You could also make a list of things that make ST unlike westerns.
1. No hats.
2. No horses.
3. People look like they smell nicer.

You could also make a list of things that make ST unlike westerns.
That's because a lot of stories can be told in various settings and various archetypes can be used in those settings. Point is, one of Roddenberry's inspirations for the type of story telling he wanted to use were the Adult Westerns of the era. Non-Western were telling those stories too. But not episodic Science Fiction. Like Westerns, SF was often looked at as kiddie fair. Roddenberry wanted to change that and use SF to tackle current issues.Just about anything ST and westerns have in common, ST would also have in common with non-westerns. If you like westerns and want to make that connection, you can. You could also make a list of things that make ST unlike westerns.
1. No hats.
2. No horses.
3. People look like they smell nicer.
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It really isn't about special effects, spaceships or ray guns. TOS is mostly about the story. TOS-R is nice, but if you cannot tolerate it without TOS-R, I think you're missing the point.
So the people who enjoy TOS-R but not the original effects aren't "true fans", is that what we're saying?
Oy gevalt.
Could you enjoy an episode of TOS in black and white and with some degree of static running through the episode?
For the people who prefer the TOS-R versions, the originals look dated to a degree they find distracting.
That doesn't make them lesser fans, and it's this kind of snobbery that serves to divide rather than unite the fandom.
Besides, who's to say that if TOS-R doesn't pique their interest that they may not go back and make another attempt to watch the episodes with the original effects work?
As I've said before and I'll say again, despite the Nuniverse films having varying degrees of flaws, I believe they've ultimately increased the size of the fandom and made Trek somewhat more relevant again. If nothing else, they deserve some credit for that. And so does TOS-R.
Just about anything ST and westerns have in common, ST would also have in common with non-westerns. If you like westerns and want to make that connection, you can. You could also make a list of things that make ST unlike westerns.
[...] Don't get me wrong, I love the characters and I'm by no means knocking the show as a whole, it's just that watching it often feels like some monastic penitential exercise than entertainment. [...]
I hate to knock this amazing series, and I know that it has some real gold, but the idea of trudging through it seems more like punishment than anything else. [...] Again, I hate speaking of TOS like this, and it's a show that I so want to enjoy as I know that there's some great stuff in it, but it's aged so much, I just can't.
Could you enjoy an episode of TOS in black and white and with some degree of static running through the episode?
An (Adult) Western is about people who are on the frontier, attempting to set bring to order an environment too vast and too indifferent to humanity to be brought to order, based on their memories and understandings of a far-distant civilization that's so remote it might as well be alien, remembering that for all their experience they are strangers here, and aware that they will certainly fail occasionally and have a serious risk of failing catastrophically. This is more important to what Star Trek: The Original Series is than are the structural elements the show has in common with, oh, Chicago Med or Parker Lewis Can't Lose.
It's just a setting. All sorts of stories can be told there. Some may not be so noble. Adult Westerns weren't afraid to show the less than noble aspects. Just as Trek shows people and situations in space that aren't always noble. Sometimes our heroes have to face this in them selves. It's what they do in these situations iis what makes them heroes, be they a US Marshall, an Army squad leader, a gunslinger, a samurai or a Starship captainOkay, maybe. I tend not to think of westerns in such noble terms.
but if you cannot tolerate it without TOS-R, I think you're missing the point.
It really isn't about special effects, spaceships or ray guns. TOS is mostly about the story. TOS-R is nice, but if you cannot tolerate it without TOS-R, I think you're missing the point.
I've been watching since I was a 3-year-old toddler, so I have no such issues. Greatest show in the history of television...hands down.
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