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Which Season of The Animated Series Do You Think is the Best?

Which season did you think was the best?

  • Season 1

    Votes: 7 87.5%
  • Season 2

    Votes: 1 12.5%

  • Total voters
    8
  • Poll closed .
Hard to say. In terms of production values, I'd give season 2 the edge, since its production wasn't as rushed and they were able to do a more polished job. But season 2 only has a couple of good episodes -- "The Pirates of Orion" and "Albatross" -- and the rest is weak, particularly the dreadful finale, "The Counter-Clock Incident." I'm not sure it's even a fair comparison, since season 1 had considerably more episodes and thus more chances to do well, but I'd say season 1 takes the lead from a story/writing standpoint, even though it falls behind from a production standpoint.
 
Because there are only 22 episodes I can't get away from thinking of it as all one season that was just aired in two parts.

Pretty much where I'm at. Plus, it's hard to fairly compare the two as season one had 16 episodes and season two only had 6.
 
The first season had D.C. Fontana has story editor and the second did not; the first also has her episode "Yesteryear." No contest to me.
 
Who was the season 2 story editor? I've never been quite clear on that. IMDb credits Fontana as the story editor for all 22 episodes, for what it's worth.
 
Season one will always win the "best season, " with so much pressure on Filmation to live up to all that made TOS great. Right out of the gates, "Beyond the Farthest Star" and "Yesteryear" did not disappoint, and are among the oft-cited best episodes of the series. Sure, there are some uneven stories, such as "Mudd's Passion," "Once Upon A Planet" and "The Infinite Vulcan," but the season accomplished more than being a convincing follow-up to TOS, but ended up (arguably) as the most literate, well-conceived TV animation of the decade
 
Hmm... what's the deal with all the "which season is best" threads all of a sudden?

Anyway, I also consider TAS to basically be a single set of episodes, even if it was technically aired in two seasons. It just so happens that the episodes I like most were from the first batch of episodes. But the second "season" had way fewer episodes than the first, as has been mentioned. If it had ten more episodes, there would be a more solid basis for comparison, IMO.

Kor
 
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Hmm... what's the deal with all the "which season is best" threads all of a sudden?
I would just like to point out that "indycar" is not related to "Indysolo".

I can't differentiate TAS seasons. It's all one thing to me.

Neil
 
The 16 episodes of season 1 have more good episodes than the 6 second season episodes. It would be fairer if each season had eleven episodes.
 
I had to look up where the Season 1 finale was and Season 2 began. I don't remember Pirates of Orion (I'm doing a slow rewatch of TAS and just watched Yesteryear) or Jihad. In fact, I wonder if the writers would get away with calling an episode Jihad in today's climate.
 
I had to look up where the Season 1 finale was and Season 2 began. I don't remember Pirates of Orion (I'm doing a slow rewatch of TAS and just watched Yesteryear) or Jihad. In fact, I wonder if the writers would get away with calling an episode Jihad in today's climate.

Reading about that episode in The Star Trek Concordance was the first time I ever heard of that word.
 
Reading about that episode in The Star Trek Concordance was the first time I ever heard of that word.

And the TAS episode misused the word "jihad" in the way that Westerners usually do, by treating it as synonymous with "crusade." Strictly speaking, jihad isn't an aggressive war of conquest or conversion like a crusade, it's the defense of the Islamic community against threats to its freedom or survival. The Qur'an overtly defines it as purely defensive. In fact, that's the lesser jihad; the greater jihad is the struggle within oneself against the forces that endanger one's ability to be a good Muslim, such as doubt, fear, selfishness, and rage. Which is why terrorist groups who use "jihad" as the excuse for their violence are totally corrupting its meaning and perpetuating the Western misunderstanding of the word.

Anyway, it would've been more fitting for that episode to be called "The Crusade" than "The Jihad," but I suppose "crusade" was seen as a word with more positive connotations to a Western audience, even though the historical Crusades were pretty barbaric undertakings. Or maybe invoking religion was seen as too controversial for Saturday morning, and "jihad" was a comparatively obscure and exotic term at the time.
 
I can't remember... did anyone actually say the word "jihad" in dialog in the episode?

Kor
 
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