I really liked Route 66. Corbett can't hold a candle to Maharis (but he is the first Vietnam vet on TV...in 1963!)
But I read on the internet that Magnum P.I. was the first Vietnam veteran in a TV lead role!?

I really liked Route 66. Corbett can't hold a candle to Maharis (but he is the first Vietnam vet on TV...in 1963!)
Wow…. Did not know that. Recycling ideas makes sense in those days, I mean, who would compare them after all?The Have Gun - episode "Les Girls," written by Gene Roddenberry, featured a French woman transporting three young French mail-order brides cross-country. Only a vague resemblance to "Mudd's Women," but the idea is there. They start out dainty and decorative, but after a week of travel in a wagon with Paladin teaching them survival in the wild, end up hardy and able to take care of themselves and some rough miner husbands.
Wow…. Did not know that. Recycling ideas makes sense in those days, I mean, who would compare them after all?
Amazing information. How cool is it that I can still learn new things about tos and the genre after all these years. Thank you for sharing.The similarity wouldn't have taken anyone in those days by surprise. The "wiving settlers" trope was pretty common in Westerns, and was based on a real-life historical practice that was well known. The entire TV series Here Come the Brides from 1968-70 (starring Robert Brown, Mark Lenard, and David Soul) was built around it. "Mudd's Women" wasn't even the first science fiction iteration of the premise, since a lot of SF adapted frontier/colonial tropes from Westerns. A notable one is “The Girls from Earth” by Frank M. Robinson, published in January 1952. Similar to Mudd's scheme, it involved a fraud in which the scammers replaced the photos of plain women from Earth with photos of starlets and models to lure in the men on Mars, with the men turning out to be just as happy to have the companionship of the plain women. It was adapted on the X Minus One radio show.
From “Star Trek Is…”:I wonder if Roddenberry (or Stephen Kandel) read that story before "Mudd's Women" was written.
Turned on an episode of 'The Big Valley' and there is a pre-TOS William Shatner as a reluctant bank robber.
Do we have this person's name?One is a fellow we see on the bridge and other places throughout the first season:
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Do we have this person's name?
Peripherally interesting the(actor) also shares the last name with (character) Marta Batanides who Picard regretted not pursuing a relationship with, and Q shows him a "second chance" (TNG: "Tapestry").
Do we have this person's name?
This may be the guy:He's not even listed in the credits on Memory Alpha for "The Man Trap", but he was there:
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I know I've seen him in other episodes, but I can't remember where and I don't have ready access to the photos.
This may be the guy:
Walter Soo Hoo | Memory Alpha | Fandom
Noticing that also in the cast of the Monkees ep was a very young Mike Farrell (who never made a TOS appearance, but a few years later would be prominent in The Questor Tapes opposite Robert Foxworth.)
I remember that fan theory, and when George Takei was a guest at the Denver Star Trek convention in 1990, I asked him about it during his presentation. That's when I learned that Hikaru had been planned to be revealed as his name, according to Takei as far back as when TOS was airing new.Interesting that a recurring Trek guest was named Walter Soo Hoo, since there used to be a fan theory, before Sulu's first name was officially established as Hikaru, that his full name was Walter Sulu. I wonder if there's a connection, or if it's just coincidence.
I remember that fan theory, and when George Takei was a guest at the Denver Star Trek convention in 1990, I asked him about it during his presentation. That's when I learned that Hikaru had been planned to be revealed as his name, according to Takei as far back as when TOS was airing new.
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