Roddenberry feeling it necessary to rewrite “Shore Leave”
Can you direct me to an article on this?
Roddenberry feeling it necessary to rewrite “Shore Leave”
This! THIS is freakin’ gold!On the broader subject of science fiction and Star Trek, writers/producers are more likely to date their work by attempting to ground it with current technology. This is best illustrated by the evolution (or more accurately, de-evolution) of the Enterprise since TOS.
The first big step backwards being putting reaction control thrusters all over the refit in TMP. While this was a valid solution for 70's spacecraft, it shouldn't have been applied to a starship from hundreds of years in the future. This got even more ridiculous with the Kelvin Enterprise being covered with rockets.
The best way to get a feel for how to approach the subject would be to take something like our current submarines/carriers and ask how someone of the 18th century would have explained their functionality using the science of that period. Would someone from that era call what we take for granted science fiction or fantasy? To them we move ships the size of cities at unimaginable speeds for years on a few pounds of a magic rock. They didn't have the science to explain what we do... just like we shouldn't have the science to explain what happens in Star Trek. Trying to shoehorn in current tech into Star Trek (like the aforementioned reaction control thrusters) is like adding sails to a carrier.
In my opinion, good science fiction in Star Trek comes from internal consistency of the functionality of the technology, not trying to provide how it is possible.
Inside Star Trek p. 209.Can you direct me to an article on this?
Space 1999 suffered a similar fate, although that was made for a UK audience.
Voyage was mostly the relationship between Lee and the Admiral. Morton and Sparks were there, but mostly nonentities.
You're forgetting Chief Sharkey who joined in season 2 and quickly became practically a third lead. By the third season, he was as important to the series as DeForest Kelley was to Star Trek. Nelson and Sharkey developed a quirky relationship which mirrored the relationship between the actors.
Voyage wouldn't have worked nearly as well as it did if not for that cast.
I loved the Slaver Weapon. I know some people did not - probably because it didn't have Kirk but I thought it was great science fiction but from your analysis I realise that you're right and the Enterprise crew were just trying to survive and stop a weapon getting into the wrong hands. They weren't controlling the situation, they were just players. And I think thats alright for some episodes. I didn't like it it in Assignment Earth though but here the story made sense.Maybe. But I doubt people in the Trek production offices were telling these writers the flat truth about the reasons for their decisions.
The show was sold to NBC as an action adventure, and NBC didn't like it when they got episodes that were not the show the were promised.
Mind, you, it wasn't NBC who was griping about the story submissions, it was Roddenberry, Fontana, Justman, et al. "Action" doesn't necessarily mean fistfights and phaser beams, it means the characters taking action in an attempt to solve the problem. Many of the scripts and stories they got had Kirk standing around and talking with the guest star of the week and not actually taking action.
Let me give you a silly example. Had Roddenberry or Coon in 1967 gotten Niven's "The Soft/Slaver Weapon" story submitted, I can just about guarantee they would have complained that the heroes were just observers and not active in the story, nor affecting the climax. They'd probably have suggested that the lead (probably Kirk) manipulate the Kzitini captain into finding the self destruct setting, because then they would be taking action in the story, not just waiting inertly [Filmation joke here] to see what happened.
The problem is they're just observers. That's not drama.I loved the Slaver Weapon. I know some people did not - probably because it didn't have Kirk but I thought it was great science fiction but from your analysis I realise that you're right and the Enterprise crew were just trying to survive and stop a weapon getting into the wrong hands. They weren't controlling the situation, they were just players. And I think thats alright for some episodes. I didn't like it it in Assignment Earth though but here the story made sense.
I doubt it. I’ll look to see if there any deForest Research notes on this.Something that always struck me as weird was the "planetary compaction" of Psi 2000 in "The Naked Time". Was that an actual scientific theory back then?
Something that always struck me as weird was the "planetary compaction" of Psi 2000 in "The Naked Time". Was that an actual scientific theory back then?
I could be wrong, but it's possible there was not a scientific consensus on just what quasars were or how far away they were, at the time. Of course Trek has never really been on the forefront of such things and has done better by just inventing its own universe of space storms, giant wormholes, gravity flooring, etc.
Apparently planets can shrink as their metallic cores cool, but this a process occurring over billions of years. Mercury is said to be a shrinking planet.
But I’ve seen nothing where a planet could shrink rapidly over a period of hours or days. Perhaps if it was artificially induced somehow? Maybe the scientists on Psi 2000 as well as the Enterprise crew didn’t realize they were studying an alien race’s scientific experiment?
Lunar mascons alter the local gravity above and around them sufficiently that low and uncorrected satellite orbits around the Moon are unstable on a timescale of months or years. The small perturbations in the orbits accumulate and eventually distort the orbit enough that the satellite impacts the surface.
Because of its mascons, the Moon has only four "frozen orbit" inclination zones where a lunar satellite can stay in a low orbit indefinitely. Lunar subsatellites were released on two of the last three Apollo manned lunar landing missions in 1971 and 1972; the subsatellite PFS-2 released from Apollo 16 was expected to stay in orbit for one and a half years, but lasted only 35 days before crashing into the lunar surface. It was only in 2001 that the mascons were mapped and the frozen orbits were discovered.[2]
I have no issue with that; I was just pointing out that modern astronomical knowledge gives us a out, albeit an imperfect one, for have a 'quasar' within the MW. Here's a somewhat more technical but still mostly math-free write-up discussing quasars and microquasars:I like to think that the Murasaki 312 is a "yet" to be discovered quasar-like formation. Being so rare a phenomena, Starfleet has standing orders to study them.
I don't think it was that The Cage was necessarily light on action adventure; it was that there was no action/adventure sequence at the end of the episode as part of its resolution. The Action was mostly in the middle of the episode and the ending of the episode was a long intellectual like soliloquy.When you consider that some of the greatest episodes of Star Trek, including the Cage, were light on the action-adventure elements, it's a shame if this mindset existed at the time. I think Trek was made for US audience so this was likely true to the general family audience they were aiming for. I actually think that sticking to this formula is what led to Trek becoming a bit stale by season 3, albeit the high cost of sci fi was not helping its case.
Out of interest, there were other, much longer running shows at the time, what story-telling formulas were they using to keep the ball bouncing?
Just to be clear on this, you reviewed popular entry-level astronomy books of the late 50's and early 60's and the previous decade ('56-'66) worth of Scientific American and National Geographic articles to get an idea of what a non-professional astronomer/astrophysicist would have had access to in the public library at this time... right?
I grew up pre-internet, so I remember what it was like back then. Heck, when I was a double major in math and physics I still had professors studying Steady State Theory... and that was in the 80's.
Someone from 2022 trying to put themselves into the minds of people of 1967 really needs to recognize the limitations of that time.
Slightly off subject...
On the broader subject of science fiction and Star Trek, writers/producers are more likely to date their work by attempting to ground it with current technology. This is best illustrated by the evolution (or more accurately, de-evolution) of the Enterprise since TOS.
The first big step backwards being putting reaction control thrusters all over the refit in TMP. While this was a valid solution for 70's spacecraft, it shouldn't have been applied to a starship from hundreds of years in the future. This got even more ridiculous with the Kelvin Enterprise being covered with rockets.
The best way to get a feel for how to approach the subject would be to take something like our current submarines/carriers and ask how someone of the 18th century would have explained their functionality using the science of that period. Would someone from that era call what we take for granted science fiction or fantasy? To them we move ships the size of cities at unimaginable speeds for years on a few pounds of a magic rock. They didn't have the science to explain what we do... just like we shouldn't have the science to explain what happens in Star Trek. Trying to shoehorn in current tech into Star Trek (like the aforementioned reaction control thrusters) is like adding sails to a carrier.
In my opinion, good science fiction in Star Trek comes from internal consistency of the functionality of the technology, not trying to provide how it is possible.
Sorry for the off subject rambling.
My favorite bit of “scientific weirdness” in Trek is when Voyager gets trapped inside a black hole, and escapes by blasting a hole in the event horizon.
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