Lost in Space did two different hippie episodes. "Collision of Planets" had essentially an alien biker gang with hippie overtones, with Daniel J. Travanti of Hill Street Blues as the leader. Both episodes portrayed the anti-establishment hippie concept as misguided at best, and sinister when you scratch the surface.
But that's not surprising, since they had to present a challenge to the heroes, who were disciplined, straight-laced, and clean-cut, much like Kirk and Spock. Dr. Smith was not a hero, so he promptly joined the hippies in "The Promised Planet," and absolutely skewered them with his pathetic attempt to assimilate, which had the effect of exuberant mockery. It was great.
So really, there was no way hippies were going to be shown in a positive light on Star Trek or Lost in Space. They got gentler treatment on mid-sixties sitcoms, but were still shown to be ridiculous or lazy in most cases. Bewitched went the other way and made hippies sexy, in the person of Serena (the Boyce and Hart episode). That works, too, since the main appeal of the hippie movement for young men, after opposing the Vietnam war, was the idea that if you dressed insanely and stopped getting haircuts, you'd get a lot more action with young women.
But that's not surprising, since they had to present a challenge to the heroes, who were disciplined, straight-laced, and clean-cut, much like Kirk and Spock. Dr. Smith was not a hero, so he promptly joined the hippies in "The Promised Planet," and absolutely skewered them with his pathetic attempt to assimilate, which had the effect of exuberant mockery. It was great.
So really, there was no way hippies were going to be shown in a positive light on Star Trek or Lost in Space. They got gentler treatment on mid-sixties sitcoms, but were still shown to be ridiculous or lazy in most cases. Bewitched went the other way and made hippies sexy, in the person of Serena (the Boyce and Hart episode). That works, too, since the main appeal of the hippie movement for young men, after opposing the Vietnam war, was the idea that if you dressed insanely and stopped getting haircuts, you'd get a lot more action with young women.