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Free Download Star Trek-----------------------------------------DOWNLOAD: http://urllio.com/r1hli -----------------------------------------It is the 23rd century and together with the crew of the Federation starship Enterprise we travel across the galaxy to meet new and exciting life forms on distant planets. The 80 episode TV series which was produced from 1966 to 1969 has now cult character and has fans all over the world.Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the Starship Enterprise explore the galaxy and defend the United Federation of Planets.This was the first Star Trek show I ever saw, but I have to say I prefer the TNG universe shows. They've got better FX, a wider variety of villains etc. Voyager is currently my favourite, because it has loads of Borg stuff in it, then DS9 because of its great story line (Dominion war), and then TNG, though it wasn't until it's later years it became good. (The episodes witht the Cardassians are the most interesting)
Sorry, die-hard TOS fans, but not everybody agree with you.For those that don't know, Star Trek was the original science fiction show to win over a massive fanbase. It is appreciated for having inspired many to boldly go where no man (or woman) has gone before. Is it as timeless as Shakespeare? Well, perhaps in the way Shakespeare inspired the onslaught of perverted literature this inspired of a new cheese.
A cheese with floating green energy hands in space trying to grab your starship. It certainly has an exotic taste but it's not what you're accustomed to and it feels really awkward. Like that seems out of place kind of way. It certainly depends what you're using the cheese for. It's certainly a different experience and you're interested in what else this culture has to offer. Ther's always something new to try. Watching this is a step of boldly going where at least you've never gone before.
This show was meant to be way of secret communication at the time for issues that were being hotly debated. An analogy The show features three great characters in Captain Kirk, a full blown womanizer, Mr Spock, who values his logic to the death with which I can sympathize, and Dr McCoy, who will always make sure you know he's a doctor. The side characters are also fun but I always feel like they're never delved into to the full potential. There aren't very ongoing stories because everybody just seems to get along which I honestly don't buy completely into. But that is, I must concede, the point. A future where in everyone likes each other. This does make for the interesting relationship between Mr Spock and McCoy where McCoy favors compassion and emotions but Spock as a Vulcan chooses to shun these things and let what's interesting just be interesting.
The downside to me I must stress that I am a story person. A person of character growth to be more specific. I rarely feel like anything one episode matters in the next. This I must say is the hole in the cheese.
Speaking of the cheese comparison, I must say the special effects and costumes are so fake it might occasionally appeal but mostly makes one cringe. Now speaking more so of cheese I must comment on an episode where Abraham Lincoln appears floating in space and him and our main characters must fight against the evil historical figures. That is in all fairness a potential brilliant idea. But that's really all it is. An idea not used to it's potential. No interesting remarks made between him and the villains or what makes them good or bad. Nothing of that sorts is discussed. I never felt, in any part of the series,(except maybe the pilot) like morals were being pushed. This show is praised for featuring the first interracial kiss on television but in all honesty it doesn't count. They were forced to kiss by an evil godlike being! It was not two genuine lovers finding solace in each other. And on top of that the quality of that particular episode is atrocious in a way that's not even so bad it's good. The show has it's so bad it's good moments such as William Shatner's over the top acting.
Overall this was the most intelligent bad show there was. A show that had guts but not the best writing. Or perhaps the cheese is just too foreign to me. Something I'm glad I tried because nobody likes a picky eater that won't try anything."TOS" is an abbreviation for "The Original Series". It is used by fans to diffferentiate between this series and any of the spin-off series. The other series are The Animated Series (TAS), The Next Generation (TNG), Deep Space Nine (DS9), Voyager (VOY), Enterprise (ENT) and Discovery (DSC). The original shooting model of the U.S.S. Enterprise measures 11 feet long, 5 feet wide, and 32 inches tall (3.4 x 1.5 x 0.8 metres), weighing in at about 200 pounds (90 kg). It is currently on display at the gift shop of the Smithsonian Institution, in Washington, D.C. The model of the U.S.S. Enterprise was designed by Walter M. "Matt" Jeffries. Nearly all Federation ships featured throughout "Star Trek" are based on this model. The crawl spaces on ships were named "Jeffries Tubes" in his honor. Desilu was a production company owned by Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball. By the time "Star Trek" and "Mission: Impossible (1966)" went into production in 1966, Ms. Ball was the sole owner of the studio. A year later, Paramount bought out Desilu, but Desilu was allowed to continue using their name as long as their shows were in production.
Not every episode ends with Desilu. From "The Immunity Syndrome" through the end of the series, episodes end with the Paramount logo. A black and white print of "The Cage" was screened by Gene Roddenberry in September, 1966 on the "World Science Fiction Convention" along with "Where No Man Has Gone Before."
In the 1980s a half black-and-white half color print was made available on VHS tape edited together from "The Menagerie" and a black and white print of "The Cage".
An original, full-color negative was found in the Paramount archives in 1988 (some fans speculate that they simply colorized the black-and-white print, but it seems unlikely). This print - and the full pilot itself - first aired in the United States as part of a special during the strike-shortened second season of "Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)," in October 1988. The first scheduled airing of the episode in the U.S. was on the Sci-Fi Channel in 1998.
The reason why some fans think that the color version was colorized is that they don't realize that the camera negative was silent. So what they did was to print the negative, and synch it with the soundtrack to the half black and white version (hence the quality of the sound changing like it had in the previous release). Season 1: Thursdays, 8:30 - 9:30pm. Season 2: Fridays, 8:30 - 9:30pm. Season 3: Fridays, 10:00 - 11:00pm. All times are Eastern/Pacific. (NBC aired 12 or 13 third season episodes during the summer of 1969 on Tuesdays at 7:30 - 8:30, replacing "The Jerry Lewis Show," a variety show. Most of them were third season repeats, but "Turnabout Intruder" had its first run in that time slot, on June 3, 1969.) No. "Star Trek" had no predetermined ending point. (Captain Kirk makes reference to a "five-year mission" in the introduction, but the show was not intended to stop after five seasons either.)
"Star Trek" was nearly canceled during both the first and second seasons. A very creative and aggressive letter-writing campaign to NBC was enough to save the series for a third season.
But the show was now scheduled in the Friday night 10-11 "suicide" slot. The slot was particularly bad for "Star Trek," whose typical fan would be going out on Friday night. (VCRs, of course, were not around in the late 60s.) After the third season, "Star Trek" was finally canceled.
Roddenberry promised that he would return to Producer status which he held in the first two pilots and the first nine regular episodes, if NBC puts the show to a decent, 7:30PM timeslot. However when NBC put Trek into the "suicide" slot of 10PM Fridays, he stepped off and had very little control over the series during the third season. According to William Shatner's book "Star Trek Memories," the campaign originated when Bjo and John Trimble approached Gene Roddenberry, and they asked him for ideas on how to reach other fans of the show (The Internet did not exist in those days, so it had to be letters, phone calls, and face-to-face contact). As a token for their efforts, Bjo Trimble had a walk-on role in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) (1979). Fans of the show to this day regard the couple as the ones who saved "Star Trek." Though science-fiction conventions had been around long before "Star Trek" entered the scene (Gene Roddenberry premiered two episodes at a sci-fi convention), the first convention devoted to "Star Trek" took place in New York City, in 1972. Both were made up on the set by Leonard Nimoy. In the script of "The Enemy Within" Spock disabled the duplicate Kirk by pistol whipping him. Nimoy felt that it would be too "savage" and unsuitable for such a logical individual as Spock. He asked the director if he could improvise his own idea. He said yes, and Nimoy choreographed the now-famous neck pinch with Shatner for the episode. a5c7b9f00b https://www.causes.com/posts/4947415 https://www.causes.com/posts/4947408 https://www.causes.com/posts/4947417 https://www.causes.com/posts/4947416 http://www.ggf.lt/en/news/view/id/275218 http://olopocdabcu.simplesite.com/433964101/6627829/posting/the-green-hornet-full-movie-in-hindi-free-download-hd-720p http://adrenalineprovinggrounds.ning.com/profiles/blogs/monday-720p-torrent http://telegra.ph/Download-2-Fast-2-Furious-Full-Movie-In-Hindi-Dubbed-In-Mp4-09-18 http://telegra.ph/Bad-Program-Full-Movie-In-Hindi-Free-Download-Hd-1080p-09-18 http://www.gyvunupaieska.lt/en/news/view/id/275220
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