• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Fact-Checking Inside Star Trek: The Real Story

I am Phil Lynch, of no renown whatsoever; you can tell what a neophyte I was to web 2.0 or whatever this is, since I just shortened my name and didn't think up a cool handle. And I also sure didn't mean to imply anyone is hiding or creeping, just how the web initially went, with handles.
 
My pitch experiences (well, the first one) mirrors Christopher's almost exactly. I came in (telephonically) with 7-10 page outlines, the first couple of which took me about five or six minutes each to pitch.

Wow, I think I only had 1-2 pages each. It still took me a few minutes each.

Echevarria, very kindly, asked me to "cut to the chase" and in fact, he pitched one of my ideas back at me to show the succinctness he wished.

Ooh, that would've been helpful.


I had maybe three full outlines (one of which involved Kira and a fellow member of her cell that was shot down because it was sorta like one in the works already).

Yup, that's the most common reason pitches get rejected. Laypeople tend to assume that any similarity between two episodes or series or movies is proof of a "ripoff," but the fact is that it's very hard to avoid doing something similar to an existing idea, which is why creators try so hard not to. Too much similarity to a recent or current work is a surefire way to get a story rejected, assuming the parties involved realize the similarity. Far from being proof of deliberate imitation, similarity between two works is most likely proof that they had no awareness of each other until it was too late to change things.

Literally just ten days after I mailed in my TNG spec script, they aired "Quality of Life," which had a very similar plot about Data realizing an AI was sentient, complete with an almost identical beat where an offhand quip by Geordi was what got Data wondering about sentience in the first place. And "Empok Nor" was rather similar to one of my pitches to RHW, although I made the opposite assumption about Cardassian nomenclature and called it "Terok Hel." Although I bet a lot of people pitched stories about something happening on a duplicate station, since it's a good way to save money on sets.

My spec script that got me the pitch invitation to DS9 was also a money-saver, a bottle show in which a technobabble phenomenon left a few characters alone on an empty DS9 for most of the episode. I'd noted how the shows sometimes did really economical bottle shows by focusing on character stories with minimal FX and action (e.g. "The Drumhead" and "Duet"), and I wanted to come up with a similarly inexpensive bottle show that was more science fictional, while still focused on character interplay. I suspect the economy of my script was probably a factor in getting my pitch invitation.

I actually recycled the same premise for one of my Voyager pitches to Joe Menosky, and after I pitched it and he rejected it, he asked where I'd gotten the idea, since it was (here we go again) similar to a spec movie script he'd been pitching.

I'd say one of the best things to come out of my pitching experience was that I got to thank Joe Menosky for "Darmok."

Oh, one more thing: People complain about how Seven of Nine dominated VGR and often assume it was because of the actress's sex appeal. But when I did my second VGR pitch, for season 5, I tried very hard to avoid pitches about Seven or the Doctor, since I expected everyone else to be pitching for them and I wanted to offer something different. Yet nonetheless, most of the ideas I came up with were about Seven or the Doctor, because they were simply the most interesting and complex characters, the ones with the most potential for growth, change, and conflict. Everyone else in the cast had pretty much resolved their issues and settled into steady roles (aside from the Tom-B'Elanna romance), and thus there wasn't as much to say about them. I assume that's why both Seven and the Doctor were so heavily featured in the show. (Although I once estimated the figures for a Star Trek Magazine article fact-checking that belief about Seven, and I determined that Janeway remained the most prominently featured character throughout the series, with Seven second during her four seasons and the Doctor third -- except in season 7 where the Doctor took second place. And I'm getting recursive here, since I included this very anecdote in that article.)
 
Last edited:
I honestly can't remember too many of them, and since I worked on a Brother word processor in those days and the machine is long dead, I have disks which I cannot access, so who knows what all I pitched.

You might try a service like this one.


Thanks. Very interesting.

If anybody meets the guardian of forever and goes back in time and restarts this forum, I for one vote for using real names. Many of you are very interesting people and it is kinda weird to have this veil of pseudonyms here. Be well!
It's actually possible to change your name on here if you nicely ask one of the mods. They do it for holidays, after all. I was DS9Sega when I started on here before I decided to just "come out" as me.
 
I sent a spec script to Voyager about an exiled war criminal trying to return home, never heard back. At that point, I figured my career as a Hollywood screenwriter was over. :lol:

Thanks. Very interesting.

If anybody meets the guardian of forever and goes back in time and restarts this forum, I for one vote for using real names. Many of you are very interesting people and it is kinda weird to have this veil of pseudonyms here. Be well!

Bill Jasper here. :techman:
 
Re similarity. My spec which got me an invitation to pitch was entitled "Strange Bedfellows" (from Shakespeare, a very common title) and I believe DS9 later did an ep with title, which bore no resemblance to my story other than people having to work together who were not on, shall we say, the best of terms. Did they rip me off? Of course not!

I also had a very broad, obvious joke (which was far from original with me) in which Gul Dukat, being escorted about the station, says something to Sisko like "Must I be escorted EVERYWHERE?" -- obviously the guards are going in the john with him. IIRC, Dukat does this exact line in a later show.

Did they rip me off? Of course not! As I said, it was an old, hoary joke to begin with.

So I agin echo Christopher. As they say, there are only (how many, again?) so many basic plots in literature, and by extension, television.

Though I do love Malcolm Hulke's advice to a young Terrance Dicks (when the latter first started writing for DOCTOR WHO). Something like "All you need to write for television is a great idea (pause)... It doesn't have to be your great idea..."

Sir Rhosis
 
I still have my TNG spec scripts and pitches. The "None So Noble" one is what convinced the Johnson brothers to let me rewrite their planned 3rd episode of Starship Exeter. As I recall, Jimm Johnson really liked my throwaway solution to the whole "why do Klingons look different?" question.
 
As Christopher and the others have said, it's very easy to duplicate someone else's idea: I lost my chance to write a Who novel because the McGuffin that initially got the Doctor involved overlapped with a book already in the works. By the time I'd rethought it, they'd halved the number of books to one a month, so the year's worth that had been commissioned had become two years' worth. By the time the next commissioning round started, the series was coming back and only established authors could be used...
 
Re similarity. My spec which got me an invitation to pitch was entitled "Strange Bedfellows" (from Shakespeare, a very common title) and I believe DS9 later did an ep with title, which bore no resemblance to my story other than people having to work together who were not on, shall we say, the best of terms. Did they rip me off? Of course not!

I doubt anybody would cry ripoff for the reuse of just a title, especially one that's a common phrase like that. There are several duplicate or near-duplicate titles in the screen franchise -- the TNG episode "First Contact" and the movie First Contact, TNG's "The Emissary" and DS9's "Emissary," TAS's "The Eye of the Beholder" and TNG's "Eye of the Beholder," TAS's "The Survivor" and TNG's "The Survivors," etc. Not to mention all the book titles later used as episode titles -- there's a TNG novel called Eyes of the Beholders and one called Survivors. And quite a few exact duplications between books and episodes -- "Reunion," "Requiem," "The Siege," "Sanctuary," "Evolution," "Resistance," "Sarek," etc. Plus a couple of cases of novels having very similar titles to other novels: TOS: The Kobayashi Maru and ENT: Kobayashi Maru, TNG: To Storm Heaven and Vanguard: Storming Heaven, maybe others. And that's not even getting into comic-book titles.

And of course there are countless titles that get used over and over by different shows or films. Sometimes even titles you'd expect to be unique get reused. Both TOS and Space: 1999 have episodes named "The Immunity Syndrome"; once in the '70s my local station ran them both consecutively on the same night!
 
And of course there are countless titles that get used over and over by different shows or films. Sometimes even titles you'd expect to be unique get reused. Both TOS and Space: 1999 have episodes named "The Immunity Syndrome"; once in the '70s my local station ran them both consecutively on the same night!
There is though the amusing time when Terry Nation reused one of his old Saint scripts for The Baron, and then they got run back to back in the States. Oddly, many viewers guessed the twist in the plot of the second episode run...
 
I submitted some spec scripts to TNG, but I didn't go through the open submissions policy. I got an agent (actually, she had been Ronald D. Moore's first agent) and submitted that way. I did three spec scripts, one of which I really really liked titled "None So Noble", which I thought had it all: at the core it was about Worf coming to terms with the fact that his idealized version of Klingon honor had little in common with what Klingons actually practiced, and eventually coming to realize that just because other people don't live up to their ideals doesn't make the ideals bad. So I had the "how does it affect the characters" thing down. .

I'm not big on 24th century klingons, but THAT sounds awesome. If I'd come up with an idea like that, I'd've probably made it a downer and called it THE KLINGON WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALLANCE!
 
I am Phil Lynch, of no renown whatsoever; you can tell what a neophyte I was to web 2.0 or whatever this is, since I just shortened my name and didn't think up a cool handle. .

That's the way I went with my username originally, kmart for Kevin H. Martin (I had gotten in the habit of signing my name as kmart as well, which got me in no small amount of trouble at WaldenBooks when KMart bought them from Carter/Hawley/Hale in the mid80s.) But I got so much shit from posters about the name that when THE GOD THING got me to come back many years back, i was able to take TREVANIAN (for my favorite non Ellisonian author.)

But on ILMFAN.COM I'm still KMART because I could never figure out how to change it.
 
I submitted some spec scripts to TNG, but I didn't go through the open submissions policy. I got an agent (actually, she had been Ronald D. Moore's first agent) and submitted that way. I did three spec scripts, one of which I really really liked titled "None So Noble", which I thought had it all: at the core it was about Worf coming to terms with the fact that his idealized version of Klingon honor had little in common with what Klingons actually practiced, and eventually coming to realize that just because other people don't live up to their ideals doesn't make the ideals bad. So I had the "how does it affect the characters" thing down. .

I'm not big on 24th century klingons, but THAT sounds awesome. If I'd come up with an idea like that, I'd've probably made it a downer and called it THE KLINGON WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALLANCE!
Thanks. I compared the theme to that of a Christian who becomes disillusioned when finally noticing that people in the congregation talk the talk (turn the other cheek, don't judge, help the downtrodden, etc.) but don't walk the walk, and thus questions the rightness of the faith before ultimately realizing that the ideals are what's important, not whether others follow them. Coming at it from that angle gave me an emotional grounding for the story which I hoped would make it feel authentic.

My solution to the Klingon issue (pre TNG's exploration of the culture) was that that "Klingon" was the name of the warrior caste, and anyone who was a member of the caste, whether they were from the founding race Worf belonged to or one of the subject races that fell within their spacial "Warsaw pact". Once the Empire had lots of subject planets the founding race made them do all the real work, thus allowing them to become an almost exclusively a warrior race whose subjects grew the food and built the ships, etc. I posited that certain "2nd Klingons" (the ones from TOS) had done things which their masters didn't like, and they were all reduced to subject caste and banished from military service (I figured they'd started trading with the Romulans and opened that whole can of worms). It was a tidy solution which also helped drive the narrative of why the subject planets wanted out, and why the Klingons would never let them go (since their society had become utterly dependent on them).
 
I submitted some spec scripts to TNG, but I didn't go through the open submissions policy. I got an agent (actually, she had been Ronald D. Moore's first agent) and submitted that way. I did three spec scripts, one of which I really really liked titled "None So Noble", which I thought had it all: at the core it was about Worf coming to terms with the fact that his idealized version of Klingon honor had little in common with what Klingons actually practiced, and eventually coming to realize that just because other people don't live up to their ideals doesn't make the ideals bad. So I had the "how does it affect the characters" thing down. .

I'm not big on 24th century klingons, but THAT sounds awesome.

Indeed. That's something I'd think Ron D. Moore could have gotten behind to champion.
 
Yup, that's the most common reason pitches get rejected. Laypeople tend to assume that any similarity between two episodes or series or movies is proof of a "ripoff," but the fact is that it's very hard to avoid doing something similar to an existing idea, which is why creators try so hard not to. Too much similarity to a recent or current work is a surefire way to get a story rejected, assuming the parties involved realize the similarity. Far from being proof of deliberate imitation, similarity between two works is most likely proof that they had no awareness of each other until it was too late to change things.

That issue seems to be one of the main reasons why the open submission was finally killed off. It was reportedly an ongoing hassle with the producers, where people who sent in unsolicited scripts would get ticked off and claim their ideas were stolen, etc.
 
To be fair, sometimes it's remarkable how far coincidence can go. One of my story pitches was about a guest character who is plugged into the computer as part of an experiment to see if they can improve the response time of the ship to emergency and combat situations, and as the guy's mind is running at "machine speed" he starts doing all this impossible stuff, including plotting warp drive slingshot maneuvers around a black hole singularity to warp incredible distances. There's some superficial similarity to "The Nth Degree" in terms of the gimmicks, but I'd never go so far as to claim someone stole my idea.
 
My solution to the Klingon issue (pre TNG's exploration of the culture) was that that "Klingon" was the name of the warrior caste, and anyone who was a member of the caste, whether they were from the founding race Worf belonged to or one of the subject races that fell within their spacial "Warsaw pact". Once the Empire had lots of subject planets the founding race made them do all the real work, thus allowing them to become an almost exclusively a warrior race whose subjects grew the food and built the ships, etc. I posited that certain "2nd Klingons" (the ones from TOS) had done things which their masters didn't like, and they were all reduced to subject caste and banished from military service (I figured they'd started trading with the Romulans and opened that whole can of worms).

That's brilliant! And a really nice subversion of the way Trek and most screen sci-fi tends to treat species and culture/nationality as equivalent.


That issue seems to be one of the main reasons why the open submission was finally killed off. It was reportedly an ongoing hassle with the producers, where people who sent in unsolicited scripts would get ticked off and claim their ideas were stolen, etc.

Except that before you got to send in a spec script, you had to sign a waiver saying you wouldn't sue in such an event. That was the only reason the studio lawyers allowed open submissions to go forward in the first place. At least, the waivers were supposed to prevent that sort of thing. Maybe they weren't enough to do so?
 
Except that before you got to send in a spec script, you had to sign a waiver saying you wouldn't sue in such an event. That was the only reason the studio lawyers allowed open submissions to go forward in the first place. At least, the waivers were supposed to prevent that sort of thing. Maybe they weren't enough to do so?

That's my understanding of it, the waiver was kind of a nice idea, but not all that enforceable in our increasingly litigious society.
 
I can't know why it didn't get me a pitch session (maybe the first reader just didn't like it), but I do know my timing sucked, because it was submitted around the time "Sins of the Father" was in the pipeline and they went a very different direction with the Klingons. Oh well.

For what it's worth, I don't think their direction with Klingons ended up being entirely different than yours. That entire plotline is about Worf being more Klingon than other Klingons and how everyone else is a hypocrite (well, not entirely, but that's one of the themes). But, yeah, your timing sucked. I could see it as a prelude to Sins of the Father, but they probably didn't want to risk any timing problems.

Sounds like a pitch isn't much different than a sound byte or even a film teaser. And, because of the lack of detail, the idea you're trying to put across might be totally different from the idea the one hearing the pitch is getting.

What I'm reminded by this is the opening scene from the movie The Player, which is noteworthy for other reasons, but does have a nice little thing in the background involving Hollywood movie pitches and how the industry tends to handle it:

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0epB5Z6ijpk[/yt]
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top