What line from Kirk to Alexander?
The one I was thinking of at the time is this:
Alexander, where I come from, size, shape, or colour makes no difference, and nobody has the power.
What line from Kirk to Alexander?
Alexander, where I come from, size, shape, or colour makes no difference, and nobody has the power.
Yeah, I left out Black because I wasn't sure how heavily rewritten his episode was - but looking it up, not too much. And he was still happy with it in later years. So yeah, he counts and I loved the episodes under his watch.Also John D.F. Black for the earliest episodes, and briefly Steven Carabatsos.
Well, let's be fair to the outside writers. The first two seasons had plenty of treatments, even by some greats, that would be considered unsuitable. The writing staff shaped them into the acceptable standards and format of the series. It's not like Jerome Bixby strolled in with Mirror, Mirror ready to roll. The rewrites are ongoing until the staff (Fontana, Coon, Roddenberry, Lucas, Black, whomever) took over. A lot of these writers were fantastic at TV dramas like Combat, The Big Valley and The Fugitive, but didn't grasp Star Trek.
Of the staff, Fontana, Coon and Roddenberry had the more advanced first passes because they were staffers.
Things got shaky at the end of the second season when Coon left, Lucas had a different viewpoint and Roddenberry went back to doing more of the rewriting. Luckily Fontana was still there (and Justman who didn't write but had tremendous feedback) and episodes like The Ultimate Computer still happened so late.
The third season was behind the 8 ball because only Justman and kinda Roddenberry were left and Freddie and Arthur Singer were the main story editors. Strangers to the series with their own ideas of what worked.
So...with that in mind...
Shimon Wincelberg (S. Bar-David): "Dagger of the Mind." Middling episode from a man who penned some of the best Lost in Space early episodes. Damning with faint praise? Nah, it takes talent to make that series good. (I don't count "The Galileo Seven" because he co-wrote that one)
Max Ehrlich: "The Apple." Another successful writer who couldn't deliver a good Trek.
I recall D.C. Fontana stating that Carabatsos wasn’t brought back as Story Editor because (paraphrased) “He wasn’t as enthusiastic as the rest of us.”Also John D.F. Black for the earliest episodes, and briefly Steven Carabatsos.
Do you mean thrilled because we have a great episode that otherwise wouldn't have existed, or thrilled because the one episode they did was bad and we're glad they didn't do any more episodes?Which script writer from any season are you thrilled only contributed one, solitary script to TOS?
Do you mean thrilled because we have a great episode that otherwise wouldn't have existed, or thrilled because the one episode they did was bad and we're glad they didn't do any more episodes?
Okay. That's honestly most of the third season for me.I meant a script that was so bad that you’re thrilled that the writer didn’t contribute another klunker.
It’s good to be the Captain.
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