I just pitched an article about the making of that game to Retro Gamer magazine.
I hope they bite!
I just pitched an article about the making of that game to Retro Gamer magazine.
They seem interested in both pitches I made. The article I mentioned has the working title of Project Genesis: A Deep Space Design.I hope they bite!
Christopher beat me to the Monkees which used many, many quick cuts and set-ups. I think James Frawley won the Emmy for directing their first year.
The Monkees feels a bit like a spiritual successor to The Addams Family.
That's an interesting comparison. I kind of see what you mean.
The sixties were my favorite era for sitcoms. So many weird ones, so many that didn't fit a standard mold and experimented with different subjects and formats. I kind of lost interest in sitcoms by the '90s when they all seemed to be about workplaces or schools or families in the living room or friends hanging out together.
The 60's was full of "anything goes" escapist television. Comedies were fantasy flavored with adventure plots (I Dream of Jeannie, Gilligan, It's About Time etc), or period farces (F-Troop, Here Come the Brides) as well as other experimental genres. It was really just a "try anything" sort of time. The schedule was filled with so much escapism, the 60's was also my favorite era of television. Like westerns, sci-fi, espionage, action, hard hitting drama, variety shows, anthologies, news hours? There was something to everyone. All on just a scant few channels.
The 60's was full of "anything goes" escapist television. Comedies were fantasy flavored with adventure plots (I Dream of Jeannie, Gilligan, It's About Time etc), or period farces (F-Troop, Here Come the Brides) as well as other experimental genres. It was really just a "try anything" sort of time.
Monkees aimed to be somewhat Marx brothery.
The late 50s/early 60s was a period of "true to life defenders" dramas, which had waned somewhat by middle of the decade. The avalanche of escapist fare more or less began with the debut My Favorite Martian, which managed to land at #10 for its first season in 1963-1964, so come 1964 you suddenly get all these fantasy comedies: Bewitched, My Living Doll, The Addams Family, The Munsters, and Giligan's Island. 1965 gets you I Dream of Jeannie, My Mother the Car, and The Smothers Brothers Show (not to be confused with The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour).
Also, and I've cited this year before, the first season I,Spy episode with Eartha Kitt tackles substance abuse far better than anything Trek has done on the subject.
Has Trek ever done a good substance abuse episode?
Nope. And nope. Although I can appreciate "Symbosis" a lot more as an indictment on Big Pharma, in retrospect.
PICARD tried with Raffi, but her substance abuse problem felt inauthentic to me. At least the writing did. Michelle Hurd was excellent with the material she was given.
I have recovered from a substance abuse issue, which I don't shy from discussing.
Some of my own experience informed the fan STAR TREK webcomic serial I co-wrote with our own @trekcomic, "Red Meat."
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Click here to read the currently ongoing serial from the beginning.
Thank you for sharing. I'm a person who's struggled with substance abuse for the last few decades and I'm still nowhere near being on top of it, but it's heartening to know you found the light at the end of the tunnel.
Same @Richard S. Ta. If having a friendly, no judgment person to talk to would help, I'm always around.No thank you for sharing. If you ever want someone to chat with, my DMs are open.
My Living Doll
Has Trek ever done a good substance abuse episode?
I have great affection for the early-mid 60s dramas before everything went to escapist fare.
I'd submit that This Side of Paradise was a decent drug-themed episode.
Have you seen East Side, West Side? Brilliant show.
I kind of lost interest in sitcoms by the '90s when they all seemed to be about workplaces or schools or families in the living room or friends hanging out together.
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