You mean a new actor replacing Gary Lansing and taking on the globalists plan of world domination?
I'd bet that what she didn't liked was Roddenberry's hands up her miniskirts.I'm not so sure. Miss Garr never liked the ever shrinking mini skirts.
I'm always struck by how many similarities Assignment: Earth as a concept has to Doctor Who. I don't at all think it's intentional, since as far as I know Doctor Who never aired in the U.S. until well after it was made, but I think Roddenberry and the DW producers came up with a lot of similar ideas because they were marinating in a similar late-60s Anglosphere cultural zeitgeist.
I'm not sure why so many people think it wouldn't...
Paramount+ should do a one off special that's like a lost episode of an "original series" and just throw it on there.Could it work now if it was revived as a new spin off series with a different cast?
Roberta, you've got to believe me. Look, a truly advanced planet wouldn't use force. They wouldn't come here in strange alien forms. The best of all possible methods would be to take human beings to their world, train them for generations until they're needed here.
I don't know. The whole concept has a real Doctor Who flavor to it. It could have been made to work.
Primarily because it didn’t.
TOS's ratings were going downward, hence the show being axed. Even if Assignment Earth was objectively great, a network would be hard-pressed to green-light a full series - especially if the ratings for it didn't skyrocket above preceding it.
Roberta is just a cipher and proxy for the audience living this vicariously, to tell us about how all the hippies are worried about teh nukes and not living to be 30 and think they know more than everyone else who have more regular direct contact on issues - complete with empirical experience, and so on. (Maybe she gaffed her line, which read "80"? I doubt it.)
Comparing it to the other TOS episode that went back to the 1960s for historical research, this one pales.
It wasn't a show that was on and got cancelled, it never existed in the first place.Primarily because it didn’t.
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You do have a point there. Gilligan's Island, Lost in Space, The Brady Bunch. As T.S Elliot said, "TV is a vast wasteland."It could absolutely have worked as a series. I'm not sure why so many people think it wouldn't...have you seen some of the crappy shows that have run for multiple years?!![]()
It's basically THE MAN FROM UNCLE meets THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL. Seems like a good premise for a sixties action series.
Spy-fi stuff was popular in the sixties. No reason it couldn't have run as long as THE MAN FROM UNCLE, THE AVENGERS, or at least as long as THE PRISONER.
It's basically THE MAN FROM UNCLE meets THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL. Seems like a good premise for a sixties action series.
I wonder if they'd have brought in aliens. I sure hope so.
Agreed, but I feel the template for "Assignment: Earth" would have been best served as a 90 minute TV movie, with the door open for a sequel TV movie. The concept was strong enough for single movie stories, but i'm not sure it would survive the demands of a then typical 26 - 30 episode season format.
Being a Stat Trek spin-off (and considering Gary Seven's origin), one would would expect aliens to appear more than few times (being a sci-fi / espionage series), but my fear is that the series would end up leaning too much in the direction of Quinn Martin's The Invaders (ABC, 1967-68), with earth-bound protagonists fighting a threat unknown to the general public. That worked for the somewhat underrated Quinn Martin series, but it would hang a "ripoff" sign around the neck of Roddenberry's show airing in the same era.
Agreed. "Assignment: Earth" had the sort of superhero flair of Airwolf or Knight Rider. If the hero has superlative powers, the more extreme the enemies or challenges need to be to make a suitably engaging and suspenseful story. For Airwolf there were only a small fraction of episodes in seasons 1 and 2 worth bringing in "the Lady." The others became silly or juvenile, like a hero of Superman's capabilities fighting common crime in one city. In the case of Knight Rider, it was juvenile from the start—the technology available to Knight Industries deployed in a car.The concept was strong enough for single movie stories, but i'm not sure it would survive the demands of a then typical 26 - 30 episode season format.
It wouldn't have been the only time a series was in a different continuity from its pilot
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