My winner, therefore, logically arrived at, is "The Way to Eden". And it wins, ultimately, for one reason...I HATE HIPPIES!!


My winner, therefore, logically arrived at, is "The Way to Eden". And it wins, ultimately, for one reason...I HATE HIPPIES!!
Up to this point, I'd think you'd been pumped full of cordrazine.
You're more forgiving than I am.
Honestly, with the exception of my three least faves, all of those eps still feel like Trek. They may have a bad story or bad execution, but I can still enjoy them or pieces of them.
The bottom three are like lousy fan fic.
Hate is illogical, unless you meant it as a little joke.My winner, therefore, logically arrived at, is "The Way to Eden". And it wins, ultimately, for one reason...I HATE HIPPIES!!
Up to this point, I'd think you'd been pumped full of cordrazine.
You're more forgiving than I am.
Honestly, with the exception of my three least faves, all of those eps still feel like Trek. They may have a bad story or bad execution, but I can still enjoy them or pieces of them.
The bottom three are like lousy fan fic.
Am I to understand that you see some value in "And the Children Shall Lead?"
If so, please do share
Hate is illogical, unless you meant it as a little joke.My winner, therefore, logically arrived at, is "The Way to Eden". And it wins, ultimately, for one reason...I HATE HIPPIES!!
Extremely little if so, Teach.
BWAHAHAHAHAHAH!
Hate is illogical, unless you meant it as a little joke.My winner, therefore, logically arrived at, is "The Way to Eden". And it wins, ultimately, for one reason...I HATE HIPPIES!!
Extremely little if so, Teach.
BWAHAHAHAHAHAH!
Even if Way to Eden was the absolute worst episode, which it isn't, Deborah Downey raises the grade by being the loveliest Trek guest star ever.
Even beating Helen Noel. I find that hard to believe.
Impossible!! Then again I sort of worship at the altar of The Great Noel, so maybe I'm just a little biased towards her!!Even beating Helen Noel. I find that hard to believe.
As do any sentient sexual beings.I sort of worship at the altar of The Great Noel
And Barbara Babcock is hot!"Plato's Stepchildren" - err...umm...I can't think of anything. Oh wait, Michael Dunn is cool.
I never understood why Melvin Belli took part in this. The man was hugely influential in the field of tort practice. He was obviously highly intelligent, and the new techniques he brought to the courtroom even indicate a fine sense of showmanship.Here's a good way to approach this question.
Suppose you're introducing a friend to TOS; they've never seen a single episode. Which ones would you avoid at all costs? The top (or bottom) two are: "And The Children Shall Lead" and "Plato's Stepchildren". They are both just plain embarrassing and there's little point in watching either of them.
Look, even the really bad episodes (like "The Alternative Factor") have some redeeming qualities...like an interesting guest star, some unusual sets, a different alien ship, or a new special effect. "The Alternative Factor" and "Spock's Brain" had all of these. While I appreciate the acting ability of Michael Dunn, he is the only thing good about "Plato's Stepchildren".
"And The Children Shall Lead" has the WORST guest cast of any Trek episode! A bunch of bratty kids (worse than "Miri"!) and an annoying attorney with bad skin. Yechh.
"The Way to Eden" - good episode for Chekov
"Plato's Stepchildren" - For years, Trekkies pointed to Kirk and Uhura's kiss as the first ever interracial kiss in network television history. That's since been refuted, but "Plato's Stepchildren" can still lay claim to the title of first ever interracial BDSM scene in network television history.
People like to try to discredit that kiss and claim that since the actors weren't REALLY kissing on set and were only pretending to kiss, that it doesn't count as the first interracial kiss on television. This is utter nonsense; it doesn't matter whether the actors were pretending or not - that's WHAT HAPPENS IN A TV SHOW. The point is what is being represented on screen, whether the actors are actually doing it or not. In which case, the kiss in "Plato's Stepchildren" truly IS the first interracial kiss in film and TV history."Plato's Stepchildren" - For years, Trekkies pointed to Kirk and Uhura's kiss as the first ever interracial kiss in network television history. That's since been refuted, but "Plato's Stepchildren" can still lay claim to the title of first ever interracial BDSM scene in network television history.
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