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Debunking TOS exceptionalism

There's no teleportation in Forbidden Planet, but there is a "D/C" platform aboard C-57D that looks a good deal like the Enterprise's transporter room. It does something to the crew that protects them during deceleration from FTL, but exactly what isn't explained - it looks like it's converting them to energy beams.

I seem to recall that there was a similar set-up in This Island Earth (1955), also designed to protect the crew.
 
I'm just working through this, so please contribute everything you have to say...

I've been listening to a lot of old radio shows, and watching a good number of older tv shows that haven't achieved the longevity of Star Trek as a pop culture icon.

And the thing that strikes me most is how absolutely absurd it is when talking heads or acolytes of the church of All Things Roddenberry talk about how groundbreaking the show was.
Now, TOS is probably my favorite tv show, and has been for decades. It was good, quality television. But the mythology that's grown up around it is a bunch of bunk (something Melinda Snodgrass pointed out in an issue of Omni in the early '90s what she called Roddenberry on believing his own BS at that point).

All the technology (faster-than-light speed, teleporters, starships, shields, video communication...) had been envisioned decades earlier.

Showing Russians and Americans working together? Man From UNCLE featured Russian and American spies working together during the cold war.

Different races working together? I Spy featured a black leading character who was the brains of the team (the other guy was the jock).

First interracial kiss? Lucy, you got some 'splainin to do (yeah, this one might be arguable).

All the major creative talent involved in Trek were featured prominently in other shows first, and did top work there. Including GR.

Please share your thoughts on this.

I'm confused about whether we are discussing whether Star Trek was groundbreaking or whether we are discussing whether Star Trek was exceptional. (Those are two different things and aren't reliant on one another.)

I think there's probably not much that was seminal about Star Trek. (Do people really assert that? Or do people just assert that people assert that?) But I do think that much of what Star Trek has done has now become definitive. My sense is that different francises really have to get clever (and sometimes do so in an almost reaction formation way) simply to avoid comparisions with Star Trek.

What some people seem to be saying in this thread is something like "America isn't exceptional because Rome had the idea of a Republic first."

So groundbreakingness or exceptionalism: which one are we discussing?


Was Star Trek first with a lot of its portrayal of science and society? No. Did it do it well? Usually. Did it reach a broader audience than most of the forerunners? Yes. Does this make it ground-breaking or exceptional? Generally, yes.

(I will no longer be speaking in annoying rhetorical questions.) Buck Rodgers, The Twilight Zone, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., I Spy, and so on may all have done or shown the things Star Trek did, but Star Trek did most of them together and well. Star Trek also tried to make sure that each of its stories was about something and had something intelligent to say. It did not always succeed (what "Spock's Brain" was trying to say is beyond me), but when it did, the results were exceptional and ground-breaking. Star Trek also - and most significantly for me on a personal level - unabashedly looked ahead and predicated that, as a human race, we were going to be okay. It assured us that we would solve the problems plaguing us today and that the future was a bright and prosperous one for Earth and mankind. To me, this was the most exceptional and ground-breaking thing it did.

Star Trek is not a show without flaws, to be sure. Roddenberry is not a man without flaws. But, the general result of the overall effort is positive, exceptional, resonating, ground-breaking, and enduring. I don't think Star Trek is the best show ever to cross the airwaves, but it's a darn good one.
 
what he fails to grasp is he is having a hissy fit when someone knocks his beloved TOS as if the show is immune to any form of criticism while knocking a show others like.

the hypocrisy is lost on him.........a grown man getting upset over what a person on the internet saying about TOS.

you could not make this up....priceless


You're starting to sound angry again. Maybe you need another treatment.
 
Star Trek also tried to make sure that each of its stories was about something and had something intelligent to say.
.

At the risk of repeating myself, that would certainly apply to The Twilight Zone as well, not to mention The Outer Limits.

None of which is intended as a slam on Star Trek. Certainly, when you compare TOS to stuff like The Green Slime, which came out around the same time, you can see how sophisticated Star Trek was by comparison.

But it was hardly the first sf show to be about something or having something intelligent to say. Rod Serling, among others, was there earlier--and doubt that any sf fan would dismiss the Twilight Zone as some obscure, forgotten footnote in tv history! :)
 
I'm just working through this, so please contribute everything you have to say...

I've been listening to a lot of old radio shows, and watching a good number of older tv shows that haven't achieved the longevity of Star Trek as a pop culture icon.

And the thing that strikes me most is how absolutely absurd it is when talking heads or acolytes of the church of All Things Roddenberry talk about how groundbreaking the show was.
Now, TOS is probably my favorite tv show, and has been for decades. It was good, quality television. But the mythology that's grown up around it is a bunch of bunk (something Melinda Snodgrass pointed out in an issue of Omni in the early '90s what she called Roddenberry on believing his own BS at that point).

All the technology (faster-than-light speed, teleporters, starships, shields, video communication...) had been envisioned decades earlier.

Showing Russians and Americans working together? Man From UNCLE featured Russian and American spies working together during the cold war.

Different races working together? I Spy featured a black leading character who was the brains of the team (the other guy was the jock).

First interracial kiss? Lucy, you got some 'splainin to do (yeah, this one might be arguable).

All the major creative talent involved in Trek were featured prominently in other shows first, and did top work there. Including GR.

Please share your thoughts on this.

I'm confused about whether we are discussing whether Star Trek was groundbreaking or whether we are discussing whether Star Trek was exceptional. (Those are two different things and aren't reliant on one another.)

I think there's probably not much that was seminal about Star Trek. (Do people really assert that? Or do people just assert that people assert that?) But I do think that much of what Star Trek has done has now become definitive. My sense is that different francises really have to get clever (and sometimes do so in an almost reaction formation way) simply to avoid comparisions with Star Trek.

What some people seem to be saying in this thread is something like "America isn't exceptional because Rome had the idea of a Republic first."

So groundbreakingness or exceptionalism: which one are we discussing?


Was Star Trek first with a lot of its portrayal of science and society? No. Did it do it well? Usually. Did it reach a broader audience than most of the forerunners? Yes. Does this make it ground-breaking or exceptional? Generally, yes.

(I will no longer be speaking in annoying rhetorical questions.) Buck Rodgers, The Twilight Zone, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., I Spy, and so on may all have done or shown the things Star Trek did, but Star Trek did most of them together and well. Star Trek also tried to make sure that each of its stories was about something and had something intelligent to say. It did not always succeed (what "Spock's Brain" was trying to say is beyond me), but when it did, the results were exceptional and ground-breaking. Star Trek also - and most significantly for me on a personal level - unabashedly looked ahead and predicated that, as a human race, we were going to be okay. It assured us that we would solve the problems plaguing us today and that the future was a bright and prosperous one for Earth and mankind. To me, this was the most exceptional and ground-breaking thing it did.

Star Trek is not a show without flaws, to be sure. Roddenberry is not a man without flaws. But, the general result of the overall effort is positive, exceptional, resonating, ground-breaking, and enduring. I don't think Star Trek is the best show ever to cross the airwaves, but it's a darn good one.

...and doing it first does not always mean doing it best--nor does not doing it first mean not doing it best. Whether or not Trek (or anything, I suppose) is "groundbreaking" probably is not what will determine whether it has a legacy that will be passed down to later generations.

"In truth, methinks the plays of William Shakespeare
shall not for long withstand the test of time.
His works deriveth from others' and through the ages
shall only amount to naught with little legacy.
What ground doth this man break with his play Hamlet
that has not been broken by Thomas Kyd?

Since Thomas Kyd had already written a play upon which much of Shakespeare's Hamlet, Prince of Denmark was based, I guess some might think that Shakespeare's Hamlet must not be exceptional and should never really amount to much--in the same way that Star Trek had its roots in so many other works and should itself never really amount to much. My hunch, however, is that Star Trek will "only" be as well known to the masses 500 years after its creation as Shakespeare's works are known 500 years after their creation--which is to say that I think Star Trek will be around for a long time--like Shakespeare's plays or Greek tragedies before them.
 
the original star trek was a good show for its time.

But lets face facts, it took an idea or concept about space and other stuff and came up with a novel approach.
Being the first show of what would latter spawn spin offs they had limitless ideas to ponder with, unlike the following shows that had to follow the set limits which TOS set.

I personally never saw TOS growing up and I am in my 40s now.TNG was the first trek series I saw after the movies.
It was only after watching TNG, DS9, Voyager and EnterpriseI decided to watch the original series,,,and even with its upgrades, new improved color etc it is basically woeful acting, camp as fuck, and dated to the hilt.I expect it to be dated, but some other issues have no excuse and this myth that the show is getting as the years go by is typical of the type of bullshit that hysteria breeds and how sheep will follow each other.

Was the original a good show at the time...I suspect yes, did it set the bar...yes but is it the greatest show ever....absolutely not.
The acting ran the same gamut as any TV show. Some wonderful performances some horribly bad. They even managed a few Emmy nominations for Nimoy. Something no other Trek has managed in the acting category. Camp? It was about as campy as any hour long drama produced around the same time. In time folks might find Stewart or Brook's performances to be campy. The styles seen in the sets and costumes of DS9 might also drift into "camp" eventually. I think TNG aready has. ;) Dated? Yeah, its a reflection of its times visually and culturally. Storywise, I don't think so. The stories are standard tropes used before and after TOS. ( and by other Treks). Presentation-wise. Until episodic TV comes back into vogue it will seem dated.
 
Let's not turn this into some sort of intergenerational war, which is not really what the thread is about.

Dont worry, there isn't really any comparison, TOS is the definative Trek and regarded by many one of the greatest sci-fi shows of all time regardless of what trek fans in this forum think - the same cannot be said about DS9.

I don't know. I still think you're selling DS9 short, and I say that as a lifelong Trekkie who grew on the original series. There was nothing "shitty" about it.

I'll second that. In fact, I consider DS9 to be the real successor to TOS as far as thought-provoking storylines (and in a post-9/11 world, the Dominion War plotline takes on a whole new level of relevance).
 
Query: When you attempted to watch TOS, was it on DVD, so you could see the episodes uncut, or were these the hack-and-slash versions on either a local station or on Sci-Fi?
 
Had roddenberry not started TOS some other show more than likely would replace it, it was only a matter of time before one struck a chord with the masses.TOS did have a lot of good going for it but its seems some people have some sort of issue accepting that I do not rate it half as good as others.
Replace it in what way? Star Trek's impact is really about being in the right place at the right time.Whats really exceptional is that it spawned a movie franchise and five TV shows. A different show produced by different people would not have had the same result. A show produce later, even by a year or two would not have the same impact.
 
Let's not turn this into some sort of intergenerational war, which is not really what the thread is about.
Too late. :lol:

Star Trek's impact? We're still arguing that...going on fifty years later.

Right: for how many decades will we have to keep discussing Star Trek before we are able to decide whether it will ever have any lasting impact?
 
Let's not turn this into some sort of intergenerational war, which is not really what the thread is about.
Too late. :lol:

Star Trek's impact? We're still arguing that...going on fifty years later.

Right: for how many decades will we have to keep discussing Star Trek before we are able to decide whether it will ever have any lasting impact?

Trek's impact is obvious. I don't think anybody's questioning it. That's not the topic here.
Other contemporary and earlier shows did many of the same things as Trek. Many did them just as well. Some better. Yet they're practically forgotten.
Untold scores, scripts, performances, concepts lie utterly ignored, while thousands of people parse the exact shade of magenta used in France Nuyen's eye shadow.
My question is.... why?
 
Other contemporary and earlier shows did many of the same things as Trek. Many did them just as well. Some better. Yet they're practically forgotten.

Broken record here. Again, I wouldn't say that Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits are virtually forgotten. Heck, they're probably rerunning TZ on Syfy tonight!

For that matter, Dark Shadows debuted the same year as TOS and it's back again . . . for at least the third time.
 
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Well, it's not like I have a burning desire to keep hyping TZ. It just seems weird to keep reading these sweeping statements that everything before TOS is "forgotten," "a footnote," or had nothing intelligent to say.

Forget The Outer Limits for a moment. In what universe is The Twilight Zone "practically forgotten"?

Not to mention Forbidden Planet, The Fly, etc.
 
Other contemporary and earlier shows did many of the same things as Trek. Many did them just as well. Some better. Yet they're practically forgotten.

Broken record here. Again, I wouldn't say that Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits are virtually forgotten. Heck, they're probably rerunning TZ on Syfy tonight!

For that matter, Dark Shadows debuted the same year as TOS and it's back again . . . .
But did they have the same cultural impact that TOS had is the question. Are they the same touchstones as TOS. Did they have the franchise success?
wasting your time greg...............some on here ignore what they dont want to hear and cannot accept the choices or opinions of others like their opinion is more important or valid
Not sure who/what you think you're debating here.

beaker is saying that Trek wasn't all that "exceptional" and is wondering why it has lasted while other shows, better shows are mostly forgotten. Do the shows Greg mentioned have the same cache ( especially in the "outside world") that trek does? Thirty years ago a show like SNL could do a TZ riff and people would get it. Can the same be said today? Yet a riff on Star Trek would probably be understood by most of the audience watching SNL today, including those who never saw Trek in any form.
 
Looking back at TOS, it probably stands out because it made space adventure and old sci fi concepts popular during the dawning of the space age. In reality, except for a few cheap 50s shows, and one campy Irwin Allen show, there were no continuing shows in space...none! No wonder it held sway even through the 70s and early 80s, when it finally had some contenders.

I think there are a lot of erroneous beliefs about Gene Roddenberry: he did want to write about messages, but he wanted to make money too, those two things are not mutually exclusive. Secondly, after many years of thought, exploration, soul searching, brought upon by people's reaction to the show, I think Gene really believed he found positive views to convey, and wanted STTMP and STNG to be worthwhile. In other words, he grew and changed..so to assume he still had the same thought process in 1987 as he did in 1966 is ludicrous.
 
First of all, shame on several of you for sniping at each other instead of merely arguing your points. When you make it personal instead of about the subject, you've de facto lost the argument.

re exeptionalism

Star Trek (fuck this "TOS" noise) was exceptional as a package in that it was arguably one of the early [American] science fiction dramatic series that (mostly) tried to play it straight, where other shows in the genre may have started serious enough but quickly ended up in silly-town. The 1959 CBS series Men Into Space depicted future efforts by the USAF to explore and develop outer space. It was not silly or campy. If anything, it was dry. So Star Trek wasn't first in that territory.

In other words, Star Trek was exceptionally well-made for a science fiction TV series.

On the other hand, as a series—minus subcategory—it was not so exceptional.
Production Value. Watch I Spy or Mission: Impossible or Gunsmoke or Have Gun Will Travel and you'll quickly see that the acting, production, music, and even the writing is pretty average for a dramatic series of the time.

Topicality. Other shows had plenty to say on the subjects Roddenberry and Co. put in scifi drag without the need to disguise it. I Spy's episode "The Loser" dealt head-on with drugs and featured Eartha Kitt as a heroin addicted jazz signer without the need to hide it in a coy metaphor. In one single skit ("Bonanzarosa") The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour poked fun at more topical issues than any 10 Trek episodes put together.

Race & Nationality
Other shows had non-whites and non-Americans in significant roles: I-Spy, Mission: Impossible and Julia all had black lead characters, not as background players. The Man From U.N.C.L.E. had a Russian character as co-star. Sure, they weren't enough by a long shot, but Star Trek was merely on the curve, not on the leading edge. In this regard, Star Trek was not at the top of the heap, whereas I-Spy and Mission: Impossible were.

Even Spock's not a new character. As pointed out in other threads, he's basically a pointy-eared version of the character Mingo from Daniel Boone: a well educated "half-breed" who lives amongst us. Nimoy's performance is what makes Spock exceptional, and why he was nominated for three Emmys.

Visual Effects. Now here Star Trek is mostly at the top. No sci-fi show prior to it had as convincingly depicted a spacecraft moving through space, and—with come exceptions—many of the effects on the show were state-of-the-art for TV.

Camp. By the standards some people here apply, most everything from 60s TV would be camp, so this is an argument not even worth having.
 
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The 1950 comic Eagle had a story called Dan Dare Pilot of the Future, who was chief pilot for Space Fleet, which had covered a lot of ground before Trek.
The symbol of Interplanetary Space Fleet was a rocket with two stars surrounded by laurel leaves, this was replaced by a delta/arrow head shape in 1960.

JSYK, Dan Dare was a big deal in the UK, and still sort of is. Basically the quintessential British space hero. Arthur C. Clarke advised to the series. ROBE, I'm not sure if you know this or not or are simply presenting it in a condensed format for the general public. Dan Dare was more or less continuously published until 1967, when Star Trek was already on the air.
 
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