. . . and I did! About 25 bucks on Amazon. It's terrific and I've only skimmed parts of it so far. The best TOS book in ages and ages. Bravo!!
Thanks, everyone, I'm so glad -- and relieved -- that you're enjoying the book!
Additional volumes will depend upon the sales of the first one, of course, and it's still too early to know how it's going.So besides a potential Volume 2 which it looks like everyone is up for.....
any chance of similar book of the TOS movies? There is a ton of unmined deleted material from those.
Thanks again!
Additional volumes will depend upon the sales of the first one, of course, and it's still too early to know how it's going.
With regards to a movie book, there are always possibilities.
Just curious if you have ever collected or categorized any deleted material from the movies or would you have to start from scratch?
Just found this image of Shatner in the Jupiter 8, aka Reactor, and thought maybe others had not seen it before:
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Picked this up at a brick-and-mortar store in shrink-wrap a couple of weeks ago. I haven't had the chance to get into it yet, but when the thread popped up I wanted to just drop in to mention it.
More betterer, though, was watching my 8 year old utterly captivated by the book. It was like Sunday night at 6 pm in 1975 all over again.
It’s a US thing. Kaiser Broadcasting bought the initial TOS syndication package—even though it was under the magic number of episodes—and ran the show on the weekends. Markets in Boston, Chicago, Detroit, and others saw the show on Saturdays and Sundays in the early 70s through the mid-80s.What happened on Sunday nights at 6pm in 1975?
JB
Bay City.Me too! Farmington. Where you from?
For a time in the super Trekkie years, mid -70s, it was on weekdays, I think. "Stripped" IIRC. I am feelng the feeling of watching a dull old movie on Sunday on channel 50, waiting for Star Trek, my one true entertainment love!
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