by Aquarius » Mon Sep 27, 2010 4:15 pm
I went with TOS. It was the first for me. While I was not yet born during the original run, my mother exposed me to syndication reruns through the womb! She and my father watched the show together all through her pregnancy, though my earliest memories of seeing it are from the high chair and the play pen!
After I was school age, our local station that showed Star Trek started showing it in two hour blocks that it marketed as "Mission: Star Trek" that ran from 7-9pm. I had the misfortune of having an 8: 30 bed time! After about a week of my crying and pouting and going to bed kicking and screaming (okay not literally on the kicking and screaming but I made it clear to my mom that I thought I was getting screwed on the deal!), my bedtime got pushed to 9pm--but only the nights that Star Trek was on! (Which meant, in an atypical reversal of most households, I had an earlier bed time Saturdays and Sundays, but that was the deal and I stuck to it, as far as I remember!)
It was during these "Mission: Star Trek" blocks that an announcer would come on during commercial breaks and give "fun facts" while clips of the show played. It was usually biographical information about cast members or anecdotes from the set or something to that effect. It was during one of these interludes that I learned of the "Trekkie movement," that there were other people as passionate about the show as I was (and keep in mind that here, I'm like, SEVEN!), and about the letter writing campaigns that saved Star Trek from cancellation not once but twice not too long before I was born. It was that moment, at that tender, impressionable age, that I decided that Trekkies had to be the absolutely coolest people on the planet because not only did they love the best show in the world, but they also knew how to get stuff done! Upon hearing about this, I had decided I wanted to be a Trekkie "when I grew up"--not yet realizing that at seven I already *was* one simply for my already-existing commitment to the show!
Remember, this is also the time period when our very first space shuttle was given the name Enterprise, and I remember watching its first flight on my grandma's living room floor in front of her big-assed console TV.
So, while the series Enterprise is what inspires me the most now, in a lot of ways TOS will always be numero uno with me, just because of how big of a part of my life it was so early on.
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