They probably can't be bothered to keep track of stardates.
I know I can't.
They probably can't be bothered to keep track of stardates.
How can the episode 4 happen in Stardate 3177, episode 5 happen in Stardate 2341, then episode 6 happen in Stardate 1943? Not only that Episode 3 happen in Stardate 1224,3, Episode 2 happen in Stardate 2912,4, Episode 1 happen in 1739.12
This make me very confused. Can anyone explain?
Is episode 3 actually happen before Episode 1, then followed with episode 6, then episode 5, then episode 2 before it goes to episode 4?
But impossible, as according to Spock, episode 5 happen after episode 4. So how Stardate in this series work?
Can you go one post without insulting the production team?They probably can't be bothered to keep track of stardates.
Yup. Any rationalizations after the fact doesn't change that in TOS it was pretty nonsensical. Therefore, the production team is under no obligation to make it make sense because of fan rationalization after airing of the show.As others have stated, Stardates didn't mean anything in TOS. They were just extra seasoning to make the show more futuristic. Stardates didn't start meaning something until the 90's when they started having some order because the behind the scenes people like Mike Okuda wanted it that way. Even then stardates have always been gibberish with no one knowing how they work exactly.
They're doing it be consistent with TOS, which wasn't consistent.
STARDATE
We invented "Stardate" to avoid continually mentioning Star Trek's century (actually, about two hundred years from now), and getting into arguments about whether this or that would have developed by then. Pick any combination of four numbers plus a percentage point, use it as your story's stardate. For example, 1313.5 is twelve o'clock noon of one day and 1314.5 would be noon of the next day. Each percentage point is roughly equivalent to one-tenth of one day. The progression of stardates in your script should remain constant but don't worry about whether or not there is a progression from other scripts. Stardates are a mathematical formula which varies depending on location in the galaxy, velocity of travel, and other factors, can vary widely from episode to episode.
More a matter of watching people invest time and energy in to something that was not regarded as important even in the past.We don't need to exaggerate about how careless people were fifty-five years ago to vindicate what's happening today. Things are allowed to be bad, or overlooked, or unimportant, without constantly having to reach back to precedents that people also complained about.
"Edited for clarity by James T Dixon."HERE is some extreme technobabble about stardates, from the DS9 Millennium novel trilogy. It makes no sense, but sounds very complicated!
Can you go one post without insulting the production team?
They're doing it be consistent with TOS, which wasn't consistent.
Yeah, the scripts themselves are a handful enough, no need to worry about Stardates. Besides they can make adventure stories without them, the trope isn't necessary for this series.They probably can't be bothered to keep track of stardates.
Whoooaaa. I didn't even realize that they used a Kelvin reality stardate in the pilot episode, but they did. 2259.42 is the year 2259, day 42 (February 11). Nice catch!I wish they'd used Kelvinverse Stardates (as they did at the end of the first episode) but ... yeah, 4 random numbers point more random numbers. It's tradition, I guess![]()
Resurrecting a thread that's been dormant for two years is bad form. Check out the board rules, please.Whoooaaa. I didn't even realize that they used a Kelvin reality stardate in the pilot episode, but they did. 2259.42 is the year 2259, day 42 (February 11). Nice catch!
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