This is the crowd I'd love to quiz as to their thoughts comparing the pilot(s) to what they later saw on TV, particularly The Menagerie.
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Here's the audience of the Tricon Star Trek screening. (source)
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And here's the model in the "What Are Little Girls Made Of" costume at the Trek table. (source) Note the 3 footer Enterprise model on the table, with its starboard nacelle all wonky.
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There were several screen worn costumes at the convention, including a Starfleet miniskirt and a Romulan costume worn by Roddenberry himself.Along with the beleaguered 3-footer, you can see the photographer's reflection as he takes the picture. But the Andrea model is the main subject. That must have been the screen-worn costume.
There were several screen worn costumes at the convention, including a Starfleet miniskirt and a Romulan costume worn by Roddenberry himself.
A nice bit of business about our 50th anniversary rewatch for the first year and a half was that the days and dates lined up the same, so we were actually watching on Thursdays as the NBC Peacock intended.We watched "The Naked Time" last night
A nice bit of business about our 50th anniversary rewatch for the first year and a half was that the days and dates lined up the same, so we were actually watching on Thursdays as the NBC Peacock intended.
Of course, as I added more shows, I was pretty rough about exactly when I watched them, as long as it was the right week. The point for me was to watch the shows, not to authentically miss them.![]()
I love watching Trek with period commercials. I do that with a couple of them, but I can't imagine trying to find 79 episodes worth of 1966-1969 NBC ads. If you have done that, then I truly salute your stamina!
You've heard that television rots your brain? It is the commercials that do the rotting.
This is the crowd I'd love to quiz as to their thoughts comparing the pilot(s) to what they later saw on TV, particularly The Menagerie.
FANAC.org has PDFs of a lot of old fanzines. I’ve been reading Juanita and Robert “Buck” Coulsons’ fanzine YANDRO from that era — they were at Tricon, and were early Star Trek fans. I really enjoy reactions from established SF fans reacting to Trek “live”, as it were. Not to mention all their coverage of the “stf” world of the time. YANDRO 167 has a letter from Roddenberry, which, coming some time in late 1966, has to be one of his first interactions with sf fandom, after Tricon, that is.
Some friends run a Trek 'zine archive and I currently have access to every extant 1960s Trek zine. The collection starts in January '67 (not counting the YANDRO you mention) and we'll have reading parties for them.
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