• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Family Memories Involving TOS?

Shatmandu

Vice Admiral
Admiral
Hiya, folks.

Got any family memories involving TOS?

Trek was on after school (followed by The Rockford Files) and on Sunday before church on Channel 13 out of Indianapolis. My older brothers and I watched it most days. I still associate Miri with a sleepy Sunday morning.

We had a tree out front that was the Enterprise. A rope hanging down was the Transporter. When our "Transporter" broke on my brother Danny one day, leaving him with a bruised ass instead of splitting him in two, he cut it into little pieces. Not very Scotty was Danny.

And when I was very young, those two pricks would wait until the third act was over, when all hope was lost, and tell me, "This is the last one ever filmed. They all die at the end."

In anguish, I'd steel myself and watch the rest, astonished when the laughing and pointing at Spock would happen.

How about you?

Joe, older now
 
I remember watching it just before bedtime. I remember thinking Captain Kirk was dreamy (hell, I was only 6). I didn't like the boy who could roll his eyes back into his head and had superpowers.

I should add that, as with all US imports, we could never understand why there was a dramatic build up and the screen would go blank and then a reprise of the dramatic build up again. That's the downside of having TV channels with no commercial breaks.
 
I only saw a bit of ST once during its initial run. We were visiting my Dad's family in Wisconsin. Visiting my aunt, who had one of the first color TVs I think I had seen, we came across the conference room scene from BoT (where Spock waves around the shard of material). I think my aunt asked if I wanted to watch it, but I said no, and we changed to something else. I would have have been around 8 years old.

It wasn't until several years later, when the reruns were airing after school, that I fell in love with ST. Of course, that was on our B&W TV. It wasn't until years after that, when I had my first color TV as an adult, that I could enjoy full episodes in color.

Doug
 
My whole Star Trek fandom conversion is my grandfather's fault. Back in 1975, we'd just got cable TV, and he was "trying out the new channels." One afternoon he was watching Star Trek, and I wanted to change the channel (I thought anything that had a guy with pointed ears in it had to be beyond stupid).

My grandfather told me to be quiet or leave the room -- he wasn't going to allow me to change the channel. So I sat, watched the show, and at the end I figured, "This wasn't too bad. Maybe tomorrow's show will be interesting, too."

That first episode I saw was "By Any Other Name." Less than two weeks later, I bought the Blish episode adaptations (#4 and #6), and nearly 33 years later, my grandfather's ghost is probably wondering why he ever refused to let me change the channel, as he eventually got tired of me always watching "that damn silly Star Trek." :guffaw:
 
I started watching it in middle school, after discovering the Blish books that my friend had. Star Trek was on from 5-6 PM every day. Mom would (grudgingly,) let me watch it. But we ate promptly at 6 PM every day, not 5:58, not 6:02 so inevitably, at 5 to 6 it would be:

Mom: Bon, set the table!
Bon: But MOMMMMM, the best part is on!
Mom: Set the table NOW!

I'd set the table at warp speed. Like two minutes after 6 would have killed my parents. :p

And in junior high, girls did sleepovers. The two of us who were the leaders of my small group of buddies were Trekkies. So we all "played" Star Trek. It was kind of a roleplaying thing, we'd act out scenarios.

My junior high yearbook inscriptions from friends refer to Star Trek and our roleplaying. :D
 
Dad used to quiz me over who was who when I was a little kid. Even by the age of five, I knew the 'Red Shirt Curse,' so I usually mistook Scotty for a normal Red Shirt. After all, he didn't look like the Scotty from the movies!
 
The first time I ever saw ST, I was five and a half years old and sitting between my parents in their bedroom while we watched it on our little black-and-white TV. I'd seen an ad for it a couple of nights before, and it's possible they let me stay up to watch it (it was past my bedtime then) because of the curiosity I showed. At the time, I didn't know anything about outer space. I thought the Enterprise was a weird plane that flew around at night. I thought the "planets" they beamed down to were islands or something. I didn't know what to make of those gray balls they circled around (B&W TV, remember?)

It wasn't long thereafter that I discovered the animated ST, then in its network run. I have a vague recollection of my mother coming out into the backyard to tell me that ST was on in the daytime too as a cartoon.

Within a few years, I had many of the Mego action figures and the bridge playset. My sister and I would watch the show together and play with the toys. (This was before she got older and decided to be pretentious and put ST down as silly kid stuff. Somehow she never saw the contradiction in loving Doctor Who at the same time. I guess she figured that was classier because of the English accents.) I remember we referred to the "Galileo Seven" creatures as "gorilly-monsters." I still think of them that way. I also seem to remember undressing the Uhura doll a few times, perhaps out of vague curiosity about the different anatomy, but I was too young for it to have much impact on me, especially given the doll's lack of anatomical correctness. Come to think of it, I probably removed and replaced the clothes on all the figures, just out of my natural inclination to take things apart and see how they worked, but it's the Uhura image that's stuck with me more....

Tragically, when I was ten, we moved, and I somehow lost the one box that held all my best toys, including my Trek toys and the model train set I'd only had for six months. I still get depressed over that. I'm tempted to buy the new recreations of the Mego toys, but I fear it wouldn't be quite the same somehow.
 
Hmm, I got into Trek proper in August 1972 when I was nine, but my first "fleeting" memory was probably 1967, during its initial run.

My dad was was sitting in an easy chair; it may have been one of the two Danish modern chairs I still own. On the B/W screen (we didn't get a color set until September of 1969) I saw this "circular" object, almost a kind of "ring". No, it wasn't the famous "Guardian" because it was surrounded by blackness and it "grew", slowly filling the screen. Being only four, I hd no clear understanding what it was, but the "thrumming, beating" music instilled a mounting unease within me. Though looking like no animal I ever saw, I just knew it was somehow, alive, hungry, and if I didn't do something, it would eat me. As the the trumpets blared I finally panicked and ducked behind my father's chair, believing I had hidden from the "monster". I screamed for my father to protect me, to save me from the "thing" that would surely devour me.

Yep, it was "The Trouble with Tribbles".

OK, OK, obviously I had seen one of the effects sequences from "The Doomsday Machine". Like I said, I was too young to comprehend what it really was, either within context of the story or the reality of television production, but Fred Steiner's (or was it Sol Kaplan's) music certainly worked upon the primitive reptilian "fight or flight" centers of my wee lil' brain. I can't listen to John Williams' "Jaws" theme without comparing it to the score from "...Machine". Some of the chords are practically identical.

Fast forward to August '72. My father and I had just moved into a new apartment complex, several sections of it still being constructed. One day my father told me he had seen a couple of boys roughly my age playing at the edge of one construction area. I went to introduce myself as they played with their Tonka trucks, the original stamped metal designs, not these wimpy "child safe" pliable plastic models. As we chatted one of the boys, Kyle, asked me if I knew about Star Trek. I nodded that I had seen it once or twice, but at that time, I was more into the various Irwin Allen series, particularly "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea". Kyle asked if I would be willing to play the role of "Spock" to his "Kirk" as I was a couple of inches taller than he and had near black hair. I agreed, but I said he'd need to provide some background. Kyle proceeded to describe the basic concept of the show and characters as well as a near eight year old understood. Since the series had recently started its many years long run in syndication, I got a "crash course" in the series when Kyle came to watch the show with me at my apartment or when I visited his place.

Soon, I was trying to arch my eyebrow as Kyle performed his latest feat of daring do to save the "ship". Flair felt-tip markers became our phasers, his mother's spent makeup compacts became our communicators. I found a protective case for a pair of binoculars which served as my tricorder. I had (and still own) a "knock-off" tulip chair which I claimed for my "science station". Most of the apartments had a hanging globe lamp equiped with dimmers. Set really low so to just radiate a faint ambiant glow, those hanging lamps became the "planets" around which we "orbited" our AMT Enterprise models. My, or rather, my father's apartment had a full laundry room, so the washing machine and dryer became the engine room "controls". The public laundry-mats turned into alien computer centers, much to the annoyance of renters trying to wash their clothes. Whenever one of us bought and assembled a new Enterprise kit, the older version had selective regions of its hull "phasered" by kitchen matches to become the wrecked Constellation. An outlet for a storm sewer at the far end of the complex turned into an all-purpose "lagoon" for whatever licensed property we enacted, be it "Trek", "Voyage...Sea", "Planet of the Apes", etc.

It sure was fun to be a "latch door" kid during the early '70s. Sadly, nowdays some "do gooder" would probably have charged our parents with "neglect", but we could have done far worse. As it was, we did nothing more terrible than pretending to "phaser" passing cars (our Klingon ships) with water pistols (the wimpy kind that squirt about two feet...when the wind was good).

So actually, I got into Trek so to have a common interest with someone whom I wanted to be my friend. The fannish obsession onto itself came later. ;)

Sincerely,

Bill
 
When I was a teen in the 70s, Trek was on WPIX in the NY area at 6PM. My mother's mother had passed away, and her father decided to move in with us. The problem was that neither I nor my father could stand the bigoted old coot. My escape from the daily tension of the dinner table was "Star Trek is on!" and I'd take my dinner in the living room and eat on a snack tray while Trek drowned out Grampy's nightly tirade on the state of the world.

Dad really hated that I did that. And he couldn't. :)

One evening, my grandfather came into the living room and sat down to watch Trek with me after he finished dinner. Not 5 minutes went by when he suddenly declared, in his Brooklyn accent, "Dat dere, John, is whatcha call yer imPOSSible!!"

:vulcan:

I couldn't grow up and move outta that house fast enough.
 
My family was never into scifi or Star Trek but I do remember one incident when I was in grade school. It was in the afternoon after school and I was over at my grandparents watching the daily reruns (again). Both grandparents usually sat in their recliners reading books or doing crosswords or something while I indulged in my Trek for the day. I suppose I should relate that my grandmother was fighting cancer at the time and even with one of the top 3 doctors in the country at the time, the diagnosis wasn't optimistic. Anyway, my grandfather never really paid attention to the show and was always reading but one day my grandmother was teasing him about not reading like he usually did. He claimed that he actually got interested in this particular show and thought he'd see it through. So it always stood out to me as a fond family memory concerning Star trek. If you're curious, the episode's name was "For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky." I can't help but feel that it might have helped my grandfather REALLY appreciate those last 4 years before she passed on.
 
Mum remembered Star Trek from years ago, probably when it was first run in the UK. So I can thank her for introducing me to it back in the 80s, when the BBC were the only channel showing it in the UK. I remember the episode too, Return of the Archons.

At the time I thought I was the only one who watched it, along with all the other tea time shows on the BBC. Channel 2, 6pm, The Man From Uncle, Buck Rodgers, The Invaders and of course, Star Trek. I remember Mum and Dad catching The Wrath of Khan in the caravan on a black and banning me from watching the whole thing because of the damned eel larvae :lol:

When I found out that this was actually a big thing and they even had books about other adventures, I was staggered! :eek::p
 
...I remember Mum and Dad catching The Wrath of Khan in the caravan on a black...

'Ello, Squire. I'm savvy to most of your English lingo, but this one threw me for a loop. I understand a caravan is what we call a van; but what's "on a black"? Were they at a drive-in theatre?

Thanks,
Doug
 
When the original shows were first run, my mom and dad watched semi-regularly, but never could convince me to join them. I didn't pick up on it until the syndication and the first movies.
 
My Dad, a lifelong scifi fan, turned my brother and I onto TOS as soon as we started watching TV. Day of the Dove is the first TV show I can clearly remember watching. I grew up in NY, so WPIX ran TOS at 6pm every night for years and years. Later, when we got cable and I was a teenager, our cable gave us acces to WVIA in Scranton/Wilkes Barre/Hazelton PA, which ran 3 unedited TOS eps back to back staring at around 11:30pm on sat nights and we would all stay up to watch (and tape) them. It was great bonding for the 3 of us, and we all still talk trek all the time. I have participated in the IAW auctions and have won a nice selection of costumes, which my dad and bro are dying to see the next time they visit me.
 
Yeah...in the 70's Trek was on at 6pm in NY. My Dad and Mom were both Nurses (as I am today) and my Dad worked Dayshift and my Mom worked Eves.
I remember my Dad used to take the small B&W TV we had and actually put it on the kitchen table so we could watch Trek while we ate.
Something my Mom would never do...tv during meals was out as far as she was concerned. :lol:
So yeah...that was a cool little bonding type experience between me and my Dad. I remember eating alot of chicken cutlets, rice and canned corn... which was pretty much all he was any good at making back then. :rolleyes:

-Rabittooth
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top