It seems to me that Steven W. Carabatsos is not a guy who's discussed in relation to Trek very often. He was a Story Consultant on TOS for a good chunk of the 1st season, and yet I never hear him brought up with the frequency that Gene Roddenberry, D.C. Fontana, David Gerrold, or Gene Coon are.
Here are the Trek episodes produced under Carabatsos' tenure, according to his IMDB page*:
- The Alternative Factor (1967) ... (script consultant)
- A Taste of Armageddon (1967) ... (script consultant)
- The Return of the Archons (1967) ... (script consultant)
- Court Martial (1967) ... (script consultant)
- Tomorrow Is Yesterday (1967) ... (script consultant)
- Arena (1967) ... (script consultant)
- The Squire of Gothos (1967) ... (script consultant)
- The Galileo Seven (1967) ... (script consultant)
- Shore Leave (1966) ... (script consultant)
- The Conscience of the King (1966) ... (script consultant)
- The Menagerie: Part I (1966) ... (script consultant)
- Operation -- Annihilate! (1967) ... (written by)
- Court Martial (1967) ... (teleplay by)
A lot of decent episodes, but hardly any we would call stone cold classics. I feel like almost all of these episodes have story problems that could've been solved at the rewriting stage, but weren't.** And yet, I don't think that he gets nearly the amount of grief that, say, Fred Freiberger does. Is that just because he worked on the 1st season, when the show was still relatively fresh fresh and less campy than it became in the 3rd? Is he just overshadowed by being in between Gene Roddenberry and D.C Fontana? Something else?
* According to Memory Alpha, Carabatsos also did a rewrite on "Miri," and was one of the many people who rewrote Harlan Ellison's version of "City on the Edge of Forever." This was also confirmed by D.C. Fontana in Ellison's book about COTEOF.
** I'll expand on this thought a bit in the thread. If I did it here, I feel like this might come off as a "Let's Bash Steven W. Carabatsos" thread, and that's not really my intent. I just want to discuss him a bit.
Here are the Trek episodes produced under Carabatsos' tenure, according to his IMDB page*:
- The Alternative Factor (1967) ... (script consultant)
- A Taste of Armageddon (1967) ... (script consultant)
- The Return of the Archons (1967) ... (script consultant)
- Court Martial (1967) ... (script consultant)
- Tomorrow Is Yesterday (1967) ... (script consultant)
- Arena (1967) ... (script consultant)
- The Squire of Gothos (1967) ... (script consultant)
- The Galileo Seven (1967) ... (script consultant)
- Shore Leave (1966) ... (script consultant)
- The Conscience of the King (1966) ... (script consultant)
- The Menagerie: Part I (1966) ... (script consultant)
- Operation -- Annihilate! (1967) ... (written by)
- Court Martial (1967) ... (teleplay by)
A lot of decent episodes, but hardly any we would call stone cold classics. I feel like almost all of these episodes have story problems that could've been solved at the rewriting stage, but weren't.** And yet, I don't think that he gets nearly the amount of grief that, say, Fred Freiberger does. Is that just because he worked on the 1st season, when the show was still relatively fresh fresh and less campy than it became in the 3rd? Is he just overshadowed by being in between Gene Roddenberry and D.C Fontana? Something else?
* According to Memory Alpha, Carabatsos also did a rewrite on "Miri," and was one of the many people who rewrote Harlan Ellison's version of "City on the Edge of Forever." This was also confirmed by D.C. Fontana in Ellison's book about COTEOF.
** I'll expand on this thought a bit in the thread. If I did it here, I feel like this might come off as a "Let's Bash Steven W. Carabatsos" thread, and that's not really my intent. I just want to discuss him a bit.