Beethoven's landlady was very criticle of him as well. The only record we have of what he thought of her was three G's and an E Flat. I'm assuming it wasn't a compliment.
You fault him for merchandizing? with the advent of Star Wars? And he had every right to put words to that song. It lended itself to and almost demanded words.
Well ... Jonathan Frakes and Leonard Nimoy anyway.Jonathan Frakes, Leonard Nimoy, and JJ Abrams
What's the current events message of "The Doomsday Machine," again? There's a minor commentary about weapons of mass destruction, but the episode is primarily an action story. Star Trek was made to comment on current events, surely, but it could do a lot of other things, too. "Balance of Terror" is nominally about racism, but its primarily a submarine story (but, in space!).
True enough that I wasn't alive in the 1960s. That said, I stand by my statement that the commentary in "The Doomsday Machine" is ancillary to the action. I'd also point out that "Balance of Terror" seems more inspired by WWII submarine tales (and the Robert Wise-directed film about the subject, Run Silent, Run Deep) than by anything relating to submarines in the 1960s.
But, being quite removed from the period, I'm ready to be corrected.
If he were with us and in renewed, youthful health, I would expect new "Trek" episodes to look at (alien versions of) the Tea Party, global warming, Bin Laden, ongoing war (again), national debt, hate crimes, and so on.
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