Obviously... She was very sensitive.You can be a genius and still be morally bankrupt.
Obviously... She was very sensitive.You can be a genius and still be morally bankrupt.
As are a lot of fans if you question the creators of their beloved fandom.Obviously... She was very sensitive.
She answered with something like: "Well, that´s disheartening, because I´ve always thought STAR TREK MUST HAVE BEEN CRATED BY TOTAL AND UTTER GENIUS!!!!"
I have hurt her fan girl feelings.
Not to mention the fact that the things people like about Star Trek were created by other writers, producers, and story editors along with, and sometimes instead of, Roddenberry.
I´ve told her how man is losing illusions
Of course, but without the contributions of people like Coon, Fontana and Justman, Trek would have been a very different thing than what we know.Like I mentioned in another thread, whatever one thinks of Roddenberry (I generally think he was a pretty shitty human being), none of this exists without him.
Of course, but without the contributions of people like Coon, Fontana and Justman, Trek would have been a very different thing than what we know.
I’d argue that the Clipper Eclipse crash was a pivotal moment in Gene’s life, but this web comic take more liberties with the actual events than Gene’s authorized biography does.
My opinion of Gene Roddenberry as a person has consistency lowered over the last couple of decades. I outlined most of my reasons here a couple years ago, so I'll just direct you to that.
And since I wrote that piece, I've found out through a book excerpt linked to from here that Roddenberry told his first wife Eileen that he wanted a divorce at their daughter's wedding reception. I think most people would agree that that's a pretty shitty thing to do. (I can't find the thread in my searches, though, but I remember commenting in it here.)
Majel showed no signs of resentment toward Gene or their life.
She was at his side when he died.
There’s nothing indicating he was abusive. And she continued to speak well of him and Star Trek. That’s a fact.
Roddenberry was a mediocre writer at best who got lucky that other people took his basic idea and shaped it into the thing we love. He stumbled into success and then milked it for what it was worth at the expense of others, I have very little respect for him.
I don't have problems with Cushman writing out what people have told him. That's fine. The issues most of us have are his sloppy scholarship and that he invents narrative and presents it as fact, like this horse manure (link).And, yes, I know that many here don’t think very much of Cushman’s “These Are the Voyages” books, but I still thought it worth mentioning in the context of this discussion, especially since these are things being said by Jon Povill, who was a witness to Roddenberry and Barrett’s relationship in the mid 1970s, during the resurgence in Star Trek’s popularity via the syndicated reruns and Star Trek conventions, but prior to the production of the first motion picture and the subsequent movies and TV series.
As a matter of fact, I have recently seen an episode of Colombo where Captain Kirk killed a woman... Come to mention it, I think Spock was once there as a murderer too. Unbelieveable. Thankfully, they were both busted by the husband of Captain Janeway.We don't have a shortage. For every illusion lost, another swiftly fills that space. Sometimes a whole raft of them.
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