Yes.I don't think the patch is saying that it represents Starfleet Command and UESPA as separate entities. I think it's saying it represents "Starfleet Command, United Earth Space Probe Agency." In other words, that SFC is a division of UESPA.
Youu see examples of that in shows like later seasons of SG-1 when Shanks returned and in SGA where in S2 you had both With And used. Also used in B5 where Jurasik and Katsulas at the end of the credits they swapped positions each season.
It needs a better agent.
Also, Cagney and Lacey. When Sharon Gless was signed to take over as Cagney in season two, her agent wanted top billing, but as Tyne Daly had been there for a year her agent wanted her to get top billing.Often the two leads of a show will get near-equal billing by having one come first and the other come last with an "And" -- for instance, Jim Caviezel and Michael Emerson in Person of Interest.
I read once that it actually started with Jonathan Harris on Lost in Space. He was added to the show after the pilot was made (and integrated into the story through reshoots and new footage), so all the other actors' places in credit order had already been negotiated, but it wouldn't do for a noted adult actor to be billed after a group of children. So they invented the "Special Guest Star" credit for him and thus started the tradition of last billing as a prestige credit.
Agents of U.E.S.P.A.Agents of UESPA...hmm.
They compromised on a top right, bottom left dual billing, that alternated, with the PR releases also alternating the order.
The Man from U.E.S.P.AAgents of U.E.S.P.A.
That's roughly what Barney Rozenweig says in his autobiography: when they were caught in these agent discussions he remembered seeing it on a movie, and suggested it as a way of settling something that didn't really matter on a show that depended for its survival on the leads being a team.I find top r/bottom left to be an interesting way of giving essentially equal billing -- one person comes first if you read top-to-bottom and the other if you read left-to-right. Adding alternation on top of that seems a bit redundant.
So they invented the "Special Guest Star" credit for him and thus started the tradition of last billing as a prestige credit.
That's roughly what Barney Rozenweig says in his autobiography: when they were caught in these agent discussions he remembered seeing it on a movie [...]
Because the writers hadn't worked out what Vulcan was yet. Which is why the term "Vulcanian" is used. IIRC, Starfleet didn't even exist when Court Martial was made.This is such a fascinating thread that I have just got to throw my observations at it.
1) in Court Martial one StarFleet officer says something about having not seen Kirk "since the Vulcanian mission". It is said as if it was a very important mission. Now, if the UFP had been together for a century at that point why would a StarFleet mission to one of the core civilizations be so noteworthy? It sounds like something new and important!
Bad research by the writers of the film. Though in JTB, Sarek is there representing Vulcan, not the Federation. perhaps in SFS he is once again in the service Vulcan rather than the Federation.2) in Search for Spock, when Sark comes to Kirk for help, he says some thing about having already been to "your government". Surely as a Council member for Vulcan it is "his" government too? Or do old pre-Federation habits die hard?
I don't think it was about mining rights. It was about admitting Coridan into the UFP which would put a crimp in the Tellerites illegal mining operation.3) Journey to Babel feels less like a cohesive government working out a disagreement over mining rights and more like a fractious group of semi independent allies undertaking a land grab.
Just my opinion to add in agreement with the OP.
@Timo, I don't get what your problem with this is.
There is a solid theory that fits the observed evidence pretty much perfectly.
1) in Court Martial one StarFleet officer says something about having not seen Kirk "since the Vulcanian mission". It is said as if it was a very important mission. Now, if the UFP had been together for a century at that point why would a StarFleet mission to one of the core civilizations be so noteworthy? It sounds like something new and important!
2) in Search for Spock, when Sarek comes to Kirk for help, he says some thing about having already been to "your government". Surely as a Council member for Vulcan it is "his" government too? Or do old pre-Federation habits die hard?
3) Journey to Babel feels less like a cohesive government working out a disagreement over mining rights and more like a fractious group of semi independent allies undertaking a land grab.
One theory I read waaay back in the 1980s is that part of the mission in Journey To Babel was to finalize the charter of the United Federation of Planets. Take that as you will.
So if NASA would put weapons on their spacecraft, world would stop making sense?"The military division of NASA". 'Nuff said.
1) in Court Martial one StarFleet officer says something about having not seen Kirk "since the Vulcanian mission". It is said as if it was a very important mission. Now, if the UFP had been together for a century at that point why would a StarFleet mission to one of the core civilizations be so noteworthy? It sounds like something new and important!
Because the writers hadn't worked out what Vulcan was yet. Which is why the term "Vulcanian" is used. IIRC, Starfleet didn't even exist when Court Martial was made.
So if NASA would put weapons on their spacecraft, world would stop making sense?
Why is it silly for government to have an agency to oversee their starships? If comparison to NASA does not fit, think it more like Department of Defence.
And why is UESPA on that ENT logo?
Why is Kirk working for UESPA?
Why is there the arrowhead on EUSPA logo on Friendship One?
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