One comment I've heard over the years is that Kirk 'slept with a green woman' in the show, which he never did.
Well, there were few cases where he really went as far as sleeping with his romantic interests -- probably Drusilla, pretty obviously Deela, and undoubtedly Miramanee. Normally it was more just romancing and getting to first base. (That's actually what they meant in the 1960s and earlier when they said "making love" -- not having sex, just flirting and wooing.) And one of the women he got romantic with was Marta, a green Orion woman -- and their romantic scene did literally happen in bed, which is about as close to a sex scene as TOS was allowed to get. So it's understandable why people would have that impression.
Yet another, is the death of the redshirts. Now, while the 'redshirts' are usually the security guards who face danger first....we've also seen many other 'shirts' get taken down as well.
In season 1, there was no bias toward redshirt casualties, but the pattern definitely took hold in seasons 2 and 3.
"Beam me up, Scotty" was a line that was never said, but was on bumper stickers and used by those casual or non-fans.
Mmm, that's technically true, but in fact Kirk did say "Beam us up, Scotty" twice in the animated series ("The Infinite Vulcan" and "The Lorelei Signal"), and "Scotty, beam me up!" in The Voyage Home. And in TOS he did come close on several occasions: "Prepare to beam us up, Mr. Scott" ("The Paradise Syndrome"), "Have Scotty beam us up" ("The Mark of Gideon"), "Mr. Scott, beam us up" ("The Cloud Minders"), "Scotty, beam us up fast" ("The Savage Curtain"). Note that it's almost always plural -- aside from TVH, "beam me up" only appears in "The Squire of Gothos" and "This Side of Paradise." So it's not so much that Kirk never said it to Scotty as that he never said it in the singular, except the once.
If you really want to hear deliberate speech pauses watch John Banner as Sargeant Shultz on Hogan's Heroes at times.
Or Scott Bakula as Jonathan Archer, all the time.
Not sure if a misconception but at least when I was watching (early 70s) that it was just a kid's show and while I was a youngster at the time. I certainly didn't appreciate the social relevance of most episodes.
True, it was deliberately conceived to be the first adult-oriented science-fiction television series with continuing characters. However, it was always highly popular with children. So while the perception was based largely in the longstanding stereotype of SF as kid stuff, it wasn't entirely false.
There used to be a big misconception out there that Star Trek was "about" those silly plot ideas. I think The Wrath of Khan went a long way toward making ST respectable among non-fans. That was a turning point in the broader public perception.
I find that an odd sentiment, since I think TWOK has an incredibly silly plot. Genesis is one of the most completely fanciful and nonsensical ideas in the history of the franchise. The plot makes little sense, the characterization is broad and melodramatic, and it's mainly just a loud, lowbrow, violent action movie. The respectable Trek movie should've been TMP -- that was a flawed but sincere attempt to make a sophisticated, intelligent, classy, philosophical science fiction film. Obviously TWOK was more popular, but I don't see what there was about it that would've made people see ST as mature or sophisticated.
And yet, Justman gets overlooked, because it's easier for lazy journalists to just claim Roddenberry did everything.![]()
Well, Roddenberry himself did a great deal to encourage that perception.