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First Episode You Watched

I never paid any attention to this show and dispised it when my brothers would turn the TV to it. I was about 9 years old.
I found it insulting to women.
I found it now on a channel I still find it insulting to women but I'm able to get past that to watch the stories.
So far my favorite is when Spoke had his Brain stolen.:guffaw:
Unfortunately I missed part of the episode but it cracks me up anyway.
I had my bicycle stolen when I was in high school and that really upset me, I don't know how nuts if feel if someone snuck in and stole my brain!!:ack:
 
I have this very vague recollection of seeing Star Trek late at night when I was 5. Probably woke up and bumped into an NBC 3rd season airing. I recall knowing about the show when I was 7 and 8 but I can't recall any specific episodes. When we moved in 1973 we found a local station that was stripping the show 5 days a week right after school.
 
I remember being on holiday in Wales in the 70s and in a cafe somewhere one evening and Star Trek was on the television on the wall but it was an episode that didn't exist as I know now! They were on a Nazi style planet or earth in the forties and there were two Kirks, one was a Nazi officer and the other our hero! At least that's the way my little brain saw it! Nowadays I wonder if I was watching Patterns of Force and just got my wires crossed, somehow? :crazy:
JB
 
I remember being on holiday in Wales in the 70s and in a cafe somewhere one evening and Star Trek was on the television on the wall but it was an episode that didn't exist as I know now! They were on a Nazi style planet or earth in the forties and there were two Kirks, one was a Nazi officer and the other our hero! At least that's the way my little brain saw it! Nowadays I wonder if I was watching Patterns of Force and just got my wires crossed, somehow? :crazy:
JB
I would bet that was the case. Kirk in his normal uniform and Kirk dressed like a Nazi.
 
I remember being on holiday in Wales in the 70s and in a cafe somewhere one evening and Star Trek was on the television on the wall but it was an episode that didn't exist as I know now! They were on a Nazi style planet or earth in the forties and there were two Kirks, one was a Nazi officer and the other our hero! At least that's the way my little brain saw it! Nowadays I wonder if I was watching Patterns of Force and just got my wires crossed, somehow? :crazy:
JB

Kirk didn’t know Spock had a dry sense of humor...

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It is amazing how we remember these things. I was in 4th grade (1974). Was turning the dial (yes dial) and happened upon "Miri." The most powerful memory was the scene with the freshly-turned grup and the tricycle.

No looking back since then other than I am an old fart now
rsz_tos-thedeadlyyears23.jpg
 
My answer to this is kind of tricky. As I remember it, my mother tried unsuccessfully to introduce me to Star Trek when I was four years old, so sometime between August 1970-71, most likely in September 1970, when our local NBC affiliate picked up reruns for afternoon syndication. I was very resistant. I was a sensitive child with an aversion to anything "weird" or "scary." At that age, I was all about sitcoms, especially the ones aired by our CBS affiliate, and Star Trek had been counterprogrammed against Gilligan's Island. As soon as weird music started playing during the first planetary beamdown, I said, " Nope. Too scary, " and hightailed it outside to play.

Shortly thereafter, Star Trek was taken off the afternoon schedule.

When I was five, however, my tastes broadened to include adventure shows like The Wild, Wild West and Lost in Space. I was all about those Jim West fight scenes.

In September 1972, when I was six, Star Trek returned to the afternoon schedule, starting this run, oddly enough, with "The Gamesters of Triskelion." This time, I was hooked.

In September 1973, the animated series premiered, and for a time, I had Star Trek six days a week. But soon, the afterschool live action reruns ended, moved to 5 and 7 a.m. on Saturday mornings. Even as a kid, I was never a morning person, and I generally didn't get up before nine a.m. on weekends.

During that enforced absence from live-action Trek, we had upgraded our cheap/freebie hotel cast-off black and white VHF-only TV (no UHF tuner built-in) for a used color TV. On May 31, 1974, we moved into a new house. As my bedroom did not as yet have curtains AND was on the East side of the house, the sun woke me up at 6:50 a.m. on the morning of Saturday, June 1st. I was up in time to watch that morning's live action Star Trek rerun, only this time, IN LIVING COLOR. So, the first episode I saw in color was a rerun of "A Private Little War."

By 1975, live action Star Trek disappeared altogether from my local television market. From 1975-September 1979, the only times I could see it was on hotel televisions when we took vacations to King's Dominion or the Blue Ridge Mountains, so until 1979, there were many episodes I only experienced through their Blish adaptations.

(Oh, and on the night we hurried out to see TMP, we had to leave in the middle of my first viewing of "Journey to Babel." Yes, thirteen year old me was conflicted about that. )
 
And quite rightly so! Nothing compares to the television episodes of TOS, certainly not the movies!!! :techman:
JB
 
Pretty sure the first ep of TOS I ever saw was "By Any Other Name"...I don't remember the viewing very well, but I distinctly remember being horrified by the crushing of Yeoman Thompson.
 
The first Star Trek episode I watched was "Mirror, Mirror".

The episode enthralled me, as I recognized for the first time Spock's wry humor and saw the application of Star Trek to everyday life. The "take home" message, if you will, in this episode, is the duality of good and evil.

A similar episode would be "The Enemy Within", where Kirk is split in two.

The necessity of both parts of the human nature is evident in both episodes.
 
I remember my first episode that I saw was in the late-80’s, but I was a small kid then and all I remember is Spock on the bridge (which is of no help).

The first episode I really remember seeing is “Spectre of the Gun” from the early-90’s. Especially Chekhov’s death scene.
 
"Miri" during the writer's strike in '88 when my local channel played old episodes in place of TNG. I had started watching TNG and thought it was OK but when I saw this episode of the original series I fell in love. McCoy racing to find a cure as everyone starts falling to the disease. To this day I like the original Trek best. I started renting all the video tapes of each individual episode and the color and energy of the series just grabbed me in a way that TNG didn't although I have watched all Trek since then.
 
The first star trek episode I watched was actually The Cage because that's episode 1 on Netflix and I really thought this series was overhyped but I knew that it wasn't the usual Captain just from the presence of Kirk in pop culture so I kept watching and eventually I was hooked, I think the episode that really brought my love of this franchise (as new as I am to it, it has really quickly endeared me and I still have most of the other series left) was probably Space Seed.
 
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