Sounds like something by Lewis Carrol.
Did that poem come from "Alice in Wonderland" (based on Lewis Carrol's mushroom trip)? I honestly don't remember.
Sounds like something by Lewis Carrol.
It's a combination rearrangement/rewording of the opening stanza of Jabberwocky.
My favorite line from a quick exchange in "The Naked Name":
"Sorry, neither."
Balance of Terror - I thought it was funny that whenever the Romulan ship was torpedoed by the Enterprise, dirt and gravel would fall out of the ceiling. Exactly what are these Romulan ships made of?
I thought it was supposed to be plaster dust from the ceiling. That's a building material, but a little odd for a spacecraft.
Plaster/stucco/drywall is a primitive material with which to manufacture interstellar spaceships. But it doesn't explain the volcanic-looking gravel pouring out of the ceiling when the Enterprise crippled it with its final volley. I swear, lol, some of those "ceiling rocks" looked like the unusual gravel I've seen in Hawaii. Maybe Romulans insulate their ship cabins with bags of volcanic rocks, I don't know. At any rate, it looked hilarious.
I've heard that Nichelle Nichols ad-libbed that line on the spur of the moment when Sulu called her "fair maiden." The powers that be liked it so much they kept it.
I've heard that Nichelle Nichols ad-libbed that line on the spur of the moment when Sulu called her "fair maiden." The powers that be liked it so much they kept it.
If Ms. Nichols is the source of that rumor, then, well . . . er . . . .
Sometimes earthen materials are used for radiation shielding. Whether they'd be used in a spaceship instead of say, metal plates, is another matter.
Or: one deck up from the Romulan control room there might be a hydroponic garden that got smashed, and material started falling through the damaged compartment.
If Ms. Nichols is the source of that rumor, then, well . . . er . . . .
Spock's kind of sheepish smile at Uhura when he's trying to play lyre and she starts to sing Beware You Female Astronauts
In retrospect its perfect. Everything returns to where it started.Early installment weirdness. The Vulcan character wasn't 100 percent nailed down yet, and on top of that, Nimoy didn't want to appear unkind to a woman singing and putting herself out there, let alone a minority woman.
In "Plato's Stepchildren" (in one of the nuttiest scenes ever filmed) I thought Kirk & Spock's singing/dancing was pretty catchy: "I'm Tweedledee, he's Tweedledum, we're spacemen marching to a drum! We slide among the mimsey troves and gyre among the borogoves!" And of course that scene ends with the midget riding Kirk's back while Kirk starts neighing like a horse. The astonished look on McCoy's face says it better than I can.
I always liked a lot of the red shirt deaths, not only because they were often creative, but because in many cases they were stupid enough they deserved to die, per natural selection. Like when the redshirt idiots thought they could control Nomad with their phasers - a machine who just wiped out a couple of billion people - and of course Nomad instantly vaporized them without a second thought. Or in "Friday's Child" when that young, dumb redshirt flipped-out and got violent over the sight of a Klingon, for which he deserved a blade-like thing embedded in his chest. These redshirt characters were the deliberately stupidest in the series and in many cases, I felt no sympathy for their idiotic deaths. These were Darwin-Award-winners who improved the gene pool by ridding themselves from it.
screen name checks outI always liked a lot of the red shirt deaths, not only because they were often creative, but because in many cases they were stupid enough they deserved to die, per natural selection.
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