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Missing 32" Enterprise finally found...

Yeah, Solow also claims that Solow got rid of the vocals in the main titles AFTER season 1, as a cost saving measure. Except season 1 doesn't have vocals. Season 2 and 3 do!

Snopes.com has the "Courage left Star Trek after season one because of Rodenberry" BS.

I forget if Cushman repeats this nonsense. I know he says the end of A Private Little War was especially written for the episode by Fred Steiner. Which is wrong on both counts. Courage wrote it, but not specifically for that episode or any other episode. It was written for wherever they could use it.
 
OT, but is it documented that both Courage and Steiner ghostwrite some music for STTMP?

Yup. Courage wrote and arranged the Captain's Logs music (and was a regular arranger for both Goldsmith and John Williams) and Steiner wrote several cues including when the Enterprise first encounters Vejur and the last cue of the film with the crew on the bridge.
 
Yeah. For most of my life, I was buying all the Star Trek music I could get my hands on, but I instinctively skipped that CD, and it seems my instincts were good.
I see your hand and raise you…this:
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A judge ruled on Monday that the 33" Enterprise model is officially the property of Rod Roddenberry, dismissing the claims of the plaintiffs.


A shame the reporter didn't bother to even get a picture of an Enterprise for the article, but it is what it is. Very glad to see this saga has come to a satisfactory conclusion.
 
Just one more reason to NOT look for this stuff. I mean unless you really just love Star Trek. And that was obviously getting the job done. (<-- YES that's sarcasm.)
 
I am sure good folks do go to estate sales... otherwise things could end up in the trash. Sorry for venting.

One individual at Hobbytalk died and his sister threw everything out--as happened to Warped9's computer. I call it the Paul Allen Sister syndrome. Let a dude throw his sister's stuffed animals or costume jewelry out--oh, here hell come.

When my Dad passed, I gave his tools to a man who worked at ACIPCO Steel (an anvil).

I had a friend who really adored trains. It hurt me to do so--but I gave him my old Lionel set...and a CSX jacket my father was given just before retirement back in...88' I think.
 
^^ As I said before I don’t blame my sister, she didn’t do it on purpose. She was dealing with a lot and it was a mistake on her part. She is not that kind of person and she was very apologetic about it. Shit happens. I didn’t lose my shit over it.

Now if I’d been about 18, 22 or 25 and this happened… 😁

However, that night I lay in bed looking at the ceiling, thinking, “WTF!!!” 😆
 
I hate to think what little historical tidbits the next of kin of Chang, Jefferies, Theiss, etc. might have innocently thought were nothing. But what really makes me sad sometimes is how most of the original Stage 9 set was discarded or torn apart and recycled. Somewhere in a landfill in California there are probably hundreds of rocker switches, ice-cube-shaped resin buttons, and little blue fake intercoms. What I wouldn't give for half a handful of that TV history.

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Edit to add, this reminded me of a story just now. (It's the wrong franchise for this forum, but it's all I've got.) Years ago I worked for a company that was a Star Wars licensee, and the big boss had a meeting out at Skywalker Ranch. He asked a couple of us idiot youngsters if we wanted to come along (duh, YES), and we were treated to a tour of the Lucasfilm archives -- a barely-organized warehouse full of boxes and piles of movie props from probably every film George had made. I remember seeing flat cutouts of full-scale vintage cars used in Tucker. If you zoom this crappy old Polaroid photo, you just might be able to make out one or two of those car "standees" against the back wall. (I know some of the R2 units look pasted in, but this is the actual Polaroid I took all those years ago. Maybe some of the R2s in the back were also just standees? I can't remember; we were moving quickly to try to see everything in a short amount of time.) Anyway you can clearly see the generally haphazard storage system.

Multiple tier racks were full of various loose parts, and there was one small, weird-shaped piece of metal that the archive curator told us he'd never been able to identify. We recognized it as the cave-wall switch that Luke flung the rock against to bring the gate down on the Rancor. I wish I had thought to snap a picture of that, too, since it always seems to be the first thing I think of when this old memory occasionally flares up.

Anyway, the memory lesson for today, boys and girls, is that we hoarders are right! Never throw anything away if it looks like it could be something.
 
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