DumbDumb2007 said:
The episoide with Spock going back in time and the episode with the crew against backwards were the two best stories.
"Yesteryear" and "The Counter-clock Incident".
DumbDumb2007 said:
The episoide with Spock going back in time and the episode with the crew against backwards were the two best stories.
Alyssa said:
I've never seen any episodes of TAS does anyone have a picture of Spock. I am a huge fan and would love to see him as a cartoon.
Therin of Andor said:
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Captain Robert April said:
And Roddenberry was never one to admit to something like this (like the reason the network didn't like the character of Number One wasn't because of sexism but because Roddenberry had cast his girlfriend in the role) so he dresses it up in a big ol' decree from Mount Olympus and banishes the poor show to the netherworld of novels and fanzines, totally ingoring the sniggling detail that, although animated, meets the criteria of all the other shows and movies for inclusion into the official canon. It was written and produced by established Star Trek writers, the parts were played by the original cast in their original roles, and aired on NBC for quite a while, even nabbed an Emmy award in the process.
I think the DVD release, and the affirmative commentary included therein, should settle the matter, TAS is now canon.
The Squire of Gothos said:
OOOPIM () is a hoot and not entirely a rip off of "The Immunity Syndrome", even when Spock remarks that the cloud is somewhat like an amoeba.
Captain Robert April said:
I'm more curious about this infamous memo that supposedly decanonized TAS in the first place.
Christopher said:
No, I don't think so. Roddenberry was very protective of ST, and when something fell below his standards, he preferred to regard it as apocryphal. When he got the budget and technology to give Klingons a more alien look in the movies, he just pretended they'd always been that way and asked viewers to ignore their humanlike look from the series. He was on record as saying he considered ST V and much of ST VI apocryphal. And in the TNG years, he was known to express the opinion that he considered parts of TOS itself to be non-canonical, because they didn't live up to his standards of quality or credibility.
sturmde said:As to TAS, it's a shame that CBS wouldn't let the digital team experiment with it to see if they could create a TAS-R with all the space scenes replaced with CGI, and even let them have a pass at creating CGI characters and see how that would go. Just to take the "Top Ten" TAS episodes... or even just a couple, namely "Yesteryear" and "Time Trap" would be something I'd pay gladly for a direct DVD
Noel Given said:
This is proven by the fact that he SOLD the his entire interest and rights to the 'Star Trek' series to Paramount.
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