This was touched upon when "The Leader" (say it in German) told Chekov's girlfriend that the sonics would harm no one, and then turned to another of his followers and confessed that the sonics would kill everyone. Later of course it turns out the promised land was a toxic environment.It never successfully explores the idea of countercultures or the idea of a charismatic leader co-opting the movement for his/her own ends.
They should have gone back to the time portal from COTEOF and traveled back in time again.
And you would think that by the third season, Kirk, having been burned by Khan and Lazarus and about every other guest he's brought on board, would have learned his lesson and at least posted guards in the ship's vital locations.
Duly noted, Ensign.They should have gone back to the time portal from COTEOF and traveled back in time again.
The animated series did this and had their best episode!
We never learnt much about the crew
TOS was always about the mission, but it would have been nice to learn a little about the people on it along the way. Why did Kirk, Scotty, Uhura and Sulu join Starfleet? What about McCoy's divorce?
I agree, it would've been cool to delve into the lives and history of the characters a bit more.
I also would have liked to have seen some more backstory, in general. More details and explanations about the Federation, it's inner workings, and perhaps more about the major member races.
The biggest missed opportunity I can think of is the lack of a fourth season.
It's been mentioned in other threads before and I'm surprised no one has mentioned it yet. Saucer separation of a starship from its secondary hull.
I'd loved to have seen some other ship classes, not just the Connies.
The visual effect of saucer separation would probably have been impossible given what they had to work with, and I can’t think of any reason for it other than that it looks kØØl. They were concerned with telling a good story, not dazzling viewers with special effects. Do you think saucer separation have provided us with better stories, or do you just wish you could have seen the neato effect?
I think it is more like the society that has become completely dependent on the control computer.I think this is a myth that somehow got started and everyone has just accepted. I don't see how this could have been initially meant to be a comedy because there's a damned good SF story at the heart of the episode.
"Find the dude's brain and put it back in?"
Because in their day, the rubber rocks and the rubber aliens were pretty darn cool, while TV's interpretation of contemporary popular music has always been lame.But I like Way to Eden, so I can't really talk. There's much to like in it. If we can ignore the rubber rocks and rubber Gorn, why can't we ignore cheesy space hippie music and lingo? There's much to like in the story. Plus, nobody's walking around without a brain.
Joan Baez appeared (and sang!) in an episode of "Fame" - the one where the students were protesting having the ROTC on campus. The students held a sit-in in the lobby of the school, and Joan Baez came down and joined them after hearing about it on the news.Joan Baez doesn't do TV or movies, and would never have done Star Trek, especially an episode so insulting as 'The Way To Eden'.This episode was a missed opportunity, the problem wasn't so much the story itself as it was the execution, the production. I understand how, given the time period, TPTB wanted to do a hippie episode, but hippie terrorists? Think how much better this story would have aged if the music had been jazz or blues."This Way to Eden"
Better still if the hippie singer casted had been Joan Baez.
All he had to do was ask Spock himself if it was true:It was Jellico's contention that Kirk was making things up. IIRC, he said something like, "Oh come on! His ship was eaten by a space ameoba? Aliens stole his First Officer's brain?".![]()
A story which had already been done how many times in Trek? Anybody have the time to count them?I think it is more like the society that has become completely dependent on the control computer.I think this is a myth that somehow got started and everyone has just accepted. I don't see how this could have been initially meant to be a comedy because there's a damned good SF story at the heart of the episode.
"Find the dude's brain and put it back in?"
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