Well, Takei is a cast member and Sulu is a crew member. As the primary helmsman, Sulu is "main crew". As a character on the show he's definitely a secondary character. And Takei as a day player is a supporting actor.Maybe secondary character would be more accurate. Or as Shatner once described Takei "the extra with a few lines."
In the 1960s?In the 1960's there was a expectation that people would drink alcohol on a daily basis, and it was unusual if someone didn't. Scotty wasn't a lush by the standards of the day, we never saw him impaired on the job, he was just average. Kirk and McCoy were drinking buddies. Right after Kirk found out he was heading into a courts martial, he naturally went to a bar.
Okay, that may be taking things a bit far. That's more like Mad Men levels, except with heavy equipment added...My grandfather told me that in the 60's people would openly drink on the job, drink heavily at lunch, and as long as you got your job done nothing would be said. He worked in a machine shop.
What research are you talking about? This sounds completely counter-intuitive to me, for two reasons:Why? Research has shown that as long as someone is held in a child state, size and development-wise, their cognition retains the child state as well. I doubt even centuries of life experience would change this. Basically, children don't act like adults because they can't.
Well he did have weaknesses. Compare the way Kirk was running through enemy fire in Arena verses Spock's stumbling attempt to do the same. Spock made (imo) a series of command mistakes in The Paradise Syndrome, and was less than effective in Galileo Seven. Even taking into account that Spock has a personal philosophy of logic, given the time period he was in Starfleet he should have developed a greater understanding of people who didn't embrace his mindset.
Love for the Enterprise to of had the equivalent of a Chief of the Boat. A older senior NCO, grey hair and a bit "grizzled."As a yeoman, she was the captain's valet and administrative clerk, what we saw her doing was consistent with her job. It wouldn't have been out of place for her to of been present at every briefing room scene, even if Whitney had no lines.
If we expand her role to that of a British Army "batman," then she would be on most landing party the captain went on, because part of her job would be as the captain's personal bodyguard.
Want to make a statement about the roles of women to a 1960's audience, give the lead male character a female bodyguard.
And Spock also gets some patriarchy in "Amok Time". Implied indentured servitude as well?
Klingons find a planet where human children survived some plague or holocaust. Klingons use agents that look like humans to restore the civilization and raise the children, training them to be sleeper agents in the same manner that the Soviets did with children raised in those "cities" that looked like US cities
https://panethos.wordpress.com/2013...hot-dogs-and-vodka-spy-towns-of-the-cold-war/
https://m.ranker.com/list/kgb-built...yLI9Kw.5&utm_referrer=https://www.google.com/
I pointed to the 1960's owing to that's when TOS was being written and produced.In the 1960s?How is that any different in the present day?
My crowd usually brings racks energy drinks. Alcohol isn't unknown, but also isn't the standard.You go to a social gathering, you take a bottle of wine or a six-pack of beer
Paradise Syndrome. Spock himself noted that the interior of the obelisk was the only area he couldn't scan, yet he didn't put that together with not being able to locating Kirk on the scanners.I thought that Spock made reasonable command choices in both episodes
Maybe that's what happened to Pike's yeoman on Rigel Seven?I can imagine a story in which a captain's yeoman is killed defending him and he feels guilty about it.
It not that rare that teenage and younger children have to take on adult duties and responsibilities, and have been shown to be capable of handling those mature responsibilities.Let's not forget that children's brains are not adult brains.
I would love to have seen that!I would basically make "The Cage: The Series."
Kor
It sounds like whoever assigned crewmen to cabins on the Enterprise is an idiot, then. Having people of different shifts share the same cabin is just common sense.Eight of the crew , a mixture of males, females, humanoids and exotic aliens have to share a room intended for two people. They all work the same duty shift.
So... canceled in midseason, then?In all seriousness, eliminating about half of the season three episodes and not doing anything else would improve the entire season
So can I. It was called "The Cage."I can imagine a story in which a captain's yeoman is killed defending him and he feels guilty about it.
Would've lasted 13 episodes max.I would love to have seen that!
As did Firefly and that was superb.Would've lasted 13 episodes max.
Thats right. The subsequent series wouldn't have existed at least not in the form they were made. Even cutting out theFirefly existed in the era of home video where it wouldn't vanish like The Tammy Grimes show. If Star Trek lasted 13 it wouldn't have been syndicated and none of us would be here.![]()
Thats right. The subsequent series wouldn't have existed at least not in the form they were made. Even cutting out the 'bad' Season 3 episodes would have made the series hard to syndicate and I might never have seen it (gasp).
...Not employing deadly force during his "attack" was a mistake.
Over-estimating the intelligence of the anthropoids and their reaction to his display of pretty (but harmless) streams of light...
.
Captain's log, supplemental. The Enterprise has left the Exeter and moved into close planet orbit. Although it appears the infection may strand us here the rest of our lives, I face an even more difficult problem. A growing belief that Captain Tracey has been interfering with the evolution of life on this planet. It seems impossible. A star captain's most solemn oath is that he will give his life, even his entire crew, rather than violate the Prime Directive.
KIRK: The SS Beagle was the first ship to make a survey of this star sector when it disappeared.
SPOCK: Then the Prime Directive is in full force, Captain?
KIRK: No identification of self or mission. No interference with the social development of said planet.
MCCOY: No references to space, or the fact that there are other worlds, or more advanced civilisations.
KIRK: If I brought down a hundred of them armed with phasers
CLAUDIUS: you could probably defeat the combined armies of our entire empire, and violate your oath regarding noninterference with other societies. I believe you all swear you'll die before you'd violate that directive. Am I right?
SPOCK: Quite correct.
MCCOY: Must you always be so blasted honest?
CLAUDIUS: But on the other hand, why even bother to send your men down? From what I understand, your vessel could lay waste to the entire surface of the world. Oh, but there's that Prime Directive in the way again. Can't interfere.
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