My mother was the same way. She had no use for "Star Track" or "Doctor Spock," but thought the Lost in Space robot was hilarious.
We finished season 1 of Mrs. Maisel last night. We'll be waiting for season 2.
For some reason my mom developed an old lady crush on Shatner when he was playing T.J. Hooker in the cop drama of the same name. She thought that he was "sexy" when he was running in pursuit of a bad guy. And she had a similar crush on the handyman character, Schneider, in that Bonnie Franklin/ Valarie Bertinelli sitcom, "One Day At a Time." I always thought that the guy came across as unbathed and unsophisticated, and never understood the attraction to either him or Shatner.
Watched the first three episodes of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. I enjoyed it and look forward to the rest. I must say, though, as a woman whose husband cheated on her, I expected a bit more of a breakdown from Midge! That was rather unbelievable, IMO, but I'm overlooking it because I enjoy the show - and the costumes and the sets. GORGEOUS!
We have been enjoying high temperatures in the mid fifties to low sixties.The Weather Channel - Looking for anything close to double digits temperature wise! Dagnabit!
Worf
"Dammit Jim, I'm a doctor, not a sex symbol."...As for TV actors, all the smart gals knew that Doctor McCoy was the real dreamboat on "Star Trek."
Janssen was a favorite of my mother as well. She pointed out how much he looked (in the Fugitive days) like a young, pre-mustache Clark Gable.My grandmother developed (but wouldn't admit it) a crush on Joe Namath which was eye opening for me as a six year old as it forced me to think of my grandmother as a woman and not just my grandmother. She also really liked David Janssen from the TV show "The Fugitive" a whole lot.
Well, you wouldn't want some kid fresh out of medical school operating as Chief Surgeon on a ship that was like a flying small city.Hmmm......
Even as a kid watching Star Trek I thought that Bones was a tad too old to be flying in a space ship.
Janssen was a favorite of my mother as well. She pointed out how much he looked (in the Fugitive days) like a young, pre-mustache Clark Gable.
A pretty good clue who my mom's favorite '30s-'40s movie star was, don't y' think?
DeForest Kelley was only 46 years old when the series premiered, and hadn't reached the age of 50 before the last episode aired. He was the oldest of the seven "main cast" actors, but was only two months older than James Doohan. And I have to agree with Benzadmiral--if you're exploring that far from home, you'd want experienced medical personnel. That being said, by the time they got around to Star Trek V and VI I did think Kelley was getting a bit long-in-the-tooth and looked rather frail.Hmmm......
Even as a kid watching Star Trek I thought that Bones was a tad too old to be flying in a space ship.
DeForest Kelley was only 46 years old when the series premiered, and hadn't reached the age of 50 before the last episode aired. He was the oldest of the seven "main cast" actors, but was only two months older than James Doohan. And I have to agree with Benzadmiral--if you're exploring that far from home, you'd want experienced medical personnel. That being said, by the time they got around to Star Trek V and VI I did think Kelley was getting a bit long-in-the-tooth and looked rather frail.