I don't giggle, but when I first read about this when I was about twelve or so I found it a bit confusing.Am I the only one who giggles at the oddness that Kellam de Forest is associated with a show featuring De Forest Kelly?
I don't giggle, but when I first read about this when I was about twelve or so I found it a bit confusing.Am I the only one who giggles at the oddness that Kellam de Forest is associated with a show featuring De Forest Kelly?
Kellam de Forest; de Forest Research.
Yeah I admit I'm kind of baffled by the attitude they seemed to have towards that. Surely they must have seen the importance of having the characters act consistently from episode to episode, and in having a set of established rules for this world to exist in.
You get the sense they saw the Enterprise as being just another generic spaceship, with a bunch of generic officers who only existed to serve the story they came up with. I don't think a lot of them really understood the kind of extensive world-building Roddenberry was attempting to do with this show.
I get that sense with some of the writers, others not so much. George Clayton Johnson, for example, had some interesting ideas that Roddenberry's re-write of 'The Man Trap' gutted.
After reading The Are The Voyages I found myself revisiting sections of another "making of" book regarding Mission: Impossible. There are a lot of parallels between Mission: Impossible and Star Trek.
Agreed, he was extremely short sighted. Had he played ball even just to the point of stroking a few network egos, his other transgressions might have gone down a little easier. Instead, he played the blame game. I hear you, the next two volumes can't come out fast enough. So much interesting stuff here, even that which was already known.
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