You didn't answer his question. How does being a rebelious child preclude Kirk from becoming a "stack of books with legs" as an instructor at the Academy? When did Star Trek ever say that young Kirk was always a good student and happy teenager?Because the James Dean Kirk that jumps out of a car just before it plummets off of a cliff, and is doing nothing but rebelling everywhere including happily climbing onto ships he's not supposed to be on, is not a stack of books teacher that needs help becoming the James T. Kirk we all know by having a blond lab assistant sent his way.
So? Could you point me to the episode where we learn that Kirk never drove a car over a cliff? Or the one where he recalls his blissful childhood? I think I missed those.
Uh... which part of what I wrote don't you get, the English, or... the English?
We don't know when Kirk was Mitchell's instructor. Mitchell could have been in Command School when Lieutenant Kirk was his instructor. Kirk may have matured and "settled down" by that time. Perhaps this film documents that "maturity process".
...and, like Franklin and others have said, this is perhaps all happening in an altered timeline and thus things are different (but I hope this isn't the case.)
EDIT TO ADD:
I never took Mitchell's line about the blonde lab technician to mean that Kirk needed help with women...Just because Mitchell set Kirk up with this woman doesn't mean that Kirk "Needed help" in getting women to date him.
I suppose this goes to show how different people can translate what they see on screen in different ways.
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