Serling had to lie too and say his new show TZ would contain no social commentary what so ever.
Thing is TV shows were already doing that. Some without the SF disguise. And in spite of Gene lofty goals, the stories being told were not all that different than those in the Westerns and Cops shows that preceded Star Trek.
I'm not saying it was three hours social commentary and relevance every night on every network, but that Star Trek was hardly the lone voice in the wilderness that some would have you believe.Thing is TV shows were already doing that. Some without the SF disguise. And in spite of Gene lofty goals, the stories being told were not all that different than those in the Westerns and Cops shows that preceded Star Trek.
Somewhat true. Certainly NBC shows like "I, Spy" were doing a good deal more for representations of minority characters than "Star Trek" could or did, to cite one example among many.
Serling had to lie too and say his new show TZ would contain no social commentary what so ever.
Did Roddenberry like the Wrath of Khan ? cause I hate those personal winner takes all stories. I like crazy metaphysical philosophical concepts that make you think and not about suicide or how to be devious to get your way in life.
Thing is TV shows were already doing that. Some without the SF disguise. And in spite of Gene lofty goals, the stories being told were not all that different than those in the Westerns and Cops shows that preceded Star Trek.
Gene would want a time travel story that ends with Spock being the guy who assassinated JFK.
No joke, he pitched that story multiple times for the movies.
Especially since he died.I become more and more glad each day that other people took the helm from Gene.
Yeah remember out of all the TOS episodes Gene Roddenberry only wrote 11.^
^^ except that Gene Roddenberry died in 1991. Gene L. Coon took the helm of TOS from Gene R. back in late 1966 and early 1967 (less than half-way through the first season).
yea but he rewrote alot. How many eps did coon write ? Coon also my least favorite one wink of an eye and GR wrote my favorites like Return of the Archons and Savage Curtain.Yeah remember out of all the TOS episodes Gene Roddenberry only wrote 11.^
^^ except that Gene Roddenberry died in 1991. Gene L. Coon took the helm of TOS from Gene R. back in late 1966 and early 1967 (less than half-way through the first season).
yea but he rewrote alot. How many eps did coon write ? Coon also my least favorite one wink of an eye and GR wrote my favorites like Return of the Archons and Savage Curtain.Yeah remember out of all the TOS episodes Gene Roddenberry only wrote 11.^
^^ except that Gene Roddenberry died in 1991. Gene L. Coon took the helm of TOS from Gene R. back in late 1966 and early 1967 (less than half-way through the first season).
Well i myself think Gene did far more than he's credited for but they all outdid themselves, but coon's wink of an eye was really horrible and didn't he write spock's brain which i liked better by far under the psuedo name of Lee Cronin ?yea but he rewrote alot. How many eps did coon write ? Coon also my least favorite one wink of an eye and GR wrote my favorites like Return of the Archons and Savage Curtain.Yeah remember out of all the TOS episodes Gene Roddenberry only wrote 11.
I belive Coon wrote 12, and Boris Sobleman wrote Return of the Archons The teleplay there's no crediting of Gene Roddenberry on that episode and he only co worte Savage curtain, with Aurthur Heinemann.
DC fontana wrote Ten episodes.
So out of seventy episodes Gene wrote 11, DC wrote 10, Coon wrote 12 thats 33 of seventy episodes the rest were written by people like Ellison Wilbur (Who co wrote space seed with coon.) I think if you look back at most of Gene Roddenberry's work, his other shows that he tried Star Trek was so successful because of the whole pool of writers and yes while gene wrote many of the stories and did re-writes on others I doubt he did major changes in the story structure. I'm just saying there are people who did as much work ash he did, he's the creator but he didn't do it alone, (which BTW is one of the over reaching arcs of Star Trek is that no one person can do it all by themselves, or they would have always focused on just Kirk, they didn't but that's an unrelated aside)
GR wrote... Return of the Archons and Savage Curtain.
^
^^ except that Gene Roddenberry died in 1991. Gene L. Coon took the helm of TOS from Gene R. back in late 1966 and early 1967 (less than half-way through the first season).
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