IMDB says Errand was written by both.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0708429/?ref_=fn_tt_tt_2
They list a lot of uncredited work, and we know Roddenberry was rewriting just about every script at that point. So I think it was both.
They actually wanted to bring John Colicos back to reprise 'Kor' in the later TOS Klingon episodes; but he was a busy actor in the 60s and they could never make the scheduling work. He had stated many times that he would have been happy to reprise 'Kor' had his schedule allowed back then.But Kor was meant, as of the episode, to be Kirk's nemesis, implying that the producers had planned for the Klingons to return, probably more than once.
Yes, and Blish's Spock Must Die, the first ST novel targeted at an adult audience, portrayed them as active enforcers to the point of taking the Klingons more-or-less permanently out of the equation. Kind of like what Douglas Adams would do with the planet Krikkit.Some books and comics have portrayed the Organians as active enforcers of the treaty, but that doesn't make sense, because "Errand of Mercy" made it emphatically clear that the Organians couldn't stand to be around us filthy corporeal beings and only imposed to treaty to get us noisy kids off their lawn.
Yes, and Blish's Spock Must Die, the first ST novel targeted at an adult audience, portrayed them as active enforcers to the point of taking the Klingons more-or-less permanently out of the equation.
I suppose even the Organians might not be monoliths; there could be rogue factions that want to get more involved.
IMDb lists Roddenberry as a writer on EVERY episode. That still doesn't make it true.IMDB says Errand was written by both.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0708429/?ref_=fn_tt_tt_2
At the end of the first season when he was no longer the showrunner but instead the executive producer? I doubt it.They list a lot of uncredited work, and we know Roddenberry was rewriting just about every script at that point. So I think it was both.
Case in point, Enowil, from Stephen Goldin's Trek to Madworld.I suppose even the Organians might not be monoliths; there could be rogue factions that want to get more involved.
Yes. A real head-scratcher.Still, it's annoying that the writers of "Observer Effect" threw in the gratuitous continuity nod of calling their energy beings Organians even though they bore no resemblance to Organians beyond being energy-based.
IMBd does that all of the time. They'll list the writer of a book, say Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan, under writer for a movie.MDb lists Roddenberry as a writer on EVERY episode. That still doesn't make it true.
We have to say that the Organians disengaged for some reason
Yep. I've run into this when interviewing creatives from various shows of the DC Animated Universe. People are listed as producers or story editors for episodes before or after they were on a show all the time.IMBd does that all of the time. They'll list the writer of a book, say Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan, under writer for a movie.
No, because IMDb is crappy with credits.Because the episode uses things they added to the show?
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