Welcome to the newest addition to the Fire and Water Podcast Network, and just in time for Star Trek's 50th Anniversary Week, too! Join Siskoid and his guests once a month for Star Trek discussion in the mold of Ryan Daly's Give Me Those Star Wars. We start with the beginning, Trek's original pilot "The Cage", and wonder what would have happened if it had gone straight to series. Where would the Enterprise be now if its captain had been Christopher Pike for a season or more? Gene Hendricks of The Hammer Podcast and Anime Freaks helps Siskoid answer that question.
Listen to Episode 1 by clicking HERE!
http://fireandwaterpodcast.com/podcast/startrek1
Or you can right-click “download”, choose “Save Target/Link As”, and select a location on your computer to save the file (26 MB).
Or subscribe to Gimme That Star Trek on iTunes!
Credits:
"Star Trek Theme" by Alexander Courage, with voice assist by the Irredeemable Shagg. End theme: "Deep Space Nine Theme" by Dennis McCarthy.
Bonus clips from: Star Trek's "The Cage" by Gene Roddenberry, starring Jeffrey Hunter and Susan Oliver; Star Trek's "Mirror, Mirror" by Jerome Bixby, starring DeForest Kelley and James Doohan; and "Lonely Man Theme" from The Incredible Hulk (green skin connection!) by Joe Harnell; and Star Trek's "The Trouble with Tribbles" starring James Doohan.
Thanks for leaving a comment!
Listen to Episode 1 by clicking HERE!
http://fireandwaterpodcast.com/podcast/startrek1
Or you can right-click “download”, choose “Save Target/Link As”, and select a location on your computer to save the file (26 MB).
Or subscribe to Gimme That Star Trek on iTunes!
Credits:
"Star Trek Theme" by Alexander Courage, with voice assist by the Irredeemable Shagg. End theme: "Deep Space Nine Theme" by Dennis McCarthy.
Bonus clips from: Star Trek's "The Cage" by Gene Roddenberry, starring Jeffrey Hunter and Susan Oliver; Star Trek's "Mirror, Mirror" by Jerome Bixby, starring DeForest Kelley and James Doohan; and "Lonely Man Theme" from The Incredible Hulk (green skin connection!) by Joe Harnell; and Star Trek's "The Trouble with Tribbles" starring James Doohan.
Thanks for leaving a comment!
Comments
And I can usually tell a Roddenberry episode of HGWT without reading the credits, because I find myself saying "this is the most sexist thing I've ever seen". Now I know you can't judge previous eras by today's standards, but when Roddenberry's theme over and over is that willful women need to learn their manners -- and somehow the other HGWT writers managed to avoid going there -- I'm forced to think that maybe Roddenberry is the problem.
I say this in response to the pilot episode of his space epic, which resolved by putting the hero in the trilemma of which woman to procreate with. To her credit, Number One does refuse to play the game. To her detriment, Number One doesn't even get a name.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0597565/combined
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0597610/combined
Dude loves his Robert April.