Look at you, scoring Data! π
@MLClark I lack the dancing gene. Shrug.
It's okay. Data is fully functional. He can cover for all missteps, I'm sure. ;)
@MLClark Oh lord, "The Naked Now." π³ How could an android with a positronic brain get an organic infection?
Not to mention the sexual hijinks.
Data as the galaxy's most sophisticated vibrator.
@nblumengarten Roddenberry himself wrote much of it -- D.C. Fontana took her name off it after Gene rewrote her to add the sex scenes that she "felt debased the female characters of the series," to quote Dorothy -- so it's canon, for better or worse.
Gene was a great idea guy, but he was a lousy writer. Gene Coon and Dorothy Fontana were TOS' secret sauce.
@nblumengarten Richard Arnold, Gene's long-time personal assistant, once said at a convention:
"If it's on the screen, it's Star Trek fact. If it's not, it's Star Trek fiction."
There's been a lot of bad Star Trek over the decades. We Trekkers have to own it.
I've always thought that "Chaos" should be mandatory viewing for anyone who wants to be a TV writer. π
That statement hit me hard in the 2000s when Enterprise was on. I wasn't a fan of it, but love the post-DS9 Pocket Books. I was frustrated that the show, which was canon, was inferior (in my opinion) to the books, which were really well written and engaging.
@nblumengarten And there was a hard line between Trek screenwriters and Trek novelists. The novelists rarely were allowed to pitch scripts, much less write them. That slowly changed, in particular with Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens coming on "Enterprise" in the fourth season. But there was a bias against the novelists for a very long time.
I would have given anything for a Peter David written Trek episode.
@nblumengarten Peter did write episodes of "Babylon 5" and "Crusade."
Yup, and the great Centauri trilogy of books.
@WordsmithFL @MLClark
Yeah, then you got his lawyer involved, and it's amazing TNG got past the first season.
The "Chaos on the Bridge" docu-film does ab great job of showing all of this.
I know it's canon, and the reference to it in "Measure of a Man" makes it hard to erase. I was being a bit tongue-in-cheek about removing it from canon.