Sorry, how is that obvious, given what I've said?
If 3.5 million weren't more than enough, CBS wouldn't be considering the show a success. Streaming numbers aren't the same as network numbers, where that nine million came from.
Sorry, how is that obvious, given what I've said?
You don't think Discovery is using nostalgia aimed at fans?![]()
If 3.5 million weren't more than enough, CBS wouldn't be considering the show a success. Streaming numbers aren't the same as network numbers, where that nine million came from.
The bulk of the audience isn't old fans.
Do you have anything to back that up?
Only the bit of reasoning that followed and that you mysteriously edited out.
I thought it was pretty dumb reasoning, so I ignored it.
“Refit” is all relative. Here in California they have a rule that you can’t demolish your old house and build a new one in its place without paying some huge penalties. So what everyone is doing is knocking down 3 walls of the old house, building the new house around the remaining wall, then when the rest of the house is built, they knock down the last wall and build new one from scratch. So at no point was the old house knocked down completely at one time, so it’s technically a “refit” while practically it is a new house (nothing from original remains). So yeah, it’s all relative and has roots in real life.The only problem I have between TOS and TMP is the word 'Refit'
Had they just said complete rebuild, it would be fine.
Then I misread.Sure... but that wasn't what we were saying, was it? We were talking about the necessity of changing the design of the ship, not whether two forces were at work.
The premise is that the keel, whatever it is that serves as a keel on a starship, remained. In that case, as with the Naval carrier vessel USS Enterprise, it's still the same ship even after undergoing multiple refits. She's just undergone a refit, and refits range from cosmetic to nearly a full rebuild.The only problem I have between TOS and TMP is the word 'Refit'
Had they just said complete rebuild, it would be fine.
“Refit” is all relative. Here in California they have a rule that you can’t demolish your old house and build a new one in its place without paying some huge penalties. So what everyone is doing is knocking down 3 walls of the old house, building the new house around the remaining wall, then when the rest of the house is built, they knock down the last wall and build new one from scratch. So at no point was the old house knocked down completely at one time, so it’s technically a “refit” while practically it is a new house (nothing from original remains). So yeah, it’s all relative and has roots in real life.
“Refit” is all relative. Here in California they have a rule that you can’t demolish your old house and build a new one in its place without paying some huge penalties. So what everyone is doing is knocking down 3 walls of the old house, building the new house around the remaining wall, then when the rest of the house is built, they knock down the last wall and build new one from scratch. So at no point was the old house knocked down completely at one time, so it’s technically a “refit” while practically it is a new house (nothing from original remains). So yeah, it’s all relative and has roots in real life.
"Admiral, this is an almost totally new Enterprise. You don't know her a tenth as well as I do."So when the Enterprise returned in 2269, they removed the nacelles, bridge module and computer core... then they discovered that the pylons couldn't handle the new stress loads... so they changed those. Then Starfleet decided they wanted their new ships to be shiny and white, so they changed the outer hull. Then some asshat admiral wanted more weaponry on the engineering hull so we got the torpedo launchers there, which opened a large hole in the saucer section that resulted in more changes. Then the impulse engines didn't fit with the new warp core they had to install for the nacelles, and a year later they had ripped every single nut and bolt from the original ship and replaced it.
You know, the HMS Victory in Portsmouth basically has zero parts from the original. Even the keel's been changed. 'Course, it's over 200 years old.
"Admiral, this is an almost totally new Enterprise. You don't know her a tenth as well as I do."
That's why we studyHow many lights are there?
Yeah I know that line pretty well. Never took it literally, though. Star Trek is like the bible, I suppose. You can quote one line to support any theory!![]()
“[A]s is the fate of Bibles, it was not carefully read and was still less understood by many of its disciples.”Star Trek is like the bible, I suppose. You can quote one line to support any theory!![]()
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