McCoy never went for the neck. Always the shoulder, except for the one time he did himself in the forearm.
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He gets cordrazine right in the gut here.
That was accidental...![]()
He gets cordrazine right in the gut here.
With or without the mayonnaise jar?I was going to guess Kirk's books might be a set of Funk & Wagnalls encyclopedias. My parents had a set from before I was born.
I had to do an AI inquiry to find that reference. It was a running gag on Johnny Carson. I was in bed for those shows.With or without the mayonnaise jar?
Sandburg's Lincoln is one of the great biographies, insanely thorough, definitely read it.Now, given the image resolution challenges, I don't think the following speculation is very reliable, but it's what I might call "reasonably close" and, given what we know about Kirk's (and Roddenberry's) personal interests, I want to let myself believe those books are copies of the red 1948 Sangamon edition of Sandburg's well-known biographies, perhaps even coming from GR's own collection.
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Whether a match or not, I now have a set on order. Probably will be an interesting read, too.
In universe, this makes sense based on the detailed and accurate portrayal of Abraham Lincoln from Kirk's memories in The Savage Curtain.I don't think the following speculation is very reliable, but it's what I might call "reasonably close" and, given what we know about Kirk's (and Roddenberry's) personal interests, I want to let myself believe those books are copies of the red 1948 Sangamon edition of Sandburg's well-known biographies, perhaps even coming from GR's own collection.

SPOCK: It would seem that we were held in the power of creatures able to control matter and to rearrange molecules in whatever fashion was desired. So they were able to create images of Surak and Lincoln after scanning our minds and using their fellow creatures as source matter.
KIRK: They seemed so real. And to me, especially Mister Lincoln. I feel I actually met Lincoln.
SPOCK: Yes, and Surak. Perhaps in a sense they were real, Captain. Since they were created out of our own thoughts, how could they be anything but what we expected them to be?
They’re almost certainly not personal items. Film studios have props and set dressing for that.
Those sort of items are a bit different than books. De Kelly wore a pinky ring, something of his mothers, IIRC.They do now. But there’s plenty of times personal things end up on screen.
(Watches, wedding rings, earrings… Doctor Who has some fun examples of that: Capaldi wore his wedding ring as the Doctor, Pertwee his own watches, and Aldred nearly caused a continuity nightmare with some Batman Earrings on Remembrance of the Daleks. Plus famously, Bonds Rolex was Cubby Broccolis but on a production team members strap.)
They did THEN. Largely, that's what you see on screen: stock or rented props. Most everything else is an exception.They do now. But there’s plenty of times personal things end up on screen.
(Watches, wedding rings, earrings… Doctor Who has some fun examples of that: Capaldi wore his wedding ring as the Doctor, Pertwee his own watches, and Aldred nearly caused a continuity nightmare with some Batman Earrings on Remembrance of the Daleks. Plus famously, Bonds Rolex was Cubby Broccolis but on a production team members strap.)
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