It's always struck me how easy it is to forget the cold equations of time. For us, ST is timeless. For Steve Carabatsos, he had a 3-month gig that was probably in total panic mode, if everything we know about the first season scripts is correct.
Picture coming into a job where your boss delivers piles and piles of pages on your desk and says "hurry up and fix these"! Especially since John D. F. Black seemed to have had short-timer attitude toward the end of his tenure, and Gene Coon was similarly tossed into fire, I bet Carabtsos just did the only TV job he knew how to do, rewrite scripts based on input from his boss, staff, and whatever skill he posessed.
Obviously, his contract was not renewed, and from the little evidence we have he was out before DC Fontana was in. So Roddenberry and I imagine Coon decided he wasn't right for the job.
I equate it in my mind as a singer who works at a night club for three months and then one day isn't asked back. It may have been a sour memory for him or not, but it seems to not have affected him much. "It was just another TV show...."
Picture coming into a job where your boss delivers piles and piles of pages on your desk and says "hurry up and fix these"! Especially since John D. F. Black seemed to have had short-timer attitude toward the end of his tenure, and Gene Coon was similarly tossed into fire, I bet Carabtsos just did the only TV job he knew how to do, rewrite scripts based on input from his boss, staff, and whatever skill he posessed.
Obviously, his contract was not renewed, and from the little evidence we have he was out before DC Fontana was in. So Roddenberry and I imagine Coon decided he wasn't right for the job.
I equate it in my mind as a singer who works at a night club for three months and then one day isn't asked back. It may have been a sour memory for him or not, but it seems to not have affected him much. "It was just another TV show...."