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Any other TOSers give up during the original run?

Admiral Buzzkill

Fleet Admiral
Admiral
The topic about abandoning Trek when things go awry from one's expectations reminded me of this.

Basically, I bailed on Star Trek midway through its second year on NBC. There were two reasons: disappointment with the show was one; an improved social life was the other. Midway through the second season this apartment complex near my house started hosting "record hops" in the evenings for the younger teens who lived in the buildings. I started going as the guest of a friend. I wouldn't go out if Star Trek was on.

After watching "Patterns Of Force" I decided I'd rather go try to talk to girls. I probably skipped half of the remaining second season shows.

We bought a color TV a few weeks before the third season of TOS premiered, so that got me back into the show for a few weeks - color is so ubiquitous now, it's probably hard to imagine but I'd never gotten a good look at Star Trek in color - no one I knew well had a color TV other than my grandparents. They lived in Stanaford, West Virginia and the reception from the NBC affiliate in Blue Plains was so awful that my couple of attempts to watch Trek in summer reruns down at their place were just frustrating.

Anyway, I stuck with Trek for a couple of weeks during the third year and then discovered Judd For The Defense. That was the end of Trek in first-run, for me.

I picked Trek up again and saw the remaining episodes a couple of years later, in syndication on Washington's WDCA 20. But by 1968, in first run it had become one of those shows I liked for a while and then got bored with.

You know, the other technology besides color that was missing at the time was any way to go back and watch the good episodes and thus renew one's enthusiasm for the whole thing - you could remember shows like "The Doomsday Machine" but you couldn't go back and appreciate them again for new facets. Once during the regular season and once during the summer and then - poof - they were gone.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

My family moved to Japan around the third season ( and with me being 10 years old, it was decided that I should go with them.) Does that count? ;)
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

So when did you see the rest?

BTW, how come you can edit the thread title in TNZ and not in this forum? I've got an extra "s" in "TOSers" up there.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

We returned to States in 1971 and Star Trek was in syndication by then. My Dad retired from the USAF, so we never left the USA again and I could watch all the Trek I wanted. As long as some station was broadcasting it.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

I was an instant fan of Trek TOS when it debuted in September 1966, and I stuck with it through all three seasons -- even though some of the second-season episodes were disappointing, and the third season was like watching a friend slowly wither away from some awful degenerative disease. Of course, at the time, I had no idea of the machinations behind the scenes -- NBC moving the show to the death slot of 10:00 pm Fridays, Gene Roddenberry making good on his threat to leave the show as line producer, and Fred "Tits in Space" Freiberger coming aboard.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

I found that preference for Judd because by the third year Star Trek had lost much of its sophistication about telling stories that related to real-world concerns, replacing it with simplistic allegories and polemics, and there was a good deal of the former going on in that long-forgotten legal drama on ABC.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

I barely remember it being on. The parents had TV control (one TV downstairs is all we had until around 1970 or so when we got a dinky B&W one for my brother's room, which he and I shared) and they didn't like Star Trek. I only saw a handful of eps in first run, less than a handful actually.

So I only really watched it regularly in first syndication. But I was hooked immediately when I started watching it. And even though some eps were lame, such as Way to Eden and such, I forgave the flaws 'cause it was Trek.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

When Trek premiered, it ran half-an-hour past the "TV off" time my parents had set for my younger brother and me. I watched weeks of the show halfway through, bugging my friends at school the next morning to tell me the rest of it and campaigning constantly at home for a Thursday night exception to the house rule. After a few weeks my Mom relented - I picked up the second half of the first month or two of episodes in summer reruns.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

You know, the other technology besides color that was missing at the time was any way to go back and watch the good episodes and thus renew one's enthusiasm for the whole thing - you could remember shows like "The Doomsday Machine" but you couldn't go back and appreciate them again for new facets. Once during the regular season and once during the summer and then - poof - they were gone.

An enterprising :rolleyes: friend of mine set up his Kodak Super-8 camera on a tripod in front of the TV, and filmed certain episodes on a time-delay setting. He could get an entire episode on 4 reels of film. He only did this for three or four episodes. When watched, they would be in "fast motion" and reminded me of old silent films. But that, along with cassette recordings of the soundtrack (lots of people did this) you sort of had a record of the episode. It was a pretty rudimentary way of recording the episodes but it was the best we could do.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

Wow. I used to occasionally make audio tapes of the episodes, but the only time I tried the Super-8 thing was for the movie "Planet Of The Apes" when it ran on CBS some years later. I still have the last half-hour of the thing in a metal can somewhere.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

It was barely worth watching after Yeoman Rand disappeared but I persevered.
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

When Trek premiered, it ran half-an-hour past the "TV off" time my parents had set for my younger brother and me.


Your parents were meanies.

No, they were responsible parents, and they limited our TV viewing accordingly. Thanks for your unsolicited judgment of my family, though - drop down to TNZ and I'll share a few of my own observations with you. ;)
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

Ah, watching half of the show. My parents did that with Sunday night's The FBI. It was so frustrating. Finally, we convinced them to let us watch the entire show and if we were absolutely quiet, we could watch that second half!

thumbtack, parents were stricter in the 1960s and early 1970s. In most houses of people I knew, TV watching was rationed for children and early teens. Parents thought it was better that we were reading or outside playing and I can't say that they were wrong. Kids were reasonably well-read and very few fat kids were in evidence. Kids were always in motion and no matter what bad stuff we ate or drank (like Kool-aid, basically flavored sugar water) we were slim.

Lots of kids would sneak out in the hall to watch at night, or lay on the floor next to the door of their bedroom to watch from a distance. Thrilling, but risky, as our butts would get tanned if we were caught! :lol:
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

Ah, watching half of the show. My parents did that with Sunday night's The FBI. It was so frustrating. Finally, we convinced them to let us watch the entire show and if we were absolutely quiet, we could watch that second half!

thumbtack, parents were stricter in the 1960s and early 1970s. In most houses of people I knew, TV watching was rationed for children and early teens. Parents thought it was better that we were reading or outside playing and I can't say that they were wrong. Kids were reasonably well-read and very few fat kids were in evidence. Kids were always in motion and no matter what bad stuff we ate or drank (like Kool-aid, basically flavored sugar water) we were slim.

Lots of kids would sneak out in the hall to watch at night, or lay on the floor next to the door of their bedroom to watch from a distance. Thrilling, but risky, as our butts would get tanned if we were caught! :lol:

In the early 1970's, I could only watch Star Trek on cable TV "Metromedia 11" from the Twin Cities. It was broadcast at 5:00, and there was NO WAY my dad would miss Walter Cronkhite at 5:30. With only one TV in the house, I missed a lot of 3rd and 4th acts. I finally solved the problem by offering to pay the cable bill ($6.50 a month) out of my paper route money. Dad agreed, not thinking I'd actually go through with it, but I did! And guess what, he then sat down every evening and watched Star Trek with me.

The main reason he bought a color TV in the first place was to watch Star Trek! I wonder if he forgot that.

Like you, we were limited in our TV watching hours. We were allowed three hours a day, maximum. That wasn't hard to manage, because it was pretty difficult to find three hours worth watching.
 
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Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

Your parents were meanies.

No, they were responsible parents, and they limited our TV viewing accordingly. Thanks for your unsolicited judgment of my family, though - drop down to TNZ and I'll share a few of my own observations with you. ;)


Would you make your kids get up and go to bed just as the Doomsday Machine was moving in for the kill? Actually, I guess that no longer applies since everything gets DVRd now. Spoiled kids today. Send them all to bed!
 
Re: Any other TOSsers give up during the original run?

Would you make your kids get up and go to bed just as the Doomsday Machine was moving in for the kill?

My parents generally were not watching television with us. I don't recall either of them being at all interested in Star Trek, and I don't think they considered TV watching to be an activity of any importance.
 
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