Depends on whether all the adventures occurred in 'Broadcast Order'...Only if Stonn is Decius's twin. Remember, the Commander blew up the ship.


Depends on whether all the adventures occurred in 'Broadcast Order'...Only if Stonn is Decius's twin. Remember, the Commander blew up the ship.
But only after a prolonged conversation between Kirk and the Commander. Plenty of time for "Decius" to beam onto the Enterprise and stay hidden until he could disembark. The man's a pro after all...Only if Stonn is Decius's twin. Remember, the Commander blew up the ship.
Or a clone...Only if Stonn is Decius's twin. Remember, the Commander blew up the ship.
Watched "I Mudd" yesterday. Was there a reason that anyone knows that Takei wasn't in it past the bridge scenes?
Watched "I Mudd" yesterday. Was there a reason that anyone knows that Takei wasn't in it past the bridge scenes? Looking back at the episode I wonder why Kirk didn't blast the androids as they came onto the ship or you know blow up the planet with some cockamamie scheme. Surely it was better the ship destroyed than in say Mudd's hands. Kirk threatened to blow up the ship more than once rather than see it in enemies hands.
Watched Metamorphosis today. Its really a beautiful episode. Great colours. Great story. Great aesthetic. I noticed a couple of things. Spock shook hands with Cochrane. No Vulcan salute thingy.
Maybe it's in deference to Cochrane's humanity, and the fact that Spock is representing Starfleet here, not Vulcan?
It's quite well known that, like many fictional vehicles, the Galileo is bigger on the inside than on the outside.Watched Metamorphosis today. Its really a beautiful episode. Great colours. Great story. Great aesthetic. I noticed a couple of things. Spock shook hands with Cochrane. No Vulcan salute thingy. I like Cochrane's house, the artwork and the Galileo. Though when Cochrane inspected it, it was a bit tardis like in height.
It's obvious in in many of episodes on the regular clamshell 2004 DVD release too; as is the bad paint job on many of the plywood Bridge set pieces.I've heard (never seen it for myself) that to watch TOS in HD television treatment, the seam between Leonard Nimoy's prosthetics and his real ears is obvious.
Watched Metamorphosis today. Its really a beautiful episode. Great colours. Great story. Great aesthetic. I noticed a couple of things. Spock shook hands with Cochrane. No Vulcan salute thingy. I like Cochrane's house, the artwork and the Galileo. Though when Cochrane inspected it, it was a bit tardis like in height..
Spock eagerly shakes hands with McCoy when they are reunited near the end of "The City on the Edge of Forever." It was a realistic moment too, because if you haven't read the script in advance, you don't know things will work out in the end, and it's a great relief when they seem to have worked out.
Maybe it's in deference to Cochrane's humanity, and the fact that Spock is representing Starfleet here, not Vulcan?
Also, maybe it's common knowledge that Cochran had trouble making the gesture, as seen in First Contact.
Spock's great-grandfather discovered the Earthlings? And signed the Federation charter. With so much involvement with Earth by his forebears, maybe Sarek's openness to marrying a human makes more sense.Spock's father was Sarek, "child of Skon, child of Solkar". Given Vulcan longevity, Spock could possibly have heard stories about Skon's life and even Solkar's life diectly from them. And some fans claim that Solkar was the captain of the Vulcan ship in Star Trek: First Contact who personally greeted Zefraim Cochrane.
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Solkar
Nah, he was just there for official first contact. T'Pol's grandma was trapsing around Earth in the 1950s.Spock's great-grandfather discovered the Earthlings? And signed the Federation charter. With so much involvement with Earth by his forebears, maybe Sarek's openness to marrying a human makes more sense.
It was displayed on the monitor in the room, hence it was in the computer. Jack brought it back out with him when he left the computer. Yep, that's how computers work.Did I miss something when someone bought it back in?
When Hengist realized that if he was searched, he would have its matching companion on him and proof of his guiltHENGIST: Gentlemen, I know something of the law. You're engaging in sheer speculation.
KIRK: Perhaps. Mister Spock. The murder weapon.
SPOCK: Computer. Report on analysis of Exhibit A.
COMPUTER: Working. Exhibit A on visual. Composition of blade, boridium. Composition of handle, murinite. Details of carving on handle conform to folk art forms, indicating place of origin.
SPOCK: Specify. Point of origin.
COMPUTER: Artefact produced by hill people of Argus River region, planet Rigel Four.
KIRK: Now then, Mister Hengist
(But Hengist tries to make a break for it, even landing a very good kick on Kirk, who repays him with an even better right cross. Hengist falls to the floor.)
Ha, right, I forgot about that.Nah, he was just there for official first contact. T'Pol's grandma was trapsing around Earth in the 1950s.
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