2. I know that this will draw some reaction, but finding out that Gene Roddenberry was a horribly flawed human being (drugs, infidelity, ethics, etc) really tainted my belief in the franchise as "his vision." I look to contributors like Coon, Justman, Fontana, Nimoy and Bennett now as actually being more critical to the direction of the franchise than Roddenberry.
No offense, but that isn't really a low moment for
Trek. Rather, that's just a low moment for you personally. Roddenberry's behavior never actually affected the show.
For me, Trek's lowest moment was when we saw T'Pol's buttcrack. That was the icing on the cake that UPN and B&B were pandering to the lowest common denominator of viewer.
I disagree ENTIRELY. His abandoning TOS in the 3rd season certainly had implications to the quality of the scripts and to the future departures of Justman and Fontana. His ethics were always in question by the higher-ups given his affinity for casting women he was sleeping with (Nichols, Barrett) which, among other things, did not help him politically where he needed some capital.
It also caused / allowed most of what sucked in the first two seasons of TNG. It alienated good people like Fontana and David Gerrold.
His behavior as Producer / Writer on Star Trek- The Motion Picture almost ended the franchise and alienated several key players, including Nimoy. It also resulted in his permanent exile from the movie franchise.
Don't get me wrong. I'm eternally greatful for the gift he has given us all, God rest his soul...but that's why the truth about the man he was is, indeed, a low-point.
T'Pol's buttcrack, indeed.
Gene Roddenberry and Star Trek was Brett Favre and the Packers in reverse.
Farve was seen by many as not just the starting QB for GB, but, thanks to help by idiotic sycophants like John a Madden who wet his pants every time Favre did anything, as the living, breathing embodiment of the Packers, he symbolized their tradition, their spirit, the fans passion......etc. He clearly loved the team, bled green and yellow and he probably slept on a bed made from Lambeau Field turf and had life sized statues of Vince Lombardi, Bart Start, and Ray Nitzke in his house that he paid tribute to every night in a two hour ceremony.
He also was the embodiment of the Green Bay fan. He was tough and gritty, he played hard, he played hurt, he played well in the cold, he didn't miss a game, every time he took a vicious hit (which he took a lot of because he tended to release the ball late in the play a lot) he shook it off and was ready for the next snap. He never quit and when the chips were down he often made the big play. Even when he threw a stupid pick at a critical juncture (which he did a lot) it was still ok because he was the "Ol Gunslinger" who was just doing what he did naturally. He was literally EVERYTHING about the Packers and their fans. The only difference between him and joe Packet fan was he made hundreds of millions.
Turns out he was all these things as long as the Packers catered to his every whim. When he started this retiring/unretiring thing so he could skip training camp and GB said stop jerking us around like this....well he started being a un Packer like diva. And when the team had the gall to say, you want to unretire, fine, come to camp and beat Aaron Rodgers for the job....Well....How dare the Packers think a guy 37 years old might be at the end of the line and the franchise needed to look to the future. He was Brett Favre damnit. It didn't matter if he was declining or Aaron Rodgers looked like a stud. He should get to do whatever he wanted for as long as he wanted based on his past.
We know the rest. Mr Packer got traded, had three more seasons where he mostly spent his time trying to stick it to GB, when he wasn't busy texting pictures of his penis to Jenn Sterger, and he ended his career, appropriately enough, throwing a stupid pick to send the Saints to the Super Bowl.
Meanwhile Aaron Rodgers had won a Super Bowl (same number Favre did in 20 seasons) is the current MVP and, barring injury, probably has several seasons of high level football left and will probably be in the HOF.
Roddenberry was the reverse. I don't care the guy was an ass IRL but, when ST was some low rated and low budget show, he was just a guy in Hollywood trying to make his project popular to make money and power. When the show was clearly going to end after season three he had no problem bailing and going to another project he hoped would be his big break. Yeah he worked hard at it for a while, but there was none of this it being "his vision" and him representing all that was good and sacred about ST. It was a show he tried, it failed and he moved on as soon as he could.
It was only when ST experienced an unprecedented return from the dead and became a phenomenon that had major financial possibilities that Gene went "HOLY SHIT. THIS THING IS HUGE" and he and others created this image of him as the supreme protector of ST and how much of his heart and soul he put into this "vision of the future and humanity." All so he came off as done indispensable element of ST so he could profit from any future success it might have.
Even though the order of events were reversed, Favre and Roddenberry were one and the same. As long as their "great loves" in GB and ST were making them rich and meeting all their other demands they were the unimpeachable symbol of those things. When those things weren't doing what the men wanted they had ZERO problem cutting bait and running to something else they hoped would. Great love of their life be damned.
The images these men created were every bit as fictional as anything that happened in ST.