And the miniskirts, the go-go boots, the bright colors and about a million other things didn't also "date" the series more-so than a single extra with a 'fro?
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Well... the first two of those made comebacks a couple of times - thankfully...

And the miniskirts, the go-go boots, the bright colors and about a million other things didn't also "date" the series more-so than a single extra with a 'fro?
![]()
And the miniskirts, the go-go boots, the bright colors and about a million other things didn't also "date" the series more-so than a single extra with a 'fro?
![]()
Well... the first two of those made comebacks a couple of times - thankfully...![]()
A major WTF that just occured to me - in "Obsession", the cloud creature begins to enter the ship through a broken air vent in the room Spock is in. When he sees the vent is broken, what does our highly intelligent logical Vulcan do? HE TRIES TO COVER THE VENT WITH HIS HANDS! He tries to keep smoke from coming out of a vent grill which is too large for him to cover with his hands! I've tried to rationalize it 2 ways - 1) Spock knew, or guessed, that the creature wouldn't want his green blood and may retreat - far fetched - or 2) He was trying to meld and communicate with it. Either way, when you watch the scene, you can't help but bust out laughing and think "What is he doing?"
I actually like the close-up where Spock breaks off the little switch that controls the vent, and just kinda tosses it aside.
A major WTF that just occured to me - in "Obsession", the cloud creature begins to enter the ship through a broken air vent in the room Spock is in. When he sees the vent is broken, what does our highly intelligent logical Vulcan do? HE TRIES TO COVER THE VENT WITH HIS HANDS! He tries to keep smoke from coming out of a vent grill which is too large for him to cover with his hands! I've tried to rationalize it 2 ways - 1) Spock knew, or guessed, that the creature wouldn't want his green blood and may retreat - far fetched - or 2) He was trying to meld and communicate with it. Either way, when you watch the scene, you can't help but bust out laughing and think "What is he doing?"
Well, what did you expect him to do? It was time for a commercial break, so some cliff-hanging was required (if it were me, I would have grabbed the pillow from Garrovick's bunk and plugged the vent with that).
I actually like the close-up where Spock breaks off the little switch that controls the vent, and just kinda tosses it aside.
Indeed. Holding Spock up as some kind of paragon of cold logic and considering any deviation from that kind behavior as a mistake is really misreading the character. When it came to emotions, the guy was constantly slipping up, practically in every episode.^I think the whole point of that scene is that Spock wasn't acting logically -- that he had a reflexive, emotional response to danger and acted in desperation.
^I think the whole point of that scene is that Spock wasn't acting logically -- that he had a reflexive, emotional response to danger and acted in desperation.
You mean the same "illogical, emotional" humans that tend to strip their clothes off when they are about to die from being in a cold environment to long? Or the "overwrought emotional" person that throws their hands up to block an explosive blast?^I think the whole point of that scene is that Spock wasn't acting logically -- that he had a reflexive, emotional response to danger and acted in desperation.
That may be true, but putting your hands over a vent you can see that your hands can't cover? Even an "illogical, emotional" human would, as others pointed out, grab the nearby pillow or blanket to try and cover the vent. The most logical action is to get the hell out of there, but even the most illogical, overwrought emotional person would not try to stop smoke with their hands! Its just either a screw up by the time-pressed writers, a bad improv by Nimoy, or something to that effect.
Furthermore, I think that a lot of the nitpicks and "WTF moments" that have been pointed out over the years fall into this same category . If all these "errors" ever were actually "corrected," I think Star Trek would be a much less entertaining and satisfying show than it is.
Don't ruin our fun, you fun-ruiner.
^Your point is well-taken, but on the other hand, this isn't really a "mistakes" thread, just a thread for things in TOS that struck us oddly when we saw them.
Yes, that's pretty much what I intended with the thread. Many of the WTF moments can be rationalized in some manner or other, but they can still impress one as strange.^Your point is well-taken, but on the other hand, this isn't really a "mistakes" thread, just a thread for things in TOS that struck us oddly when we saw them.
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