He should have just thrown the bust into the trash, problem solved! Didn't Berman notice a trend when the show got better every time the blindfold was on? That should have been a hint.Remember this is TNG-era Gene Roddenberry, not TOS Gene. TNG Gene's outlook changed quite a lot. Berman was always trying to stop and think about WWGD (What Would Gene Do) in the way he ran the franchise. He says so on one of the TNG Blu-ray documentaries and on Rod Rodenberry's doc TrekNation.
He had a bust of Gene in his office and he'd blindfold it as a symbol when he would give in and approve something he didn't think Gene would like.
http://weminoredinfilm.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/roddenberry-blindfold.jpg
I bet that blindfold was on a lot for Ira Steven Behr's meetings![]()
This is what happens when instead of one man with vision you have a room full of people all shouting their own agendas.
This is what happens when instead of one man with vision you have a room full of people all shouting their own agendas.
Anyone think there's any credibility to the suggestion, which is apparently accredited to Jolene Blalock, that part of the reason for Enterprise's cancellation was to facilitate the creation of the Abramsverse?
Okay, time to climb back into my closet.
ENT and VOY as individual series would have been better served if Paramount had stayed with the syndication route, rather than suddenly deciding to use them as linchpins for a new network that had little else of value. Both shows suffered from studio and network interference, just like TOS.
I do recall reading somewhere that the decision was made at the end of season 2 to axe Enterprise once they reached the syndication limit of about 100 episodes and reboot as a movie series, but IDK how truthful it was. Nor do I recall where I read it.
What a charming thread title.
As someone who has all of the first three Trek shows on DVD, I'd say the blus are worth an upgrade not just for the picture but for the features. TNG's has so far been great. Haven't seen ENT's, cause I'm not all that crazy for the first two seasons, but I know the features are done by the same guys who did TNG so it should be very illuminating. Kinda wish I had them.There's no way I'm buying all of Trek on blu-ray having just finished buying it all on dvd's 5 years ago.
I'm having a hard time justifying that as well.
As someone who has all of the first three Trek shows on DVD, I'd say the blus are worth an upgrade not just for the picture but for the features. TNG's has so far been great. Haven't seen ENT's, cause I'm not all that crazy for the first two seasons, but I know the features are done by the same guys who did TNG so it should be very illuminating. Kinda wish I had them.There's no way I'm buying all of Trek on blu-ray having just finished buying it all on dvd's 5 years ago.
I'm having a hard time justifying that as well.
No enlightened human being would so disgrace his dignity by allowing a bomb to blow his legs off.I heard it was because they reduced it to one leg being blown off instead of two.So, how did "The Siege of AR-558" slip through?
What is this about? Why does Gene envision a future where bombs don't totally maim you?
Kinda creepy.He had a bust of Gene in his office and he'd blindfold it as a symbol when he would give in and approve something he didn't think Gene would like.
http://weminoredinfilm.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/roddenberry-blindfold.jpg
When TNG started, the field was wide open to be exploited. During DS9's run, first-run syndication was a crowded market, and new networks were making the market smaller and smaller. By the time ENT came around, first-run syndication wasn't viable anymore.ENT and VOY as individual series would have been better served if Paramount had stayed with the syndication route, rather than suddenly deciding to use them as linchpins for a new network that had little else of value.
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