Exactly this. @TRON JA307020 Join the mass majority and don't watch.Nah. It happened, it exists. Get over it, and watch something else if you don't like it.
Exactly this. @TRON JA307020 Join the mass majority and don't watch.Nah. It happened, it exists. Get over it, and watch something else if you don't like it.
I was thinking the same thing.@Everyone: This has gone about as well as one could have expected. Frankly, I think the whole premise of the thread is flawed and questionable, and I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t tempted to just close it down, since not airing the second season seems so far-fetched and like nothing more than some people’s fantasy at this point. Discussing it doesn’t really seem to lead anywhere … or so I thought, because for a while there it seemed like people were making the best of it and had some interesting conversations anyway. Or some fun, at least. But this last page or two it just devolved into needless bickering.
Look, I think we all got our suspicions as to what the motivation was for starting this topic; but I’d like for this to not become a discussion about one poster, please. So let’s give the thread one more chance, alright? Talk about the technicalities of tax write-offs or whatever, discuss the state of Trek fandom, where a vocal portion seemingly needs to see a show fail because they didn’t personally enjoy it, or fantasize about where the show might land if some other streamer bought the rights for all I care. If we can’t do that, we’ll just bid this thread farewell.
Yeah, from what Sandro Rosta said at Fedcon (where admittedly he was just reacting to a prompt from the audience), he believes Caleb has a future outside of Starfleet. From the way he so readily had this idea concocted it really made me think season two just might conclude with Caleb being thrown out of the Academy or becoming disillusioned with it for one reason or another. If this is indeed the cliffhanger waiting for us at the end of the show (or at the very least, one of the cliffhangers) then that should provide some interesting story opportunities for some writer to explore in a novel or comic. I feel like he would have eventually found his way back into the fold, had there been a third season, but it surely would be an interesting note to end the show on.His actor suggested he could in fact not become a starfleet officer at all. Idle speculation of course but with their final fates more than likely never to be revealed on screen why not use it to fuel the imagination
Exactly this. @TRON JA307020 Join the mass majority and don't watch.
The great thing about potentially ending the series on a cliffhanger is the endless fan speculation about what might or might not occur until some future showrunner decides to tackle that era again.
I didn't say accomplish.Accomplishing what exactly? I mean, it is no matter to me if you watch or not, but what exactly gets accomplished? You got what you wanted, it is already cancelled.
Fanfic turbines to speed!The great thing about potentially ending the series on a cliffhanger is the endless fan speculation about what might or might not occur until some future showrunner decides to tackle that era again.
I didn't say accomplish.
Poor Mir is never coming back from the Prophets.


I have to admit, the idea that some potential future Trek show 25 years down the line makes a callback to Starfleet Academy, only to just give us some half-arsed non-conclusion to the show would be kind of poetic justice after what they did with the whole Sisko mystery in “Series Acclimation Mil”.![]()
I think Sisko was something the show should've left alone, and I liked that we got to see Cirroc Lofton again. I'm not sure how you have someone come back from being essentially a god and it be compelling.
That works perfectly fine with me. The more they try to tie it to prime, the more convoluted it gets. I've thought plenty of times that it would make a ton more sense and maybe be more enjoyable if it just didn't tie it to canon so damn hard.I think the reason I prefer a multiverse as opposed to one changing timeline is that a multiverse keeps everything intact the way it was originally presented. Everything is able to be judged on its own merits.
I remember the novels had Sisko come back, and it wasn't very memorable.
That works perfectly fine with me. The more they try to tie it to prime, the more convoluted it gets. I've thought plenty of times that it would make a ton more sense and maybe be more enjoyable if it just didn't tie it to canon so damn hard.
When I say this, I mean all over nutrek.
Honestly, when he came back, I stopped reading the relaunch.
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