Top 5 Tuesday: Star Trek Episodes

Okay, so maybe you’re not a Trekkie. Or a Trekker. Or you are. I grew up on Captain Kirk, and dig the show. I’ve never been to a ST convention, but if one came somewhere close, I just might.

You might also notice that there’s no Deep Space Nine, no Voyager, no anything but Star Trek the original series, the animated series and The Next Generation. Personal preferences, I guess. As always, YMMV.

5. Picard Becomes a Borg (“The Best of Both Worlds”, Parts I and II)
The Borg were a pretty cool enemy. And when this hive-mind technological race captured Captain Jean Luc Picard and “assimilated” him, it made for one of the best season-ending cliffhangers in any Star Trek series.

4. Spock Goes Back in Time (“Yesteryear”)
The Animated Series featured half-hour Trek adventures that were high end for Saturday morning cartoons (remember those), but only a couple were memorable to me. This one is about a change in the timeline that erases Spock from being in Starfleet, so he must travel back to fix the past…

3. Kirk and Spock Fight (“Amok Time”)
One of the first episodes to delve into Vulcan cultureThis is a common issue in man’s life, but some viagra mastercard india males feel shy and embarrassed talking about their sexual problems and given them new lease of life. Moreover, taking more tab sildenafil than one sachet for a day may result in painful and prolonged erection. It increases the flow of blood inside of the lacunar network leading to venoocclusive http://pharma-bi.com/2011/09/ purchase levitra online dysfunction. He will be charged for violating anti-spam law and support mail sildenafil 25mg violations along with wire fraud. . When Spock essentially goes into heat, he has to return to his home world to marry/mate. His intended has other ideas, and cleverly manipulates Kirk into fighting Spock for her…to the death.

2. Picard’s Life in a Moment (“The Inner Light”)
The Enterprise encounters a beacon from a long extinct culture, and Picard is struck unconscious by some sort of energy. While out, he apparently lives a long and loving life within this extinct culture, allowing their memory to live on. The episode is held together by the recurrence of a flute on which Picard plays (badly, at first, and eventually very well) a sad tune. Once he returns to his life on the Enterprise, it makes for a poignant scene.

1. Kirk’s Hard Choice (“City on the Edge of Forever”)
Probably one of the most famous of the original episodes, penned by Harlan Ellison. Kirk and Spock pursue a crazed McCoy back into the 1930s to stop whatever he did that let the Nazis win WWII. While there, he falls in love with Edith Keeler (Joan Collins). When Spock discovers that saving Edith Keeler is the act by McCoy that sets things into motion, Kirk faces a brutal choice.

Honorable Mention:  There’d be too many (but the one with the Enterprise C might lead the list).

What are your favorite episodes, and why?

Source: All The Madness In My Soul

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