While I initially didn't care about early TNG it did have folks interested and talking Trek. Indeed at the time TNG helped make Trek more mainstream (for good and ill) and somewhat less ghetto-ized in the broader public consciousness.
Since then I've grown to see that while early TNG isn't good tv overall I find more redeeming things in it than all the Trek that followed.
Now...this isn't me...I just found it somewhere and kept it for the sheer quantity of AWESOMENESS on so many levels that it contains.
And now I share it with you all...
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Is that beautiful or what?
-Rabittooth
Are those pants cordoroy?
Of course they are. That photo is just teeming over with period-specific geektastic details.I wish we could see the footwear.
That's a great pic.Wow that brought back so many memories
I too grew up in Mississauga and toronto trek 76 was the first con I ever attended. I followed GLW around like a puppy dog for days, I was in an elevator with George Takei and he couldn't find his floor, Walter Koenig was being hounded by a gaggle of girls one night-fun times.
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I'm rather irritated that I can't find my fifth grade school picture, with me in my blue Star Trek jacket (the one available via that offer in all the AMT models). It was missing the sciences insignia by that point, but still had the two white stripes on the sleeves, and I had the cockiest expression on my face.
I'm gonna have do some digging for that picture...
a starfleet insignia I made out of cardboard
My first Trek memory was in '66, or '67 in the 2nd grade (during the first season). I wanted to make my eyebrows like Spock's, so I took my father's razor and began cutting. There wasn't much left when I was caught, so I never finished. I don't remember how I explained what happened when I went back to school, but I did get a lot of stares.
Oh, there was plenty to buy, just none of it commercial (and yes, I have Bjo's original fanzine Concordance...and the third season supplement). At the door memberships for the 1973 NY Trekcon were $5 (less in advance). That was my first convention.
Amazingly, by 1975 I was running a convention. But that's another story.
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