"And The Children Shall Lead" sounds too psychodelic to my modern ears, too.

"And The Children Shall Lead" sounds too psychodelic to my modern ears, too.
I'd have to say Naked Time made the least sense.....
Yeah, exactly. I like the episode title more than the actual episode.Frankly, "For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky" is nicely poetic, and vastly preferable to the one word titles that became de rigeur on later Treks.
Wrong word order. It's "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", from the nursery rhyme that answers that question with "Sugar and spice and everything nice." So there's a wicked irony to the title, given that the "little girls" here are made of rather more disquieting ingredients.
No, it isn't. "Syndrome" means a group of symptoms that indicate an abnormal condition. That abnormal condition can involve the immune system as much as anything else. AIDS is an immunity syndrome -- an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, to be precise, a set of symptoms resulting from immune-system failure. Arthritis is an autoimmune disorder where the body's immune system attacks its own tissues.The Immunity Syndrome- Seemed a bit of an oxymoron
When what it's actually asking is the reverse, "Is there no beauty in truth?" Out of context, it could be taken to mean "Is there truly no such thing as beauty?", which is what I used to think it meant. But the full quote from George Herbert is, "Who says that fictions only and false hair / Become a verse? Is there in truth no beauty?" I.e. "Can't the truth be just as beautiful as an illusion?"Is there in Truth no Beauty?- I read it as "Is there no truth in beauty?" every damn time.
You have to admit that the titles were improved over time:
1. Charlie's Law --> Charlie X
2. The Unreal McCoy --> The Man Trap
3. The Last Gunfight --> Spectre of the Gun
Wish I knew more of the working titles.
You have to admit that the titles were improved over time:
1. Charlie's Law --> Charlie X
2. The Unreal McCoy --> The Man Trap
3. The Last Gunfight --> Spectre of the Gun
Wish I knew more of the working titles.
Besides, anything to do with cats is automatically fine art.![]()
I'd have to say Naked Time made the least sense.....
^Why? As I said above, "The Naked Time" means the time when the crew's innermost selves were stripped bare, exposed for all to see. It makes perfect sense as a metaphor.
>"Operation: Annihilate" is an apt title.
But remember - it's not "Operation: Annihilate." It's "Operation-Annihilate!" The use of the dash instead of the colon and the exclamation point make the cheese factor.
Frankly, "For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky" is nicely poetic, and vastly preferable to the one word titles that became de rigeur on later Treks.
Is there in Truth no Beauty?- I read it as "Is there no truth in beauty?" every damn time.
I'd have to say Naked Time made the least sense.....
That title made it sound like a time-travel story, instead of Kirk, Spock and some babe having their bodies taken over by non-corporeal lifeforms.Return to Tomorrow -- would we all like that
On the contrary, the title is too vague. A character could be obsessed with anything -- destroying a vampire cloud, killing a giant white whale, or catching a road runner.Obsession -- no real mystery to what the episode was going to be about.
Yes, the metaphorical meaning of "naked" is pretty clear, I think.The time when people's inner selves are stripped bare.Naked Time -- Time needs to have clothing?
You have to admit that the titles were improved over time:
1. Charlie's Law --> Charlie X
2. The Unreal McCoy --> The Man Trap
3. The Last Gunfight --> Spectre of the Gun
Wish I knew more of the working titles.
“The Galileo Seven... Make That Six... Uh, Five...” ➔ “The Galileo Seven”
“Laugh It Up, Fuzzballs!” ➔ “The Trouble With Tribbles”
“Qualcomm Stadium” ➔ “Arena”
“Spock’s Beard” ➔ “Mirror, Mirror”
Worst title: Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country
They should have called it Star Trek V: The Undiscovered Country and let us forget that The Final Frontier ever existed.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.