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These are the Voyages - TOS: Season Two (These Are The Voyages series Book 2) Kindle Edition
Now, travel back to 1967, with Star Trek entering its second season on NBC as the incredible, in depth, behind-the-scenes story gets even more remarkable. For Gene Roddenberry and his talented team, launching Star Trek was nearly an impossible task. Keeping it on the air was even harder.
Learn why Leonard Nimoy almost didn't return for Season Two.
Explore why Lucille Ball, whose Desilu Productions, had gambled big on financing Star Trek, would lose her studio.
Discover the real reason producer Gene Coon suddenly quit in the middle of the second year.
Find out about the unproduced episodes written by renowned science fiction masters.
Read the memos from Roddenberry and his staff, and NBC, concerning all 26 Season Two episodes.
Witness the continuing deception by the network over the show's ratings, and how the fans took on a corporate giant to save their favorite series.
Early Reviews:
"Compelling, page-turning ... the most important book of Star Trek journalism ever done and is just as gripping as [Marc Cushman's] look at the shows and launch of the first season." - Jeff Bond, Editor, Geek Magazine
"With These Are the Voyages - TOS: Season Two, author Marc Cushman has topped his amazing predecessor!" - Scott Mantz, Access Hollywood
"You can trust these books! You won't be reading a P.R. man's spins. This is honest and this is how it was being there making Star Trek." - Walter Koenig (Chekov).
Season One is on Amazon in hardback, softback and Kindle
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication date5 June 2014
- File size149073 KB
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Product description
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B00KSS2SEU
- Publisher : Jacobs Brown Press (5 June 2014)
- Language : English
- File size : 149073 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 709 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: 915,286 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- 186 in Television History & Criticism
- 632 in TV History & Criticism
- 15,734 in Performing Arts (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Marc Cushman is an author and Los Angeles based screenwriter and director. His television writing assignments include scripts for Star Trek: The Next Generation, Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction, and Diagnosis: Murder. His feature film credits include Desperately Seeking Paul McCartney, The Magic of Christmas, and In The Eyes Of A Killer. As a writer/producer, Marc created and served as show runner for two TV series: the cult comedy Channel K and its spin-off, the original Bachelor Pad. Marc is the author of the "biography of a TV show," I Spy: A History Of The Groundbreaking Television Series (McFarland & Co., 2007), and the definitive examination of the making of the original Star Trek series, with his 1,700 page, three-volume set,These Are The Voyages, TOS. The first volume -- Season One -- was published in August 2013 by JacobsBrown Press, with Season Two due in late 2013 and Season Three in early 2014.
An interview with Marc Cushman about the writing of "These are the Voyages..."
Marc, what lead you to write "These are the Voyages..?"
I interviewed Gene Roddenberry for a TV special about the Star Trek phenomenon in 1982. He gave me all the scripts and showed me the immense amount of documents he had saved from the production of the series and suggested I take the research for the TV special, expand on it by utilizing the gigantic "show files" and turn it into a book. I interviewed him at that time and again in 1989 when I pitched the story for the episode "Sarek" to him for Star Trek: Next Generation. I was too busy with my own career as a screenwriter and director to begin work on the book until after Gene had passed, but, during those years, I continued to collect interviews from the creative staff (Bob Justman, D.C. Fontana, John D.F. Black), as well as members of the production crew, the cast, and guest players. I finally began writing the Star Trek book in 2007. And it was meant to be one book. Six years later it was roughly 1,700 pages in length, and had to be divided into three books (one for each season of TOS).
What are the most amazing facts that you uncovered?
I'd say that about 30% of the info out there on TOS -- on the internet, in other books and articles -- is false. There is a remarkable amount of folklore about the history of Star Trek, which has been reported in other sources as if true, while so many unknown facts have been left unreported. For one, the writers whose names appear on the screen often did less than 50% of the work on particular episodes. Gene Roddenberry rewrote the first 13 episode of TOS almost entirely. Gene Coon handled much of the rewriting after that and, between himself and Dorothy Fontana, and Roddenberry, a good percentage of the dialogue we heard in every episode came from their typewriters, without credit. It is fascinated to see the memos that flew back and forth between the creative staff as they assessed and reworked the scripts. And to find out how many stories and scripts by famous science fiction authors did not get filmed. We see how the staff thought, what they liked and what they worried about. And there was much more drama behind the making of Star Trek than I'd never realized, even though, as part of my research, I'd read hundreds of articles, all the books written about the making of the series, including the memoirs from all the cast members, and visited all the internet fan sites. There are many stories out there, but they are merely the tip of the iceberg. The show files -- the immense amount of documents saved by Gene Roddenberry and Robert Justman -- tell of all the ups and downs and strange turns that the production went through, week after week. The increasingly restrictive budgets, the battles with the network, cast problems, such as when Leonard Nimoy almost quit the show at the end of the first year over a contract dispute and they had even hired a replacement to be the new resident Vulcan on the Enterprise, and so much more. But the biggest revelation, for me, was the ratings. NBC claimed Star Trek was a failure in the ratings and this myth has been repeated over and over for 45 years without anyone bothering to verify the statement. I licensed all the ratings reports from A.C. Nielsen and include them with each episode. These reports contradict what we have always been told, showing that Star Trek was often the network's top rated Thursday night show and, on many occasions, won its time slot. Even when moved to Friday nights at 8:30 for its second year, which is covered in Book 2, Star Trek again, more often than not, was NBC's top rated show for that night. And yet they tried to cancel it, which was stopped by a massive letter writing campaign from the fans. So the network moved it to Friday's at 10 p.m. for its third year (covered in Book 3), known as "the death shot," the worst time period of the week. And, even then, the ratings were better than we have been led to believe.
Have you heard from any of the original cast since the release of the first book?
Grace Lee Whitney was the first, who said she "loved" the book. Walter Koenig took a copy up on stage at a Star Trek convention and talked about it for a couple minutes, saying it he "guaranteed" it was the best documentation on the making of the original series to be published. A gentleman who worked in the V.I.P. section at the Los Vegas Star Trek convention came to the publisher's booth and told us that William Shatner was carrying a copy of the book around back stage and suggested he come get himself a copy. And Leonard Nimoy called to tell me that he felt the research was "astounding." He said it was "an incredible job; a tremendous amount of good information" and that "the reviews are wonderful and well deserved." That coming from Mr. Spock, impressed by the amount of research. You just can't beat that.
What's in store for fans in books 2 and 3?
Book 1 has been extremely well received, but I feel Book 2 and 3 will be even more surprising, because the story of the making of Star Trek gets far more dramatic; the conflicts and challenges are greater, as the show progressed into its second and than third seasons. As Gene Roddenberry's relationship with NBC deteriorated, and the budgets were slashed, the time slots got worse, and the threats of cancellation grew louder. They would often be filming an episode in the middle of a season without knowing if they would even be making any more, with scripts being prepared to film one week later just in case the network decided to order additional episodes. It was an enormous strain for all of them -- the producers, writers and stars -- to be working under that, with a possible death sentence hanging over their heads. It was really quite cruel the way television operated back then, mostly as a result of an adversarial relationship between a producer and the network. Gene was telling stories the network was not comfortable with -- stories about Vietnam, racism, sexism, religion, over-population, you name it. It is all revealed in the memos, as well the production schedules, budgets, and ratings, episode by episode, as we progress through the "Classic 79." It was a remarkable trek.
Customer reviews
Top reviews from other countries




That said, this exhaustive treatment can also be cumbersome in that it's SO DETAILED and there are SO MANY EPISODES that must be covered, along with some supplementary chapters outlining changes in production staff, etc. After awhile, I found myself skimming of the differences between versions 3 and 4 or even 5 of the script and slowing down to read the casting, pre-, and post-production portions in more depth. That said, I believe it easily merits five stars because each volume could easily serve as the "go to" reference for the respective season of TOS that it covers. What could be made better? I have only two (2) minor observations: 1.) I would have liked to have had a bit more information on the guest stars. What's given is good (and often more than you'll find in other locations), but I still would have liked to heard more - particularly what happened to them throughout the remainder of their careers. However, to be fair, adding this material could have swollen this already voluminous tome into something you would need a wheelbarrow to tote around, so I won't fuss any more about it (besides, there's always IMDB); 2.) I wish the photographs were bigger and in color. I have the Kindle version of both books, and - while many of the photos are interesting and of the "never-before-seen"-type, they still remain quite small and limited in resolution, and the black-and-white so limits what could have been. HOWEVER, . . . all is not lost. For a mere $36 on Amazon, one can apparently see much larger, sharper images in full color in a companion book entitled "To Boldly Go" by Gerald Gurian - the source for many of the photos used in the "These are the Voyages" series. Right now, only a Season 1 photo book is available, but I'm betting two more will be forthcoming in time with photos for Seasons 2 and 3 respectively. SO, at the end, if you buy all three of the "These are the Voyages" books + (presumably) all three of the "To Boldly Go" photo books, you'll be well-stocked to serve as your neighborhood's/family's/graduating class's/etc. historian on this epic series . . . but you might have to take out a small loan to do so!
Worth getting? You bet! As an aging boomer who first became aware of - and mesmerized by - TOS when I first stumbled across it as a second grader while searching for "It's the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown" one Thursday evening in late October, 1966, this represents a good memory from my childhood, and I will definitely feed that nostalgia. But you might want to consider getting them one at a time - both to savor them, and for the time it will take to wade through them, which, in itself just might become a five year mission!
