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  • Disowned Adaptation: In 2022, William Shatner voiced his disapproval at the post-Star Trek: Discovery shows, saying that franchise creator Gene Roddenberry would be "turning in his grave some of this stuff". Given that he couldn't name one moment from the new shows as to why he felt this way, and offered non-answers on whether or not he'd even watched the new shows, his comments were largely dismissed by the fanbase as "Complaining About Shows You Don't Watch". Especially when he refused to answer Strange New Worlds actor Melissa Navia asking if he even watched the shows.
  • Refuge in Audacity: The Star Trek novel Before Dishonor, by Peter David. Suffice it to say this book should not be read entirely sober, but for those who dare... We have sentient Borg cubes bigger than the planet Earth. That skip the assimilation middleman and just ram into starships and eat them. Along with Pluto. It's piloted by Captain Janeway, who becomes Borg Queen, eats Pluto, dies, and gets promoted to Q? Add 7 of 9 piloting the Doomsday Machine from The Original Series, and a pair of Starfleet Admirals who place bets on The End of the World as We Know It after the Borg eat Pluto, and you have a recipe for hilarity. Refuge in Audacity at its apotheosis.
    • In the same book, after the Borg eat Pluto, the planet / not planet debate gets mentioned by one of the Admirals: "They changed it back again? What's that, the tenth time in three centuries? Make up your minds." Then after the Borg eat Pluto, Admiral #2 casually drawls, "Well, that settles that debate." It's not a bad book, just completely insane.
    • Consider what else Peter David has put into Star Trek novels: a giant bird/energy being hatching out of a planet and impregnating a starship; a one-eyed, one-horned, giant purple people eater; a woman who looks like Lwaxana Troi and Christine Chapel, and is immortal...who he manages to kill...except that her consciousness is now in a starship; a helmsman who regularly sleeps at his post and is part Greek god; a hermaphrodite chief engineer (hir whole species is hermaphroditic) who impregnates a Vulcan, of all people; and an episode inside a pocket universe that is, for all intents and purposes, a jellyfish. And that's just Star Trek: New Frontier.
    • More Trek goodness. The TOS novel How Much For Just the Planet? by John M. Ford features, among other things, a Klingon who's a fan of Humphrey Bogart, a milkshake-obsessed computer, spontaneous musical numbers, inflatable starships, a planet whose hat is comedy routines, a Neil Gaiman cameo, a Paramount Shout-Out, and a truly epic Starfleet vs. Klingon... pie fight. And blue orange juice. And it is awesome.
      • Exceedingly.
    • There have been no less than three Star Trek/X-Men crossovers, all of which have been pretty decent.
    • ( Then there is "Uhura's Song". A Federation planet of humanoid felines is having their worst known outbreak of a disease that periodically incapacitates most of their planet's population. Then Christine Chapel catches it—and it affects humans more quickly than the feline race. The surest hope of finding the cure to this plague is to go to the planet the felines originally came from—which they previously told outsiders doesn't exist despite biological evidence to the contrary; the medic who admits that planet's existence tries to commit suicide because he told them. The only clues for finding this planet are in the folk songs of the feline race, which the Federation only knows because Uhura befriended one of this race previously. This mission to find that planet and get the cure presumed to be on it, is deemed so important that the Enterprise crew is given permission to completely ignore the Prime Directive... And it only gets stranger. It's great fun, but if Star Trek's Expanded Universe was canon, this story would really wreak havoc with later continuity.
    • It probably doesn't help that the solution to the whole mystery lies in what key a song is sung in, either.
    • Another Star Trek novel, The Tears of the Singers, has the Enterprise drafting a great, arrogant, and mortally ill musician almost immediately after Uhura (on leave) had assured him that Starfleet was not a military organization. This musician is needed to help save the entire universe from a seal-people whose own efforts to save the entire universe are backfiring because they are getting killed for their dying tears, which become the most beautiful jewels in the universe.
    • Any Deep Space Nine novel edited by Marco Palmieri is likely to have some weirdness. To name a few: Kira gets excommunicated; the First Minister of Bajor is assassinated by having his head cut off, just as he's about to accept Federation membership, because he's been subverted by a parasitic race that appeared in a first season TNG episode and is out to exterminate the Trill symbionts; and a Jem'hadar stabs Kira because he's being controlled by Iliana Ghemor, who is genetically engineered to be Kira, and is being chased by a Ghemor from an Alternate Universe, and is trying to kill every Kira in every universe, as well as become the Emissary of the Mirror Universe before Mirror Sisko can.
  • Running Gag: It is commonly held that the odd-numbered films are bad, but the even ones are good. Nemesis (10, bad) and the Abrams film (11, Contested Sequel) are considered by some to have absolutely wrecked the system and by others to be the most clear example of "odd == bad" since Star Trek V (but still having broken "even == good"). But Sam Hughes has a solution, at least for those who liked XI.
    • Another solution is that since it's a continuity reboot, the Abrams film could be considered Star Trek Zero, and thus be an even-numbered film.
    • Alternatively, the numerals in the title are added together to decide a movie's quality. The first (01) is 0+1=1=odd, the second (02) 0+2=2=even, etc. After the ninth, it goes 10 (1+0=1=odd) then 11 (1+1=2=even).
    • Of course, people who liked the earlier series and movies don't need to go through complicated rationalisation processes because they tend to think XI was bad.
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