Actually, I think she DID heat coffee using a phaser.
She Did! And in the early City on the Edge of Forever script, she used tricorder feedback to distract space pirates and jury-rigged the damaged transporter. There was certainly a kernel of an idea that she could make do and mend in a crisis. In Galileo 7, it could have been Rand that suggested using phasers to power the shuttle or Rand that came up with a quick plan to minimise damage from the phaser overload in Conscience of the King.Actually, I think she DID heat coffee using a phaser.
Well, there is certainly a lot of maths and physics involved in engineering but I find biology to be more of a stretch. Spock's strengths seem to be maths, computing, physics, astrophysics, and communications. Biology is very much a different field of study and I would have preferred it if they had kept that niche for someone else. Technically, Life Sciences are not part of Spock's remit. I think McCoy might have been head of Life Sciences as well as CMO in fact.I can legitimately see Spock being good with biology and engineering. Both use science a lot, and he IS the Science Officer. And being Vulcan, you basically expect him to be really smart.
It's only... logical.
She Did! And in the early City on the Edge of Forever script, she used tricorder feedback to distract space pirates and jury-rigged the damaged transporter. There was certainly a kernel of an idea that she could make do and mend in a crisis.
I admit, I thought they'd cheekily updated her role in the script for a modern audience. I was really surprised when I read the original script. In the final version all we got was Uhura saying she was afraid. I do wonder if the way Grace was treated and being edited out of the script played some part in his anger at the redrafts.Ellison was friends with Whitney and write more for her to do as Rand in his version of the story. Wish we'd gotten to see this Rand on the show. She's kickass and a proto-Tasha Yar.
From the comic adaptation of Ellison's COTEOF teleplay:
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I think Spock is a great example of the difference between intelligent and smart. He was usually the first, but not always the second.And being Vulcan, you basically expect him to be really smart.
Oh, like McCoy ever worried about protocol in the first place.McCoy could've been a special civilian advisor to Kirk, so he'd get to speak his mind without worrying about protocol.
I'm sad to say that I think it was exactly that. And "sinister moves behind the scenes" sums it up pretty well, IMO. (I should note that Maurice also added a very vital fact to the circumstantial argument I laid out about the possible reasons behind GLW's dismissal.)It's interesting that Grace appeared in 8 shows if she was only contracted for 7 and yet her only line was cut from the final episode. It does make you think that there was some kind of sinister moves behind the scenes to get her out the door fast, doing the minimum they had to to comply with obligations already in place.
Possible, I suppose, but AFAIK, Ellison never cited that as much of a reason of his distaste for the final version of "City." Ellison wrote his initial story outline for COTEOF early in TOS's first season, and the script wasn't finalized until after GLW had been let go from the series.I admit, I thought they'd cheekily updated her role in the script for a modern audience. I was really surprised when I read the original script. In the final version all we got was Uhura saying she was afraid. I do wonder if the way Grace was treated and being edited out of the script played some part in his anger at the redrafts.
Yeah he certainly articulated his issues about the changes with which he wasn't happy. I prefer some parts of both scripts personally. I just wonder if one of the underlying reasons for some of the rancour was what happened to Grace since they dated after she'd left the show and he would have seen how she was feeling about it all. Her autobiography doesn't state that she told anybody about exactly what happened at the time other than Nimoy but when Gates Mcfadden left TNG many people were upset by the decision even before knowing the full story.I think the reasons for Ellison's distaste for the aired version of "City' if pretty apparent if you compare the scripts: he wanted to push Kirk to a point where he emotionally couldn't make the logical decision, and the finished script has him do just that. Ellison's original script is much more thematically complicated than the finished episode, plus Roddenberry stuck in all the hamhanded drivel for Edith to spout about spaceships and stuff.
Pure fact, I'm not talking about the infinitesimal fragment of fandom represented here. There is really no arguing this fact.Ahem *Bullshit* ahem.
Agreed that it was well cast. But I say Walter Koenig is a much better actor than many give him credit for. For proof, look at his appearances as Bester in BABYLON 5. He was well utilized there, and he brought it every time.
The teaser for Miri was the most blatant. Rand says "Earth," and the screen shows a obvious North America. The episode didn't need this, it added nothing.-no parallel earth bullshit
The teaser for Miri was the most blatant. Rand says "Earth," and the screen shows a obvious North America. The episode didn't need this, it added nothing.
I thought they nicely explained the presence of Native Americans, so, I'm okay with the parallel Earth planet for that episode. As to why they speak English with a fake Native American accent is another problem. (Yes, Kirk's implanted universal translator could be the solution, but...no.)The only circumstance that redeems it - and only very slightly - is that it's the first time they did it. By the time of S2, it was almost unheard of to have a NON-Earth-parallel planet. Thankfully they backed away from this in S3, excepting TPS.
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