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Hey, I never noticed that before....

• Maybe Matt Jefferies inadvertently provided AMT with scale drawings of the Constellation instead of the Enterprise. Spock: "It would explain a great many things."
By the way, documents around "The Doomday Machine" i.d. the Constellation out as an "Enterprise class ship". So the intent was it's the same ship class, AMT kit inaccuracies aside.
 
By the way, documents around "The Doomday Machine" i.d. the Constellation out as an "Enterprise class ship". So the intent was it's the same ship class, AMT kit inaccuracies aside.

Of course I was being facetious, but fans are still free to go by the aired material only and see the Constellation as a variant type. TOS-R forecloses on that leeway later on, but again, fans pick their canon. :bolian:
 
Watching the Mark of Gideon and noticed that Spock disobeys the Admiral's orders and beams down to Gideon. There seem to have been no further repercussions for Spock.
He seems to be passed over for promotion to Captain, again...:vulcan: Having no career path forward, he should probably leave Starfleet after this tour of duty. ;)
 
He seems to be passed over for promotion to Captain, again...:vulcan: Having no career path forward, he should probably leave Starfleet after this tour of duty. ;)

Yeah, really!

I imagine Starfleet gave him some leeway because he was right and saved Kirk. Of course, Kirk wasn't a favorite of the admiralty either, so, hmmm . . . . As Sulu says (roughly; not checking the exact quote) "With the captain missing, that's the best they could come up with?"
 
As Sulu says (roughly; not checking the exact quote) "With the captain missing, that's the best they could come up with?"

When did Sulu say that?

Edit: I gotcha, it's from "The Mark of Gideon." What's the matter with me? I was afraid it might be JJ-Sulu or Streaming Sulu or...
 
When did Sulu say that?

Edit: I gotcha, it's from "The Mark of Gideon." What's the matter with me? I was afraid it might be JJ-Sulu or Streaming Sulu or...

Yeah, it's in the episode. It's a nice Spock-Sulu moment and some good dialogue (of which there is plenty in the oft-derided episode). After Sulu's well-taken remark, Spock makes clear that he sympathizes and then offers some sardonic commentary.
 
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"Arena"

The boulder Kirk drops on the Gorn (image & image) resets back to its starting position near the end of the episode as he hobbles uphill (image).

Good catch. The Metrons must have reloaded that "available weapon."

It was awful lucky the type of rock in question wasn't too dense for Kirk to roll uphill. If Kirk's boulder was sandstone, it would weigh a ton or more, and getting behind it to push like that would be reckless at best:
http://www.delawarequarries.com/landscape/boulders/boulderwt.html

In the future, exo-geologists will have to study the origins and properties of papier-mâché rock formations. We just don't know enough right now.
 
Ssosmcin said:

Model kits of that era weren't usually accurate. They were, at best, simplified.

-----

You've got that right. As I just mentioned elsewhere, next to the TOS Enterprise, I always thought the battlestar Galactica was the coolest looking ship, especially the front or forward section. So the people who made the model kit, Revell I Think, got that same forward section very much wrong and I always hated that.

Robert
 
Watching the Mark of Gideon and noticed that Spock disobeys the Admiral's orders and beams down to Gideon. There seem to have been no further repercussions for Spock.
I think it's pretty much a Star Trek staple for the Captain on the scene to disobey Starfleet regulations only to be forgiven later. Easier to ask forgiveness than to get permission?
 
Until the movies did Kirk only disobey orders in AmokTime? I know he delayed and took on passengers but I regarded these as pushing the boundaries.

Kirk's rep as a maverick cowboy who did whatever the hell he wanted and damn the orders comes from the movies. And not even that many of them. The two times he truly went against orders was to save Spock. General Chang's statement of Kirk "violating the chain of command whenever it suited him" was courtroom bluster that was taken seriously by people.

Kirk was pretty by the book but the book did allow some leeway because the whole point was that Kirk was too far out to keep consulting with Starfleet (unless the plot required it). Even when he bucked the prime directive, he didn't do it on a whim and always justified or agonized over it.
 
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