In the end we all like what we like, and no amount of "logic" is going to make any difference.
It really is just that simple.

In the end we all like what we like, and no amount of "logic" is going to make any difference.
Tikka masala is not Indian food it was invented by British Bengali chefs..... and that's canon
I could get behind that....In Japan, the "traditional" Christmas meal is fried chicken, because of a very successful KFC marketing campaign there.
'Objectively wrong' what moral tv code are they breaking? None. Not liking what's on the menu does not mean the menu is wrong. Why are some fans expecting a franchise to operate on their personal preference? Fandom is not monolithicBut it is objectively wrong if a preexisting, successful concept is used as a tool to draw in an audience and thereby ease the risk and creative effort needed, and by extension any objective awards or other long-term recognition. Most riff-ons are built on that commercial premise, rather than a genuine feeling that a character or a concept must be brought back because a story idea demands it. Or do you believe it’s OK if CBS prefers to settle for fare-of-the-day, and egotism to demand award-winning television? At least as one option on the menu out of four?
Yeah, lots of "ethnic" foods were invented by immigrant communities -- e.g. a lot of what Westerners call "Chinese food" was actually invented by Chinese-American chefs. Then there's the odd case of fortune cookies, which were invented by a Japanese-American restaurant based on a couple of traditional Japanese food items (the cookie from one source and the practice of inserting written messages from another), yet somehow came to be associated by Americans with Chinese cuisine.
It goes the other way, too. In Japan, the "traditional" Christmas meal is fried chicken, because of a very successful KFC marketing campaign there. Also, one of their major "Western food" staples I've heard of is something we don't have in America as far as I know -- omelette rice (or omu-raisu), an omelet filled with fried rice and topped with ketchup. (That one was a result of postwar shortages and the need for simple recipes based on cheap ingredients, I think.)
DSC is still alive after being retooled twice, but those are warning signs, as is the clunky, unnecessary “we won’t talk about it” solution in the S2 finale.
Same with so called "Mexican" food. I went to a local church bazaar and this parish has a large Hispanic population and they always have a food stand at the bazaar with authentic Hispanic foods. Their tacos are nothing like the tacos you get at La Tolteca I can tell you.
I do have to admit to a preference for the 'fake me out' versions. I guess because I'm a gluttonous American. You know thinking about it a lot of the 'ethnic' cuisine I like is probably bastardized versions of the real thing---Chinese food, Italian food---none of them is probably truly authentic.
Aren't traditional tacos often made with fish? That's not something I'd ever want to try. I hate seafood (although I don't begrudge anyone else the right to like it).
Authenticity is overrated. The liveliest inventions come from mixed influences and fusions.
Because that's the nature of business, not a moral or objective wrong.How can it not be wrong if a show is then cancelled and forgotten because it just didn’t break new ground creatively, and win new audiences? Is something right because it can physically happen? Is Star Trek that kind of franchise? DSC is still alive after being retooled twice, but those are warning signs, as is the clunky, unnecessary “we won’t talk about it” solution in the S2 finale.
Yeah, lots of "ethnic" foods were invented by immigrant communities -- e.g. a lot of what Westerners call "Chinese food" was actually invented by Chinese-American chefs. Then there's the odd case of fortune cookies, which were invented by a Japanese-American restaurant based on a couple of traditional Japanese food items (the cookie from one source and the practice of inserting written messages from another), yet somehow came to be associated by Americans with Chinese cuisine.
It goes the other way, too. In Japan, the "traditional" Christmas meal is fried chicken, because of a very successful KFC marketing campaign there.
Also, one of their major "Western food" staples I've heard of is something we don't have in America as far as I know -- omelette rice (or omu-raisu), an omelet filled with fried rice and topped with ketchup. (That one was a result of postwar shortages and the need for simple recipes based on cheap ingredients, I think.)
Just spitballing, but could the way that Chinese cuisine dominates the Asian restaurants in the Western world (or at least seems to) have something to do with that?
Started with the Star Trek Animated series in 1973. <--- That was the very first fan schism where fans started arguing differences in canon from the Live action compared to the Animated series. This further intensified as the TOS film series started in 1979, etc*.I've been trying to put my finger on when Trek fans became so obsessive over the consistency of the Star Trek canon/continuity. The time I started to notice this happening was probably when ENTERPRISE was announced as a prequel and then nearly every Star Trek production being a prequel after that.
Personally, I get so exhausted having conversations with eagle-eyed fans who let canon get in their way of enjoying a new Star Trek series or film. I've found that when it comes to both ENTERPRISE and DISCOVERY, it's not so much there are violating the Trek canon, but that it's perceived as so simply because they were two starships not ever spoken of before in the earlier shows.
I could go on and on, but I won't.![]()
You really cannot use that term. What is the objective standard to measure art?I'm not sure you can use a word like "objectively" to describe subjective reactions to a fictional TV series set in an imaginary future.
It's an art, not a science.
No, that is not objective, since there are those who enjoy the story elements and those who do not.Something like not retrofitting Burnham into Spock’s backstory for fan service, not having Lorca run into Mudd of all the villains, and later Pike of all the possible captains that could’ve been assigned to take over, not deciding that all the continuity effort wasn’t good enough and slapping on a “we won’t talk about any of this” band-aid just in case? These are objectively poor creative choices, shortcuts taken in story construction that led to poor results, and all because the story was designed around giving the audience some of the good-old, as opposed to setting a new premise and following it through without ratings boosters.
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