Brightly coloured uniforms make everyone a target. They should have stuck with beige, or even the beige landing jackets lined with kevlar.
The FASA TNG book in 88 claimed the colour swap was down to a strike by redshifts who insisted on a colour change.
That makes literally zero sense, not even as a humorous explanation.
Probably the same reason as it happens in real life. ...I could be wrong, but aren't modern British officer uniforms pretty much the same as ones from WWI? The sailor suits they wear in the Navy seem to have lasted a long time too, but I'm not sure how long.As well - Why did the Monster Maroons last so long?
Looking at the casualties listed on Memory Alpha and disregarding the dead who came back (Scotty, Bones, Leslie, Galloway) the totals I get are:Okay I just did a quick count for discussion’s sake. Note that I restricted the deaths to the crew of the Enterprise during Kirk’s 5-year mission and those we can actually verify. Therefore I cannot count the deaths of the crews of other starships such as the Intrepid, Constellation, Defiant, Exeter and Excalibur.
Also I didn’t count the deaths in WNMHGB other than the ones we actually saw because we cannot identify who the other listed casualties are. WNMHGB also complicates things because red did not yet exist as a division colour, but rather sand. Both Mitchell and Kelso were wearing sand even though they were at the helm/nav console. Do we count them as red or gold? If sand is later replaced by red then that makes them “redshirts,” but if we go by assignment later throughout TOS then they would be gold shirts. I also didn’t count the loss of Pike’s yeoman in “The Cage” who could have been wearing gold or sand.
Gold = 6
Blue = 5
Red (Engineering) = 6
Red (Security) = 17
Interesting that the number of security deaths is equivalent to deaths from all other departments combined. Yes, security looks to be a higher risk occupation, but it looks like if you’re aboard a deep space starship not being in security doesn’t make one automatically safer.
I think it’s not so much being in security per se, but actually landing party duty that puts you at greater risk. Most of the security deaths occurred planetside whereas aboard ship everyone seems to be pretty much at equal risk.
Even though I understand recycling the costumes because they wanted to cut down on costs wherever they could, I always thought it was dumb in-universe. Especially compared to how often the uniforms changed from "The Cage" to TUC and then again from TNG onward.As well - Why did the Monster Maroons last so long? There seems to have been three main variants: the overly formal from 2278ish to 2230ish, then a cutting down from 2330 to 2340ish, and the final version from 2340 to 2350ish.
I think they should have reused the first-second season uniforms (maybe with some additional embellishments) for "Yesterday's Enterprise", that would have at least established some ambiguity around when they stopped using the TWOK uniforms.
Yeah, sorry, for the 1701-C crew.For the Ambassador crew?
Yea even just having the now-tunic jacket in different colors might had worked.
I think they should have reused the first-second season uniforms (maybe with some additional embellishments) for "Yesterday's Enterprise", that would have at least established some ambiguity around when they stopped using the TWOK uniforms.
For the Ambassador crew?
Yea even just having the now-tunic jacket in different colors might had worked.
Yeah, sorry, for the 1701-C crew.
Was trying to think of cost effective costumes, seems like the first season TNG uniforms would have been fine, that would have given those a period of around 20 years of use. Maybe switch the colors around so command was yellow, use a different communicator pin, or add a dickey collar similar to Spock's in TMP to make them a bit different.
I don't remember even giving it a second thought. Rather, I was just happy they didn't reuse the TMP uniforms.
And on the subject of monster maroons, it turns out that they (or minute variations thereof) were the longest-lasting Starfleet uniforms ever. They started in TWOK in 2285 and lasted right up to the first season of TNG in 2364. That's 79 years!
Maybe save the jackets for a dress or almost dress uniform and on duty just have the pants and department colored shirt with insignia on the shirt
Why are they called monster maroons?
I agree, it would definitely display a form of transition in the uniforms. The results of "Yesterday's Enterprise" felt lazy.I think they should have reused the first-second season uniforms (maybe with some additional embellishments) for "Yesterday's Enterprise", that would have at least established some ambiguity around when they stopped using the TWOK uniforms.
I might have to post this to another thread but I am generally curious what would be considered an evolution from the TOS uniforms?One could also say that the TMP uniforms maybe tried a bit too hard to look authentically futuristic rather than something evolved from what we saw in TOS.
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