In Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, Robert Justman reprints a one-page story synopsis he submitted to Gene Roddenberry for possible consideration as an episode long before this episode was written. Almost beat for beat, Justman's proposed story is the same as this episode.
Roddenberry was just this guy, you know?
"Bad people" blow up day care centers with fertilizer bombs. Judging the great run of human beings as "good" or "bad" is arrogant and best and most certainly a waste of life.
Since I'm not a religious person, the sinner/saint dichotomy doesn't hold much interest to me. What I find more interesting is how much the "visionary writer-producer" label which was central to Roddenberry's personal mythology (and, often, Paramount's marketing of the franchise) holds true.
Well, he was certainly a dick to his first wife. I don't know as much about his relationship with Majel, but it didn't disintegrate with divorce like his first marriage did.
I don't have the Science Channel, and of course left town when Roddenberry Jr. was holding a free screening that I could have gone to. Any word on the DVD?
What do we know about Roddenberry's first marriage, really?Well, he was certainly a dick to his first wife. I don't know as much about his relationship with Majel, but it didn't disintegrate with divorce like his first marriage did.
What do we know about Roddenberry's first marriage, really?Well, he was certainly a dick to his first wife. I don't know as much about his relationship with Majel, but it didn't disintegrate with divorce like his first marriage did.
What do we know about Roddenberry's first marriage, really?Well, he was certainly a dick to his first wife. I don't know as much about his relationship with Majel, but it didn't disintegrate with divorce like his first marriage did.
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