Eh, screw series continuity! Just think of the additional slash possibilities!
Not, err. That I have any sort of possible agenda with regards to the upcoming movie.
McKock!
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
Eh, screw series continuity! Just think of the additional slash possibilities!
Not, err. That I have any sort of possible agenda with regards to the upcoming movie.
McKock!
Oh god, my eyes.
Eh, screw series continuity! Just think of the additional slash possibilities!
As Ple goes, so goes my nation.
(Although of course Spork is also a fabulous portmanteau.)
...that said, I am entirely charmed both by Joe's conversation with his mate, and by Pete's assertions wrt the assembly of The Enterprise.
Geeks for the win!
Chekov is useless.
Oh come on. You need someone around to be tortured, beat up and otherwise abused. He's the Wesley Windham Price of the Trek-verse.
oh, that is awesome.
I think someone mis-spelled "adorable".
Chekov is useless.
That's why you need the books. To redeem characters.
t goes back to rereading Diane Duane
When I told Pete, who is a big ol' Star Trek geek, about this discussion, he rolled his eyes and said "There's no canonical evidence that parts of the Enterprise weren't assembled planet-side, and then the final construction took place in orbit".
Has Pete seen the trailer? They're working on the saucer section! There's shots of the nacelles and pylons! They're building the structure on a planet!
No no no no no! Maybe you can build the warp core and lift it into orbit, or other internal parts, but not the structure! It won't bear it's own weight! And it would be prohibitively expensive, not to mention way inefficient, to build the whole ship on the ground and then tow that monster into orbit!
Parts of Enterprise were assembled at the Utopia Planitia shipyards on Mars, but the hull had to be assembled in orbit.
t ULTRA DORK!!
So you tell your adorable husband to take his "non-canonical" argument and...do something with it. Nyah.
Although of course Spork is also a fabulous portmanteau.)
People. They never learn. Word-squishes must die!
Word-squishes
You mean worshes?
Has Pete seen the trailer? They're working on the saucer section! There's shots of the nacelles and pylons! They're building the structure on a planet!
Yeah, I gotta go with MM here.
IOSlightlyRelatedN, I was at the US Navy Historical Center FAQ the other day, and this entry under "deck logs" amused me:
Deck logs are not "Captain's Logs"
A deck log is not a daily diary written by the ship's captain. The "captain's log" was a dramatic device used by the creators of the televison series Star Trek to introduce each episode, and does not exist in the U.S. Navy.
So apparently the US Navy Historical Center got a bunch of requests for "Captain's Logs".... [link]
Also, are people still familiar with the WWII Navy carrier USS Enterprise? Possibly the most significant ship in US Navy history, at least ranking up with the USS Constitution (aka "Old Ironsides"). Too bad it was scrapped after the war.
You mean worshes?
You are On The List, mister.