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What's with all the "view masters"

Gotham Central

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Were "view-masters" in common usage in the 1960s? Why where there so many of them on the original series? Why did Spock have to stand up and look into one to get basic information when he had plenty of display screens near him. They even had those odd hand held versions...why?
 
Because as a prop the "viewmaster" was able to provide whatever info spock was able to describe with no costly optical inserts etc.
 
Because as a prop the "viewmaster" was able to provide whatever info spock was able to describe with no costly optical inserts etc.

Exactly. The most likely answer to any question about television or film is "money." Having a character look at a display on a viewscreen requires a costly special effect. Having him look into a hooded viewer and describe what he sees requires only the cost of a light bulb inside the viewer.
 
Annnnd...it's more interesting, because the graphics he's viewing never go out of date.
 
I always wondered if Nimoy ever complained about the light inside. If he had to do a couple of takes, I could see his eyes getting irritated. I know mine would.
 
Because as a prop the "viewmaster" was able to provide whatever info spock was able to describe with no costly optical inserts etc.

Exactly. The most likely answer to any question about television or film is "money." Having a character look at a display on a viewscreen requires a costly special effect. Having him look into a hooded viewer and describe what he sees requires only the cost of a light bulb inside the viewer.

Plus, it lets the audience imagine a little bit, even if they don't know they are. I - as a seven year old viewing the original syndication run - wanted REALLY badly to know/see what Spock saw. It was visceral if illogical.
 
I always wondered if Nimoy ever complained about the light inside. If he had to do a couple of takes, I could see his eyes getting irritated. I know mine would.

Nimoy was cast in the role due to his transparent nictitating membrane that protects his eyes from harsh light. :vulcan: ;)
 
Were "view-masters" in common usage in the 1960s? Why where there so many of them on the original series?

Mmmmmmm.... If Spock was watching View-Masters every episode, how come he was caught by surprise by "The Omega Glory" or "Mr Spock's Time Trek" ("Yesteryear"), or the returns of V'ger and Khan? :rommie:

http://therinofandor.blogspot.com/2007/07/deja-view-master-ive-long-wanted-to-do.html

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Don't be silly Therin. Those only exist in OUR reality. Star Trek is real ELSEWHERE, where Earth HAD no View Master sets based on Star Trek.

They did have some really good Galaxy Quest ones, tho'. :p
 
I always wondered if Nimoy ever complained about the light inside. If he had to do a couple of takes, I could see his eyes getting irritated. I know mine would.

Working in film or television means having blinding stage lights shining in your face for several hours a day on a daily basis. That little bulb inside the hooded viewer was probably gentle in comparison.
 
I always wondered if Nimoy ever complained about the light inside. If he had to do a couple of takes, I could see his eyes getting irritated. I know mine would.

Working in film or television means having blinding stage lights shining in your face for several hours a day on a daily basis. That little bulb inside the hooded viewer was probably gentle in comparison.

Knowing the cast and crew's propensity for practical jokes, I wonder how often the "view-master" was a target. I would have put all kinds of things in there.
 
Because as a prop the "viewmaster" was able to provide whatever info spock was able to describe with no costly optical inserts etc.

Exactly!

I've always thought that the bridge of the Romulan ship in "Balance Of Terror" was one of the most clever things that Jefferies ever did on the series. Built within the budget of a single episode, he leveraged the lack of money and resources into the creation of a stylish, claustrophic set - and there's not a visible instrument or display on the set! Just a few guys staring into Spock-type viewers at light bulbs. :lol:
 
I always wondered if Nimoy ever complained about the light inside. If he had to do a couple of takes, I could see his eyes getting irritated. I know mine would.

Working in film or television means having blinding stage lights shining in your face for several hours a day on a daily basis. That little bulb inside the hooded viewer was probably gentle in comparison.


This may be apocrophyl, but I believe I read that one of the reasons the most famous red-shirt of them all, Eddie Paskey, stopped working on the show in third season, was because the stage lights were giving him debilitating migraines.

As a sufferer of migraines myself, I can empathize with that.
 
"Enterprise" had the same type of viewer, but they ruined the mystery by showing what T'Pol was seeing.
 
I always wondered if Nimoy ever complained about the light inside. If he had to do a couple of takes, I could see his eyes getting irritated. I know mine would.

Nimoy was cast in the role due to his transparent nictitating membrane that protects his eyes from harsh light. :vulcan: ;)
Hah! I should've expected that. You made me chuckle, for sure. :p

I always wondered if Nimoy ever complained about the light inside. If he had to do a couple of takes, I could see his eyes getting irritated. I know mine would.

Working in film or television means having blinding stage lights shining in your face for several hours a day on a daily basis. That little bulb inside the hooded viewer was probably gentle in comparison.
You speak the truth. Then perhaps the question should be asked: did Nimoy prefer to spend a couple of takes gazing into the viewer? Sounds like it may be the lesser of two evils, after all.
 
Knowing the cast and crew's propensity for practical jokes, I wonder how often the "view-master" was a target. I would have put all kinds of things in there.

The first thirty times i saw the infamous ST bloopers, they were of such poor quality that it took a much cleaner print, and a 31st viewing, before I realised that Spock (from "The Naked Now") is "watching" Vina as an Orion (from "The Menagerie") in his little hooded viewer - and getting sweaty palms from doing so.

Ah, and you've reminded me! I once wrote and directed a Star Trek fanfilm called "Perfect Botch", in which a dating gameshow sent Spock and T'Pring on their free honeymoon. We had our "Spock" on the beach, reading a book called "Logic Made Less Simple", but - unseen by the audience - the book opened out to a full-frontal nude male centerfold, and our poor straight actor had to pretend he was reading a logic text for the camera.
 
Don't be silly Therin. Those only exist in OUR reality. Star Trek is real ELSEWHERE, where Earth HAD no View Master sets based on Star Trek.

They did have some really good Galaxy Quest ones, tho'. :p

Didn't they have viewmasters until Nero went back in time and changed the timeline? But maybe that wasn't the prime timeline we know and love. The viewmasters on the Kelvin look different, after all . . . .
 
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