Wed
Sep 8 2010 2:01pm
Happy Airdate, Star Trek!

On September 8, 1966, Star Trek premiered with “The Man Trap,” that classic tale of lonely salt vampires and the crewmen who love them. In celebration, check out Eugene Myers and Torie Atkinson’s inaugural post in the Star Trek rewatch, where I learned that “The Man Trap” was actually the sixth episode filmed. Thank goodness Star Trek went better than that other awesome show set in space and denied its intended pilot by the network!

The whole “Man Trap” thing made me poke around a bit into Star Trek airing history. Turns out, Star Trek suffered from low ratings during its first season and was nearly cancelled, but Lucille Ball, chief of Desilu Productions, pulled for the show, and it was given a second season.

And, well, Star Trek suffered from low ratings during its second season and was nearly cancelled, but a massive letter-writing campaign convinced the network to give it a third season. And even though it was cancelled after that, the third season gave Star Trek immortality: it was the magic number that would allow the show to be “stripped,” that is, rerun at the same time every weekday until the heat death of the universe.

I discovered Star Trek during the summer between sophomore and junior years of high school, when I was too old to go to my favorite summer camp and too young to get a job. Flipping through the cable one day, I discovered that Star Trek, the original one, with the guy—who talked—like this, was on from 4:00 to 6:00, Monday to Friday. Bingo. A summer project. My dad used to come upstairs when he heard the theme music and stick around for a few minutes to share memories of the ’70’s; it seems that he’d also discovered Star Trek in weekday syndication long after it was cancelled.

And thus an empire was born. Er, Federation. You know what I mean. So thank the deity or secular humanist principle of your choice for that third season, and live long and prosper (in reruns)!


Megan Messinger sometimes thinks she hears the old guy in 1N watching Star Trek. This would be awesome, except that it means the sound is carrying four floors.

10 comments
Stefan Jones
1. Stefan Jones
I have very, very vague memories of Star Trek during its initial run. I remember seeing Dagger of the Mind as a five or six year old, and getting to stay up late to watch Spock's Brain a few years later.

Hmmm . . . It has been a while since I watched Man Trap.

Do you think that lonely archeologist, like, you know, got it on with the salt vampire?
Mike Conley
2. NomadUK
I discovered Star Trek during the summer between sophomore and junior years of high school I discovered that was on from 4:00 to 6:00, Monday to Friday. My dad also discovered Star Trek in weekday syndication long after it was cancelled.



Damn. I am now feeling really old....
Laura Southcott
3. tallgrass
My dad did the same thing...except he would also go on to quote "classic" lines from the episode, spoil the ending, and explain why Kirk is the greatest guy ever. Every weekday, all summer.
Eugene Myers
4. ecmyers
@1 Stefan Jones
and getting to stay up late to watch Spock's Brain a few years later.

Are you sure your parents weren't punishing you for something?
Mike Conley
5. NomadUK
ecmyers@4: Are you sure your parents weren't punishing you for something?

Watching babes in tinfoil miniskirts — the Givers of Pain and Delight — is punishment? Since when?
Marcus W
6. toryx
It was the movies that made me a Star Trek fan. I saw all of them (the original series ones) in the theater when they were first released but it was the "trilogy" that caught my attention. Being a rather lonely kid I was enraptured by the friendships between Kirk, Spock and McCoy and that led to my watching and reading anything related to Trek, though it took me a few years to get into watching TNG.

I remember watching "Encounter at Farpoint" the night it debuted and being thrilled that Deforest Kelley had a cameo and then getting really pissed off the following week to see them redo "The Naked Time."
Anyway, Trek got me through some pretty rough times in my youth and though I'm not terribly fond of some of the latest efforts, I'm always happy to celebrate the date the series first aired. Hard to believe that it's been around so long and gone through so many evolutions.
Twila Price
7. anderyn
The original Star Trek first aired the same week I turned 10, five days later to be exact. I have watched it since then through the Next Generation, all of the movies, Deep Space Nine, and some of Voyager, although I stopped watching about the time they brought on Seven of Nine. I never did get that into Enterprise, but I loved the original series dearly and it is still one of my favorite tv shows of all time.
James Goetsch
8. Jedikalos
I was ten years old when that episode aired, and I can still remember watching it, such an impression ST made on me. Watched every episode, and even used a small reel-to-reel tape recorder I had received for my birthday (no cassettes, no vcrs, etc.) to make an audio recording of that opening sequence: Space, the final frontier . . . with the jazzy music and the *whooshes* to listen to while waiting for the next episode. The show gave me occassion to think about so many things . . . Thanks, Star Trek.
Michael Burke
9. Ludon
I guess I was not in the right frame of mind during my first exposure to Star Trek. I don't know which episode it was but I know it was a first run showing. My dad was watching it when I walked into the room and the first thing I saw was
Those Ears!
freaked me out. I went outside to see what the neighbor kid was doing. A few weeks later I caught an episode from the beginning and I was hooked.

@ Jedikalos #8
I used my reel to reel recorder to tape entire episodes when the series ran in syndication on Ch. 45 - WBFF during the 70s. Those tapes are long gone now but back then I enjoyed listening to them like they were old radio plays.
Delos Rifenburgh
10. KaijuGamer
My very first remembrance of Star Trek was a scene (totally unknown which one - it could have been one of a dozen episodes) which showed Spock's head and shoulders on the bridge. I remember hating it because it had captured my (little) brother's attention (he was 2 and I was 3) when I wanted to play with him. This was amusing to me, as when I started watching it a few years later in syndication, it quickly became my favorite show of all time. It still is among the top 10, and the highest of all the Star Trek shows.

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