I haven't fundamentally changed. I'm still a geek.
But I hit my "rock bottom" and have made huge changes since then that would probably surprise people who haven't been around me for awhile. I both am and am not the same person.

Changes? Yes. Reboot? No.
(Just don't try to tell me nobody changed anything and we'll get along fine.)
(Just don't try to tell me nobody changed anything and we'll get along fine.)
Is anyone saying that the EW has always been the early 21st century? Because why would you need time travel shenanigans for that? Unless that means that they're telling us "Hey, we changed that".*cough, cough, date for the Eugenics Wars, cough, cough*
Is anyone saying that the EW has always been the early 21st century? Because why would you need time travel shenanigans for that? Unless that means that they're telling us "Hey, we changed that".
*cough, cough, date for the Eugenics Wars, cough, cough*
Yeah. I got that. ARE you trying to tell me nobody changed anything? Because that would be nutty.See SNW S2, Ep. 3, "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow."
Same here. And there are som big changes for things that I value more as I get older, and the stuff as a youngster I value far far less than before.I haven't fundamentally changed. I'm still a geek.But I hit my "rock bottom" and have made huge changes since then that would probably surprise people who haven't been around me for awhile. I both am and am not the same person.
Which is why the same continuity doesn't bother because if you have time travel changes are going to happen.Is anyone saying that the EW has always been the early 21st century? Because why would you need time travel shenanigans for that? Unless that means that they're telling us "Hey, we changed that".
No, it's not a comparison game. It's feeling like this fleshes out the universe idea. Even the Kelvin universe, stated definitively as an alternate timeline, still provides a measure of enjoyment if one knows Kirk from the prime universe.
Yeah. I got that. ARE you trying to tell me nobody changed anything? Because that would be nutty.
Yes, but it's an interesting thought experiment at looking at both versions.I don't understand. If you change something, it becomes an altered version.
I would not consider myself the same as I was 5 years ago
Yes, to put it mildly.Did you go from extrovert to introvert?
It can't.One would think such trauma could be treated by the 23rd century depicted in Star Trek.
If you shift things over by two years, the '80s were the best decade for Star Trek as a franchise. 1982-1991.
If you look at that stretch, things almost always looked like they were on the up. Even when there were setbacks, they didn't last. The TOS Movies recovered from TFF, and TNG recovered from its rocky start. You've got the Genesis Trilogy and the majority of TNG's best episodes.
I think the ratings were fine. But the first season had a mixed reputation.TNG never had a rocky start. Did it please everyone? Absolutely not, but it had more positives than negatives despite some old guards who thought the series should've ever existed. As for ratings? It never had a low rating on syndication, how the show was sold was the series was ordered by each individual syndicated station across the United States. Syndication had an option to order 65 episodes, that's approximately 3 seasons, despite a strike year during season 2 the show was getting positive reviews and for many young audiences this was THEIR Star Trek.
Everyone in Hollywood wanted to be on the show, you don't get a big movie star like Whoopi Goldberg, YES - she was a major player in the industry back when - to join a series that was having a rocky start and I doubt very much the show was struggling based on how the syndicated market worked back then.
Is this a spicy take: Allamaraine is better than Faith of the Heart.
I thought everything about that episode was dumb. And Akiva Goldsman's explanation for why he felt the change was needed is just ridiculous.See SNW S2, Ep. 3, "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow."
The ratings were great, IIRC. Certainly among syndicated television. Because it was STAR TREK. And some of us had waited our entire lives for new Star Trek on TV. (Really we wanted Kirk and Spock back every week, but what can you do?)TNG never had a rocky start. Did it please everyone? Absolutely not, but it had more positives than negatives despite some old guards who thought the series should've ever existed. As for ratings? It never had a low rating on syndication, how the show was sold was the series was ordered by each individual syndicated station across the United States. Syndication had an option to order 65 episodes, that's approximately 3 seasons, despite a strike year during season 2 the show was getting positive reviews and for many young audiences this was THEIR Star Trek.
Everyone in Hollywood wanted to be on the show, you don't get a big movie star like Whoopi Goldberg, YES - she was a major player in the industry back when - to join a series that was having a rocky start and I doubt very much the show was struggling based on how the syndicated market worked back then.
Are we out of the six month window yet?Apparently, a 56-year old story needed updating to keep things "aspirational" and believable
Because everyone has memorized The Wrath of Khan.
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