
I was a Trekkie back when there was only one
Star Trek, and that was
Star Trek. I can't claim to have been on board with the show from the very beginning, although I suppose that as a toddler I may have staggered through the living room when the episodes originally aired (although knowing my parents, I'd be surprised if they ever watched the show), but by the mid-Seventies and my ninth or tenth year, I was already a confirmed
Trek fan.
Early on, I was familiar with
Trek more through the Saturday morning animated version and
James Blish's paperback short story adaptations, which I spent most of my allowance money on and voraciously devoured on the school bus, playground and on long car trips. I also had non-fiction books like
The Making of Star Trek, The World of Star Trek, and
The Star Trek Concordance. One of my most treasured possessions was the
Starfleet Technical Manual (though I never had the
Enterprise blueprint set, damn it).
I
still have all of those books, by the way.
As to the show itself, it took me a long time to see all of the original 79 episodes, as reruns aired infrequently in our television market, and when they did air, the schedule was maddeningly irregular. WCSH was the station most likely to slot in a
Trek on a Sunday afternoon if a sporting event was delayed or ended early, though WMTW aired the series on weeknights for a few months around '74. Unfortunately, it was on during homework time, right after the news, so I rarely got to see it. On occasion, we would visit relatives or family friends who lived in major markets, and I'd catch an episode on their sets... man, it was tough to be a Trekkie then.
Star Trek: The Motion Picture in '79 was a big event for me.
The Wrath of Khan and
The Search for Spock helped me get through High School, and in '83, when I went off to art school in New Jersey, I finally found regular
Trek on the tube, courtesy of cable and the New York TV stations. I only had an 8" black & white TV, but it was good enough.
When
The Next Generation debuted in '87, several of my geekier friends and I gathered in my first apartment to watch the premiere... and while it was good to see new
Trek, it just wasn't the same. While I watched the show regularly, I never really warmed to Picard and company the way I had to Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scotty, and the rest of the original crew. It certainly didn't help that that pompous, Anglo-Franco fop surrendered his ship
three times in the first
four episodes! The 24th Century just wasn't very exciting to me. Everyone got along too well, and there was virtually no conflict among the cast. Too much technobabble and pop psych, and not enough shooting of phasers and photon torpedoes. The final frontier had become far too tamed.
Deep Space Nine, on the other hand...
At first, I was unimpressed, and didn't make much effort to keep up with it. But while I was living in Florida, the show aired on Saturday afternoons in a large block of syndicated fantasy shows with
Babylon 5 and
Xena, so I started catching more episodes, and was soon watching it regularly. And I started to recognize that this one was different from
Next Gen in some significant ways.
In this show there was a solid episode-to-episode continuity. The characters – and their relationships – grew and changed as the overall story progressed. Further, this show wasn't afraid to reference directly the original
Trek, bringing back characters (Klingons Kor, Kang and Koloth) and concepts (Tribbles, The Mirror Universe) from the classic series, and like that series,
DS9 wasn't afraid to do a comedy episode once in a while, either.
And then, they did something completely unexpected – they shook up the
status quo by starting a galactic war. Plenty of phasers and photon torpedoes were unleashed, but more than that – alliances – both between individuals and governments – crumbled, and new ones were forged. New races and political entities were introduced from another part of the galaxy, and our main characters were forced into situations that required them to reevaluate their beliefs and codes of conduct/honor.
The final frontier got wild again.
(Unfortunately, subsequent
ST series didn't measure up to
DS9.
Voyager was a cosmic bore, and
Enterprise – well, I'd had high hopes for that one, but it just didn't work for me. I was never convinced that
Scott Bakula's universe was the same as
William Shatner's. It played far too fast and loose with continuity, and, like
TNG and
Voyager, it had no edginess at all.)
Recently, the wife won an Amazon gift certificate in an online contest, and as we had just completed acquiring the classic
Star Trek on DVD, she decided to use it to purchase all of the
DS9 seasons on disc, as well. The fact that Amazon was having a huge sale on sci-fi DVDs at the time influenced the choice, too.
We've been watching an episode or two each evening, and are now about halfway through season 2. I'm surprised to find that the producers and writers had planted the seeds of their universe-shaking star war earlier than I remembered. Also, the main characters started out a bit more three-dimensional than I originally realized, with a number of character conflicts built right into the original premise. Even episodes that I remembered being unimpressed by back in the early 90's, when the show originally aired, seem a lot better now.
As you've guessed, I'm really enjoying watching
DS9 again, and I've decided that it's the best of the
Trek spin-offs – at least as far as I'm concerned. In addition to everything mentioned above, there's something about
Avery Brooks' broad overacting that brings to my mind the enthusiastic thesping of the great
William Shatner....
...And
that's Trek to me.