I was only 9 years old when this animated series debuted. I remember how I was so excited that this series was returning, that I couldn't sleep all night; it was the longest night of my life. When the show began, and the shot of the Enterprise came across the screen, I got all choked up with goosebumps. While watching this, that feeling returned. At school I would try to recreate drawings of the USS ENTERPRISE and this got me involved in model making. Thank you for sharing this with us. My childhood memories were better with Star Trek.
We share similar experiences. But my most personal best moment was when I went to the Smithsonian in 2018 her lights came on for 15 minutes every hour or so. When I went, it was (of course) daylight saving time so the wait was longer. But being that close to something I'd seen as a child was awe inspiring as it was. When the time came, and the lights went on...I remembered that 3rd grader was awestruck and actually teared up.(My friend said I couldn't even speak for 20 minutes and had to sit down.)
I am a fan of both Star Trek The Original Series and Star Trek The Animated Series. When I was a child in the 1960s Star Trek The Original Series was one of the few shows that I was allowed to stay up and watch during the later hours of prime time. However when Star Trek The Animated Series was originally on Saturday mornings I was a teenager and I enjoyed how it captured the essence of The Original Series while expanding on the various places and creatures that they could encounter. Live Long And Prosper. 🖖
Thank you so much. It is so cool how Star Trek The Animated Series so captured the essence of Star Trek. And some of the episodes are really good. 🖖 Live long and prosper, as well.
Yeah,I remember watching the original Star Trek animated series when I was aged twelve.And,I knew about syndication in the early 1970”s.What we called;reruns.I have bought the animated series several year’s ago when I had lived in a different neighborhood.And,I love ❤️ my James Blish novels by the way!😊
I can remember seeing the ads before the first animated season began and I couldn't have been more excited. Needless to say, I wasn't disappointed. At a time when Saturday morning cartoons were getting dumber and squeaky clean of even intimated violence, Star Trek brought a breath of fresh air to my favourite morning of the week. I have to point out, though, that the Gold Key Star Trek comic book had a continuous, though occasionally sporadic run and the stories written in that medium were often as good as the original series and the animated one. The comics were popular with both kids and college age adults so the brand was never quite forgotten.
That's amazing. That is is so cool that you saw this live on Saturday mornings. I used to love Gold Key comics! Some great comics were published back then.
@@nunyabizness6595 It's true, they rarely gave credits, staying within the precedent set by most of comic book history. Up until EC Comics in the early 50s, it was uncommon for any publisher to give creator credits. By the time of Gold Key's arrival in 1962, it was still abnormal for any of the small publishers to allow credits to be shown. Gold Key, Archie, Harvey, Disney under any imprint, and several others rarely gave credit.
It was the best written and most adult Saturday morning animated series ever as far as I'm concerned. Nobody who watched it as a child is likely to have forgotten the death of Spock's pet.
I was that perfect age to watch in 1974 being 9. I would sit glued to the tv holding my Mego Star Trek figures The way I always felt about it was since TOS was 3 years and the animated was 2 seasons that it gave us the full 5 year mission.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast They make really great anime today and such but the 70s were the golden age of children. All the cartoons, the freedom and OG Star Wars. It was TV nirvana.
I started watching TOS when I was 3 years old, in 1968, with my brothers. TAS was my show for years and I loved it. At the same time, the Gold Key comics were out, and later,we had the Balls time novels ... So I was immersed in it and I loved it. And yes... I still watch TAS on Prime.
I am so glad I can again watch it on Paramount! Good story lines, written by some of the original writers, such as D.C. Fontana! R.I.P. Nichelle Nichols
Born in ’62, I was a fan from the very beginning on our 19” B&W TV. The animated series made my Sat mornings for years (same TV). I’ve always considered it canon.
The idea of "canon" in fiction is largely ludicrous to me. It is All fiction, they are stories. Enjoy the stories you find engaging, but none of it is real.
I had no idea that this existed until the early 90s. I was at my great-great-grandmother 's house and was flipping through the channels and saw it on Nickelodeon. It wasn't until much later that I was able to check the whole series out, and I love it (except for the bright colors). I do accept it as the fourth season of Star Trek.
I also discovered this much later, although I remember some toys and comics during the 70's, but when I found it, it blew my mind that it existed. Now I'm a full-fledged fan.
Always had a soft spot for this one. I’m sure watching it on Saturday mornings as a child has something to do with that, but it’s definitely well done. Should be canon.
Always been a fan of the show, I was 10 years old in 66 when it went on the air, and loved it. Watched it in syndication and in 73 when I was 17 watched the animated series I loved that too. I now have it on DVD and it just so happens that I am going through it and watching all the episodes again after not watching it for some time. Great video really enjoyed it keep up the great work.
I loved this iteration of Star Trek and remember watching every episode except the premiere since we lived in the LA area. Didn't even know ir existed until now
That's interesting that you lived in LA and we're part of that interesting piece of history where the Premier episode didn't air. That kind of makes you a part of Star Trek history.
I was a teen when this came out. It was a tall, cool glass of water in the desert for me. As an adolescent, I learned new words and concepts, and I just adored the whole thing. When the DVDs this series came out some 30 years later, I bought 'em and let my DVD player go to town. Good times.
It must have been amazing to see this when it was coming out. I was too young to catch it in 1974, but caught it decades later, and it blew my mind. Thank you so much for your post.
I am so blessed. My friend in 3rd grade introduced me to Star Trek. Within a few months I had the books, model kits, Mego Figures, etc. (this was 1973). So I had it back to front. The perfect timing of TAS was almost magical to a 4th grader. BUT a 4th grader who was steeped in lore that could truly enjoy it. (1973/4). More merch came out and I was collecting with my friend.(I also remember how dejected we were that the AMT Exploration models were undersized.) The 4th grade me looks around at his DST "exploration set" of today with satisfaction, tho!
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast I’m pretty sure it was licensed by NBC to air on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), since many Canadian markets at that time did not carry NBC.
🖖😎👍Very totally wonderfully cool and very nicely greatly informatively explained and executed in every detail way shape and format provided on Startrek the Animated Series, A job very nicely fabulously well done indeed Sir!; And I myself own all 3 seasons of TOS as well as the complete Animated Series and also all of the Startrek Movies indeed!👌.
What about the other trek series ??? Star Trek the Next Generation,Deep Space 9,Voyager. Then there's Star Trek Discovery,Picard trek show & Star Trek Discovery,then Star Trek Strange New Worlds.
Me and my pals loved this series back in the day, sure it wasn't quite as great as the live one, but 99% great is still something. It had the actors and Fontana and Rodenberry's name (which at that age we just happen to notice, but it helped) and finally continually real alien-looking aliens. That was enough to seal the deal and make us glued to the screen each Saturday. It being Filmation was really a help too because of how many of us loved Superman, Superboy, Aquaman, Teen Titans and JLA from them. Though many of my friends and I came to view it as the unofficial 5th year of the mission. I think that was because of the aliens on the bridge suddenly there without explanation. Guess we figured that there had to have been a 4th year that that change had happened in. Either way, we and most on th3 playground agreed it was canon (even if we didn't know that term yet). Fun memories. Thanks for the deep dive video.
My pleasure! And thank you for the kind words. I agree with the Animated show being the fourth and fifth season. I also loved Filmation cartoons growing up. Saturday mornings were a big deal back then!
I know it was a very simply drawn show but when you're a kid you don't care I love when this came out on VHS I made a deal with the suncoast store for a discount if I bought the entire collection. Which is at the time was it being offered but they did it so I have all original still sealed VHS of Star Trek the animated series and then on top of that I was further elated when they finally released the special limited edition on DVD in these plastic Star Trek symbol cases I love it I'm so glad filmation made it.
Me too! I appreciate your post. I can feel your passion and love of the series through your post, and it makes me smile! Thank you for your comment and welcome to my channel.
As popular as Star Trek became after its initial cancellation, I'm shocked the cartoon never came out in syndication. Just about every other cartoon from that era made it to syndication in the 80s.
The Alan Dean Foster novel adaptations of the Animated Series are excellent! Would that these had made it to the movies with the original cast… Could still be done today with the right people, and with today’s technology. We can always hope! 😌
@ like I said, Foster’s Animated Series adaptations are excellent Star Trek stories. They of course flesh out the actual TV episodes. Fortunately, he was given leeway to adapt the series to his heart’s content. And he did a very fine job. Makes for great reading!
Was at just the right age to watch the cartoon, have the toys, and then only later see live-action Trek. Was like, “Mom, they made a show my cartoon!” and she explained to me how it was the other way around.
❤❤❤As a kid I really enjoyed watching the Animated Series Star Trek and it is real Star Trek series and should be credited to The Star Trek Franchise because it is Worthy of its own Efforts
The Animated series was what got me into Star Trek . After about 12 weeks of the animated series , the channel started airing the original series after the animated show
I'm so glad to see this show finally getting some of the recognition it deserves. I was a teenager when this first came out in 1973, and the only new Star Trek we were getting or had any hope of getting the previous few years were poorly-written novels and even more poorly-written comic books published by Gold Key (which made some excellent comic books overall at the time but kind of fell down on the job when it came to Star Trek). So to me the animated series was a bright light inside a dark tunnel that kept Star Trek alive at a time when there seemed to be little hope of its continuation let alone revival. Filmation itself was I have felt badly underappreciated and afaik was the last major holdout against American studios outsourcing all their animation to other countries like Japan and South Korea.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast Wholeheartedly agree. I have always wished they had kept making more. Animation wasn't the greatest and the continually reused clips were what they were, but I didn't care. I was enjoying the stories too much to even notice these the first couple of times, and imo the beautiful art, imaginative stories, and voice acting by the same actors were than enough to make it a worthwhile series to me.
My only quibble to an otherwise very well-done video is that you really should utilize a spell-checker more often because I saw at minimum four spelling errors in your captions.
Where were you when I was editing the show! 😄 It's amazing. No matter how many times you edit and proof-read an essay, a presentation, or a TH-cam video, a few mistakes always seem to creep through. Unfortunately, I can't spell-check once I'm in the Video Text creation mode. Oh well! Too late to correct it now!
I'm a fan of Star Trek TOS & a Massive fan of the Animated series of the continuion Adventures of the Starship Enterprise, & yes it should get major props for it has achieved. Just like with Wesley Snipes "Blade" movie saving Marvel Comics, which in turn lead onto the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Star Trek The Animated Series brought back the Original Star Trek crew onto the big Cinematic Screen. Plus maximum respect to the late great Mr. Leonard Nimoy for standing up bringing back the missing remaining cast members onto the show. Thank you so much for this fantastic video. "Live Long & prosper" Junior from London 😎🇬🇧🇬🇧🇯🇲🇯🇲
Imagine if we could reanimate the animated series in a similar style to "Star Trek: Prodigy" using the original voiceovers of the main characters, but cast new voice actors for the secondary characters. It could allow for the stories from the animated series to to presented in a new way.
@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast it's an idea that's been in my head for a while. "The Original Series" did not get a good send-off. But by upscaling the animated series, maybe we could get a better version of the last 2 years of the five-year mission. We could even take the "lower decks" approach and create secondary plots focusing on the crew during those missions therefore allowing new stories to be told within the existing stories.
Larry Niven also adapted one of his short stories for The Animated Series called The Shaver Weapon. Larry's known space series of books is hard sci Fi and his adaptation brought the Kzinti into the Trek universe.
I was in my 20s when this series aired. I watched every episode and loved it. My only complaint is the series was written/aired in the 70s when violence was either toned down or eliminated completely so there wasn't a lot of action. Plus, everybody had to be best buddies by the end of the episode.
I worked on this show, one of my first jobs ever. One of the things I did was sculpt a maquette of Lt. Arex for the animation crew to follow. Great to see this coverage.
I've always imagined how cool it would be for OTOY The Roddenberry Archive to animate episodes of The Animated Series. Thinking how amazing it could be to see The Lorelei episode where we'd actually see the aged appearances of Shatner, Nimoy and Kelley as we would see them 10-20 years later. Imagine the possibilities!
The "Star Trek Academy" idea did survive: it became Filmation's Space Academy debuting in the Fall 1977, a live action show however but even using Star Trek TAS incidental music.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast Sure thing! Thank you! Also Trek related, the stories of Space Academy had much input by Samuel Peeples, who did the ST: TAS pilot (Beyond the Farthest Star) and the 2nd pilot of ST: TOS (Where No Man Has Gone Before). SA's timing as premiering early Sept.1977 strikes me as a definite Star Wars influence which came out about 4 months earlier in the year. Esp. as the show had to a have a cute little, R2-D2-like robot--named Peepo. Filmation did this too with their other 1977 animated show, The Space Sentinels, the cute robot named "Mo," (from M.O. = "maintenance operator'). Both voiced (synthetically) by Lou Scheimer. Originally called The Young Sentinels--the name was changed in hopes that Star Wars mania might rub off and improve the ratings, which it didn't, so just one season. Space Academy had great ratings but was quite expensive to make for Saturday morning TV (as probably helped by late 70's inflation) so the show was retooled as Jason of Star Command, with serialized episodes just 15 minutes each, instead of 30 minute stand alone ones, as integrated with the show Tarzan and the Super 7. JSC's first season starred James Doohan as the commander of Star Command, the operation understood to be a secret section of Space Academy (though SA's episodes and characters were not tied into the show--and SA's commander was played by Jonathan Harris, of Lost in Space fame). The 2nd season of JSC went back to the 30 minute format, with John Russell replacing Doohan, who left as he could now make much bigger money doing Star Trek movies playing Scotty. Both Space Academy and The Space Sentinels episodes are out there on the web (last I checked). Unsure about Jason of Star Command. Thank you too for your respectful homage to Star Trek TAS. The show gets its knocks but I always loved it. I was a kid of 9 when it first debuted and it was my full initiation into the world of Trek which I had only known peripherally before then . The animation may be of the limited type--but all Saturday morning cartoon studios did this. Yet, IMO, Filmation, with good commercial properties like Trek, or Tarzan or Flash Gordon, always strove to be a cut above typical Saturday morning fare, still made some excellent design and aesthetic choices from that restriction by which I thought the show always looked fantastic (well drawn and I loved that brighter coloring given us by Erv Kaplan, who also gives us those lush landscape backgrounds of TAS and other shows). I do go on--apologies for length . . .
Loved this show to death as a kid. When My Grandfather gifted Me a Tape Recording Machine, I would tape the episodes (place the machine by the TV) every Saturday Morning just so I could listen to them (and the Music Cues) throughout the week. My only regret is that when My Grandfather took Me to My first "ST" Convention in '75 in Philadelphia (via New York City), I didn't pick up a few of the Animated Cels. Those cels were going for about $20. Now they are worth hundreds. If not thousands. But Grandfather placed a budget. And at 12 years old, I didn't see the value of Animated cels at the time. I've gone through VHS, DVD, and currently own the Blu-Ray Box of "TAS". It still gives Me Childhood vibes to this day. I also still have My GAF 3D Talking View-Master reel of "YESTERYEAR". Along with some of the Alan Dean Foster book adaptions. My Sister found them in a storage bin last year. I've not seen that stuff in DECADES!!! Got to meet Lou Scheimer at a San Diego Comic Con in 2000. One of the NICEST Dudes I ever met. He (and his Daughter) spoke of his love for both "TAS" and "FAT ALBERT". I always felt that FILMATION Studios kept much of Saturday Morning more "Adult" in those days, without losing the childhood enthusiasm of Cartoons. And had no issues involving Diversity. Especially in those days. Diversity and Inclusion came so naturally for that studio. GREAT VIDEO!
Thank you for the kind words. Oh man, that would have been so cool to buy some of those animation cells. That is so incredibly amazing that you met Lou Scheimer. Everything I've heard was that he was a very kind man. Thank you for your post.
I LOVE STAR TREK no matter if it's real or drawn! It's a lot easier to watch the animated Trek because it's much shorter and so because of that reason I can watch more episodes in shorter time. What I usually do when watching Star Trek is to first watch live action then animated, on and on, which means I watch more animated than real action! I often wish Star Trek had been animated in the first place because of what you can do a lot easier that way. Just look at those colors and those monsters, plant and animal, not to mention the different planetary surfaces. I better quit now because I could go on and on and on, well, you get the idea. Live Long and Prosper fellow Star Trekkers...
Thank you for your comment. I can appreciate your love of Star Trek. And I agree with you. I think the shorter run time of the Animated series make them easier to watch. And I have some to love the vibrant colors.
With so many of the animated episodes being written by original series writers it definitely was well made for the limitations of its production budgets. Perfect no.. but truly Star Trek.🖖
I was up and at the tv every Saturday when it aired, followed be the live action Monster Squad with Fred Grandy (Senator, and Gopher from Love Boat) on NBC. 😊
I loved the animated series even though I found some of the animation annoying. The stories were often good so it was always real Star Trek to me. As a pre-teen I may not have had sophisticated taste in s.f. but I knew what I liked.
I really enjoyed this look back on the animated series. Here're some other things that it introduced: 1 Klingons using cloaking devices. More Tribbles, More Troubles 2 The rec room is almost identical to the holodeck. Practical Joker 3. "Safe tribbles." We see a tribble in Star Trek III and there doesn't seem to be any problem with it. I'd like to make one correction. Jane Wyatt was not in Yesteryear. Majel Barrett is credited with the role. I don't remember if you mentioned that Roger C. Carmel and Stanley Adams reprised their roles as Harry Mudd and Cyrano Jones. That's impressive for a Saturday morning cartoon. You may have mentioned this. I'm too lazy to go back and check. This one is very obscure, but as a kid I was a huge fan of the Gerry Anderson series, UFO. Ed Bishop (Commander Straker) was in The Magick's of Megas-Tu. This is an excellent analysis of the series. I appreciate your efforts.
Thank you for the kind words. This was an excellent comment. I wish I had you before I uploaded the video. 🙂 You presented so awesome info that should have gone into my video. At least people can read them in the comments. Thank you!
Tribble sighting in TNG, as well. "When the Bough Breaks" I think. The one with Aldea, the cloaking planet that needs kids... The little girl had a tribble in a clear dome/cage.
Yes, I have the complete series of this on DVD, which in the complete DVD of the original Star Trek, they include the animated tribble episode, as well as the Deep Space Nine episodes, with the tribbles. There is also a Keep It Beautiful America ad, with the animated series. And this series established Kirk's middle name, and was mentioned in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and J.J. Abrams' Star Trek. Seasons greetings, and nanu nanu.
A few concepts from this show have been accepted as canon by fans. The fact that the first captain of the Enterprise was Robert April and that McCoy has a daughter. Also the existence of the Kzinti and the Caitians (Lt, M'Ress)
18:55 No. Kirk's middle name was in TOS. I think it was Court Martial but it was definitely in an episode where he was being sworn in and the computer was reading his service record.
No, the computer recording read his name as "James T. Kirk." He's right, "Tiberius" as Kirk's middle name didn't appear in live-action until Star Trek VI.
It's sad .. I bought the DVD SET AT THE GREAT ESCAPE IN LOUISVILLE,KY IN 2010 and I don't have it anymore...I MOVE STATE to State too much .Greetings from NORFOLK,VA
Greetings! Oh, it must have been nice to own the DVD set. By the way, I did summer school for graduate school in Louisville, and so that city has a soft spot in my heart. I also spent this summer in Virginia, and visited some friends in Norfolk. Welcome to my channel!
@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast Born and Raised in Detroit by the way. But the transition was PARAMOUNT🤣(pardon the pun)as of 2024. I got some really cool children here That aren't into SCI-FI. That unattended trait comes from my EX.😂THANK YOU FOR THE WELCOME.
NBC should never have cancelled or cut the budget (in half), or aired it on Friday night. TOS deserved to run for at least 10 years. 'MASH' ran for 9 years, and 'Bonanza' ran for 14 years. Oh and, "Gunsmoke"? Um, over 20 years. Besides the 'Andy Griffith Show', 'Star Trek' is one of the best shows to ever come out of US broadcast television.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast It truly is a shame. All those great writers (Fontana among them) and directors (Marc Daniels among them), AND actors, put out of work.
I fully believe that the animated series is Star Trek canon. It follows the events of the original series and basically competed the 5 year mission from the original series. I remember really liking it as a kid. It was kinda weird to have the alien helmsman replacing Checkov but at least Nimoy was able to get all the rest of the original cast back to do their voices.
1) There likely would not have been any Trek _films_ (another live-action show is a different matter) without a certain space fantasy film in 1977 raking in balefuls of moolah. 2) Was there ever any on-screen explanation for the absence of Ensign Pavel Chekov? 3) My favorite episode is "More Troubles More Tribbles" - but then that is the only one I have viewed thus far.
I’ve long wondered if we could use TAS artifacts and modern CGI to make a new, updated TAS. Use the original voices, with additional ones, if possible. Use modern CGI to improve upon 1970s-era animation.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast - Star Trek: Prodigy has proven the job can be done. Some of the writers of those episodes are still alive and could flesh out the content a little. Walter Koenig said that if he'd known how good the series was going to be, he would have written more than one episode. Sadly a lot of the talent isn't around anymore to record additional dialog - but perhaps with the permission of the estates (and appropriate compensation) dialog could be looped or AI-assisted. You could turn 22 episodes of 24 minutes into a lot more than that and, although it shouldn't be necessary, that might be enough to convince more people that "it's canon".
Is there any other example of an hour long show that didn't initially do well in the ratings catching on in syndication like Star Trek? Most shows that are hits in syndication are half hour long, and usually sitcoms. An amazing feat but it shows how innovative and interesting the original show was.
I believe David Gerald came back to write the sequel episode as well for the Trouble with Tribbles. So he wrote the live action and animated stories I believe.
I liked the episode about the lonely being on a planet who hijacked the ship. They had to pretend that they were crashing into the sun to get rid of it.
Always been a TAS fan. I really like the way Lower Decks has leaned in on the canonicity of TAS. The bones of giant Spock, a Caitian crewmember, the return of the "Bem" species, and especially when Mariner looks up the old Enterprise crew it shows their images from TAS (even though the animation style is completely different).
There is a series of Star Trek animations under the title "Start Trek Logical Thinking" which can be viewed on TH-cam. Does anyone have any information on how this series was produced?
My nitpick: during the segment on "odd colors", he identifies one race as "the Slavers" that were the Kzin (who were trying to unlock the Slaver technology). And of course, that episode was adapted from Larry Niven's Known Space short stories.
I LOVED THE ANIMATED STAR TREK SERIES NEVER WAS AGAINST IT! HAD NO IDEA FANS WERE AGAINST IT! NEVER KNEW IT WON AN EMEY HAD NO IDEA WHAT DC FONTANA LOOKED LIKE PROBY ASSUMED BELONGED TO A MAN BECAUSE I ALSO KNEW MANY FEMALE CREATORS LIKE IN THE 1800’s 1900’s were forbidden to have their names front and center-and having a name not saying female may havee come from that ? Don’t know. HER EPISODES/Stories were some of my favorites. I KNEW FIMATION FOR FLASH GORDAN TARZAN AND ZORRO!!( yes a lot of scenes were reused But I ALSO GREW UP WITH CLUTCH CARGO!! And ONLY THEIR LIPS MOVED!!! SO I HAD WAY MORE MOVEMENT THAN THAT!! Also Amazing Spider-Man with our iconic song still blazed in my head $ I can SGILL HETE THE CAT LADYS TONE OF VOICE IN THE ANIMATED TREK! I like Anything with Time Travel and LA’s First ep was one of my fav’s. -MANY YEARS LATER WHEN I FOUND OUT A FELLOW FAMILY MEMBEF LIKED A CERTAIN SCI FI SERIES WITH NATHAN FILLION? There was I think a bruh ha about -something being out of order Or the won’t watch a certain BBC show out of order by. 🤣😂WHEN WE GREW UP! WE NEVER EVER SAW ANYTHING IN ORDER!!! & when a UHF channel showed ORIGINAL STAR TREK((THAT WAS THEEEEE ONLY TREK OTHER THAN THE ANIMATED IN EXISTENCE!!) IN ORDER!!! EEEEGADS!! LOVEY!!! STOP THE PRESSES!!! MAN THE LIFEBOATS!!!! ALL ENGINES FULL STOP!!!!! IT WAS LIKE A NAGIONAL HOLIDAY!!!! To see CAPTAIN KIRK AND CREW IN ORDER😱😱😱😱🤩🤩🤣🤣😂😎😎😎👍👍‼️‼️‼️‼️🤩🖖🖖🖖🖖🖖
I enjoyed TAS from its original broadcasting on NBC, Saturday mornings, back in '73-'74, and I knew it wasn't just a "cartoon show"...not too many shows with certain words like "hellish" and "die" in the dialogue during our Saturday-breakfast-cereal-morning rituals. Some dialogue still etched in my mind to this day: Kirk: "Lt. Norrid, you could have stopped him, (the Vendorian imposter), why didn't you fire?" Norrid: "I...I couldn't. I know he had to be the intruder, Captain, but I couldn't harm the image of the man I loved." Kirk: "Lt., he is not the man you loved. Carter Winston is dead!" "Norrid: "I know that,too....now." TAS was a big-time breath of fresh air in the morass of Saturday morning lameness.
Thank you. Actually, it's a famous story I side science fiction circles. DC Fontana wrote the Battlestar Gallactica episode, "Gun on Ice Planet Zero" but had the credits taken from her due to rewrites. She was so disgusted that she never wrote another episode for them.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast this story apears to be apocraphal, especially since she did eventually write for Automan, another Glen Larson production. Do you have a concrete source for this?
I too was nine years old and loved this. I should point out that while Mark Leonard voice acted Sarek in the animated series, Jane Wyatt did not return. Amanda was voiced by Majel Barrett. I am not a fan of the Megus Tu episode as it goes against my Christian beliefs. That episode disgusted me.
I remember being very excited for this show and bitterly disappointed at Filmation's cost cutting techniques. Even years later, I didn't mind it on Masters Of The Universe; I thought it just didn't fit... Considering how Lower Decks is animated... Mind you, I don't like THAT very much: the bridge crew get live action yet the unseen minions who make the ship work get a cartoon comedy sits badly with me. However, we have the audio... I'd love to see the episodes remade with less skinflint animation.
This was a pretty good video, but it got a couple things wrong. Jane Wyatt did NOT return to voice Amanda in "Yesteryear" . That was Majel Barrett's voice. Also, the Tribble episode was called "More Troubles, More Tribbles", NOT "More Trouble with Tribbles". I'm sure dozens more pointed this out as well.
He is! He did so many incredible things, and advocating for Nichols and Takei is just one more example of what an incredible person he was. He is a role-model!
What do you think about Star Trek: The Animated Series? Is it a true continuation of the original series or just a fun side project?
I was only 9 years old when this animated series debuted. I remember how I was so excited that this series was returning, that I couldn't sleep all night; it was the longest night of my life. When the show began, and the shot of the Enterprise came across the screen, I got all choked up with goosebumps. While watching this, that feeling returned. At school I would try to recreate drawings of the USS ENTERPRISE and this got me involved in model making. Thank you for sharing this with us. My childhood memories were better with Star Trek.
Thank you so much for your heart-warming comment. I am so happy to share my love of the Animated series.
We share similar experiences. But my most personal best moment was when I went to the Smithsonian in 2018 her lights came on for 15 minutes every hour or so. When I went, it was (of course) daylight saving time so the wait was longer. But being that close to something I'd seen as a child was awe inspiring as it was.
When the time came, and the lights went on...I remembered that 3rd grader was awestruck and actually teared up.(My friend said I couldn't even speak for 20 minutes and had to sit down.)
I am a fan of both Star Trek The Original Series and Star Trek The Animated Series. When I was a child in the 1960s Star Trek The Original Series was one of the few shows that I was allowed to stay up and watch during the later hours of prime time. However when Star Trek The Animated Series was originally on Saturday mornings I was a teenager and I enjoyed how it captured the essence of The Original Series while expanding on the various places and creatures that they could encounter. Live Long And Prosper. 🖖
Thank you so much. It is so cool how Star Trek The Animated Series so captured the essence of Star Trek. And some of the episodes are really good. 🖖 Live long and prosper, as well.
Yeah,I remember watching the original Star Trek animated series when I was aged twelve.And,I knew about syndication in the early 1970”s.What we called;reruns.I have bought the animated series several year’s ago when I had lived in a different neighborhood.And,I love ❤️ my James Blish novels by the way!😊
I was about to say the same thing it was over the producers of Laugh IN that had a cow iirc
This is the best description of TAS I’ve seen. Well done.
Thank yo so much for the kind words. Welcome to my channel, and I hope you enjoy my other videos.
I can remember seeing the ads before the first animated season began and I couldn't have been more excited. Needless to say, I wasn't disappointed. At a time when Saturday morning cartoons were getting dumber and squeaky clean of even intimated violence, Star Trek brought a breath of fresh air to my favourite morning of the week.
I have to point out, though, that the Gold Key Star Trek comic book had a continuous, though occasionally sporadic run and the stories written in that medium were often as good as the original series and the animated one. The comics were popular with both kids and college age adults so the brand was never quite forgotten.
That's amazing. That is is so cool that you saw this live on Saturday mornings. I used to love Gold Key comics! Some great comics were published back then.
@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast Wasn't Gold Key notorious for not having who the writer or artist for their comics were or was i wrong about that?
@@nunyabizness6595 It's true, they rarely gave credits, staying within the precedent set by most of comic book history. Up until EC Comics in the early 50s, it was uncommon for any publisher to give creator credits. By the time of Gold Key's arrival in 1962, it was still abnormal for any of the small publishers to allow credits to be shown. Gold Key, Archie, Harvey, Disney under any imprint, and several others rarely gave credit.
It was the best written and most adult Saturday morning animated series ever as far as I'm concerned. Nobody who watched it as a child is likely to have forgotten the death of Spock's pet.
I agree! It was so well written, and the episodes still hold up today.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcastBatman animated series is much more interesting and mature taje
I was that perfect age to watch in 1974 being 9. I would sit glued to the tv holding my Mego Star Trek figures The way I always felt about it was since TOS was 3 years and the animated was 2 seasons that it gave us the full 5 year mission.
That amazing you got to see TAS as they were coming out. So awesome!
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast They make really great anime today and such but the 70s were the golden age of children. All the cartoons, the freedom and OG Star Wars. It was TV nirvana.
DC Fontana was brilliant! Absolutely loved her!
Gene Coon as well.
Her re-write of "City On The Edge Of Forever" is, in my opinion, superior to Harlan Ellison's original script.
She was indeed incredible!
I started watching TOS when I was 3 years old, in 1968, with my brothers. TAS was my show for years and I loved it. At the same time, the Gold Key comics were out, and later,we had the Balls time novels ... So I was immersed in it and I loved it. And yes... I still watch TAS on Prime.
Ah, Gold Key comics! I loved them. Gold Key made some of the best comics of my childhood. The TAS episodes still hold up incredibly well!
If you scan the credits, a young Glen Keane pops up. Don't know if it was his 1st animation gig, but it was certainly at the start of his career.
That is very interesting.
I loved the music as a kid and still do
You are so right. The music is next level. I like the opening music better than the Original Series.
Another great piece of work. Thanks!
Thank you so much. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
I am a fan of both Star Trek TOS and Star Trek Animated Series which is an Excellent and Phenomenal Series
I agree! Such a great series.
I am so glad I can again watch it on Paramount! Good story lines, written by some of the original writers, such as D.C. Fontana!
R.I.P. Nichelle Nichols
I'm enjoying it on Paramount Plus myself! And R.I.P. Nichelle Nichols.
Great job on the video!
Thank you so much!
Born in ’62, I was a fan from the very beginning on our 19” B&W TV. The animated series made my Sat mornings for years (same TV). I’ve always considered it canon.
For me, the Animated Series is 100% canon. Thank you so much for your post.
The idea of "canon" in fiction is largely ludicrous to me. It is All fiction, they are stories. Enjoy the stories you find engaging, but none of it is real.
I had no idea that this existed until the early 90s. I was at my great-great-grandmother 's house and was flipping through the channels and saw it on Nickelodeon. It wasn't until much later that I was able to check the whole series out, and I love it (except for the bright colors). I do accept it as the fourth season of Star Trek.
I also discovered this much later, although I remember some toys and comics during the 70's, but when I found it, it blew my mind that it existed. Now I'm a full-fledged fan.
Always had a soft spot for this one. I’m sure watching it on Saturday mornings as a child has something to do with that, but it’s definitely well done. Should be canon.
That is so cool you were able to see it live on Saturday mornings. 😀 And I agree. For me, this is canon.
Paramount had no control over Star Trek’s time slot. NBC, the network which broadcast the show, controlled that.
Oh, you are 100% correct. My mistake. Thank you for clearing that up. 😊
Always been a fan of the show, I was 10 years old in 66 when it went on the air, and loved it. Watched it in syndication and in 73 when I was 17 watched the animated series I loved that too. I now have it on DVD and it just so happens that I am going through it and watching all the episodes again after not watching it for some time. Great video really enjoyed it keep up the great work.
Thank you so much for the kind words. It really impressed me how well the TAS episodes hold up.
Loved this as a kid. Didn't even think about it being Filmation - I raced home from school, chuffed to watch new a Star Trek show
That's incredible! Thank you for your post!
I might need to rewatch this series. I love the tie in to Lower Decks.
Yes! Give it a try! It's on Paramount Plus. On that note, I need to finish Lower Decks.
I loved this iteration of Star Trek and remember watching every episode except the premiere since we lived in the LA area.
Didn't even know ir existed until now
That's interesting that you lived in LA and we're part of that interesting piece of history where the Premier episode didn't air. That kind of makes you a part of Star Trek history.
In spite of a few minor errors, this is a great video. Thanks!
Thank you so much!
Truly excellent video. Totally awesome, absolutely! Thank you so much!😊
Thank you so much for the kind words. It is truly appreciated. 🙂
Well deserved!
I wish this video had been in the animated series box set. Outstanding work and thank you ❤❤😊
Thank you so much. That is one heck of a compliment. 😀
I was a teen when this came out. It was a tall, cool glass of water in the desert for me. As an adolescent, I learned new words and concepts, and I just adored the whole thing. When the DVDs this series came out some 30 years later, I bought 'em and let my DVD player go to town. Good times.
It must have been amazing to see this when it was coming out. I was too young to catch it in 1974, but caught it decades later, and it blew my mind. Thank you so much for your post.
I am so blessed. My friend in 3rd grade introduced me to Star Trek. Within a few months I had the books, model kits, Mego Figures, etc. (this was 1973). So I had it back to front. The perfect timing of TAS was almost magical to a 4th grader. BUT a 4th grader who was steeped in lore that could truly enjoy it. (1973/4). More merch came out and I was collecting with my friend.(I also remember how dejected we were that the AMT Exploration models were undersized.) The 4th grade me looks around at his DST "exploration set" of today with satisfaction, tho!
That is awesome. I loved those Meego figures. It was an amazing time to be a kid!
Loved the show as a kid in the 70s.
In Canada we had it on Sunday mornings.
CBC if I recall.
NBC. That's amazing you were able to see it as a kid. That is so cool. 🙂
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast I’m pretty sure it was licensed by NBC to air on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), since many Canadian markets at that time did not carry NBC.
🖖😎👍Very totally wonderfully cool and very nicely greatly informatively explained and executed in every detail way shape and format provided on Startrek the Animated Series, A job very nicely fabulously well done indeed Sir!; And I myself own all 3 seasons of TOS as well as the complete Animated Series and also all of the Startrek Movies indeed!👌.
What about the other trek series ??? Star Trek the Next Generation,Deep Space 9,Voyager. Then there's Star Trek Discovery,Picard trek show & Star Trek Discovery,then Star Trek Strange New Worlds.
Thank you so much for the kind words. I hope you keep checking out my videos, as well as the other videos on my channel!
This video was "Fascinating"😂😂⭐👍👍👍
Thank you! Live Long and Proper! 🖖🖖🖖
Me and my pals loved this series back in the day, sure it wasn't quite as great as the live one, but 99% great is still something. It had the actors and Fontana and Rodenberry's name (which at that age we just happen to notice, but it helped) and finally continually real alien-looking aliens. That was enough to seal the deal and make us glued to the screen each Saturday. It being Filmation was really a help too because of how many of us loved Superman, Superboy, Aquaman, Teen Titans and JLA from them. Though many of my friends and I came to view it as the unofficial 5th year of the mission. I think that was because of the aliens on the bridge suddenly there without explanation. Guess we figured that there had to have been a 4th year that that change had happened in. Either way, we and most on th3 playground agreed it was canon (even if we didn't know that term yet). Fun memories. Thanks for the deep dive video.
My pleasure! And thank you for the kind words. I agree with the Animated show being the fourth and fifth season. I also loved Filmation cartoons growing up. Saturday mornings were a big deal back then!
I know it was a very simply drawn show but when you're a kid you don't care I love when this came out on VHS I made a deal with the suncoast store for a discount if I bought the entire collection. Which is at the time was it being offered but they did it so I have all original still sealed VHS of Star Trek the animated series and then on top of that I was further elated when they finally released the special limited edition on DVD in these plastic Star Trek symbol cases I love it I'm so glad filmation made it.
Me too! I appreciate your post. I can feel your passion and love of the series through your post, and it makes me smile! Thank you for your comment and welcome to my channel.
As popular as Star Trek became after its initial cancellation, I'm shocked the cartoon never came out in syndication. Just about every other cartoon from that era made it to syndication in the 80s.
I missed it in 1974, so I was totally surprised when I caught it decades later. It blew me away!
Needed more episodes!❤❤❤
Yes! I would love more episodes of this awesome show!
The Alan Dean Foster novel adaptations of the Animated Series are excellent! Would that these had made it to the movies with the original cast…
Could still be done today with the right people, and with today’s technology. We can always hope! 😌
Wow! I need to check those out. I love Alan Dean Foster.
@ like I said, Foster’s Animated Series adaptations are excellent Star Trek stories. They of course flesh out the actual TV episodes. Fortunately, he was given leeway to adapt the series to his heart’s content. And he did a very fine job. Makes for great reading!
Was at just the right age to watch the cartoon, have the toys, and then only later see live-action Trek. Was like, “Mom, they made a show my cartoon!” and she explained to me how it was the other way around.
That's such a great story! That is so cool that you were intrigued to Star Trek through the Animated series.
❤❤❤As a kid I really enjoyed watching the Animated Series Star Trek and it is real Star Trek series and should be credited to The Star Trek Franchise because it is Worthy of its own Efforts
I agree! Star Trek TAS is real Star Trek and should absolutely be considered canon.
The Animated series was what got me into Star Trek .
After about 12 weeks of the animated series , the channel started airing the original series after the animated show
That's great that the Animated Show was your introduction to Star Trek. Amazing!
Great video 🖖🏾 I love this show as a kid & I was happy it wasn't Goofy .. but I kept waiting to see Mr Chekov 😆
Thank you so much for the kind words. It is such a shame that they didn't hire Walter Koening. It just doesn't make sense.
great video presentation, great job!
Thank you so much!
I'm so glad to see this show finally getting some of the recognition it deserves. I was a teenager when this first came out in 1973, and the only new Star Trek we were getting or had any hope of getting the previous few years were poorly-written novels and even more poorly-written comic books published by Gold Key (which made some excellent comic books overall at the time but kind of fell down on the job when it came to Star Trek). So to me the animated series was a bright light inside a dark tunnel that kept Star Trek alive at a time when there seemed to be little hope of its continuation let alone revival. Filmation itself was I have felt badly underappreciated and afaik was the last major holdout against American studios outsourcing all their animation to other countries like Japan and South Korea.
It is indeed incredible that this TAS exists. It is such an amazing series.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast Wholeheartedly agree. I have always wished they had kept making more. Animation wasn't the greatest and the continually reused clips were what they were, but I didn't care. I was enjoying the stories too much to even notice these the first couple of times, and imo the beautiful art, imaginative stories, and voice acting by the same actors were than enough to make it a worthwhile series to me.
24:12 ""More Tribbles, More Troubles""
Thank you.
Yes.
My only quibble to an otherwise very well-done video is that you really should utilize a spell-checker more often because I saw at minimum four spelling errors in your captions.
Where were you when I was editing the show! 😄 It's amazing. No matter how many times you edit and proof-read an essay, a presentation, or a TH-cam video, a few mistakes always seem to creep through. Unfortunately, I can't spell-check once I'm in the Video Text creation mode. Oh well! Too late to correct it now!
I counted 8! Horrendous!
I'm a fan of Star Trek TOS & a Massive fan of the Animated series of the continuion Adventures of the Starship Enterprise, & yes it should get major props for it has achieved. Just like with Wesley Snipes "Blade" movie saving Marvel Comics, which in turn lead onto the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Star Trek The Animated Series brought back the Original Star Trek crew onto the big Cinematic Screen. Plus maximum respect to the late great Mr. Leonard Nimoy for standing up bringing back the missing remaining cast members onto the show. Thank you so much for this fantastic video. "Live Long & prosper" Junior from London 😎🇬🇧🇬🇧🇯🇲🇯🇲
I agree. I think the Animated Ser4eis saved Star Trek. And Leonard Nimoy was an all around class act.
Five year old Spock is why I'm a lifelong fan.
Yes! Such a great episode. It added so much dimension to Spock!
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast I could relate, I was also five at the time.
DC Fontana also wrote He-Man episodes, I know because I watched it a few time ago
DC Fontana was such an amazing writer. She is an inspiration!
Imagine if we could reanimate the animated series in a similar style to "Star Trek: Prodigy" using the original voiceovers of the main characters, but cast new voice actors for the secondary characters. It could allow for the stories from the animated series to to presented in a new way.
Oh man! That would be so epic. Let's hope!
@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast it's an idea that's been in my head for a while. "The Original Series" did not get a good send-off. But by upscaling the animated series, maybe we could get a better version of the last 2 years of the five-year mission. We could even take the "lower decks" approach and create secondary plots focusing on the crew during those missions therefore allowing new stories to be told within the existing stories.
Larry Niven also adapted one of his short stories for The Animated Series called The Shaver Weapon. Larry's known space series of books is hard sci Fi and his adaptation brought the Kzinti into the Trek universe.
I also loved Larry Niven when he played Rebecca Howe's father on Cheers.
6:15. The graphic for "Paramount" is missing the first "r". It says "Paamount bought Desilu"
Oh man! I missed that! Too late to correct now. I wish I could talked to you before I uploaded it. 🙂 Oh well. Thanks for letting me know.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast LOL. I have printed everything from cassette tapes to T shirts. I'm a terminal proofreader.
The animated series is wonderful anyone dismissing it for animation is missing out on some of the best TOS star trek
I agree 100%. Star Trek TAS has some excellent stories that shouldn't be missed.
I was in my 20s when this series aired. I watched every episode and loved it. My only complaint is the series was written/aired in the 70s when violence was either toned down or eliminated completely so there wasn't a lot of action. Plus, everybody had to be best buddies by the end of the episode.
The classic Saturday morning cartoon trope. Still, the stories are excellent considering.
I worked on this show, one of my first jobs ever. One of the things I did was sculpt a maquette of Lt. Arex for the animation crew to follow. Great to see this coverage.
Oh my God! That is amazing. You are truly a part of history. You should talk about your experience.
I definitely remember the Superman cartoons the trek toons eere great(mostly)
Me too. I remember all of them. Superman, Batman, and Aquaman. But my favorite were the Superfriends by Hanna Barbara.
I've always imagined how cool it would be for OTOY The Roddenberry Archive to animate episodes of The Animated Series. Thinking how amazing it could be to see The Lorelei episode where we'd actually see the aged appearances of Shatner, Nimoy and Kelley as we would see them 10-20 years later. Imagine the possibilities!
I think that would be so amazing. And it wouldn't be that difficult to do. We can only hope.... some day.
The "Star Trek Academy" idea did survive: it became Filmation's Space Academy debuting in the Fall 1977, a live action show however but even using Star Trek TAS incidental music.
Oh my Gosh. Really? I will have to look into this. This is awesome! Thank you for letting me know! 😀
Does that make SPACE ACADEMY part of the STAR TREK canon???
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast
Sure thing! Thank you!
Also Trek related, the stories of Space Academy had much input by Samuel Peeples, who did the ST: TAS pilot (Beyond the Farthest Star) and the 2nd pilot of ST: TOS (Where No Man Has Gone Before).
SA's timing as premiering early Sept.1977 strikes me as a definite Star Wars influence which came out about 4 months earlier in the year. Esp. as the show had to a have a cute little, R2-D2-like robot--named Peepo. Filmation did this too with their other 1977 animated show, The Space Sentinels, the cute robot named "Mo," (from M.O. = "maintenance operator'). Both voiced (synthetically) by Lou Scheimer. Originally called The Young Sentinels--the name was changed in hopes that Star Wars mania might rub off and improve the ratings, which it didn't, so just one season.
Space Academy had great ratings but was quite expensive to make for Saturday morning TV (as probably helped by late 70's inflation) so the show was retooled as Jason of Star Command, with serialized episodes just 15 minutes each, instead of 30 minute stand alone ones, as integrated with the show Tarzan and the Super 7. JSC's first season starred James Doohan as the commander of Star Command, the operation understood to be a secret section of Space Academy (though SA's episodes and characters were not tied into the show--and SA's commander was played by Jonathan Harris, of Lost in Space fame). The 2nd season of JSC went back to the 30 minute format, with John Russell replacing Doohan, who left as he could now make much bigger money doing Star Trek movies playing Scotty.
Both Space Academy and The Space Sentinels episodes are out there on the web (last I checked). Unsure about Jason of Star Command.
Thank you too for your respectful homage to Star Trek TAS. The show gets its knocks but I always loved it. I was a kid of 9 when it first debuted and it was my full initiation into the world of Trek which I had only known peripherally before then . The animation may be of the limited type--but all Saturday morning cartoon studios did this. Yet, IMO, Filmation, with good commercial properties like Trek, or Tarzan or Flash Gordon, always strove to be a cut above typical Saturday morning fare, still made some excellent design and aesthetic choices from that restriction by which I thought the show always looked fantastic (well drawn and I loved that brighter coloring given us by Erv Kaplan, who also gives us those lush landscape backgrounds of TAS and other shows).
I do go on--apologies for length . . .
Loved this show to death as a kid. When My Grandfather gifted Me a Tape Recording Machine, I would tape the episodes (place the machine by the TV) every Saturday Morning just so I could listen to them (and the Music Cues) throughout the week.
My only regret is that when My Grandfather took Me to My first "ST" Convention in '75 in Philadelphia (via New York City), I didn't pick up a few of the Animated Cels. Those cels were going for about $20. Now they are worth hundreds. If not thousands. But Grandfather placed a budget. And at 12 years old, I didn't see the value of Animated cels at the time.
I've gone through VHS, DVD, and currently own the Blu-Ray Box of "TAS". It still gives Me Childhood vibes to this day. I also still have My GAF 3D Talking View-Master reel of "YESTERYEAR". Along with some of the Alan Dean Foster book adaptions. My Sister found them in a storage bin last year. I've not seen that stuff in DECADES!!!
Got to meet Lou Scheimer at a San Diego Comic Con in 2000. One of the NICEST Dudes I ever met. He (and his Daughter) spoke of his love for both "TAS" and "FAT ALBERT". I always felt that FILMATION Studios kept much of Saturday Morning more "Adult" in those days, without losing the childhood enthusiasm of Cartoons. And had no issues involving Diversity. Especially in those days. Diversity and Inclusion came so naturally for that studio.
GREAT VIDEO!
Thank you for the kind words. Oh man, that would have been so cool to buy some of those animation cells. That is so incredibly amazing that you met Lou Scheimer. Everything I've heard was that he was a very kind man. Thank you for your post.
Very interesting video.
Thank you so much!
Im 65 and I have the animation series on Blu-ray. It is so nice to see it when I want to
That's awesome!
The series was first shown in the UK on Saturday tea-time before Dr Who and it remains my fav ST.
That must have been an amazing double feature! Star Trek Animated followed by Dr Who! I'm assuming Tom Baker?
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast Yes
I LOVE STAR TREK no matter if it's real or drawn! It's a lot easier to watch the animated Trek because it's much shorter and so because of that reason I can watch more episodes in shorter time. What I usually do when watching Star Trek is to first watch live action then animated, on and on, which means I watch more animated than real action! I often wish Star Trek had been animated in the first place because of what you can do a lot easier that way. Just look at those colors and those monsters, plant and animal, not to mention the different planetary surfaces. I better quit now because I could go on and on and on, well, you get the idea. Live Long and Prosper fellow Star Trekkers...
Thank you for your comment. I can appreciate your love of Star Trek. And I agree with you. I think the shorter run time of the Animated series make them easier to watch. And I have some to love the vibrant colors.
With so many of the animated episodes being written by original series writers it definitely was well made for the limitations of its production budgets. Perfect no.. but truly Star Trek.🖖
Yes! You are so right. Star Trek The Animated Series is so good, and I feel it is absolutely canon. 🙂🖖
Nitpick: Jane Wyatt didn't voice Amanda in "Yesteryear," Nichelle Nichols did.
According to imdb, it was Majel Barrett. And yes, that's how errors happen! 😊 It just does. But thank you for your post.
I was up and at the tv every Saturday when it aired, followed be the live action Monster Squad with Fred Grandy (Senator, and Gopher from Love Boat) on NBC. 😊
That is amazing. 😊😊
TAS was all we had back then. Other than the bad coloring (purple!), it was and is quite good!
It was such a great show despite the odd colors.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast I think it was great, in part, because of the 'odd' colors.
I watched it!!
That's amazing!
Terrific series! Yesteryear is one of the best moments. Steve the Vulcan sounds very stupid.
Yes. So many great episodes. And you are right. Steve the Vulcan? So weird.
I loved the animated series even though I found some of the animation annoying. The stories were often good so it was always real Star Trek to me. As a pre-teen I may not have had sophisticated taste in s.f. but I knew what I liked.
You are so right! The animation sucks but I continue to be impressed by the stories. Most of them till hold up to this day!
I really enjoyed this look back on the animated series.
Here're some other things that it introduced:
1 Klingons using cloaking devices. More Tribbles, More Troubles
2 The rec room is almost identical to the holodeck. Practical Joker
3. "Safe tribbles." We see a tribble in Star Trek III and there doesn't seem to be any problem with it.
I'd like to make one correction. Jane Wyatt was not in Yesteryear. Majel Barrett is credited with the role.
I don't remember if you mentioned that Roger C. Carmel and Stanley Adams reprised their roles as Harry Mudd and Cyrano Jones. That's impressive for a Saturday morning cartoon. You may have mentioned this. I'm too lazy to go back and check.
This one is very obscure, but as a kid I was a huge fan of the Gerry Anderson series, UFO. Ed Bishop (Commander Straker) was in The Magick's of Megas-Tu.
This is an excellent analysis of the series. I appreciate your efforts.
Thank you for the kind words. This was an excellent comment. I wish I had you before I uploaded the video. 🙂 You presented so awesome info that should have gone into my video. At least people can read them in the comments. Thank you!
Tribble sighting in TNG, as well. "When the Bough Breaks" I think. The one with Aldea, the cloaking planet that needs kids... The little girl had a tribble in a clear dome/cage.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast You're very welcome!
Yes, I have the complete series of this on DVD, which in the complete DVD of the original Star Trek, they include the animated tribble episode, as well as the Deep Space Nine episodes, with the tribbles.
There is also a Keep It Beautiful America ad, with the animated series.
And this series established Kirk's middle name, and was mentioned in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and J.J. Abrams' Star Trek.
Seasons greetings, and nanu nanu.
Thank you so much! I hope you enjoyed the video!
A few concepts from this show have been accepted as canon by fans. The fact that the first captain of the Enterprise was Robert April and that McCoy has a daughter. Also the existence of the Kzinti and the Caitians (Lt, M'Ress)
Yes! TAS is canon!
18:55 No. Kirk's middle name was in TOS. I think it was Court Martial but it was definitely in an episode where he was being sworn in and the computer was reading his service record.
Really? You'll have to tell me which episode. That would blow my mind.
No, the computer recording read his name as "James T. Kirk." He's right, "Tiberius" as Kirk's middle name didn't appear in live-action until Star Trek VI.
It was writer David Gerrold (think tribbles) that came up with the Tiberius name during the animated series.
It's sad .. I bought the DVD SET AT THE GREAT ESCAPE IN LOUISVILLE,KY IN 2010 and I don't have it anymore...I MOVE STATE to State too much .Greetings from NORFOLK,VA
Greetings! Oh, it must have been nice to own the DVD set. By the way, I did summer school for graduate school in Louisville, and so that city has a soft spot in my heart. I also spent this summer in Virginia, and visited some friends in Norfolk. Welcome to my channel!
@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast Born and Raised in Detroit by the way. But the transition was PARAMOUNT🤣(pardon the pun)as of 2024. I got some really cool children here That aren't into SCI-FI. That unattended trait comes from my EX.😂THANK YOU FOR THE WELCOME.
NBC should never have cancelled or cut the budget (in half), or aired it on Friday night. TOS deserved to run for at least 10 years. 'MASH' ran for 9 years, and 'Bonanza' ran for 14 years. Oh and, "Gunsmoke"? Um, over 20 years. Besides the 'Andy Griffith Show', 'Star Trek' is one of the best shows to ever come out of US broadcast television.
I agree! It's a shame they did that to such an iconic show.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast It truly is a shame. All those great writers (Fontana among them) and directors (Marc Daniels among them), AND actors, put out of work.
I fully believe that the animated series is Star Trek canon. It follows the events of the original series and basically competed the 5 year mission from the original series. I remember really liking it as a kid. It was kinda weird to have the alien helmsman replacing Checkov but at least Nimoy was able to get all the rest of the original cast back to do their voices.
I agree. I consider it canon as well.
Love Star Trek Animated series, watch it every so many years,
not much different than the show except for being a cartoon and new music.
Yes! Star Trek TAS is real Star Trek, and absolutely should be considered canon.
1) There likely would not have been any Trek _films_ (another live-action show is a different matter) without a certain space fantasy film in 1977 raking in balefuls of moolah.
2) Was there ever any on-screen explanation for the absence of Ensign Pavel Chekov?
3) My favorite episode is "More Troubles More Tribbles" - but then that is the only one I have viewed thus far.
Thank you for your comment. I don't think the show itself ever explained why Chekov was not on the show.
I HAD NEVER SEEN THAT PICTURE OF GEORGE TAKAI WITH LONG HAIR!!!! 😂😂😂😂😂
He was rocking the look! haha! 🤣🤣🤣
I’ve long wondered if we could use TAS artifacts and modern CGI to make a new, updated TAS. Use the original voices, with additional ones, if possible. Use modern CGI to improve upon 1970s-era animation.
That would be so amazing!
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast - Star Trek: Prodigy has proven the job can be done. Some of the writers of those episodes are still alive and could flesh out the content a little. Walter Koenig said that if he'd known how good the series was going to be, he would have written more than one episode. Sadly a lot of the talent isn't around anymore to record additional dialog - but perhaps with the permission of the estates (and appropriate compensation) dialog could be looped or AI-assisted. You could turn 22 episodes of 24 minutes into a lot more than that and, although it shouldn't be necessary, that might be enough to convince more people that "it's canon".
Absolutely canon to me. Love it. Wish we'd had more to cover the fifth year of the five year mission.
I absolutely consider this the fourth year of Star Trek. you are so right! It's too bad we couldn't have another season to finish off the fifth year.
Is there any other example of an hour long show that didn't initially do well in the ratings catching on in syndication like Star Trek? Most shows that are hits in syndication are half hour long, and usually sitcoms. An amazing feat but it shows how innovative and interesting the original show was.
You're right. It's such a rare event hat it happened. Bu then again, Star Trek broke so many rules and broke so many patterns!
I believe David Gerald came back to write the sequel episode as well for the Trouble with Tribbles. So he wrote the live action and animated stories I believe.
That is so cool!
Loved it over here 🇬🇧
Thank you!
I liked the episode about the lonely being on a planet who hijacked the ship. They had to pretend that they were crashing into the sun to get rid of it.
A great episode.
Always been a TAS fan. I really like the way Lower Decks has leaned in on the canonicity of TAS. The bones of giant Spock, a Caitian crewmember, the return of the "Bem" species, and especially when Mariner looks up the old Enterprise crew it shows their images from TAS (even though the animation style is completely different).
I started Lower Decks and enjoyed it, but I fell off of it in the middle of Season 1. I need to return to it.
The animated series had a favorite of mine, when time went backwards with the crew getting younger
Such a clever episode. The writing on the entire series was top-notch!
I have just bought the animated series on dvd 🙂
That is awesome! That is something worth having! 😄
There is a series of Star Trek animations under the title "Start Trek Logical Thinking" which can be viewed on TH-cam. Does anyone have any information on how this series was produced?
I'll check it out.
Great sounding narrator.
Thank you so mcuh!
My nitpick: during the segment on "odd colors", he identifies one race as "the Slavers" that were the Kzin (who were trying to unlock the Slaver technology). And of course, that episode was adapted from Larry Niven's Known Space short stories.
That's right! I made a mistake. Thanks for the correction. 😊
Jane Wyatt did not voice Amanda in "Yesteryear", that was Majel.
Thank you for the correction. I just learned that as soon as I uploaded my video.
I LOVED THE ANIMATED STAR TREK SERIES
NEVER WAS AGAINST IT!
HAD NO IDEA FANS WERE AGAINST IT!
NEVER KNEW IT WON AN EMEY
HAD NO IDEA WHAT DC FONTANA LOOKED LIKE
PROBY ASSUMED BELONGED TO A MAN
BECAUSE I ALSO KNEW MANY FEMALE CREATORS LIKE IN THE 1800’s 1900’s were forbidden to have their names front and center-and having a name not saying female may havee come from that ? Don’t know. HER EPISODES/Stories were some of my favorites.
I KNEW FIMATION FOR FLASH GORDAN
TARZAN AND ZORRO!!( yes a lot of scenes were reused
But I ALSO GREW UP WITH
CLUTCH CARGO!!
And ONLY THEIR LIPS MOVED!!!
SO I HAD WAY MORE MOVEMENT THAN THAT!!
Also Amazing Spider-Man with our iconic song still blazed in my head $ I can SGILL HETE THE CAT LADYS TONE OF VOICE IN THE ANIMATED TREK!
I like Anything with Time Travel and LA’s First ep was one of my fav’s. -MANY YEARS LATER WHEN I FOUND OUT A FELLOW FAMILY MEMBEF LIKED A CERTAIN SCI FI SERIES WITH NATHAN FILLION?
There was I think a bruh ha about -something being out of order
Or the won’t watch a certain BBC show out of order by.
🤣😂WHEN WE GREW UP! WE NEVER EVER SAW ANYTHING IN ORDER!!!
& when a UHF channel showed ORIGINAL STAR TREK((THAT WAS THEEEEE ONLY TREK OTHER THAN THE ANIMATED IN EXISTENCE!!) IN ORDER!!!
EEEEGADS!! LOVEY!!!
STOP THE PRESSES!!!
MAN THE LIFEBOATS!!!!
ALL ENGINES FULL STOP!!!!!
IT WAS LIKE A NAGIONAL HOLIDAY!!!!
To see CAPTAIN KIRK AND CREW
IN ORDER😱😱😱😱🤩🤩🤣🤣😂😎😎😎👍👍‼️‼️‼️‼️🤩🖖🖖🖖🖖🖖
Thank you for your amazing and passionate post! I love it! 😄 Filmation's Saturday morning cartoon were a staple of my childhood as well.
The stories were wonderful but the repetitive animation was tiring to watch.
Excellent stories, but terrible re-used stock footage. I agree!
Music cues (some of it rather juvenile-sounding) played relentlessly also got tiresome.
I still enjoy the Animated series.
Me too!
I enjoyed TAS from its original broadcasting on NBC, Saturday mornings, back in '73-'74, and I knew it wasn't just a "cartoon show"...not too many shows with certain words like "hellish" and "die" in the dialogue during our Saturday-breakfast-cereal-morning rituals.
Some dialogue still etched in my mind to this day:
Kirk: "Lt. Norrid, you could have stopped him, (the Vendorian imposter), why didn't you fire?"
Norrid: "I...I couldn't. I know he had to be the intruder, Captain, but I couldn't harm the image of the man I loved."
Kirk: "Lt., he is not the man you loved. Carter Winston is dead!"
"Norrid: "I know that,too....now."
TAS was a big-time breath of fresh air in the morass of Saturday morning lameness.
It was incredible to think that it was on Saturday morning. But that just makes it extra cool!
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast
Big time!
Great coverage on DC Fontana, but she never worked on Battlestar Galactica or its followup, Galactica 1980
Thank you. Actually, it's a famous story I side science fiction circles. DC Fontana wrote the Battlestar Gallactica episode, "Gun on Ice Planet Zero" but had the credits taken from her due to rewrites. She was so disgusted that she never wrote another episode for them.
@@TotallyAwesomeFilmsPodcast this story apears to be apocraphal, especially since she did eventually write for Automan, another Glen Larson production. Do you have a concrete source for this?
I too was nine years old and loved this. I should point out that while Mark Leonard voice acted Sarek in the animated series, Jane Wyatt did not return. Amanda was voiced by Majel Barrett. I am not a fan of the Megus Tu episode as it goes against my Christian beliefs. That episode disgusted me.
You're right about Amanda. The Megas Tu episode is certainly an odd choice.
I remember being very excited for this show and bitterly disappointed at Filmation's cost cutting techniques. Even years later, I didn't mind it on Masters Of The Universe; I thought it just didn't fit... Considering how Lower Decks is animated... Mind you, I don't like THAT very much: the bridge crew get live action yet the unseen minions who make the ship work get a cartoon comedy sits badly with me. However, we have the audio... I'd love to see the episodes remade with less skinflint animation.
Thay would be so awesome if they went back and recreated the animation like they did with the Remastered episodes.
This was a pretty good video, but it got a couple things wrong. Jane Wyatt did NOT return to voice Amanda in "Yesteryear" . That was Majel Barrett's voice. Also, the Tribble episode was called "More Troubles, More Tribbles", NOT "More Trouble with Tribbles". I'm sure dozens more pointed this out as well.
Thank you for your corrections. Always appreciated.
It's actually called "More Tribbles, More Troubles", fwiw.
Leonard Nimoy is a hero!
He is! He did so many incredible things, and advocating for Nichols and Takei is just one more example of what an incredible person he was. He is a role-model!
He brilliantly developed, and played, the character of Spock.