It's kind of interesting that Roddenberry wanted to avoid humanoid aliens early on. If the Talosians had been crabs, it would've made the inability to piece together Vina properly make a little more sense.
Alot of measures in that first season were to avoid showing humanoid aliens. Spock was introduced as part (or half) alien, with a father that looked like Balok. Balok was a puppet later played by a small child. There were no aliens in over half of the first season, and several episodes (Charlie X, Squire, Shore Leave, Arena), feature aliens who probably take on the illusion of humanity. Balance of Terror had the Romulans look like Spock for story reasons (retconning the full Vulcan appearance), and then Miri had the human Onlies, but that was on some weird duplicate Earth. The Alternative Factor features some guy who I guess was supposed to be a human time traveller, but it isn't until Return of the Archons, 22 episodes in, that TOS introduced us to a species, w/ no explanation or uniqueness, that was near-identical to Humans (followed shortly by Taste of Armageddon and Errand of Mercy in the first season).
Alot of measures in that first season were to avoid showing humanoid aliens. Spock was introduced as part (or half) alien, with a father that looked like Balok. Balok was a puppet later played by a small child. There were no aliens in over half of the first season, and several episodes (Charlie X, Squire, Shore Leave, Arena), feature aliens who probably take on the illusion of humanity. Balance of Terror had the Romulans look like Spock for story reasons (retconning the full Vulcan appearance), and then Miri had the human Onlies, but that was on some weird duplicate Earth. The Alternative Factor features some guy who I guess was supposed to be a human time traveller, but it isn't until Return of the Archons, 22 episodes in, that TOS introduced us to a species, w/ no explanation or uniqueness, that was near-identical to Humans (followed shortly by Taste of Armageddon and Errand of Mercy in the first season).