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Shatner, always ready for a gag.
To him, it wasn't a gag. He and the other Star Trek actors had difficult times after the show was cancelled because they were so closely identified to their respective characters that no one wanted to hire them, so Mr. Shatner made a few attempts at a singing/spoken word recording career. So did Leonard Nimoy, but the only member of the cast who could actually sing was Nichelle Nichols. No one among the general public took their efforts seriously and even Mr. Shatner has commented, "They didn't understand what I was doing," but he went along with the gags when people poked fun at his efforts and eventually developed a sense of humor about it himself.Shatner, always ready for a gag.
Nimoy had things a bit easier -- he went straight from Trek to "Mission Impossible," where he was able to distance himself a bit from the whole Spock thing for a while. But Shatner couldn't seem to catch a break at all -- for a while, he seemed to be making most of his living as a celebrity guest on game shows -- I can remember him doing one of these, "Hollywood Squares," I think, actually in character as Captain Kirk. He also did a strange Western/Adventure-type series called "Barbary Coast," which seemed like it ran five minutes or so.
The most interesting thing he tried during these "wilderness years" was a live-TV drama on CBS called "The Tenth Level," dealing with the famous Milgrim experiment in psychology. I remember watching this when it aired and was struck by how utterly not-Kirk Shatner was in it. He was a much better actor than his descent into self parody ever wanted to admit.
Ha! I tried to watch that show once. Barely made it half way through the episode before I decided having a leg amputated with a rusty hacksaw would be preferable to finishing it. Also, quite possibly one of the worst toupees Mr. Shatner has ever worn; I think he borrowed it from Burt Reynolds.What about TJ Hooker?! Captain Kirk in a cop uniform.
What about TJ Hooker?! Captain Kirk in a cop uniform.
Ha! I tried to watch that show once. Barely made it half way through the episode before I decided having a leg amputated with a rusty hacksaw would be preferable to finishing it. Also, quite possibly one of the worst toupees Mr. Shatner has ever worn; I think he borrowed it from Burt Reynolds.
I'll always be partial to Nimoy's Tolkienian ballad of a particular hobbit. Though technically, this was done in between seasons.Shatner, always ready for a gag.
I give Mr. Nimoy credit for doing a "straight" version of the song that let the subject matter identify it as a novelty song.I'll always be partial to Nimoy's Tolkienian ballad of a particular hobbit. Though technically, this was done in between seasons.
I'm glad you mentioned Enterprise. That should be the starting point for the series as canon.
It would seem to me watching them in "chronological order" would be weird. I'm sure it has a lot to do with watching them in real time as they were produced, so it kind of seems watching them that way could be confusing.
Certainly something I can never experience, but it also seems some of the canonical standards developed in TOS could be confusing once introduced in the newer series, somewhat out of order.
Not to mention Klingons and their heads.
That's the REAL problem with Star Trek. Between the broadcast television series', the theatrical movies, and the "pay to stream" television series' that are playing by an entirely different set of rules for legal reasons, so many people have been responsible for so many different incarnations that the only part of Star Trek that no longer fits in is the one that started it all--the original series.
Enterprise, for all its weaknesses, actually did a pretty good job of reconciling the smarmy smooth-headed TOS Klingons with the HONORABLE SPACE VIKING Klingons of the TNG Era. I was quite impressed with how they handled that, only to have Discovery come along and completely botch it up again. CBS-Paramount can say what they want, but I prefer to think of all the streaming-Trek shows as a weird holodeck fantasy program Barclay came up with one night when he was bored.
Taken on its own merits, "Picard" isn't bad. The problem is that it's not the Picard we know from 7 years' worth of TNG. I just can't see that man becoming the man shown in the new show. I tried, and I just can't.
The real problem with Streaming Pile of Trek is that you just can't get the depth of character development in a ten show season that you could get in a twenty-six show season. This idea that each season has to be a "ten hour movie" just doesn't give you the space to do stand-alone episodes that mean nothing to the advancement of the plot but allow space for the characters to grow. That's not a weakness, really, of the shows themselves -- it's a weakness of the modern idea of what "television" is supposed to be.
The only streaming-Trek I've seen is the first episode of Star Trek: Discovery that they broadcast on CBS a little over three years ago. After reading all of the complaints about the show on another forum I frequent, I'm glad I refused to pay for CBS All Abscess just to watch a show that was Star Trek in name only. I wouldn't mind watching Star Trek: Picard and/or the upcoming Star Trek: Strange New Worlds with Anson Mount as Captain Pike, Rebecca Romijn as Number One, and Ethan Peck as Spock, but, again, not paying extra for the privilege.
Normally I try to give new shows a chance by watching at least the first half of the first season. That usually gives me a fairly decent sample size to determine what the show will be like and whether or not I think I'll like it. But with STD I didn't have that opportunity. CBS aired only one episode, and I saw nothing in that episode that would make me want to pay to see more. So I'm out...until they drop the monthly subscription cost to about a buck a month, that is; then I'll consider it.Sorry I didn't get to this earlier.
Just as Lizzie claims with DS9, you have to stay with it for it to make STS (Star Trek Sense)...
That basic thought went through my mind as I watched Picard, but I chalked the changes up to the fact that people change over time. I know that I have, and I could ultimately believe that the Picard in Picard could be the Picard in TNG after 20 more years of life experiences that we have not seen.
I don't think, Jean-Luc Picard would have retired in reality. Even, if he quit with Starfleet, he could still be in diplomatic service for Federation Council. Would he really give up his lifework?