Heresy!!!!"Turnabout Intruder" comes to mind.
("Story by Gene Roddenberry.")
To be fair, nobody bats 100 all the time. Even Hitchcock had his turkeys.

Heresy!!!!"Turnabout Intruder" comes to mind.
("Story by Gene Roddenberry.")
To be fair, nobody bats 100 all the time. Even Hitchcock had his turkeys.
You dare to say that on Doris Day's birthday? Have you no shame, sir!
Oh well, que sera sera.![]()
Nope, just a man, whom had his ups and downs, and each person has to square with them, and how they impact their view of him.Beethoven had his clunkers, but let's be clear, we're not talking religious scripture here, unless you're a non believer..
So you're saying he wasn't a creative visionary who wrote some if not the best episodes of Star Trek?
Very favorable things or bad things strung together. Would you like to be judged like that?
Oh wow, what? I mean, yes, I like Omega Glory, but if we're putting that up on a pedestal as "quintessential Star Trek" then just wow. Words truly fail me. The episode literally is the embodiment of American Imperialism in that it is because the world is "corrected" when its people embrace American values and begin saluting the Stars and Stripes. That's literally what happens in the episode! If this is quintessential Star Trek than everyone who has called me lazy for comparing Starfleet and the Federation to the US and its military owe me an apology, ASAP.Omega Glory was quintessential Star Trek.
You mean like Roddenberry was?we're not talking religious scripture here, unless you're a non believer..
Whichever label he used, he still didn't believe in a deity, which makes him a "non believer" as you put it.He was a Humanist who questioned everything.
He was a Humanist who questioned everything. The rest just sounds funny.
No, he did not. TNG Who Watches the Watchers is the thesis of his religious beliefs, which is to say, he had none and considered religions superstitious nonsense that held civilizations back.He believed in some form of God or Supreme Being
He really didn't, not that it much matters in the context of this thread, unless some sort of theism test is being applied as well.He believed in some form of God or Supreme Being as evidenced by 'The God Thing' and 'In Thy Image' to some extent.
Yes, there was a Chapel, yet Roddenberry was still unfaithful.Nope. It was a chapel.![]()
I doubt Roddenberry did though.Omega Glory was quintessential Star Trek. Hence, we're talking about it 50 years after it premiered. There must be something to it. Could it be that the Comms and the Yangs were all higher life forms playing with our conventions and replaying our history. I think so.
The Klingons were a nice part of Trek but I hardly think part of the core of it while a lot of the fans hate the Prime Directive. How should Coon deserve credit for Starfleet and the Federation, aside from the terms themselves, distinct from what Roddenberry established?
They're Star Trek's most heavily developed culture. How aren't they part of the core?
The Federation was Gene Coon's idea. Gene Roddenberry just had the Enterprise in service to "United Earth." It was Gene Coon who thought the Federation up. Maybe for Starfleet, Gene Coon only thought the name up, but that's more than Roddenberry did, who was constantly renaming the organization, although he did seem to favor the name UESPA.
Making Star Trek great was a group effort that included both Roddenberry and many other people.
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