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Worst Season 2 Episode....

Which is your least liked Season 2 episode?

  • Catspaw

    Votes: 9 17.0%
  • Metamorphosis

    Votes: 1 1.9%
  • Friday's Child

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Who Mourns For Adonais?

    Votes: 1 1.9%
  • Amok Time

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • The Doomsday Machine

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Wolf In The Fold

    Votes: 2 3.8%
  • The Changeling

    Votes: 1 1.9%
  • The Apple

    Votes: 5 9.4%
  • Mirror, Mirror

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • The Deadly Years

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I, Mudd

    Votes: 10 18.9%
  • The Trouble With Tribbles

    Votes: 1 1.9%
  • Bread And Circuses

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Journey To Babel

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • A Private Little War

    Votes: 1 1.9%
  • The Gamesters Of Triskelion

    Votes: 4 7.5%
  • Obsession

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • The Immunity Syndrome

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • A Piece Of The Action

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • By Any Other Name

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Return To Tomorrow

    Votes: 2 3.8%
  • Patterns Of Force

    Votes: 2 3.8%
  • The Ultimate Computer

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • The Omega Glory

    Votes: 9 17.0%
  • Assignment: Earth

    Votes: 5 9.4%

  • Total voters
    53
  • Poll closed .

Warped9

Admiral
Admiral
The poll for worst Season 1 episode will be ending a few days and it's practically a foregone conclusion. Of course, discussion there could continue as long as there is interest.

But I think we could now start looking at which episode was the most disappointing during TOS' second season. And I suspect opinions could be more varied here than those regarding the first season.
 
The episodes I was most disappointed with during Season 2.

"The Apple"
"I, Mudd"
"A Piece Of The Action"

Each of them still have something to recommend them even as each of them can grate on my nerves in some way or other.

"The Apple" is the quintessential cliche TOS episode where Kirk turns a society upside down in order to save his ship and crew. "A Piece Of The Action" is just plain absurd (conceptually), but absurd to the point of hilarity.

I'm therefore left with ranking "I, Mudd" as the most disappointing of Season 2 episodes. People complain of the weird behaviour of the crew in "Plato's Stepchildren," but that can't touch the weirdness of the behaviour in this episode. It is truly :wtf:
 
It's interesting to note that GR was apparently not at all fond of "I, Mudd" either. It was produced while he was away for a time and greenlit by Gene Coon.
 
My least favorite was the Halloween special, Catspaw. The yarn puppets at the end and seeing the "marionette strings" get my vote for the worst fx of the series.
 
My least favorite was the Halloween special, Catspaw. The yarn puppets at the end and seeing the "marionette strings" get my vote for the worst fx of the series.
At least they were alien.

The robot/androids seen in "Whar Are Little Girls Made Of?" And "Requiem For Methuselah" were excellent compared to the embarassing portrayals in "I, Mudd." On that score we should be asking, "Brain and Brain. WHERE is brain?" Oh, there ain't any...
 
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This is a harder question than season one (or three). I don't think any of the stinkers in season two are nearly as bad as "The Alternative Factor," but there are certainly some lesser hours:

Catspaw
Wolf In The Fold
The Changeling
The Apple
Bread And Circuses
A Private Little War
The Gamesters Of Triskelion
Patterns Of Force
The Omega Glory
Assignment: Earth

Of these, I went with "Patterns of Force" in the poll, although I could just have easily gone with "The Omega Glory" or "Assignment: Earth."
 
I plumped for Who Mourns For Adonis. Mostly because of that daft hand holding the Enterprise.
 
There are actually a lot of weak episodes in season 2, like Omega Glory, Gamesters or Tribbles, so hard to choose. Voted Assignment Earth as it was extremely boring and has more plot holes than any other 5 episodes combined, not to mention that had too much if a new show and too little of Star Trek.
 
The robot/androids seen in "Whar Are Little Girls Made Of?" And "Requiem For Methuselah" were excellent compared to the embarassing portrayals in "I, Mudd." On that score we should be asking, "Brain and Brain. WHERE is brain?" Oh, there ain't any...
To emphasize this felt more like something written for Lost In Space than Star Trek.
 
All of them have something good in them , however Catspaw seems somewhat thrown together as a Halloween special ( A 'festival' I've never thought much of) though some of the voodoo with models of The Enterprise was interesting.
Catspaw has such an unsatisfactory ending, break the glass headed wand and that's it the puppet aliens die away.

What do you think would have happened if Omega Glory had been made into the Second pilot? Probably no series? Or would NBC have warmed to its patriotic theme? Maybe for another thread.
 
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What do you think would have happened if Omega Glory had been made into the Second pilot? Probably no series? Or would NBC have warmed to its patriotic theme? Maybe for another thread.
Difficult to answer. I think it's safe to assume the story likely would not have been written exactly the same given at least two years had passed since TOS was given a second chance at a pilot and nothing had yet been firmly established for the series.

As a Canadian the only thing I can really quibble about "The Omega Glory" is the use of an unmistakable American flag albeit an earler version. But the story itself is right in line with the parallel world type stories Roddenberry had pitched for Star Trek.
 
I voted for The Changeling, for some of the same reasons I voted for Alternative Factor in season 1, matters of scale. I sometimes think that some of the writers either didn't realize what they were writing within the constraints of the larger background setting or maybe Fontana/Roddenberry were off that time with their script editing, but the results really skew everything for me.

From Alternative Factor: You may not be aware of its scope. It occurred in every quadrant of the galaxy and far beyond.

Then The Changeling:
SPOCK: An extremely powerful bolt of energy, Captain.
KIRK: Full power to the shields, Mister Scott.
SCOTT: Giving them all we got.
KIRK: All hands, Red Alert. Phaser banks stand by. Photon torpedoes to Condition Red, Condition Red.
(The viewscreen fills with a ball of bright light.)
SULU: It's going to hit.
(Everyone gets thrown around a lot, and the lights go out for a short while.)
SCOTT: Shields still holding, sir.
KIRK: Good.
SPOCK: Temporarily, Captain. Our shields absorbed energy equivalent to ninety of our photon torpedoes.
KIRK: Ninety?
SPOCK: I may add, the energy used repulsing this first attack reduced our shielding power twenty percent.
UHURA: First attack, sir?
KIRK: I think we can expect others, Lieutenant.
SPOCK: We can resist three more such attacks. The fourth will shatter our shields completely.
KIRK: Mister Spock, pinpoint the source. Mister Sulu, evasive manoeuvres.
SULU: Aye, sir.
KIRK: Lieutenant, contact Starfleet Command. Patch in my log. Tell them what has happened. Tell them the entire Malurian race seems to have been destroyed by an unknown agency, and that we are under attack by an unidentified force.
(Another ball of light is on the viewscreen)
KIRK: Helmsmen, I said evasive manoeuvres.
SULU: We're losing power, sir.
KIRK: Scotty?
SCOTT: I'm having to divert the warp engine power into the shields, sir, if you want the protection.
KIRK: Mister Spock, speed of those bolts.
SPOCK: Approximately warp fifteen, Captain.
KIRK: Then we can't out run them. Good, Scotty. You're doing the right thing. (another hit) Source, Spock.
SPOCK: Unknown, Captain. Nothing within sensor range. (a third bolt approaching) Something now, Captain. Very small. Bearing one two three degrees, mark one eight. Range ninety thousand kilometres.
KIRK: That's our target, Mister Sulu. Prepare photon torpedo.
(The third bolt hits)
SCOTT: Shields still holding, sir, but the drain on the engines is reaching the critical point. Ach, we lost warp manoeuvreing power. Switching to impulse.
SULU: Photon torpedoes armed, sir.
KIRK: Has the target changed location, Mister Spock?
SPOCK: No, sir. Holding steady.
KIRK: Ready photon torpedo number two, Mister Sulu.
SULU: Ready, sir.
KIRK: Fire.
SULU: Torpedo away. (a pause, then a flash) Direct hit.
SPOCK: No effect. Target absorbed full energy of our torpedo.
KIRK: Absorbed it? There must be damage to your instruments, Spock .
SPOCK: They are in good working order, Captain.
KIRK: But what could have absorbed that much energy and survived?

Um, how about you, yourself, several times over just now? Spock clearly says the equivalent of 90 torpedoes, only reduced their shields 20% and didn't even do those things that happen when the shields get hit too hard almost any other time. Plus this box just wiped out a 4 billion strong population of the solar system. What kind of probe is that? What do these people's actual ships have for firepower?

I also don't like how it casually kills Scotty but then reanimates him. I even more don't like how Uhura's mind is completely blanked but the can reeducate her in a week even though she's reading a first grade reader. That whole scene is supposed to be a joke but it falls completely flat. Either fix the line to say the knowledge wasn't completely wiped out and they can rehabilitate her or not make it like Uhura only knows a week's worth of stuff. I don't believe that this is what they necessarily meant but it seems to me it's like, "it's just Uhura, anybody can be that smart in a week." coupled with the conflicting mass of emotions is just a woman is really demeaning like no other episode.

The machine is magically powerful and Kirk keeps feeding it guards, none of whom are fixed like Scotty.

And I don't believe that it's a life form that can be mind melded with. The scene itself is actually a high point of the episode, very well acted by Leondard Nimoy and a box, but I don't accept the premise of it. I can believe Vulcan mental abilities but extending it to a machine is just wrong, otherwise why doesn't Spock fix the Enterprise by mind melding with the computer or M-5 or Landru any other manner of computer problems.

I vote that this is my least favorite episode tied with And the Children Will Lead.

Also in my bottom 7 (I don't have a full 10 least favorites) is The Apple. I don't mind most of the episode but it's really bad when Mr. Spock can't explain basic biology in a simple logical manner because he's too embarrassed. That really kills this. There's other stuff, but none of it is too bad, but not too good either.

I can't think of any other season 2 problems. I will mention that I used to not like Omega Glory but BillJ and some of the other posters changed my mind on that one and I accept the ending as a kind of "shorthand" for what they are trying to say. So than it being rather literally the USA flag, it's just their equivalent of said flag, and Constitution and Pledge and so on. Why reinvent the wheel for 6 minutes of television? So looking through that lens it's a pretty good episode and a very good use of the prime directive being mentioned.
 
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I quite liked The Omega Glory even though I'm not an American! I Mudd was bad it has to be said, it's what I voted for! It was very embarrassing to watch with your parents in your teens believe me. Piece of the action wasn't a favourite but better than Mudd and Return To Tomorrow is a bit of a chore to get through too!
JB
 
"The Apple".

"The Omega Glory" comes close but at least it had a somewhat promising opening, which is sadly completely destroyed by the utter stupidity that followed.

Kirk's decision to completely alter the civilization in "The Apple", however, is a textbook example of how the Prime Directive is a good thing - and I'm not one who usually defends the PD. As Spock rightly points out to McCoy, "these people are healthy and they are happy; what ever you choose to call it, this system works, despite your emotional reaction to it." But no, Kirk and McCoy don't like the culture so "change it is!" Then Spock's valid criticism at the end of the episode is basically just laughed off because "hehe, Spock's ears kinda make him look like the devil, hehe." GROAN!
 
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