To extend the thread drift ever further:
A staggering coincidence is plausible when you realize the second season of Buck Rogers was also a deliberate attempt to imitate Star Trek, while not bothering to see if the parts they were throwing at the wall were the ones that made Star Trek so popular. It's no wonder so little of it stuck, to the point the second season was cut short. 17 episodes, I believe, rather than the full 24 expected at the time.
And while Gil Gerard had his egotistical moments, the gender equality of season one was mostly his doing. He started with the pilot. During the reception scene, they had to delay production for a couple of days because when GG first walked on the set, all the women except Erin Gray were in gowns and dresses, and only the men were in uniform. He stormed off the set and demanded that at least a third of the couples go back to wardrobe and get their costumes reversed, so the women were represented in the military. He was furious that it was assumed that only the men would be serving, except for Wilma. Erin Gray had great fun relating that tale when they were both in Denver at the Star Trek convention about a decade ago.
A staggering coincidence is plausible when you realize the second season of Buck Rogers was also a deliberate attempt to imitate Star Trek, while not bothering to see if the parts they were throwing at the wall were the ones that made Star Trek so popular. It's no wonder so little of it stuck, to the point the second season was cut short. 17 episodes, I believe, rather than the full 24 expected at the time.
And while Gil Gerard had his egotistical moments, the gender equality of season one was mostly his doing. He started with the pilot. During the reception scene, they had to delay production for a couple of days because when GG first walked on the set, all the women except Erin Gray were in gowns and dresses, and only the men were in uniform. He stormed off the set and demanded that at least a third of the couples go back to wardrobe and get their costumes reversed, so the women were represented in the military. He was furious that it was assumed that only the men would be serving, except for Wilma. Erin Gray had great fun relating that tale when they were both in Denver at the Star Trek convention about a decade ago.