I guess that it's time that I reply to my own inquiry.
In the fall of 1966 I was a mere child. (Yes... I'm old now LOL)
My father was a college professor. A new department member had just taken residence on the other side of town and I accompanied my parents as they went over to welcome them in their new home. During the course of the evening as they were conversing in one of the rooms, I wandered over to the television set in the living room because I saw what looked like some kind of space ship fly across the television screen. It was the introduction to Star Trek… apparently a new series on NBC. No one there knew anything about it nor paid any attention to it; except me. So after the commercials, the episode began and I just stood there sort of mesmerized until the next commercial break. Then I found a seat and awaited its return. I had never seen anything quite like it before and I was hooked. From that point on, I watched every episode that I could.
[Note:The first originally aired episode that I saw was ironically the first one filmed with the change in cast… the 2nd pilot… but was actually the 2nd one aired on Sept 22, 1966: "Where No Man Has Gone Before.” I never saw “The Man Trap” until syndication. (No great loss… certainly not a favorite of mine)]
Then sometime after the season began while roaming the aisles of a local Woolworths, I discovered an ERTL model of the Enterprise on a shelf. It was like finding the Holy Grail! Having no money with me, I carefully stuffed the large box behind some less impressive models and stacked them up to conceal the prize lurking behind them and then I literally ran home and gathered up every nickel, dime and penny that I could find… I even resorted to begging for a few more coins from siblings to ensure that I had enough to cover the cost and the sales tax. I ran back the mile or so to the store, reached behind the façade that I built and carefully grabbed a hold of Enterprise box. I went up to the counter and paid for this coveted item with a pocket full of change; much to the chagrin of the impatient cashier. On the long walk home I stopped numerous times to pull the box out of the bag and just stared at it image and read through some of the information. I went home and began the construction process. I was amazed to realize that this was also a lighted model, so after procuring a couple of batteries and finalizing the construction process, I turned the switch and the model seemed to jump to life with its magical lighted glow. That was it… I was running through the darkened house with the lit Enterprise as if I was warping through space. This literally went on for years.
I was totally unaware of the attempts to cancel the show during the second season but it was a real struggle for me to stay up and watch it during its third and final season because NBC had switched it to Friday nights at 10:00pm. Fortunately, my parents would often go out on Friday evenings for dinner and to socialize with friends… so that enabled me to sneak out of bed and into their bedroom and quietly watch it before they returned. I did however get busted a few times when they returned before the episode was over.
To say that I was heartbroken when Star Trek was cancelled would be an enormous understatement. Nevertheless, I still shuffled off to school with my little Star Trek lunch box that was banged and bruised from several years of daily use. No one else in school really related to the show and my older siblings used to tease me about it as well. It didn’t faze me at all. I also have to note: I never saw the original run of Star Trek in color. At the time we only had black & white TV’s… which was quite common back then. Then came our first color TV and the animated series. It wasn’t like having the original show back, but with the voice-overs by the majority of the original cast and some new species, planets and adventures introduced and others revisited, it was like a lush little island oasis in a sea of mediocrity.
Then… syndication… reruns of the entire series… and in color! WOW I was eventually able to see all of the episodes, including some I missed when it was first aired and before I know it I could identify the title of every episode within 4-5 seconds after it began. I knew the names of planets they visited, and all of the characters and sequence of events, etc… I had collected the James Blish little books of the original episodes, a few sporadic Star Trek comics were released, rarely a few items were released, mostly models. This all changed when Star Trek the Motion picture was released in 1979 (I still have the original trading cards and such from this movie).
Over the years/decades, I attended multiple Star Trek Conventions along the east coast whenever I was able… mostly in Philadelphia but also in New York and Boston MA; including the 1986 20th Anniversary convention in which Gene Roddenberry himself announced the upcoming TNG series to an enormous and shocked audience. I attended every Star Trek Movie premiere up through the 2009 Abrams version; in which I was invited to and attended a private screening several weeks before the movie was released.
And here we are 46 years later and the adventure continues... just as Gene had proclaimed those many years ago.
I will even somewhat reluctantly attend the next Abrams' Star Trek movie "Into Darkness" slated to be released May 17, 2013. I just hope that a new series follows soon afterward; but this time in the hands of someone more capable and truly a Star Trek fan at heart.