From Spock's point of view, Droxine was urbane, cultured, educated, reserved, soft-spoken. she comes off as calm and cool, Spock, with his Vulcan up-bring, would find all of these attributes a plus.
That's just not the way he was written or played. The first thing he says to her is to call her a work of art, defining her by her physical beauty just as Plasus does. At that point, he knows nothing about her intelligence or education or demeanor, but he still baldly flatters her in terms that commemorate her looks. Then later in his voiceover thoughts (an oddity in itself), he thinks:
Here on Stratos, everything is incomparably beautiful and pleasant. The High Advisor's charming daughter Droxine, particularly so. The name Droxine seems appropriate for her. I wonder, can she retain such purity and sweetness of mind and be aware of the life of the people on the surface of the planet? ... If the lovely Droxine knew of the young miner's misery, I wonder how the knowledge would affect her.
So according to the script, Spock is captivated by Droxine's
looks above all else -- also her "purity and sweetness." Not a single mention of intellect or education. This is not the way Spock would think about a woman he found intriguing.
Then there's the fact that he casually blurts out the secrets of Vulcan reproduction to this virtual stranger, when just a year and a half earlier, he was willing to
die rather than reveal the existence of
pon farr to his closest friends in the whole universe. It was established clearly in "Amok Time" and reaffirmed in
Voyager that Vulcans simply do not discuss
pon farr with outsiders, except in the most extreme emergencies and only with the greatest reluctance. So it's ludicrous to suggest that Spock would violate that taboo just to flirt with a near-stranger he has the hots for. His casualness about it in "The Cloud Minders" is a gross continuity error as well as a gross characterization error.
Also, physically compare Diana Ewing's Droxine to Zoe Saldana's Uhura. Willowy, slim and slender, small breasted, flat tummy, toned but not muscled. Both actresses were 5' 7". She is Spock's "type."
Well, that's certainly selective reasoning, given that Nichelle Nichols is nothing like that type.
I have a hard time imagining Spock saying "It is a peaceful little place."
Why? Because it makes him sound unduly sympathetic? ...
No, because the proposed diction in that TA script doesn't seem Spockian. "Little" is especially colloquial and not accurate.
Exactly. It's too colloquial and casual. Not to mention that he's using it to refer to a
planet. It's not very logical or accurate to call a planet "little."
Technically speaking, TOS open end was in TAS episode The Counter-Clock Incident(the final episode of TAS). Since David Gerrold mentioned that TAS was the fourth season that TOS should have had, it would make sense if TCCI were that open-ended episode.
And "The Counter-Clock Incident" is just as dreadful an episode as "Turnabout Intruder," if not more so. The original crew didn't have much luck with final episodes.
Anybody here read the novel The Joy Machine? i understand that would have been an actual TV episode after Turnabout had the series continued. Maybe that would have been a better finale I don't really know, just wondering is all...
"The Joy Machine" was one of many outlines/scripts that ultimately went unused for one reason or another. It had been in development since the second season, if not earlier. We don't know if it would've been made if the show had gotten another season. And there's certainly no reason to assume it would've been the finale.
Based on my recollection of the novel, the reason they didn't make the episode may have been that it was too much like ones they'd already done. It's kind of a cross between "Return of the Archons" and "This Side of Paradise."