General off-topic chat for the crew of startrek.website. Trek-adjacent discussions, other sci-fi television, navigating the Fediverse, server meta (within reason), selling expired cases of Yamok sauce, it’s all fair game. Just don’t make Odo have to come down here.
I finished watching The Orville, it was a masterpiece from the hands of Seth Macfarlane.
Here, they showed some exchange between admirals and the main ensemble cast quite often, but watching these certain scenes made me compare them to Star Trek admirals. I personally think all admirals in The Orville are great captains who got promoted to the rank of admiral as opposed to Star Trek admirals who are just dumb politicians where our main cast captains keep dealing with their nonsense.
Of course, there are a few reasonable and competent admirals we've seen throughout the franchise, but most of them I've seen reflect real-world politicians that never even had sat on a captain's seat.
(Updated with more deal details) After almost five months, the Writers Guild’s strike will be officially over at 12:01 am Wednesday. “Today, your Negotiating Committee, the WGAW Board a…
The Writers Guild of America is in an understandably celebratory mood as it ends one of the longest strikes in its history, having held firm – and banded together with actors – to win significant concessions from the major studios and streaming services.
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A solid round up of some of the broader industry issues as the WGA contract moves towards potential endorsement by WGA East and West leadership Tuesday in preparation for a vote by the members.
The major film and television studios on Saturday evening delivered their “best and final” offer to the striking writers, a person close to the situation told CNN, adding to significant hope that the negotiations to end the months-long strike will conclude with an agreement this weekend.
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Amid some speculation about the questionable neutrality of major Hollywood media sources, owned by AMPTP members, CNN reports from “a source familiar” that WGA has been sent a ‘best & final’ offer.
So, stay tuned for the WGA leadership’s assessment.
A deal in the negotiations between the WGA and studios CEOs to end the nearly five-month-long writers strike looks within sight. During the meeting today at the AMPTP Sherman Oaks office, the parti…
WGA picket lines swelled on Friday after leaders called for a strong turnout on what could be a crucial day of contract talks with studios.
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Many WGA veterans urged caution at getting hopes too high for what may come out of the AMPTP negotiating room later today, after a third day of talks between labor and management that involved four CEOs.
Notably, Paramount Global’s Bob Baklish is not among the CEO’s sitting in.
2nd UPDATE 8:55 PM: The writers’ strike is not over yet Despite putting in a very long second day of direct talks, top CEOs, the AMPTP and the WGA did not close a deal tonight. While sources …
Steven DeKnight, showrunner on Netflix’s Marvel Daredevil series, calls the upcoming Disney+ series “an old Disney scam” that will keep the Netflix series creatives from getting w…
This week i've decided to rewatch the avatar films on blu ray. I picked up the special editions with the 3 hours worth of extras for each film. I've rewatched the first film and some extras. I'm a casual fan at best and by no means a movie critic, but here arey impressions.
The first avatar film has aged well.
I enjoy the world of pandora and it is beautiful on blu ray. The details in the plants are incredible. A botanist that consulted on the film is featured in the bonus content.
I still get the sense that this could of been a two part film, with the first part ending with the destruction of the home tree. Then there would of been space go explore the na'vi tribes before the battle.
I watched the family audio version with english subtitles. The audio creatively removed the swears, but the subtitles didn't.
The bonus features had the main actors reflecting on their experiences making the film and their reflections on its success. They all played their characters brilliantly, and
So, I have some questions about formatting on this site:
How can I make "sub-lists". Kinda like a "1a,1b,1c". For instance, an Idea I have involves pros and cons. I want to make a list of that idea, with a sub-list of "pro" and "con", and bellow them a sub-list of the different pro's and cons
Can you make tables (I can't figure out if you can from what's on the "format help" page, I found it confusing)
what is the "URL" field at the top of this post for?
How do I make "minor separations", where you have multiple paragraphs, then a paragraph with more white-space between it, but not like a header or a line. It's related enough that I want it connect, but separate enough that I want some separation
How can I make Paragraphs have indents? (I know they aren't needed grammatically anymore, but in some cases, a paragraph just doesn't seem "right" without an indent...
I do have some more questions, but I forgot them right now...
So, I have some ideas for discussing Star Trek Tech (Both ideas for how to do some IRL, and some ideas for tech based on other star-trek tech, not necessarily IRL, but "IRL" if StarTrek was 100% accurate)
So, I am confused by some things with this website, and as this is a "general" community, I thought Quarks would be the most likely to be the place to post it...
So, here they are:
If I have questions about general usage/ support of this website (startrek.website), what's the correct community?
If I am not sure of a rule for the website, where should I ask
If I am not sure of a rule for a specific community, where should I ask?
Where should I ask to find a community on a specific topic?
I'm seeing a lot of blank images when looking at posts from startrek.website through Lemmy-UI, but when I look through Photon/Sync the images are there. It seems to only affect images uploaded directly to startrek.website instead of images uploaded to a separate website. Is there something I can do to fix this on my instance?
The most overrated metric in entertainment is erratic, reductive, and easily hacked — and yet has Hollywood in its grip.
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Leaving aside bias towards the American market and critics, this latest criticism of Rotten Tomatoes influence comes from this September 6th piece from Vulture. The report provides new evidence of PR firms paying critics and persuading them to keep negative reviews off of Rotten Tomatoes tracking.
The Bunker 15 employee replied that of course journalists are free to write whatever they like but that “super nice ones (and there are more critics like this than I expected)” often agreed not to publish bad reviews on their usual websites but to instead quarantine them on “a smaller blog that RT never sees. I think it’s a very cool thing to do.” If done right, the trick would help ensure that Rotten Tomatoes logged positive reviews but not negative ones.
Warner Bros. Television Group has also suspended pacts for Mindy Kaling and Bill Lawrence.
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Earlier this week Disney announced (whinged) that it expected a $ 300 million revenue loss attributable to the strike.
Today, The Hollywood Reporter says sources are reporting cost-cutting at Warner Brothers Television Group.
the studio has suspended a number of overall deals for its top creatives including J.J. Abrams’ Bad Robot (Duster), Greg Berlanti (Superman & Lois), Chuck Lorre (Bob Hearts Abishola), Bill Lawrence (Shrinking), John Wells (Maid), Mindy Kaling (Sex Lives of College Girls). Sources say Lorre’s multiyear pact with his decades-long studio was quietly suspended in May, a week into the strike, with Wells’ deal a month later.
Whether or not it's part of the Star Trek "canon", The Animated Series shares the show's vision for a utopian future where humans coexist peacefully with aliens, writes Swapna Krishna.
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I was initially delighted to see BBC amplifying the celebration of TAS’ 50th anniversary. Then I read this piece.
Half a day later I’m still annoyed at the number of easily verifiable errors and that with the BBC’s trusted source credibility, the power that this piece can have to create uncertainty on settled issues.
First there are 22 episodes of TAS not the 20 claimed in the article.
Second, it’s established that Gene Roddenberry’s rejection of TAS as canon was overstated or at least inconsistent (and that Richard Arnold’s own view was a factor in magnifying this question in early TNG production). The BBC article overstates this as fact.
Third, it ignores the fact that Paramount as the rights holder has decided to treat TAS as canon. The article concludes with a statement that this continues as an open question. While it might have been fair to say that for a number of fans, this remains a question, it’s not accurate to portray this as an official position even just implici