No. Unfortunately, it's just my increasingly failing memory...There was a better than even chance that you were going to come back with a quote from a post a page back that meant we were absolutely talking about TOS now.![]()

No. Unfortunately, it's just my increasingly failing memory...There was a better than even chance that you were going to come back with a quote from a post a page back that meant we were absolutely talking about TOS now.![]()
So what is the basis for the production order numbering "More Tribbles More Troubles", "Infinite Vulcan", etc.?Some notes I've accumulated from These Are the Voyages: Gene Roddenberry and Star Trek in the 1970s:
It's also worth noting that, whereas the previous TATV books covered episodes in production order, this book covers them in airdate order.
- Peeples was commissioned to write what was intended to be the first episode, which became "Beyond the Farthest Star". Some referred to this as a pilot, though technically it wasn't since the show had been picked up already; regardless, it was commissioned with the specific intent of being the first episode. It was the first episode to complete the animation process and the first to air. (pp. 245–246, 268)
- Some sources say "Beyond the Farthest Star" was screened at World Con 1973, though Fontana says the only thing they showed (or had ready) was the credits. (pp. 261–262)
- "Beyond the Farthest Star" was assigned 22004 has the fourth story assignment, but it was the first episode produced. (p. 280)
- Despite "The Infinite Vulcan" being 22002, when the cast got together to record the first three episodes, it wasn't one of those. "Beyond the Fathest Star" and "Yesteryear" were prioritize so they would be ready to air in September. (p. 281)
The picture that I'm getting out of this is that the commonly-cited "production order" wasn't actually the order in which the episodes were produced. So, while I have some fondness for that order (if nothing else, it was used for the VHS releases), it seems very likely that the aired order was the order intended by the producers, and likely it's the order in which they were produced as well. (At least based on the 70 pages I've read so far out of the roughly 350 pages it has on TAS.)
So what is the basis for the production order numbering "More Tribbles More Troubles", "Infinite Vulcan", etc.?
So what is the basis for the production order numbering "More Tribbles More Troubles", "Infinite Vulcan", etc.?
Bingo. At least according to TATV, for TAS the "production numbers" were indicative of the order of story assignment, not the order in which recording, storyboarding, animation, or other things we might consider "production" took place.The scripts were probably numbered in the order they were commissioned or received.
I guess be glad they didn't go with the earlier version that brought back Nilz Baris and where the glommers were reproducing rapidly. Apparently they were laying eggs all over the ship in an early version of the script.They have the Enterprise encountering Cyrano Jones, tribbles, and Koloth & Korax while they're delivering a triticale variant to Sherman's Planet. There's way too much coincidence in there.
Well, the Klingons want the Glomer BACK because they not only engineered it, they need it (to make more like it as it's their prototype) to save a Kligon colony world Trbble infestation.It's as much of a rehash as Best of Both Worlds is a rehash of Q Who. They both have tribbles and Cyrano Jones. And they both have Kirk getting covered in tribbles. And they both have grain.
The second one is a running space battle, closer to Journey to Babel than to The Trouble with Tribbles. The second one has Cyrano Jones himself as the MacGuffin. In the second one the Klingons are openly hostile. There is no cold-war subterfuge, they just want Jones. They have no interest in the grain or the Federation. Actually they just want the Glommer.
I didn't know "More Tribbles More Troubles" was the first in production order. Various interviews, especially with DC Fontana, state that Samuel Peeples' Beyond the Farthest Star was specifically meant to be the opening episode.And certainly more original than "More Tribbles More Troubles", the first production order episode.
Turns out that even though it has the earliest production number, in practice "Beyond the Farthest Star" was the first produced; the numbers just reflect the order the story assignments were made. See my comments earlier in the thread. (I'm being lazy, but it's not a long thread.)"More Tribbles More Troubles" was the first in production order
Wouldn't surprise me. That was the order the VHS tapes used.I have a vague and unverifiable memory of Tribbles being the first episode that Nickelodeon aired when they started showing TAS in the mid 80
I think the reason that I push back so hard on Tribbles being a rehash (other than the fact that it's not) is because when I finally saw TAS as an "educated Star Trek fan" in my teens I looked at episodes like More Tribbles, Once Upon a Planet, and probably even Yesteryear and Mudd's Passion and said "Well heck, these are all just sequels!" Emphasis on "just". (Is it only those four? I suppose one could include Pirates of Orion?)
Mudd's Passion is possibly the most bat-crap crazy Mudd story but it certainly is not "just" a sequel. Maybe I should revisit Once Upon a Planet.
Kor literally tried to kill everyone on board the Enterprise as part of that "cooperation".and their cooperation to escape the Delta Triangle could be seen as an echo of the Organians' prediction of cooperation between the two nations
Kor literally tried to kill everyone on board the Enterprise as part of that "cooperation".
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