I've read many people put down Turnabout Intruder. I didn't recall it that well. But watching it now, it's not terrible. What are the big complaints about this episode. It's certainly better than the TNG's S2 finale.
I like seeing Shatner acting like Janice acting like Kirk.
Plus this episode definitively proves beyond any doubt that there were no female Captains in Kirk's era.![]()
But at the end, he never said women weren't allowed. He said she was passed over because of her insufficient skills and temperament. She claimed it was because she was a woman.
"Life Entity Transfer"...I want to trade places with Bill Gates and wake up with $$Billions$$ of dollars in my bank account.![]()
I enjoyed Assignment Earth... Turnabout Intruder just made me cringe. I can only see it as an attack on the late 1960s feminists. Lester wasn't just female, she was a caricature.
That's the critical line and its interpretation is unclear as you say. I do not recall a big deal in the show being made of the Romulans having a female captain and I believe Uhura could have been in command in some circumstances unfortunately this does not happen in TOS but does occur in The Lorelei Signal in TAS so my feeling is that Lester could have been a Starship captain but did not qualify for other reasons as well or instead of gender.Yes, Janice said at the beginning "Your world of starships doesn't admit women". I thought she meant that Kirk was so involved with the Enterprise that other relationships were subserviant to the ship. I don't know.....
Given the amount of TOS adventures that hinge on Kirk's ability to punch his way out of situations there may be a male only captain policy though.
Number One commanded the Enterprise in Pike's absence in "The Cage"/"The Menagerie" (TOS) and Uhura took command in "The Lorelei Signal" (TAS). It could very well be true that none of the twelve or thirteen (possibly fewer at the time Kirk was given command, and also at the time of "Turnabout Intruder," if the ones lost during the course of the series had not all been replaced by then) ships of the Enterprise's type—which are what the writers of TOS specifically meant when they said "starships"—had female captains, thus lending support to Lester's perception of that small circle as a boys-only club, but there was clearly no actual regulation that categorically precluded women from command.I must admit I still see it as evidence that women are not allowed to command Starships in the TOS era! (I don't count ENT) but we have seen women captain ships in the later TNG, DS9 and VOY series and the films so maybe I'm wrong!
JB
Roddenberry had stepped down as line producer for the third season, and took a far less active role during that time.It also seems inconceivable that Roddenberry would get behind that idea.
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