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Party like it's 1966!

Just for fun, here's the full TV listings from that day:

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Jumping ahead a bit, would you have access to the TV listings for December 1? I'm curious what (rerun?) aired in Trek's slot on its first week off.
 
^ Thanks for the info.

*******

50 years ago this week:
October 24 – Negotiations about the Vietnam War begin in Manila, Philippines.
October 25
  • A military court in Jakarta sentences ex-foreign minister Subandrio to death.
  • Spain closes its Gibraltar border to non-pedestrian traffic.
October 26
  • NATO moves its HQ from Paris to Brussels.
  • A fire aboard the aircraft carrier USS Oriskany in the Gulf of Tonkin kills 44 crewmen.
October 27 – The United Nations takes Namibia from South Africa.
October 29
  • The first ever regeneration in Doctor Who of the Doctor: William Hartnell's face transforms into that of Patrick Troughton.
  • The Guinean delegation to the OAU meeting in Ethiopia, become hostages of the Ghanaian government in Accra.


New on the U.S. charts:

"Stop, Stop, Stop," The Hollies
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(#7 US; #2 UK)

"You Keep Me Hangin' On," The Supremes
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(#1 US; #1 R&B; #8 UK; #339 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)

"Winchester Cathedral," The New Vaudeville Band
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(#1 US; #1 AC; #4 UK)


And airing Thursday night:

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Also airing on another channel:

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*
 
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Jumping ahead a bit, would you have access to the TV listings for December 1? I'm curious what (rerun?) aired in Trek's slot on its first week off.
I'll try to remember to post the TV listings every week. Not sure if anyone else is interested, but I think it's a cool time capsule! Kinda fun to imagine what you would choose to watch (and which nights you might have read a book instead, haha).
 
Ha ha, when I was 8, I walked around singing Winchester Cathedral. Quirky little song. I still like it.
 
^ Fun fact: The band who did the single were session musicians...when it became a hit, they put together a completely different band to perform it on tour.
 
Now I'm pretty certain that network programming executives are looney. They expected the same viewers who watched TOS to tune into Jack Benny?!?! :ack::crazy::shrug:
I would. The man was amazing.

Ok, I'm catching back up.

What are Little Girls Made Of:

Kirk on the turntable is one of my earliest memories of TOS when I stated watching in reruns in 1975-ish.

This episode feels different from just about any other TOS. It's just DARK. The cave sets might look fake, but somehow they look like someone built a fake set that was three mile tall and two miles underground. Weird. It's very immersive.

I know this is a Robert Bloch story. But this is a creepy episode. I don't think Wold in the Fold or Catspaw are creepy like this. There's something very confining about it. Not much on the Enterprise. A very small cast.

It was interesting to note that the "Corby" uniform shows up four times. Corby, Brown, Andrea, and Kirk. And it's different in all four version. Brown and Andrea wear the same outfit only Andrea forgot the shirt. Corby and Kirk wear the same only this time it's Kirk who forgets the undershirt. (Hmmm.) Theiss was amazing. Except...

The fact that Ted Cassidy manages to be scary in that outfit is a testament to how scary Ted Cassidy could be.
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He seems to be a fairly charming and dashing man. I can see how he would have been frustrated being The Monster. He had my hands down favorite line in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

Ruk definitely reminds me of Marvel comics' The Vision. I gather he made his first appearance in 1968 although the creators apparently claim that they never watched Star Trek. (Certainly a believable claim.)

I love how Corby tries to explain to Chapel that Andrea is nothing more than a machine. That he just happened to make look like that and dressed in 50% less costume. Isn't Corby supposed to be a genius? Chapel's reaction shots are some of the best things in this episode.

The assertion that Corby and Andrea don't have emotions rings even more false than when Data would say the same.

We're MANY episodes in, even in production order and we still have Smiling Spock.

Oh! And this is the first episode with a partial score, right? It's funny how much of The Cage we got to hear before even The Menagerie aired. One of my favorite Steiner scores. His Andrea music is much less embarrassing "Va va voom!" than his score for Mudd's Women. And his Ruk music is terrifying.
 
50 years ago this week:
November 2 – The Cuban Adjustment Act comes into force, allowing 123,000 Cubans the opportunity to apply for permanent residence in the United States.
November 4 – In Italy, a flood of the Arno River hits Florence, flooding it to a maximum depth of 6.7 m (22 ft), leaving thousands homeless and destroying millions of masterpieces of art and rare books. In addition, a severe tidal flood hits Venice.
November 5 – Thirty-eight African states demand that the United Kingdom use force against the Rhodesian government.



New on the U.S. charts:

"(Come 'Round Here) I'm the One You Need," The Miracles
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(#17 US; #4 R&B; #37 UK)

"A Hazy Shade of Winter," Simon & Garfunkel
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(#13 US)


And airing Thursday night:

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Ok, an age where something like Winchester Cathedral could be on the radio kind of blows my mind.

I watched Miri last night.

Watching Miri probably for the first time as a grup I have to admit that I found parts of it surprisingly affecting. The "kid " with the bicycle pleading for it to be fixed almost brought me to tears. (No I wasn't drinking. )

OK, Michael J. Pollard as the oldest "boy" was preposterous. He almost (more than almost ) drags down the whole episode. The casting changes him from a child leading his peers into a creepy young man who had found a bunch of little kids he can control. Plus you never get the idea that he a Miri are contemporaries. But she's getting the disease and he isn't, nor is it ever mentioned that he'd be the next kid to succumb.

There was something very compelling about Spock's line "And I DO want to get back to the ship. " It showed a self interest we don't usually see from Spock.

I'm behind on reading my Blish, but I do recall that he had the planet be an actual Earth colony.

This is the first episode to be scored entirely with music from other episodes , including several that hadn't aired yet. Some Corbomite, some Balance of Terror, some of The Cage There is also some of Joseph Mullendore's library music used here. Someone once said that this was the MISSING music from the TOS box. I'll have to listen more closely, but it's not from Conscience of the King which was recorded after the episode aired, but from Mullendore's library tracks.

Actually it was fifty years ago today that Joseph Mullendore recorded The Conscience of the King. (Apparently he recorded his library cues with Corbomite That must have been a hell of a day!)

This is such a different score. This score relies heavily on the Star Trek theme (as opposed to the fanfare). Mullendore and Wilbur Hatch are the only It would not be heard again until Star Trek : The Motion Picture.

His sound is as different and refreshing as Kaplan's. But Kaplan comes back next season and Mullendore didn't. Mullendore isn't the only Trek composer to do a single episode , but he is the one I wish had done more.

Dagger of the Mind is next. I'll try really hard to watch it on Thursday this week! It's kind of a pain trying to catch up.
 
Ok, an age where something like Winchester Cathedral could be on the radio kind of blows my mind.
:lol: This is the '60s, the mind-blowing is just getting warmed up....

There was something very compelling about Spock's line "And I DO want to get back to the ship. " It showed a self interest we don't usually see from Spock.
I thought it spoke more to his loyalty...he was assuring Kirk that even without suffering from the disease, he was just as motivated as they were.
 
well, just to mix things up, I watched the episode on time, I'm just writing about it late!

I never noticed the similarities to What Are Little Girls Made Of before. The mood is so strikingly different. WALG feels like it has stakes. It feels dangerous. As fun as this is and as good as all of the performances are I kind of don't see the point. Why is the Barney Miller guy doing what he's doing? Is he just a mad scientist?

At several moments in this episode Shatner and Nimoy reminded me so much of Pine and Qunito is was alarming.

A good solid adventure of the week.

Oh: Without emotion there is no need for violence. I'm still laughing. I think Vejur will tell you otherwise.

Next week: One of the best episodes EVER. But I'm not biased. :)
 
50 years ago this week:
November 6 – Lunar Orbiter 2 is launched.
November 8
  • Former Massachusetts Attorney General Edward Brooke becomes the first African American elected to the United States Senate since Reconstruction.
  • Actor Ronald Reagan is elected Governor of California.
November 9 – John Lennon meets Yoko Ono at the Indica Gallery, London.
November 10 – Seán Lemass retires as Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland to be replaced in the role by fellow Fianna Fáil member Jack Lynch.
November 11
  • A mine kills 3 Israeli paratroopers on the West Bank border.
  • Spain declares general amnesty for crimes committed during the Spanish Civil War (effective only for the Falangists' side).



New on the U.S. charts:

"Talk Talk," The Music Machine
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(#15 US)

"A Place in the Sun," Stevie Wonder
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(#9 US; #29 AC; #3 R&B; #20 UK)

"Mellow Yellow," Donovan
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(#2 US; #8 UK)

Also entering the charts, Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme, the album on which this song was originally released...though it wouldn't be put out as a single until 1968, when it was used in The Graduate:

"Scarborough Fair / Canticle," Simon & Garfunkel
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(1968 positions: #11 US; #5 AC)


And airing Thursday night:

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(And it's about damn time!)
 
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