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2 yr. ago

  • And yet, you’ll see many people posting elsewhere on social media that it shouldn’t be relevant.

    Can’t imagine trying to share a life with someone who didn’t share my values, but there seems to be a contingent that think that other things should be more important.

  • At 22 episodes total, and only 6 in TAS second season, it could go either way.

    I am willing to concede so that those who don’t love TAS much as I do can get their proper closure to the 5 year mission.

    And then there’s part of me that very much wants Vanguard to be the new, darker station-based serialized ensemble show to fill the DS9 niche we haven’t quite had in this era.

  • TAS is the 4th season of TOS - with some of the scripts adapted from the prep for a live-action TOS season 4 that never happened. (Yes, TAS IS canon!)

    Now, we know that Arex and M’Ress are difficult to bring to live action, but who’s to say that their rotations on Enterprise aren’t done, and Chekov isn’t back, as year 5 begins?

  • I’ve been wondering how much of the decision to wrap SNW with a short sixth season might have to do with Goldsman’s contract with Paramount coming to an end and his new one with another franchise and major studio.

    SNW really was his project, regardless of Alonso Myers being the co-showrunner.

    There’s a possibility that this is also about a change in leadership as the show transitions to a true TOS show, perhaps hopping to a time post-TAS but before the movies, and even shifting somewhat in tone.

    All of this would make sense of casting an older actor as Jim Kirk.

  • Ryan Britt had a good review for Inverse, and an interesting take on the show overall.

    It’s tempting to say that SNW succeeds because, of all the newer Trek shows, it's the one that feels the most like fan fiction. Or perhaps, to put it another way, it’s Star Trek version of Marvel’s What If? In this case, the “What If?” scenario that is floated in nearly every episode is “What if the 60s Star Trek show were made today?”

    Given how much of a OG fan Akiva Goldsman is, this seems a fair assessment - even if other, mostly younger fans, have different ideas about where the show should link up with the original.

    https://www.inverse.com/entertainment/star-trek-strange-new-worlds-season-3-review

  • I was hoping that SNW would focus on Pike and his crew and less on the legacy characters.

    But it seems Goldsman has had his ideas about it since the early 1970s and he’s fulfilling his fan dreams, as an EP and writer, of filling in the backstories of the characters he and we love. I can’t naysay that and it certainly sold the suits on 5 seasons of an excellent show.

  • We have to keep in mind that we’ve only seen 20 of 46 episodes, less than half the full run.

    I believe that the new benchmark for selling a licence for reruns on other streamers and linear has dropped from over 70 episodes to a bit over 40 based on various industry reports. So this definitely puts SNW above that threshold.

    This does raise the question though whether there is a plan to morph this into some kind of TOS continuation past year 5 and TAS.

  • So a half season + a one-hour series finale?

    Having only 5 seasons seems the new normal since they haven’t been able to actually produce one season per calendar year and actors’ contracts run 7 years.

    But having a short season seems weird, like some kind of negotiated compromise.

    This is just going to feed the ‘Kurtzman is done when his contract expires …’ speculation.

  • I would argue that a lot of the computational based problem solving , from middle school through early undergraduate years, focused on topics historically oriented to boys’ interests, aren’t a good measure of innate math talent either.

    But those have historically left a lot of female students behind.

    Male or female, most students are really looking to get through math requirements with plug-and-chug replication of algorithms to get to an answer - not genuine problem solving or abstraction. However, being able to reproduce an answer on a very slightly different problem, or just one with different numbers to plug in, does very little towards using mathematical as a means to model problems independently and find solutions.

  • Now I wish I had preordered Spock.

    The one I want most is Number One but it would have been great to have the set.

  • Garbage dumps are close to the grid and the users.

    Many of the worst offenders are very old wells, as much as a century old. Their original owners are long gone which is how governments ended up being burdened with capping them.

    Like many old toxic mines, the creators of the problems have evaded legal liability by going out of business. Legal frameworks may be more rigorous now but the old wells and mines remain.

    Some of the oldest wells, like the ones near Petrolia in SW Ontario, might be economically viable for methane power generation. Others in Saskatchewan and Alberta are likely not.

  • You’re welcome. The Bjorkquist decision implications aren’t that well known. I wouldn’t be aware if we weren’t trying to help some extended family figure it out z

  • One of the things in the interview, that’s super interesting, is that the original script had a scene that would have made it absolutely unequivocal that Hemmer was killed.

    And it was shot, with some significant Sfx challenges.

    The interviewers asked Bruce if there were any scenes left in the cutting room floor and he responded that there was.

    :::The actor was in harness for a falling scene in which he would have been fighting off young Gorn. He had been pleased to have the opportunity to have a heroic on-screen:::

    But the scene was cut despite it being challenging production-wise, all the more so with a blind actor in prosthetics.

    So, one has to wonder if the showrunners decided to keep the door open for Hemmer to return…

  • Yes, your Quebecois ancestors would be considered Canadian-born.

    But this opportunity to seek citizenship may be time limited as it’s an interim measure in place until the government can pass legislation to amend the citizenship act to address the issues found in the Bjorkquist decision.

    Your ancestors wouldn’t have birth certificates as there wasn’t civil registration of births at that time but there is a database of baptismal records (which are valid for proof of birth from that time).

    That subreddit has several people who have applied based on great-great grandparents who were born in the 19th century.

    Best to look at the FAQs there. The forms are on the IRCC site but the information isn’t easily navigated around the interim measure.

  • You may wish also to check out whether you may be able to claim citizenship by descent under an Interim measure related to the Bjornquist ‘Lost Canadians’ decision.

    It requires one Canadian-born ancestor (not a child of other countries foreign service).

    While I wouldn’t usually recommend Reddit, the r/CanadianCitizenship subreddit has a useful FAQ on the Interim Measure and people posting about their experiences with the process.

  • You absolutely are missing the point.

    It doesn’t matter what we’d like it to be.

    Claiming a statistical account measures chickens when it measures albatrosses and then making inferences about chickens, would be silly.

    Likewise, using labour productivity figures from the national income accounts.

    Nothing to say that the points you and others are raising aren’t both much more relevant and interesting.

    But when the business press drags out labour productivity comparisons as if they have anything meaningful to say on the subject, it’s a non sequitur to the conversation you’d really like to have.

  • Whatever the problems with the old definitions, and they are numerous, they remain the way the national accounts are published in OECD countries.

    But so are too the conventions of generally accepted accounting principles for financial accounting.

    These are the way our data sources are framed so to do meaningful data analysis and interpretation we have to know them.

    Business schools are not immune or exempt from understanding where the data comes from and how it’s constructed. Any good business school in whatever tradition will make sure its students understand that at least.

    It’s one thing be such a pedant as to make students switch from conventional and do basic microeconomics with the P and Q axes reversed (as they logically should be), just to correct a deeply embedded error in the history of economic practice - and there are profs out there who do that.

    It’s another thing to be insistent on what is actually in a measure that calls itself ‘labour productivity’ and is used by uninformed or deliberately misleading business press in Canada to beat on the labour force itself when the structural issues are completely different.

    It would be worth discussing if the business press didn’t constantly misinterpret the meaning of measure.

  • Fair enough.

    There are genuine questions about whether or not the federal government should have given in to the provinces and territories in the 1990s regarding vocational and labour market training.

    Both of these, and post secondary, are federal jurisdiction or shared jurisdiction at best. (But accreditation of professional associations and credentials is provincial.)

    The federal government did its best to continue to directly fund these kinds of programs but the provinces, especially but not exclusively Quebec, felt strongly that this was preventing them to set their own socioeconomic development priorities.

    It sounds like both the CPC and LPC federal parties had platforms that look to have the federal government step back into this space.

    One has to wonder if they view the agreements they made to transfer labour market training to the provinces and territories as something they can pull back or wind up…

    On the agriculture point, let’s say I am more than qualified to speak to economic terminology.

    So, it may be pedantic, but it’s important to understand where economics definitions come from.

    Some like labour productivity and economic rents are irrevocably tied to their origins in agricultural economic concepts.

    Which means that when applied to a manufacturing or service economy, peoples’ intuition about their meaning can be very wrong.

    When we’re teaching economics, we talk about ‘developing economic intuition’ but it would be much easier for students if we didn’t have to counter so many counterintuitive terms.

  • Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    The Dreaded Moopsy: Star Trek Bestiary

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    October is #MakeYourOwnMoopsy Month on Mastodon

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Last day for September 2023 Star Trek ebook deals - Oct 1st - 23 books available at $0.99 each

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Paramount+ partnering to launch in Japan; SNW confirmed

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    A conversation about the Gorn with Prof Mohammed Noor of Duke U

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    An amusing survey of weird but readable Treklit offerings

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Hageman Brothers featurette in Prodigy episodes 11-20 upcoming DVD/BlueRay release

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    / Film reflects on Oral History of TNG ‘Unification’ Spock appearance

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    New Era of Star Trek - promotional trailer for new shows on Paramount+

    Movies and TV Shows @lemmy.film

    Moopsy - Star Trek Lower Decks introduces a frighteningly cute-but-lethal new species

    Entertainment @beehaw.org

    Moopsy - Star Trek Lower Decks introduces a frighteningly cute-but-lethal new species

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    Smithsonian dive into the influences and Scfi antecedents of prominent Star Trek technology

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Very brief Lower Decks S4 premiere sneak peek from EW

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Star Trek Explorer mag to include original DS9 story by David Mack

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    September 2023 Star Trek ebook deals - 23 novels on offer!

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Space.com poses the debate-provoking question whether SNW S2 overdid the gimmicks

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Roxann Dawson (B’Elanna) passed on directing new Star Trek but has returned to science fiction with Foundation

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Lower Decks Season 4 - prerelease pro media reviews released - Inverse, SlashFilm and more…

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Murf photobombed the Star Trek Day Animated Celebration Poster!

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Strange New Worlds continues to rank in the Nielsen US streaming top ten