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Production Order Group Viewing 2018

Speaking of the binder....
Subject: TALOS IV in the third quadrant of vernal galaxy.

Known Facts: Detailed information cross referenced with 3XY phagrin level - mass computer

The only Earthship that ever visited planet Talos IV was the USS Enterprise commanded by Captain Christopher Pike with Half-Vulcan Science Officer Spock.

Recommendations: Be it hereby noted that said following instructions be incorporated into STARFLEET policy - -

NO ONE WILL EVER VISIT TALOS IV.

The following officers have visited Talos IV and recommended that no human should ever visit it again - -

Captain Christopher Pike

Half-Vulcan Science Officer Spock

STARFLEET COMMAND
BY ORDER OF
Robert L. Comsul
COMMANDING OFFICER
Lot of speciest centric wording in that binder. Earthship. No human should ever visit. Twice mentioning that Spock was half-Vulcan.
I can't believe I missed all this in my SPACE TALK summary!
Vernal galaxies? 3XY phagrin level - mass computer? All that Earth stuff?
SciFi from the days of yore ;)

Pike's chair seems so primitive even by today's standards. Stephen Hawking could talk and manipulate computer screens with his eyes. But then, if Pike could communicate it would ruin the plot.
And what is up with this beep chair of Pike's? Helloooo! This is the future hundreds of years from now! Pike needs a chair and computer like Professor Hawking had. He'd communicate like normal. Honestly, even with 1960s understanding, Pike could have communicated with Morse Code. That would have taken too long for the episode, but it would have been an understood idea for 1960s audiences. If he can blink once for yes and twice for no, Pike could communicate in Morse.
It could be that Pike's brain is injured to the point where he's able to hear and comprehend the world around him but his language centre is so messed up that YES/NO is all he's capable of. Little better than a waking coma. Horrible.
Although the future world we see each week is hardly the Utopia that "Roddenberry's vision" is famous for: There's smuggling, crime, madness, innumerable plagues and lethal raditation that can trap a man inside his own mind to the point where state of the art medical technology can’t help at all!

"From a stellar group at the other end of the galaxy." I didn't catch last time that that was how far Pike's Enterprise travelled. If only Voyager could travel to the other side of the galaxy so quickly.
The Menagerie re-edit of The Cage also removed another clue as to just how phenomenally fast the Enterprise travels; it's where Pike and Vina are having a picnic:
PIKE: Look, I'm sorry they punish you, but we can't let them
VINA: My, it turned out to be a lovely day, didn't it?
PIKE: It's funny. It's about twenty four hours ago I was telling the ship's doctor how much I wanted something else not very different from what we have here. An escape from reality.
So at (time) Warp Factor 7 they travelled 18 light years in around a day? That's over 6,500 times lightspeed!
Although since The Cage in it's original form was never broadcast, does that make it canon?

Again Starfleet personnel not acting or reacting rationally in the face of a security issue. The guy that caught Spock messing around should have alerted security first, then tried to stop Spock.
Not just him but Spock as well - our favourite half-Vulcan science officer should have just nerve pinched him the second he was interrupted.

Do Vina's girl parts still work to make babies as old and banged up as she is?
Her age is also an issue. Vina was an adult crewmember when her ship crashed (at least 18 years old) plus another 18, plus 13 more until the events of The Menagerie. Now, women can and do have babies at age 49 or over, but coupled with her obvious physical difficulties....


I like how Kirk or in this case Spock routinely break the rules only to have Starfleet routinely come in to tell them it was okay.
Don't worry, I'm sure it won't become a regular occurrence :devil:

As well edited as the episode within an episode is, it does strike me as incredibly lazy (writing wise) to have Mendez just be an illusion at the end (and thus to have been an illusion when he boarded the shuttle back on SB11). It extends the Talosians influence to absurd levels and means that SB11 should be evacuated immediately!

Or, did Spock just smuggle a Talosian relay transmitter on board the shuttle? :shrug:
 
Shore Leave

Why would Kirk just assume that Spock would message his back? Fascinating. Interesting too that Barrows jumped right in to handle that situation. Very devoted yeoman.

This planet's concept reminds me of a holodeck.

Alice in Wonderland, Shakepeare, Milton. TOS was all about great literature. People in the 60's got the references. Not sure people today would.

Cute trick Spock pulled on Kirk to get him to go down to the planet.

"Very much like your Earth." Psst, Spock, it's your Earth too!

"With what we've been through." What have they been through? Something recent that happened offscreen or are they talking about all the adventures they've had so far? That would take a lot out of you.

What would happen to the gun if Sulu took it back to the ship? It's a real gun, right? Or is it?

I wonder what Gary Mitchell thought of Finnegan. And Ruth.

Couldn't Kirk call the ship to use their sensors to find Sulu and the other landing party members? And maybe even beam Kirk to where they are? Well, I guess not after they lost power, but what about before?

And why did they lose power? The planet guys were stealing power to make all the things the landing party were thinking about?

Another old flame of Kirk's. He really liked Ruth. He was scarcely more affected by the Venus drug or the Naked Time thing as he is by Ruth.

I'd probably be thinking that Finnegan and Ruth were aliens.

Oooh, McCoy knows how to flirt! Get some, Leonard!

The girl with Rodriguez...Angela...is that the girl whose love died in BoT?

Someone beaming down from the bridge?

Sulu says "are we stranded?" because the transporter's not working. He's forgotten that that is not a problem now because now they have shuttlecraft! Poor Sulu is having Enemy Within flashbacks.

Kirk's appropriately devastated at the loss of McCoy, but he pulls himself together and makes Barrows pull herself together too which she does admirably.

They do a lot of running this episode. The cast will need a shore leave after.

Kirk's manly shoulder cannot be contained by a mere Starfleet jersey!

Kirk vs. Finnegan, the most extended fist fight to date. Is it the longest in the series?

A cabaret on Rigel 2? Rigel 2 is a fun place, but don't go to Rigel 7. The Rigel system is a very busy system.

We're happy McCoy is back. We don't care so much about whether Angela is back.

"Did you enjoy your rest, gentlemen?" "Yes, we f*cked like bunnies!"

Now that I think about it, is it creepy that Kirk spent his shore leave with the likeness of his old girlfriend? Reminds me of Geordi and Leah Brahms. Just don't let the real Ruth find out.

Alien Watch: We can add the Caretaker!

Talosians
That big ugly Rigellian guy Pike fought in illusion
Vina as an Orion girl in illusion
Glimpse of other aliens captured by Talosians
Ron Howard's brother
That dog from Enemy Within
Salt monster
That hand plant...Gertrude
Spock (duh)
Charlie's parents (Thasians)
Romulans!
(Ruk)
Miri's planet kids (bonk bonk)
Giant ape creatures of Taurus II
Shore Leave Caretaker guy
 
Gary MItchell might not have known much about Finnegan and Ruth. He did not attend the Academy until Kirk held the rank of lieutenant, sometime in the late 2250s.
 
Shore Leave is good fun but some elements are just bonkers.

This episode does have two women (willingly) going on landing party duty at the same but since fully one third of the crew is female, I'm sure we'll see a lot more of this.

I confess, as far as all the Yeomen Not-Rands go, Barrows is the only one I'd be reluctant to trade in for Janice. She's still almost entirely useless but at least she gets some comedic moments. Apparently Ruth was added and the romance angle switched to McCoy when the Rand's part was re-written.

I really enjoy Sulu's enthusiasm and use of scientific method. The other members of the landing party do seem largely superfluous but it's fun to have them . It's nice to see that Angela bounced back from the death of her fiancé so quickly, albeit she bounces head first into a tree.

I think Finnegan is truly dreadful. The fight goes on for soooooooo long. I would probably have preferred more aliens cropping up from past missions than this nutter.

I'm troubled by the caretaker having technology to restore the dead far beyond Starfleet tech. This felt like an over the top deus ex machina that was conveniently forgotten after this episode, along with Barrows.
 
But until the TAS sequel there was no malevolence on the planet directed at the Starfleet crew! They just simply misunderstood how to enjoy the planet!
JB
 
Gary MItchell might not have known much about Finnegan and Ruth. He did not attend the Academy until Kirk held the rank of lieutenant, sometime in the late 2250s.

Saavik was a lieutenant at the Academy. Mitchell may have known KIrk as a lieutenant at the Academy. Kirk was at the Academy 15 years ago. Is it reasonable to be a lieutenant at the Academy 15 years ago? That gives him 15 years to be a LT, LT CMDR, CMDR, and then captain. Heck, throw in a LT jr grade.

What an odd episode. It's as if everyone had ADD or was easily distracted by random objects. "I'm just going to collect flora samples and oh look, a revolver! Let's start shooting things" or "Let's hunt that tiger and meet on the other side of the hill. Oh look, a pretty flower. I'm going to stop looking for the tiger and smell the flowers."

Ugh.

OK, how much time between this and the previous episode(s)? What has the crew been through in the past 3 months that made shore leave so important? Just 2 episodes ago the entire crew was evacuated off the Enterprise in "Court Martial." This had to give most some down time. Plus the repair time. Definitely equal or more than the time they spent at the Shore Leave planet.

I do like how "Love 'em and Leave 'em Kirk" straightens up when he realizes his yeoman is massaging his back. He's not mixing work with pleasure. Clear boundaries between him and those under his command.

Sulu! And we keep with his botany background! Nice nod to continuity. With only 400+ crew we shouldn't be surprised to see people with multiple skills and using those multiple skills in their job.

Now here is our first oddity or incongruity that should have alerted our intrepid crew. Such a lush world has no animal life? Really? Does that seem right to anyone? This should have been a major red flag that something isn't right here. This is not a natural planet.

Speaking of artificial, interesting idea that everything is made out of plant life. Vegetation used as construction material. Almost like it was all... replicated from bio matter... or something.

Now the crew starts acting oddly on the planet. McCoy sees the white rabbit and Alice. He at first reacts normally. He's perplexed and calls for Sulu. Sulu arrives but doesn't see anything. Maybe McCoy is seeing things. Still, at this point, a call to the ship is made, but McCoy isn't overly concerned. He is reporting the oddity, yes, but it's not presented nor treated like a serious situation. It's laughed off. Odd.

More crew beam down and begin seeing things. Do they withdraw? Evacuate the planet? Nope. Cancel shore leave, yes, but we're gonna stick around and blunder across this glade. With each and every new sigh the crew forgets what they are doing. As I noted above Sulu acts like it's normal to find an antique revolver laying on the ground. He picks it up and starts target shooting because, hey, when you find an antique Earth firearm on a planet far from Earth what else are you going to do but shoot it? McCoy and Barrows are walking along and they see clothes hanging from a branch and both of them think it's a good idea for Barrows to change clothes? What? It's like everyone is easily distracted. They are almost child-like. Maybe there was something in the atmosphere - a gas or microbe or something - that affected our crew. These are not the actions of trained professionals exploring unusual events on a planet that could potentially be a threat.

That has to be it. Hallucinatory drugs. Pollen. Gas. Psychic mental influence from whatever was reading their thoughts. It made them act odd.

Yes, this is the same actress that played Angela Martine from "Balance of Terror." Her last name here is Teller. Perhaps she changed her name? Twin sister? Her first name is still Angela, though. "My fiance died so I'm changing my name. And I'm not taking his name, either."

Wait. What is going on in some of these people's heads? Maybe I don't want to know. Sulu walks along this lush beautiful planet and starts thinking about antique revolvers, tigers and samurai. Rodriguez and Martine/Teller start thinking about WWII era planes that change between Japanese Zeroes and US Corsairs (and go from 1 plane to 2 back to 1). Kirk thinks about a bully from the Academy.

Does Barrows have rape fantasies? Don Juan is her illusion, her fantasy. He comes to abduct her. She screams and protests. Definitely not a scene that would have been done today. Makes me wonder how a modern "Shore Leave" would have been produced.

Another nod to continuity with Kirk's Academy days description. Mitchell called him a stack of books with legs. This episode Kirk himself describes his personality at the Academy as "grim" as to the level of seriousness he took life and his studies.

Finnegan wears a starburst patch similar to Starbase 11 personnel. Is this the Starfleet logo? Is Finnegan's smaller than the ones from the last 2 episodes? Smaller because it's a cadet patch? Is it different in any other way?

Kirk likes the older women. Ruth hasn't aged since Kirk saw her 15 years earlier at the Academy. If we go by actors ages as equal to character ages, then Ruth would be about 12 years older than a 20 year old Kirk.

The only answer is that McCoy was not fatally injured and the tricorders were misreading or the results altered to make it appear he was dead.

Yes, there is no explanation for the power drain from the ship. If it was in order to make the illusions, then that drain should continue the whole time the crew are using the planet. Maybe it was a drain as the planet scanned the ships computers to learn how to make these bio-mechanical illusions.

Vasquez! Is this our first sighting of this location?

Stardate 3025.3. Are we now 3 years into the 5 year mission?

Kirk is definitely more affected by the influence of this planet than the Psi 2000 virus nor the Venus Drug. "Look, Finnegan! I must beat him up. Look, Ruth! I must woo her." He had little to no control over his actions. Again, must be some kind of drug or outside mental influence inhibiting or affecting judgement and rational thought.

So, all is well that ends well. Meet the caretaker and the crew is granted shore leave after everything is made clear. Only, we don't tell the crew what's going on. Let them figure it out for themselves that these are fantasy bio-mechanical illusions safe for their amusement. This is a planet sized holodeck or Westworld. Only the participants do not know it and think it's real.

I don't want it to appear I'm copying Poltargyst's list making skills, but here is another list

Kirk Love Meter
Little Blonde Lab Technician
Jancie Rand
Evie
Miri (In the line of duty)
Helen Noel
Lieutenant Helen Johansson
Lenore Karidian (In the line of duty)
Areel Shaw
Ruth

McCoy Love Meter
Nancy Crater
Tonia Barrows
 
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Why would Kirk just assume that Spock would message his back?

I guess it's one of those things you'd rather somebody do who won't find it awkward later. For Spock, it'd have no more awkwardness than scratching someone's itchy nose or helping somebody tie their shoes. With a woman who works closely with Kirk doing it, people would be more likely to whisper behind their backs.
 
The Barrows 'rape fantasy' harks back to what I was saying before about someone with influence on story ideas effectively stalking Grace on screen. Or in other words:

Female crewmen sexual assault/kidnap dossier:
Man Trap
The Enemy Within
Charlie X
The Naked Time
Shore Leave
 
Ah, Shore Leave: The one shot mostly on location and boy, do they milk it! Lots of beautiful scenery, lots of repetitive scenes, lots of padding, definitely a case of style over substance.

I do enjoy the initial skit between Yeoman Barrows and Kirk’s back though; lots of looks and Barrows takes no nonsense. I hope she sticks around.

"With what we've been through." What have they been through? Something recent that happened offscreen or are they talking about all the adventures they've had so far? That would take a lot out of you.
OK, how much time between this and the previous episode(s)? What has the crew been through in the past 3 months that made shore leave so important? Just 2 episodes ago the entire crew was evacuated off the Enterprise in "Court Martial." This had to give most some down time. Plus the repair time. Definitely equal or more than the time they spent at the Shore Leave planet.
This thought about the mysterious 3 months occurred to me too. Everyone really makes a big deal of going on about being tired, Kirk acting exhausted etc.
There's only 12 stardate units since The Menagerie yet there was a full 62 units between that and Court-Martial. Maybe there was a really big adventure between their 2 visits to Starbase 11? It would help account for the massive changes in between those back to back stories.
Stardate 3025.3. Are we now 3 years into the 5 year mission?
Possibly! :)
Also, looking at the episodes in Stardate order, there's a large gap between 2127 and 2712. Perhaps that is when the mysteriously exhausting adventures occurred?

Oooh, McCoy knows how to flirt! Get some, Leonard!
Yeah, McCoy is a real smoothie!

Someone beaming down from the bridge?
Perhaps he meant to say "someone from the Bridge beaming down"? Spock has quite a distinctive profile, even mid-transport.

Did the planet magically fix Yeoman Barrow’s dress? Was there a scene cut? Later it seems that her collar is still loose however.

They do a lot of running this episode. The cast will need a shore leave after.
They’re still panting for some time after they reach Sulu too. So much for Starfleet’s training regimen, I guess! Best lay off the space ciggies

Also, Kirk’s shirt looks really green when they leg it over to Sulu firing the gun

The girl with Rodriguez...Angela...is that the girl whose love died in BoT?
Her last name here is Teller. Perhaps she changed her name? Twin sister? Her first name is still Angela, though. "My fiance died so I'm changing my name. And I'm not taking his name, either."
If it's a twin sister there's certainly precedent on board ship, with Mr Leslie’s twin brother Randy Connors. :biggrin:

Maybe there was something in the atmosphere - a gas or microbe or something - that affected our crew. These are not the actions of trained professionals exploring unusual events on a planet that could potentially be a threat.

That has to be it. Hallucinatory drugs. Pollen. Gas. Psychic mental influence from whatever was reading their thoughts. It made them act odd.
If the machines can read people’s thoughts, perhaps they can influence them as well, to be more relaxed and susceptible?

The only answer is that McCoy was not fatally injured and the tricorders were misreading or the results altered to make it appear he was dead.
There's no way to rely on Tricorder readings with all that power drain around! McCoy is clearly only “mostly” dead. ;)

I don't want it to appear I'm copying Poltargyst's list making skills, but here is another list

Kirk Love Meter
Little Blonde Lab Technician
Jancie Rand
Evie
Miri (In the line of duty)
Helen Noel
Lenore Karidian (In the line of duty)
Areel Shaw
Ruth
Given Kirk's pop-culture reputation as a lothario, I look forward to seeing how this list pans out. What's the criteria though? He didn't even kiss Evie or have a history with her.
Lieutenant Helen Johansson seemed to have a history with him though...well, she "knew" him anyway (Menagerie part 1)


Finally...did Kirk, McCoy & Barrows stay on the planet for the whole period of the ENTIRE ship’s shore leave? Or did boinking the Ruth-bot make Kirk space-happy? He sits down in the chair, and orders Sulu to warp out of orbit! Did the port side of the ship displease our great leader in some way? :devil:
 
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Actual Redshirts have been rather fortunate so far! :angel:

But separate lists (and maybe a grand total) sound good
 
SQUIRE OF GOTHOS

Back to trekkin' across the stars, that's more like it! :techman:
Many point out the "900 years" thing as more uncertainty regarding which century Star Trek is set in, forgetting that Trelane has built a planet capable of outrunning a starship! There's no reason he couldn't have made telescopic observations of Earth at different places throughout the galaxy.

All in all, I very much enjoyed this episode, despite my ambivalence towards it on previous viewings. Maybe all I ever needed to do was watch Shore Leave first?

Other thoughts:
  • I like the twist – the Enterprise crew outwit their foe in typical Star Trek manner, only to find out it’s not over yet!
  • Kirk offering his own life in exchange for his ship – is this the first time it’s happened?
  • William Campbell’s “child” acting at the end is a bit OTT for my liking but it’s overall a decent ending and a fun episode, much more tightly written than last week’s outing.
Some new tech:
  • Utility belts & breathing masks
  • Laser beacon! It's good to have a backup in case the communicators fail. I expect we’ll see it every week from now on ;)
We get some lovely crane shots of the Bridge, but some really weird directorial choices:
  • How does Spock see the readings on the console before the crewman starring at the same screen??? Was Spock supposed to be looking at a different console and the director decided to make a crazy change?
  • Why is the blue shirted geologist manning Sulu’s helm station?
    It can’t be due to staffing issues - when Yaeger and DeSalle leave for the landing party, 2 gold shirt assume their posts. Why not before? Did Yaeger just really like that chair?
Some lovely moments:
  • McCoy’s double take when he sees the salt creature!
  • The Kirk/Yeoman jealousy scene would have been so much better with Rand
  • Spock’s objection speech to Trelane is top-notch
    I object to you. I object to intellect without discipline. I object to power without constructive purpose.
When Trelane shoots his pistol into the air, how hilarious would it have been if bits of ceiling plaster had fallen onto his head? :guffaw:

On the downside, Kirk & Spock do some dangerous speculation on the size of the machine required to keep out the planet’s atmosphere – this is a ridiculously advanced alien, they have no idea what he's capable of!
Also, DeSalle is an idiot, sneaking up on Trelane when he’s standing in front of a MIRROR!!!

Trelane must have really got to Spock: At the end, he is still thinking about the incident, even though earlier dialogue indicated that it would be eight days later??

Oh, and apparently inkwells still exist in the 23rd century :devil:
 
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Squire of Gothos is one of the first trippy episodes with a powerful reality warping alien but it is fun. Trelane is over the top but internationally so. The salt monster cameo is a really nice touch.

De Salle may be a bit fuzzy on the scientific properties of mirrors but he does at least have an enquiring mind which is more than can be said for Uhura and Not-Rand2. Ross is just so useless, she asks Trelane no questions while she has him all to herself. It's the second time in two weeks that a yeoman has got into a period costume while on duty but the first time we have two women in the landing party due to kidnapping. You can believe Ross spent the whole encounter wondering how pretty she looked. She's so vacuous.

I do agree that Kirk's jealous outburst would have made more sense with Rand. If I had the tech, I'd Deepfake Rand into this one in a heartbeat. ;-p

I like the theorising than the men do while the women are off being decorative. Some of the discussions can be quite sciency, which sets Trek apart from many other sci fi franchises.

The final duel is the first time Kirk really takes it on himself to save the day. I'm sure with all those highly trained personnel on the ship he doesn't get to do it very often...

Female crewmen sexual assault/kidnap dossier:
Man Trap
The Enemy Within
Charlie X
The Naked Time
Shore Leave
Squire of Gothos
 
Saavik was a lieutenant at the Academy. Mitchell may have known KIrk as a lieutenant at the Academy. Kirk was at the Academy 15 years ago. Is it reasonable to be a lieutenant at the Academy 15 years ago? That gives him 15 years to be a LT, LT CMDR, CMDR, and then captain. Heck, throw in a LT jr grade.

What an odd episode. It's as if everyone had ADD or was easily distracted by random objects. "I'm just going to collect flora samples and oh look, a revolver! Let's start shooting things" or "Let's hunt that tiger and meet on the other side of the hill. Oh look, a pretty flower. I'm going to stop looking for the tiger and smell the flowers."

Ugh.

OK, how much time between this and the previous episode(s)? What has the crew been through in the past 3 months that made shore leave so important? Just 2 episodes ago the entire crew was evacuated off the Enterprise in "Court Martial." This had to give most some down time. Plus the repair time. Definitely equal or more than the time they spent at the Shore Leave planet.

I do like how "Love 'em and Leave 'em Kirk" straightens up when he realizes his yeoman is massaging his back. He's not mixing work with pleasure. Clear boundaries between him and those under his command.

Sulu! And we keep with his botany background! Nice nod to continuity. With only 400+ crew we shouldn't be surprised to see people with multiple skills and using those multiple skills in their job.

Now here is our first oddity or incongruity that should have alerted our intrepid crew. Such a lush world has no animal life? Really? Does that seem right to anyone? This should have been a major red flag that something isn't right here. This is not a natural planet.

Speaking of artificial, interesting idea that everything is made out of plant life. Vegetation used as construction material. Almost like it was all... replicated from bio matter... or something.

Now the crew starts acting oddly on the planet. McCoy sees the white rabbit and Alice. He at first reacts normally. He's perplexed and calls for Sulu. Sulu arrives but doesn't see anything. Maybe McCoy is seeing things. Still, at this point, a call to the ship is made, but McCoy isn't overly concerned. He is reporting the oddity, yes, but it's not presented nor treated like a serious situation. It's laughed off. Odd.

More crew beam down and begin seeing things. Do they withdraw? Evacuate the planet? Nope. Cancel shore leave, yes, but we're gonna stick around and blunder across this glade. With each and every new sigh the crew forgets what they are doing. As I noted above Sulu acts like it's normal to find an antique revolver laying on the ground. He picks it up and starts target shooting because, hey, when you find an antique Earth firearm on a planet far from Earth what else are you going to do but shoot it? McCoy and Barrows are walking along and they see clothes hanging from a branch and both of them think it's a good idea for Barrows to change clothes? What? It's like everyone is easily distracted. They are almost child-like. Maybe there was something in the atmosphere - a gas or microbe or something - that affected our crew. These are not the actions of trained professionals exploring unusual events on a planet that could potentially be a threat.

That has to be it. Hallucinatory drugs. Pollen. Gas. Psychic mental influence from whatever was reading their thoughts. It made them act odd.

Yes, this is the same actress that played Angela Martine from "Balance of Terror." Her last name here is Teller. Perhaps she changed her name? Twin sister? Her first name is still Angela, though. "My fiance died so I'm changing my name. And I'm not taking his name, either."

Wait. What is going on in some of these people's heads? Maybe I don't want to know. Sulu walks along this lush beautiful planet and starts thinking about antique revolvers, tigers and samurai. Rodriguez and Martine/Teller start thinking about WWII era planes that change between Japanese Zeroes and US Corsairs (and go from 1 plane to 2 back to 1). Kirk thinks about a bully from the Academy.

Does Barrows have rape fantasies? Don Juan is her illusion, her fantasy. He comes to abduct her. She screams and protests. Definitely not a scene that would have been done today. Makes me wonder how a modern "Shore Leave" would have been produced.

Another nod to continuity with Kirk's Academy days description. Mitchell called him a stack of books with legs. This episode Kirk himself describes his personality at the Academy as "grim" as to the level of seriousness he took life and his studies.

Finnegan wears a starburst patch similar to Starbase 11 personnel. Is this the Starfleet logo? Is Finnegan's smaller than the ones from the last 2 episodes? Smaller because it's a cadet patch? Is it different in any other way?

Kirk likes the older women. Ruth hasn't aged since Kirk saw her 15 years earlier at the Academy. If we go by actors ages as equal to character ages, then Ruth would be about 12 years older than a 20 year old Kirk.

The only answer is that McCoy was not fatally injured and the tricorders were misreading or the results altered to make it appear he was dead.

Yes, there is no explanation for the power drain from the ship. If it was in order to make the illusions, then that drain should continue the whole time the crew are using the planet. Maybe it was a drain as the planet scanned the ships computers to learn how to make these bio-mechanical illusions.

Vasquez! Is this our first sighting of this location?

Stardate 3025.3. Are we now 3 years into the 5 year mission?

Kirk is definitely more affected by the influence of this planet than the Psi 2000 virus nor the Venus Drug. "Look, Finnegan! I must beat him up. Look, Ruth! I must woo her." He had little to no control over his actions. Again, must be some kind of drug or outside mental influence inhibiting or affecting judgement and rational thought.

So, all is well that ends well. Meet the caretaker and the crew is granted shore leave after everything is made clear. Only, we don't tell the crew what's going on. Let them figure it out for themselves that these are fantasy bio-mechanical illusions safe for their amusement. This is a planet sized holodeck or Westworld. Only the participants do not know it and think it's real.

I don't want it to appear I'm copying Poltargyst's list making skills, but here is another list

Kirk Love Meter
Little Blonde Lab Technician
Jancie Rand
Evie
Miri (In the line of duty)
Helen Noel
Lieutenant Helen Johansson
Lenore Karidian (In the line of duty)
Areel Shaw
Ruth

McCoy Love Meter
Nancy Crater
Tonia Barrows
I'm glad you are doing the Kirk Love Meter. I was thinking we should have been keeping track of Kirk's loves all along.
 
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