Puh-lease - I mean, who can get enough of "Line-by-line" threads? 

Well, in a sense. Adamski’s famous “UFO” photo is actually the top of a canister vacuum cleaner sitting on a chicken egg incubator — both of which may very well be patented.![]()
I wonder if the George Adamski saucer is patented or trademarked?
Some visual evidence from the 2 iconic serious Science fiction programs of the era..
(snip)The use of sets and designs was minimalistic in BOTH shows..
Here's a few more similar designs:
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First Spaceship on Venus (1960).
Doesn't minimalism imply intent? I assume jeffries and co. did as much as they could to simulate what they thought ship interiors, computers, etc. would really look like.
Computers in that day mid-60s were big, architecturally plain boxes with banks of blinking lights, right? Picture NASA's control room I grew up seeing every now an then, or their clean rooms (white guys in white suits with little furniture in a bright, white room).
I haven't read that article in eons, so maybe I am off on a wrong tack, but I think where Trek is minimalistic, it was not intentional artisitic choice (as it is in, say, Glass' music of the '80s), but result of budget constraint or modeling the future on the look of the present, as all sci fi does.
I haven't read that article in eons, so maybe I am off on a wrong tack, but I think where Trek is minimalistic, it was not intentional artisitic choice (as it is in, say, Glass' music of the '80s), but result of budget constraint or modeling the future on the look of the present, as all sci fi does.
I actually think the choice to paint the walls with light instead of chromatic paint WAS in part a budgetary choice. It's easier to make the same sets look different if you can change the color on the fly, and it's certainly cheaper to slap gels on some lights than to repaint the flats for a given scene.
I'd say their attempts at minimalism was as much an aesthetic choice as it was a budgetary one. After all, "Spectre of the Gun" could just as easily have been shot on a western backlot (Did Paramount still have the 40 Acres lot, or did they sell it off by this point?).
2. I am skeptical he chose to have simple looking sets, esp. some ship interiors and computer consoles, just to be simple.
3. "Minimalism" implies deliberately being simple as a reaction (rejection) of the more complex that came before.
4. Spectre is minimalist and surreal. I love it. Empath is minimalist, but the show wants you to believe the place "really" looks that way.
These are obviously exceptions to the overall look of the show.
According to Star Trek 365, the script that became "Spectre" was under consideration as early as the first season, but "traveling to a rented western town location was deemed too costly." I'm not sure why that would've been seen as costlier than shooting on the 40 Acres lot for "Miri" or "City on the Edge." Maybe they didn't think 40 Acres' Western-town section suited their needs.
Which meant they did a lot of bottle shows to save up for "The Paradise Syndrome".
DakotaSmith, thanks a lot for the Old Time Radio links.
Not a problem. I think any fan of SF should listen to Dimension X and X-Minus One. They were some of the best shows of the day, not to mention the best SF.
Our fathers' and now grandfathers' era of fan listened to these two shows just as religiously as we watch Doctor Who or Battlestar Galactica, after all. Even modern Star Trek, when it's been worth it ...
But the Internet Archive really is your friend if you're into OTR or want to hear more of it. Most of the shows are now in the public domain, which means the Archive has an enormous collection.
It's not all great. There was a lot of low-budget stuff produced with just an organ for music and one over-worked sound effects guy who was so dedicated that he rarely missed a cue. It's like any other medium, with it's crap along with its genius.
In fact, in the larger genre of OTR I'd categorize Dimension X and X-Minus One not as genius radio, but a solid, well-executed and produced stories. They always had an orchestra, they had well-thought-out sound effects that helped tell the story. A few of the episodes were great radio, but not all of them.
They didn't push any boundaries of the medium, but told great stories.
Dragnet, on the other hand, features some serious genius in action. I recommend any two-part episode you see.
There's always a good chance that any random episode will be pretty damned good radio -- but Webb knew a really good story when he saw one. The two-parters were all really good stories.
Try "The Big Man": Friday goes undercover for six months to break a narcotics ring. He completely insinuates himself into a local gang in part 1 (resulting in their apprehension), then goes onto an undercover surveilance detail to catch the kingpin in part 2.
Fantastic radio: if the seagulls don't convince you that Friday and his men are eating lunch at the coast, nothing will. Listen to the scene carefully (you'll know which one) and see everything Webb put into it. The location, the dialog (some of which is very minor personal stuff that's brilliantly understated characterization) ... everything you hear puts you into an undercover surveillance detail who are now bored stiff from watching their little chunk of the real estate around the kingpin's house. Nobody says they're bored stiff because professional cops like Friday never bellyached about the downside of the job. Stakeouts were boring, and that was that.
But you can hear it in their voices, their conversation, the way they talk to the Captain when he comes to debrief them about the day's activities, hoping he'll bring news of some movement that will take them off surveillance. Yet right along with it, he's slipped in a ton of exposition about why they're doing the surveillance and how it fits into the bigger plan. Yet none of it ever seems forced. You're given all this stuff, layers, really, but it sounds perfectly natural.
Great story, brilliant radio. There's a reason Dragnet ran 314 episodes, the overwhelming majority produced concurrent with the weekly TV series. It's just that good. Plus, Jack Webb loved radio and resisted giving it up until 1957. He was one of the last major hold-outs.
Of course, there's a lot of OTR. Sit-coms, movie adaptations featuring the original casts, stand-up comedy, daytime soaps, detective shows, police shows, spy dramas, screwball comedies, thrillers ... it was an entire industry that young people today know almost nothing about. It was literally the broadcast television of its day, with thousands of hours' of airtime.
Most of it didn't survive, of course. Only rich listeners could afford the cutting-edge equipment to actually record what came over the radio, and even then they made pre-vinyl 78RPM record albums. What's left is mostly from affilliate stations that made recordings for delayed or later broadcast (again, pre-vinyl 78RPMs).
Of course, "high-tech" at the time meant you plopped the recorder's microphone in front of the speaker from your network feed and told everybody to shut up for the next half hour. Not exactly hi-fidelity.
Very occasionally, a network kept the original recordings, usually on well-preserved pre-vinyl 78s. You can usually tell those, as they lack the sound deficiencies you sort of come to expect of OTR. It gives you an idea of just how good these must have sounded when they first aired and with good reception.
Thankfully, a fair number of Dragnet survived that way -- some Dimension X/X-Minus One, too. I think "Green Hills" is one of those. The sound quality is very, very good for OTR.
Almost all of it is in the public domain and can be downloaded or streamed for free.
As I say, a bit of a passion of mine ... hope you get some fun from the links.
Dakota Smith
Now I also realize why TOS Enterprise is my favourite, it's not that it was the first, it's that it was part of the Minimalist style of the show! Clean lines, no ultra/over-textured hulls...
Wow, we REALLY lost something in the subsequent movies & series when Minimalist gave way to the busy-techie visual nonsense IMO.
Thank GOD(DESS) for Mike Okuda keeping with that Minimalist feel in the new FX for TOS' "special editions"!!
And too bad JJ Abrams did not set out to recapture that feel for his new movie (apart from costumes, which I felt were REALLY REALLY nice in that way!).
60's Trek was ONE OF A KIND.![]()
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