront with his audience. He did this by honoring the original but making it clear his series was not going to be the series the classic fans remembered. That's the clarity that STD's creators are deliberately trying to avoid.How could they have done this and told the story they wanted to tell?
Because they want their story to be a part of known continuity.The same way Ron Moore rebooted Galactica and told the stories he wanted to tell: by being upfront with his audience. He did this by honoring the original but making it clear his series was not going to be the series the classic fans remembered That's the clarity that STD's creators are deliberately trying to avoid.
Bully for them. It's not. The technology's wrong, the visuals are wrong and the aliens are wrong to be in the time period they claim it's in.Because they want their story to be a part of known continuity.
Maybe the Klingon War part? Honestly, if there were a Klingon war in the 24th century/25th century I would be rolling my eyes super hard. The whole Klingon War in DS9 was bad enough.
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