Probably a good thing that they overshot there.
The Enterprise wasn't the flagship in original series. It was just a starship at that time, making rounds and picking up supplies from colonies, exploring and other stuff.
Then if that were true initially then I think they changed their minds though the series in Court Martial and Bread and Circuses, the Ultimate Computer Kirk's captaincy is a big deal.Indeed. Carrying the Hornblower metaphor further, it wasn't even a ship-of-the-line. It was a second-rate vessel (though still a Starship, with all the connotation of excellence that would come to convey). It wasn't even a new ship. Kirk was at least its second captain (by TAS, established as at leaand st its third).
Then if that were true initially then I think they changed their minds though the series in Court Martial and Bread and Circuses, the Ultimate Computer Kirk's captaincy is a big deal.
Geez what does Kirk have to do to rate.Throughout the show, really. Or what do you feel would be a "glamorous" mission?
Well, not really. In "Court Martial", Kirk is literally one out of thousands at the very most ("one man in a million"); in "Bread and Circuses", his job ranks slightly above that of a civilian skipper who flunked SF Academy on an extra year and sold his crew to gladiator games ("what do they call the one to graduate the last in his Academy class?"); and in "Ultimate Computer", Kirk is to be replaced by a computer.
Starships are important things, but Kirk's is not all that rare in the company, and Kirk himself doesn't appear to stand out at all. The only ones to grant him personal recognition are a genocidal madman and a Klingon, and the former refers to his warrior antics in his youth, while the latter hails him as the captain of the famed Enterprise rather than by name (thus probably actually hailing the achievements of Pike!).
Timo Saloniemi
They were first at Organia, Deneva, Miri's planet, I think they were also sent out first to "The Changeling"What we saw or didn't see in TOS is basically a vast volume consisting of page upon empty page of the latter thing. That show never could afford to actually show anything much, and it... shows.
It's in storytelling where Kirk never is anything special, apart from being "our" captain. And where his ship never is anything special, apart from being his ship. Does he or she get mentioned in dispatches? We never hear. But Captain Dunsel doesn't get a mention, either. Then again, Captain Tracey does - there are Kirks in the fleet, and then there are Traceys, folks Kirk looks up to, for purely dramatic purposes.
Kirk being the second best is something of a dramatic point, too. Were he the first into the fire, he'd be dead. But he gets to mop up after the A Team fails, so he has better odds of survival. Or then he hits an adventure by accident - it's truly remarkable that Starfleet never sends him into one, unless in response to the failure of the first team to try. His greatest galaxy-saving achievements come because he's the ship that happens on the spot. Part of that happening may be due to him being particularly mobile. But it isn't plausibly due to him being unique, ergo, the galaxy must be in danger outside Kirk's field of vision, too (and ours), and nevertheless gets saved.
Timo Saloniemi
I dunno where anyone gets the idea the ship was a second-rate vessel. Because of the milk run assignments we see early in the 1st season?
Then if that were true initially then I think they changed their minds though the series in Court Martial and Bread and Circuses, the Ultimate Computer Kirk's captaincy is a big deal.
Starship Class.But not once did they mention any bigger or better ships than the Constellation Class in TOS Starfleet. ...
In Court Martial theres a big chart on the Constellation Class ships on it...
True. But TOS also made it amply clear that the ship was pressed for time at every turn - she was too busy to save the lives of millions in "The Galileo Seven", say, instead merely carrying the vital medication halfway, to a rendezvous (a key plot point that allowed Kirk to spend time searching for his missing crew). Certainly no timeslot there for dropping salt to a creature that doesn't even want it.
Indeed. The salt vampire was obviously sentient; how else could he/she/it have convincingly passed as human? Later in the season, we encounter a "murdering monster" who was attacking a mining colony, and who was resistant to phaser fire. Turned out to be a mother protecting the eggs of the next generation of her species.The point is, the discussion wasn’t made. Kirk never considered it. Spock never considered it. Again, had this been written later in the season, it WOULD have been considered.
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