• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

If you started watching The Cage at midnight on January 1st....

Neither, it's more complicated :D In my timeline I didn't place "Carbon Creek"'s "past" parts in the 1950s but rather on April 12, 2152 where the framing story takes place. The reason for that is T'Pol speaking over the footage from the 1950s which to me signals that we are not seeing actual stuff from the past but a mere visualisation of the words T'Pol says to the others.

I actually didn't think "Carbon Creek" was that bad but it wasn't outstanding or memorable either. (quintessential ENT season 2 :D) I do give it credit for introducing Mestral who made some cool apperances in Dayton Ward's (mostly) 20th century Trek nobels.

What about "The City on The Edge of Forever" which takes place in the 1930's?
 
Worse than "Fair Haven" and "Spirit Folk"? :eek:
Worse than Spocks brain and Shades of grey. It was the only Star Trek episode I can think of that didn't want to be an episode of Star Trek but a day time t.v movie about two people falling in love. I have other problems with this episode but that has always been my main one.
P.S I haven't seen it since it was first on so may not be able to back this claim up properly.
 
Neither, it's more complicated :D In my timeline I didn't place "Carbon Creek"'s "past" parts in the 1950s but rather on April 12, 2152 where the framing story takes place. The reason for that is T'Pol speaking over the footage from the 1950s which to me signals that we are not seeing actual stuff from the past but a mere visualisation of the words T'Pol says to the others.
I think you might be a genius.

How about Past Tense and Future's End?
 
and what was your answer in the end?
You have to do it the way everyone else had to. If I was born in the 1950s I wouldn’t have had a choice but to watch them that way.

I also think there’s a little more cohesion in it, maybe not in the “timeline” but for sure in the progression of production and character development (TOS had very little, TNG had some, DS9 was heavy with it). I feel that watching TOS -> TNG -> DS9 helped me understand what Roddenberry and Berman we’re trying to do a little more clearly, and they got better every time. It also makes me feel like a true Trekkie by doing it this way. I get to experience it the way the rest of the community did, who loves it so much. Maybe watching it as it aired offers something that makes it so lovable? I didn’t want to possibly miss out on that by watching it in timeline order.

Additionally, watching them in production order makes it easier to accept the quality of the older series. If I was to watch ENT first, then TOS, it would have been hard to buy into the plastic looking props and sets or the poor quality picture next to ENT.

I feel that the thread I linked was pretty on point, the advice I was given by some of those guys was great. Some of them even went into great detail about vital episodes and stuff like that. Definitely worth a read. Some of them are still posting on here which gives me a lot of joy, honestly.

@MANT! @Forbin @Deckerd @King Daniel Beyond
@TheGodBen
 
Last edited:
I have to be honest, I get a little offended when I see posts like this. :wah:

Someone said in another thread they don’t even consider ENT canon. I love all trek, I can’t deny any of it. It would be like casting out a family member.

I loved ENT!

In fact I like all versions of Trek to some degree or another. I consider myself lucky in that. More for me to love.

:techman:


Also, everyone know the proper way to watch Star Trek is in alphabetical order.

:beer:
 
You have to do it the way everyone else had to. If I was born in the 1950s I wouldn’t have had a choice but to watch them that way.

I also think there’s a little more cohesion in it, maybe not in the “timeline” but for sure in the progression of production and character development (TOS had very little, TNG had some, DS9 was heavy with it). I feel that watching TOS -> TNG -> DS9 helped me understand what Roddenberry and Berman we’re trying to do a little more clearly, and they got better every time. It also makes me feel like a true Trekkie by doing it this way. I get to experience it the way the rest of the community did, who loves it so much. Maybe watching it as it aired offers something that makes it so lovable? I didn’t want to possibly miss out on that by watching it in timeline order.

Additionally, watching them in production order makes it easier to accept the quality of the older series. If I was to watch ENT first, then TOS, it would have been hard to buy into the plastic looking props and sets or the poor quality picture next to ENT.

I feel that the thread I linked was pretty on point, the advice I was given by some of those guys was great. Some of them even went into great detail about vital episodes and stuff like that. Definitely worth a read. Some of them are still posting on here which gives me a lot of joy, honestly.

@MANT! @Forbin @Deckerd @King Daniel Beyond
I'll try and give it a read. I've never given too much thought about viewing order myself so it's interesting to see the thought process behind it.
 
Ooo what about what I consider the worst episode of Star Trek ever; 11:59?
I belive I actually never made it through that one, so I've got no clue :D But looking at my timeline I didn't include it in my listing of 20th century stuff, so no. But yeah, that episode sucks.

I think you might be a genius.
Might? :D

How about Past Tense and Future's End?
I got large parts of "Past Tense" in 2020 (02:43-07:12, 08:24-14:02, 14:57-25:13, 25:57-36:22 & 38:25-43:38 of part 1 and 01:25-08:30, 11:44-22:47, 23:39-34:37 & 35:37-41:38 of part 2) and the majority of "Future's End" in November 1996 (06-44:00 of part 1 and 00:00-41:44 of part 2).
 
My goal in life now is to become head writer of Star Trek so I can create some time travel episodes that directly over lap some of those ones just to make such a rewatch really awkward.
You've got ten minutes of this episode but then we need to switch to two minutes of that episode then back to that one before twenty minutes of this one...................... :bolian:
 
I loved ENT!

In fact I like all versions of Trek to some degree or another. I consider myself lucky in that. More for me to love.

:techman:


Also, everyone know the proper way to watch Star Trek is in alphabetical order.

:beer:

Hehehehe

But yes, I too love all the series! Star Trek is enormous, if you spend your time nitpicking every detail and criticizing the writers every action you’re doing yourself a disservice. I really appreciate reading “the good in every episode” threads because of this.

Also, Trips pretty easy on the eyes. :whistle:

I'll try and give it a read. I've never given too much thought about viewing order myself so it's interesting to see the thought process behind it.

Yeah, I had a lot of anxiety about it at first actually! Haha

I didn’t want to muck anything up for myself and it’s extremely daunting walking into Star Trek having not seen any of it. I never even watched a syndicated episode on TV when I started! There’s just so much of Star Trek. It’s an enormous universe and so many different series. Having some guidance on here helped me a lot. It also gave me insight for what I should be expecting with each series. #grateful :biggrin:
 
Last edited:
"All Good Things" has a flashback to three billion years ago, when life first started on Earth.

If I were doing this, I'd go in chronological order from the crew's perspective. So, it would go:

ENT
"The Cage"
DSC
TOS
TAS
TMP-1st 15 minutes of GEN
TNG as it aired from 1987-1992
TNG, DS9, and VOY by airdate from 1993-1999 (but not the movies, see below)
  • I'd place GEN around whichever VOY episodes have stardates closest to Stardate 48632, so right between "Emanations" and "Prime Factors".
  • I'd place FC just before DS9's "In Purgatory's Shadow" because of the "recent Borg invasion"
  • I'd place INS just before DS9's Final Chapter. In time for the Son'a's ketracel white facility to be discovered.
VOY Seasons 6-7
NEM
The Kelvin Films, since they're the result of Spock and Nero going back in time Post-NEM.

Have fun!
 
I feel that the thread I linked was pretty on point, the advice I was given by some of those guys was great. Some of them even went into great detail about vital episodes and stuff like that. Definitely worth a read. Some of them are still posting on here which gives me a lot of joy, honestly.

@MANT! @Forbin @Deckerd @King Daniel Beyond
@TheGodBen

I wish I remembered! But you’re welcome.
 
I have to be honest, I get a little offended when I see posts like this. :wah:

Someone said in another thread they don’t even consider ENT canon. I love all trek, I can’t deny any of it. It would be like casting out a family member.

Yes I can understand how you feel but for me ENT didn't feel right and like DSC I am not adding it to my collection of DVDs! Sorry TF! :(
JB
 
An option is to watch the the first 10 min of every episode of the first 5 live action series simultaneously here.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

TNG
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

DS9
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

VOY
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

ENT
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top