I believe he mentioned in the book that it was around 37 and he compares it to other shows that were a success that were rated lower than 37. I can't remember exactly which ones but it seems "That Girl" and "My Three Sons" were a couple of them. He does say that during the second season that TOS never was in the number 1 position but was mostly in 2nd or 3rd place for the time slot. Apparently "Gomer Pyle USMC" was the number 1 show the entire season (for that time slot).
I have to say I largely agree with this.I've read most of the book now... and I am quite satisfied. Contents are similar to the extended and revised version of the first season edition.
There are a few errors I've detected, but those are more than counterbalanced by the mountain of background production information that I've never seen elsewhere. None on this information seems to contradict what is known from other trusted sources. A great example is the chapter dealing with the departure of Gene Coon--the author (using original interview material to buttress his conclusions) fills in a lot of the blanks while still, again, meshing with the information we knew from the Solow/Justman book.
As with the first season edition, the real benefits of this book are the production memos and the interviews. I learned more about how my favorite episode, "The Doomsday Machine," actually came to be the episode we know and love, than I had previously from any other source.
I know some on this board don't like this author and would encourage you not to buy this book. That's their right. I'm not going to worry about what the ratings meant and whether the author has the composers correct for each episode. The former doesn't matter much to me and the latter I can find out by reading Jeff Bond's superb book (or listening to the superb LA-LA LAND soundtrack).
Bottom line: For the fan who's interested in how the series was produced from initial story pitch to final product, there is no other product that matches this book. I give it my endorsement without reservation.
I noticed one typo that tuck out to me so far. Somehow a @ symbol got inserted into a word. Nothing else has registered to distract me.
I noticed one typo that tuck out to me so far. Somehow a @ symbol got inserted into a word. Nothing else has registered to distract me.
It looks like @ got inserted instead of closing quotation marks in a number of places. Software glitch?
Hey feek61, that's a familiar looking avatar.![]()
The Atari 800 also had double quotes as shift 2, where an @ would be on a PC on Mac. Not that such a thing should excuse obvious typos.I noticed one typo that tuck out to me so far. Somehow a @ symbol got inserted into a word. Nothing else has registered to distract me.
It looks like @ got inserted instead of closing quotation marks in a number of places. Software glitch?
My husband just gave me his old laptop. It has the " and @ interchanged. Its very frustrating. He says its because its an 'English keyboard'.
I want to jump in and join the fun, but the previous book just drove me mad with the typo's, errors and sloppiness.
I noticed one typo that tuck out to me so far. Somehow a @ symbol got inserted into a word. Nothing else has registered to distract me.
The Atari 800 also had double quotes as shift 2, where an @ would be on a PC on Mac. Not that such a thing should excuse obvious typos.It looks like @ got inserted instead of closing quotation marks in a number of places. Software glitch?
My husband just gave me his old laptop. It has the " and @ interchanged. Its very frustrating. He says its because its an 'English keyboard'.
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