From what I understand "The Cage" was rejected for three reasons:This is the first time I've heard that the "which one would Pike have chosen" question was a reason why "The Cage" was rejected. Do you or does anybody have a citation for that?
It's still stupid that's her name given her being called Number One. If that were any more on the nose you could smell with it.
If only Picard's ...We should just be thankful Spock was spared that unrealistic affectation.
Wasn’t Number One a term used at times in the British Navy?
It's an honorific that dates to the time when the officers ranks aboard a ship were captain/master and lieutenants:If it is a large ship, and the senior lieutenant isn't second in command, are they still called number one?
If it is a large ship, and the senior lieutenant isn't second in command, are they still called number one?
Inside Star Trek says that NBC didn't think that Desilu was up to the job, so went for a script that guaranteed failure.From what I understand "The Cage" was rejected for three reasons:
1) Not enough action. (Remember this was the era of westerns and police dramas that usually ended with a shootout of some sort).
2) While the suits at NBC were impressed; the pilot cost the equivalent of a B movie in 1966. They weren't convinced that a series like Star Trek could be produced for 30 episodes for a reasonable cost.
3) Because of the amount of visual and photographic effects required they were also unsure that episodes could be delivered for broadcast in a timely fashion.
That's why when they commissioned a second pilot they dictated certain terms and deadlines that had to be met during production and delivery, in addition to containing a story that they felt would entertain audiences and satisfy advertisers and sponsors.
Absolutely.It's still stupid that's her name given her being called Number One. If that were any more on the nose you could smell with it.
Accidently let out what he really thought?I think he was just making a sexist remark but didn't mean to.
In the book "Inside Star Trek," didn't Roddenberry tell one of the book's authors that the main reason he hired the actress who played Colt is because he wanted to get her to have sex with him?
And in an interview decades later, Dromm said that Roddenberry was a perfect gentleman and never made a pass at her, so apparently he was all talk in that instance.That story (which IIRC was attributed to GR by director James Goldstone) was about Andrea Dromm, Yeoman Smith in the second pilot.
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