General Schatten wrote:No one said you did, I'm pointing out why the circumstances are different, dumbshit. Lucas owns the franchise, Karen does not. It's like trying to compare an abortion to infanticide. One has more rights because of their status.
I do not know how to be clearer than I am now: My only point was that stupidities remain stupidities even if George "Evil" Lucas approves of them, just as Travissite wanktardries remain Travissite wanktardries even if LFL approves of them. Lucas owns the franchise, he can do whatever he wants with the canon, and his say-so ranks higher than LFL's. The TV series are canon, I shall have to grant that, just as I am required to consider Jaxxon canon. I have never disputed any of this; all I have done is expressed my personal distaste for the new, conflicting story elements brought in, as well as the, in my humble opinion, bad artistry.
Again, it's not my intention to get rid of stupidities in Star Wars. Do you mean Legacy of the Force or Legacy?
Legacy of the Force, primarily. While there are elements of the
Legacy comics that I do not like, they are actually quite good by the current standards of Star Wars material.
Last I'd heard the ICS and Into the Worlds are very low G-Canon, since they are extrapolations from the movies rather than just completely different stories.
As far as I know Canon Hierarchy remains:
G-Canon: Movies, Novelizations, and any manuals directly used for the movies.
T-Canon: The Clone Wars and Unknown Live-Action Series.
C-Canon: Books, Games, Comics, and Tech Manuals on EU related materials.
The way I understood it, only direct film elements portrayed in reference books, et cetera, are canon; i.e., in case of an
Acclamator, the ship as such would be canon, while additional material added by the author (Saxton, in this case), such as statistics or backstory, would be C-canon. Of course, my view may be dated.
(As a sidenote, this is in no way an attempt to disregard Saxton or any such; rather, I am merely interested in how the canon hierarchy works. To me, Saxton's works remain as relevant in the C-canon, if that is were they belong.)