John was very nice to me -he let me stay a little while longer on his second season replica bridge while I tired to write down the button colors in my Starfleet Technical Manual. RIP 🖖
Wm Shatner said TI was his favorite episode - even though he ran a print of Shore Leave before his appearance for his "An Evening With William Shatner" events in the late 70s/80s. 8-) ...
I'm not sure it would be correct to call it a workprint. It did not have editors markings where dissolves/fades would be. I believe it had an optical track but the effects and music were all there. I blieve it was a B&W 16mm print. At least at the event I was at, Roddenberry also had a color...
I ended up buying the Complete F-Troop DVD set from Wal*Mart for $16.96
On a totally unrelated note I was in Dollar Tree the other day and picked up a new Hot Wheels vehicle - similar to this ...
I just don't think I'm gonna put it through the SuperCharger
;) ...
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Since they keep describing it Crab Jesus was an attempted comedy bit it which an Anglo dud ewith long hair and wearing big foam crab hands came out as Crab Jesus. Toward the end of the bit he picked up a shopping bag full of fish. They turned out to be real dead fish and blood got on a...
I believe the images were Super 8(mm). I'm assuming from a reduction print or 35mm Transparency (or what most people called "Slides"). *
I believe there were 3 ST 3 real sets released TMP:
ST II-WoK
STC - Omega Glory which I believe one of the three pilots commissioned by NBC -after...
The way conventions were run changed after the for-profit entities took over. The cons were initially put together by fans for fans. Guests would be paid by the con-comm and hotel accommodations would be provided for out-of-town Guests. In exchange they would be expected to attend an individual...
Keep in mind Mr. Finnerman had to count on the fact a large portion of the audience would be viewing the show in monochrome and had to account for that.
Individual episodes ST (a swell as the other items you mentioned) were available to rent on 16mm from several companies in including Paramount directly ...
Transporters have a limited range (which varies by writer) but generally someone would not be able to beam from Vulcan to what would be called a "near Earth" object ie the Enterprise especially while it would possibly be moving. In other words it's "Science Fiction - it just works that way ;)!"
I believe in Walter Koenig's Chekov's Enterprise, he says the live-action scene of Spock's arrival took less than an hour to shoot and they still may not have had that morning's re-write script. Spock's arrival would elicit a large positive response and rather than have audience response create...
If the story is true, Props went out and purchased several "futuristic" Salt/pepper shakers which were rejected (mostly because you couldn't tell quickly they were salt/pepper shakers. For the solution the went to the DesiLu Commissary and took them off the tables.
The futuristic salt/pepper...
Not everyone followed the writers guide/bible ;) ... Realistically was expensive to "land" the shuttlecraft(s) (only one fullsize one was built) so they used the transporter because if necessary all they had to do was have the sound effect and have them walk into frame. It also took a lot of...
I suppose you cam think that as you walk through an automatic-opening door -being to told turn of your cellphone before being hooked up to the hospital diagnostic equipment ;) ... Of course that was back when Pluto was a planet :wacko:!