"The Way to Eden" is, without irony, one of my favorites from this season. The music is groovy, and the episode is great at highlighting the dangers of charismatic cults, while remaining sympathetic to those who fall into them.
Cults had existed, but this episode was ahead of its time as cults would really take off in the 1970s. Jim Jones being one of the more notorious, and even the one tv show in the late-70s that was as mindlessly silly escapist as any sitcom could possibly get - "Three's Company" - had its most "after school special" toned episode about cults as well, which is one of the show's more popular episodes...
I still don't understand the hate people have for it. Yes, the episode is a mess of ideas that don't get a chance to be properly explored on their own, such as but not limited to:
- conformity vs nonconformity
- and how the nonconformists seem to be conforming just as rigidly in their own way, it's a parallel within a parallel, Herbie there would be proud!
- Technology vs nature
- Though they missed the mark on how escaping to all-nature might not be practicable, but with 49 minutes to tell the tale and the episode is jam-packed with a slew of concepts all jostling for screen time
- Not all planets with an oxygen/nitrogen atmosphere are conducive for human life, even if it's a tad on the nose that the group went to great lengths to get high on acid and got smoked on the grass... sheesh, the "war on drugs" hadn't even started yet, so this episode is ahead of its time for two reasons now.
- Biblical allegory as gags ("his name was Adam" - Spock)
- but still more interesting than what transpired in season 2's "The Apple"
- Communicable disease risk (something Trek rarely brings up and each M-class planet is bound to have some exotic new virus/bacteria, or strain of ones we know about that have to be compensated for)
- Some of the crew being tempted by the hippies
But the ideas in of themselves are largely interesting, yes.
It's all not bad for an episode that aired on a Friday night, all while a certain percentage of the potential target audience was too busy going outside to get high and/or spreading communicable diseases in vehicles they may or may not have stolen, of which were thankfully easier to treat back then, but I digress.
I still believe that "Herbert" is not about the chap who helped make the show, but televangelist Herbert Armstrong - who was making rather loud anti-hippie commentary back in the day. Including a book he authored that was released in 1968 and that one's a bit of a doozy to try to get through. But if the script was ragging on Solow because of how he was dealing with writers, there are surely better episodes to have made the reference in. It seems a happy coincidence that "Herbert" was a popular name for adults back then, I suppose.., So which makes more sense, an episode about conformity and using the commentary of the week regarding a group of then-contemporary rebels who hated Christians but were ironically just as rigid as the people they hated, or the show's makers were spending a disproportionate amount of time doing a dig at one of the suits behind the show who - in an equally bizarre twist - always supported it? Either way, maybe it can work both ways. But most people claim "Solow" when "Armstrong" just seems to fit the story's themes more directly.
Kirk is a bit quick to confirm Eden doesn't exist, since Spock looks it up and finds it does exist. Of course,
Also, it's pointed out how stiff Kirk is. Half the galaxy knew that already...



And then there's this li'l ditty:
Remix or not, it's not unlovely. Some of the lyrics are dated, but others hold up and remain quite poignant. and some of said lyrics are oversimplified, but that's not much of a surprise...
And now, for something completely different, here's this:
^^genuine barely-legals and 20-somethings doing the equivalent of nonconformity in 1978, rather than the gaggle of admittedly very-talented 30- and 40-somethings playing hippies ten years earlier. And, yes, eyeliner should make a comeback to be popular, since people who try to be their own person generally get called names. but most people have been in that bucket for sure...