Check my review of the script (links below). The scenes are shown out of order from what was written.
Sir Rhosis
Sir Rhosis
Well what the hell did Scotty do to Kirk in "Lights of Zetar" for this log entry?
"When a man of Scotty's years falls in love,
the loneliness of his life is suddenly revealed to him.
His whole heart once throbbed only to the ship 's engines.
He could talk only to the ship.
Now he can see nothing but the woman."
For me, nothing beets a wrench lying around the engine room of the most advanced ship in Starfleet.
For me, nothing beets a wrench lying around the engine room of the most advanced ship in Starfleet.
I don't have a problem with that. New technologies usually coexist alongside old technologies rather than replacing them altogether. We live in the age of nuclear power and computers, but we still use fire and string and buttons and knives, technologies harnessed hundreds of thousands of years ago. No reason to think the same won't be true a paltry quarter-millennium from now.
After all, the laws of physics that make a wrench useful today -- leverage, torque, and the like -- will still be just as valid two hundred or two million years from now.
For me, nothing beets a wrench lying around the engine room of the most advanced ship in Starfleet.
How do you think they tighten those self-sealing stem bolts?After all, the laws of physics that make a wrench useful today -- leverage, torque, and the like -- will still be just as valid two hundred or two million years from now.
Yeah, this is one of my favorite cringe-worthy lines.All these complaints and no one mentions "1 to the 4th power"?
I love this speech.For me the best part of the episode - Cogley's speech that ends act 3 (or is it 2?), about the injustice of Kirk not being able to confront his machine accuser - is surely relevant today in a way not seen in 1966.
Yeah Kirk should have been discreet there, hell even Scotty gets horny sometimes![]()
For me, nothing beets a wrench lying around the engine room of the most advanced ship in Starfleet.
Going by Finney and Merrick, it seems like you can be 90% of the way to starship captain and come a cropper.
It's "beats" and "wench", mind you.
I've always been amused by Kirk's voice-over near the end. "Beaten and sobbing, Finney told me where he had sabotaged the prime energy circuits."
It's not identified as a log entry but if it is I find it funny that beating the charges weren't enough for Kirk. He wanted a little extra humiliation on Finney's record for a final payback.
...also, I still prefer the Ion Pod as the little one-man nub at the bottom of the sensor dome on the underside of the primary hull (as seen in Mandel's manual). I like it better than the pod location seen in the Remastered eps.
This seems like from the GR-rewriting-every-episode period.
By the way, I NEVER noticed the court members at the bar earlier, in 46 years of watching Star Trek.
Well, it would be easier for Finney to hide in the secondary hull, assuming that's where sections 18Y through 23D on B deck are located, in or near Engineering, were the ion pod located on the secondary hull.
At some point between the first airing and the emergence of the treknobabble interpretation obsession I'm a prime victim of, the idea developed that the pod was a danger to the ship and for this reason had to be jettisoned. But nowhere in the episode do we find dialogue suggesting that the pod would pose a risk. All the angst is about the storm, and the changes in the storm that affect Kirk's choice of jettison moment. An "egg" to be laid by the ship at the best possible moment, a moment the CO has to choose by balancing scientific gain against the risk to the deploying ship, is an attractive interpretation there.
Timo Saloniemi
All these complaints and no one mentions "1 to the 4th power"?
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