[March 8, 1968] Inglorious (Star Trek: "The Omega Glory")


by Gideon Marcus

Last year, Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry won science fiction's highest award, the Hugo, for writing the two-part episode "The Menagerie".  It was a deserved laurel.  After all, he not only had written the excellent pilot that formed the germ of the double-show, but also made a reasonably interesting extension to fit the new format.

Unfortunately, Roddenberry has yet to reach that high water mark again.  Despite having plenty of screenwriting experience, he seems to only have had that one good story in him.  First, there was his disappointing adaptation of "A Private Little War", originally by Jud Crucis (that's got to be a kind of Cordwainer Bird).  And now, we have his worst outing yet–"The Omega Glory":

The setup should be interesting.  Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and the red-shirted Lieutenant GAWLway beam aboard the abandoned but undamaged starship Exeter in orbit around an uncharted planet.  Everyone onboard has been reduced to crystals–sort of a reverse "Man Trap" phenomenon.  This seems shocking to Kirk and co. despite having seen a very similar phenomenon just last episode.  Obeying the exhortations of a tape by the mortally ill Exec of the Exteter (who, like Spock, is apparently a double-duty officer), they beam down to the planet.


"Save yourselves!  Go down to the planet!  I dunno why we don't, but you go ahead!"

There, they meet Captain Ron Tracey, the second active-duty Starfleet captain we've seen other than Kirk (we met four others in "Court Martial", at least one of whom had graduated to Starbase running).  According to Tracey, the planet confers immunity to the disease that killed his entire crew when the rest of the landing party beamed back aboard.  Also, the planet somehow makes all the inhabitants live life spans measured in millennia.

In the six months since Tracey beamed down, he teamed up with the 'Coms', "yellow" city-dwellers under siege by the savage "white" people.  Flagrantly violating the Prime Directive, more explicitly spelled out here than in any episode prior, he exhausted his hand phaser defending the village.


"We drained four of our phasers, and they still came. We killed thousands and they still came."

Now that Kirk is here, Tracey wants to go into the immortality bottling business, distilling the essence of the anti-disease and anti-aging qualities of the planet.

Except, as Bones soon figures out, there is no such thing.  The immunity is a natural (and permanent) phenomenon, and the natives live a long time because of freak genetics resulting from the near-total bacteriological catastrophe that wiped out civilization centuries before.

That's one thread of the episode.  The other involves finding out that this is a parallel Earth, like "Miri", and the 'Yangs' are the descendants of Americans (white ones, of course), adopting the ways of the Indians in order to survive, but carrying a corrupted tradition of Founding Father document worship.  Thus, they mangle the Pledge of Allegiance and the Constitution's preamble without understanding.  Luckily, Kirk is an avid historian, and he explains what these holy words really mean.  He also insists that the Coms (what's left of them–it appears the Yangs have killed nearly all of them by the end) are people too, and they need to be treated with the dignity and equality prescribed by our nation's most central document.


"This document is absolutely perfect as is.  It's a good thing you never made any changes to it."

And then they beam back to the Enterprise.  Happy endings for everyone.

Except the audience, of course.

So much about this show doesn't make sense, from the lack of children, to the paucity of population centers, to the way genetics and natural immunity works on the planet.  I won't even touch the racial aspects of the episode, which my colleagues are champing at the bit to address.

I will say that I am utterly confused by Captain Tracey's actions.  We've been led to believe that Starship captains are a breed apart.  Sure, Commodore Decker had his issues, but they were understandable given his situation.  But Tracey?  As soon as his crew fell ill and he didn't, you'd think he'd have beamed at least some of his people down.  And certainly he'd hold sacred the highest of orders (though not the one that violation incurs the death penalty.  That's number four.) Instead, he lets his crew die, doesn't warn Star Fleet of his situation, and becomes a little dictator.


"Crew?  What crew?"

The only thing that could possibly explain the situation is that "Ron Tracey" is actually Dr. Simon van Gelder, escaped from Tantalus without being cured, somehow assuming Captain Tracey's guise and stealing the "Exeter".  Outlandish?  Sure, but no more than this episode.


"I'm the real Captain Tracey!"

Two stars.  Why two?  Because I actually kind of dug how the show went back to the parallel Earth thing and didn't just abandon it for one episode.  Of course, they didn't do very much good with it…


When Worse Comes to Worst


by Janice L. Newman

We’ve had the best of episodes, we’ve had the worst of episodes. But never have I watched an episode so infuriating as “The Omega Glory”.

Like last week’s By Any Other Name, the story starts out promising. We’re swept up in the mystery and the danger to the senior officers we’ve come to know and love. And like “By Any Other Name”, it seems that “The Omega Glory” is prepared to play against expectations. On the planet Omega, the white people are violent and savage, while the non-white people (in this case apparently of Asian extraction) are peaceful and good. What a switch!

Just kidding! It turns out that the white people are the good guys after all. They’ll be setting up a democratic government any day now, and they’ll even let those no-good commies in…as long as the commies are okay with living under their system.


"I am Cloud McCarthy, and this is Wise Dicknixon.  We promise equality and fairness for the Coms."

I described Patterns of Force as “subtle as a brick”, but this episode went beyond that. The pro-democracy message was as direct and painful as a bludgeon to the face. It was all the more insulting in the way the white “yangs” (“Yankees”, GET IT?) started out as savage, violent, unwilling to parley or compromise, yet were still painted as the triumphant good guys in the end, for no other reason than that they were descendents of a Christian nation with an American democratic system (despite literally having no understanding of the very documents and principles they revered).

One grudging star, only because I can’t give it zero.


Losers Keepers


by Joe Reid

I recently saw a preview at the theater for the upcoming Planet of the Apes movie (based on the book) starring Charlton Heston. It's a flick about a world where cavemen-like humans in rags are dumb beasts and mistreated by the intelligent thinking and talking apes. 

Much like this week's episode, which featured wild men dressed in rags that appeared to be unable to speak and behaved like beasts.  A couple of months back we had the “Gamesters of Triskelion", which featured a Master Thrall Galt who shared the look of Ming the Merciless from “Flash Gordon”.  In fact it was that same episode that had me complaining about the amount of borrowing or sometimes outright theft that Star Trek employs in its stories.

If imitation is the best form of flattery, Star Trek is the Casanova of Burbank, California!  The number of its paramours have surely become legion.  Much like the erstwhile lover of legend, Star Trek is never able to focus on attaching to one thing at a time.  Episodes must borrow from multiple sources.  Even from other episodes of Star Trek.  For example, just last week we saw an episode where the powerful Kelvans turned members of the crew into white minerals.  This week a disease did it.  Two weeks ago the Nazis from Earth history showed up on another planet.  This week the US flag and constitution showed up, for no reason other than to attempt to throw a twist at the audience.  Both of these last two examples make me feel as if I am watching an episode of the Twilight Zone instead of Star Trek.  So many episodes of that show introduce elements into settings where they should not exist.  When it happened in the Twilight Zone it was thought provoking.  When it keeps happening in Star Trek, it lacks the same effect and is starting to leave me pining for repeats of the episodes that have more original stories.


"A man…can't just…turntosalt!"  "Captain, need I remind you what happened just last episode?"

I’d love for new episodes to stop with the borrowed elements and stick to bold new content, not plucked from the theaters, or the current newspaper headlines, or popular Earth characters like Jack the Ripper. 

Although the recent “Patterns of Force” was not an episode that I loved, I do love the fact that it was original and not an obvious rip-off from something else.  “The Omega Glory” could have been more glorious had its elements not been entirely borrowed.  That's only one of its sins, of course, but it'd be a start.

1 star


Beyond the Pale


by Amber Dubin

I want to preface myself by saying I am whole-heartedly enraptured with Star Trek. It is my first and only love, the only fictional universe I'd gladly abandon my own life to walk one day in its storyline, and I'd defend the continuation of this show to the death and beyond. I feel the need to profess my undying loyalty as a fan of this series, because I am about to unleash a diatribe that could only be wrought by the betrayal of an immeasurable love. This episode made me apoplectic. I've had my hackles raised from some insulting implications about the nature of women or certain races, but so far most of my reactions have been to subtleties. Subtle this episode was not.

The least subtle attack on my sensibilities was the racism. The Yangs are introduced as inhuman savages that cannot be reasoned with when they are first encountered. However, it turns out that they are not feral, merely driven wild by religious fervor. The supertext is that the Yangs' nature is that of Native Americans (what we have ignorantly called, for centuries, 'Indians'). I cannot begin to describe how offensive this concept is. Gene Roddenberry is saying here that Native Americans as a race are naturally a savage subspecies of whites, but they, like the fictional Vulcans, have trained to control their natures through a spirituality reverential governmental system. The fundamental insult lies in the implication that the government of whites partially tamed their savage nature (only partially, because the whole time sacred ceremonies take place, the majority of the tribe is outside yipping and howling at the moon). I hate that I have to explain this, but in reality, Native Americans have had democratic systems in place before most white societies that the white founding fathers actually drew from when they were drafting their governmental systems. In addition, the role of spirituality in most ancient Native American tribes was not a controlling cult-like obsession as could be argued is displayed by many modern organized religions, and was instead a much subtler, reverential guiding force that soothed the more offensive natural human instincts like a balm rather than a set of shackles.


"What do you mean 'they're too white?'  What do you think this is?  High Chapparal?"

Unfortunately the racial attacks in this episode are not only leveled at the Native American peoples. When it comes to the Comms, although it is implied that their genetics/immunological resistance is superior to humans, they are also implied to be inferior to the white race. This is apparent in the way that they immediately recognize Ron Tracey as their leader, after "getting over the shock of [his] white skin." This is offensive not only in the way it implies innate white supremacy, but also in the way they imply that it is natural for "asiatic races" to choose innately flawed governmental systems (godless totalitarianism and communism – for shame!) over the morally upright white, democratic Republicans. They even managed to throw in fetishization of female Asians just because this steaming pile of an episode needed a little sexism for spice.

And the science! My God, the poor, poor science! I'm too angry to even go into how terribly this episode mangled the concepts of genetic and cultural evolution. It didn't even have the most basic understanding of immunology and epidemiology! The fact that any of the plot of this episode made it off the cutting room floor goes beyond the pale of my tolerance and understanding. To say I am deeply disappointed in Gene Roddenberry is an understatement of the highest degree.

I wish I could give it less than one star, but I, like the actors in these scenes, am contractually bound by the system in which I work.

One star



Speaking of Star Trek, it's on tomorrow!  And it seems to presage a civil war…

Here's the invitation! Come join us.




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7 thoughts on “[March 8, 1968] Inglorious (Star Trek: "The Omega Glory")”

  1. On top of all the other things wrong with this episode is the fact that it betrays its promising beginning. The first act is genuinely creepy and tense. The second stumbles badly, especially with the introduction of the first hints of Yellow Peril (I wonder if having Sulu in command is an effort to deflect charges of anti-Asian racism). But the third act? Lord have mercy is it bad.

    Thing is, there's value in a story that shows Americans who have fetishized the fundamental words of the country's foundation and government, but have lost all understanding of their meaning. After all, there are plenty of them walking the streets right now. Many of them will probably vote for George Wallace come November, and many more called Eisenhower a communist and held their noses to vote for Goldwater, even if he is a little pink. However, Star Trek is not the place for that story. The Twilight Zone would have worked, maybe The Outer Limits, or a TV movie with time travel or something.

    That said there was something oddly compelling about watching a Canadian give an overly dramatic reading of the Preamble.

  2. Wig Trek: yes
    Cave Trek: nope
    Fog Trek: nope
    Doinnggg Trek: nope

    Last year (1967), the comic book Charlton Premiere published a story called “Children of Doom.” It was about a world in the aftermath of a horrendous catastrophe, with civilization ravaged by war.  As if life isn’t hard enough for the mutated survivors, a doomsday missile starts ticking away.

    That wasn’t the first time a post-catastrophe story had been done in comics or TV, of course.  There was “The Man Who Was Never Born” on The Outer Limits – that was another story done with a gravity appropriate to that background.

    Star Trek gave us a teleplay with a post-catastrophe scenario.  That never really makes much of an impression.  This undistinguished show fills up time with fight scenes and a red herring about an immortality serum till we get to the big moment with Old Glory — which, I don’t know, somehow felt embarrassing; not emotionally affecting as, I suppose, was intended. 

    In any event, this was another story in which you pretty much forget that this is supposed to be happening on a planet circling a distant star, rather than happening in some past or future of Earth.  Star Trek has developed a weakness for stories that might have been written for economy’s sake, around costumes and props on hand.  The Kohms wore padded jackets from a Korean war movie or The Inn of the Sixth Happiness or the like, and the Yangs wore bits of fur.

    Anyway… I’ve picked up the idea that newspapers or magazines have been saying Star Trek is popular with college students.  First-time viewers tuning in to the show and seeing this story might be disappointed!

    Me, I’ve been watching Star Trek from the first night it was on.  The main guest actor, with his pitted skin and wild blue eyes seemed at times to be reprising his role as poor Dr. van Gelder from the Tantalus asylum planet in “Dagger of the Mind.”

    So this was a show with hardly any Star Trek magic.  My 12-year-old self likes TV shows with plenty of action, but even though fights fill up a fair bit of this one and Shatner (or his stunt double) and his opponent swing their fists vigorously, even the action in this one didn’t grip me.

  3. Asimov had a similar document-worship forced on him in his *Stars, Like Dust" but made it make more sense.

  4. Dogs are not picky when it comes to drinking water. If a dog is thirsty they'll go for anything, be it a stagnant puddle or a toilet. But if I was a dog, this is not water I would drink: it's clearly poisonous.

    I know it's hubris to suggest that you understand a creation better than its creator, but I genuinely believe Roddenberry (who is apparently responsible for this episode's biggest errors) forgot what his own show was supposed to stand for, if only for a moment. We've had "alien" planets with humanoids that are clearly stand-ins for Earth before, but "The Omega Glory" is the first time this has happened and I had to ask, "Why?" Why go about this premise in this particular way? If this is supposed to be about the aftermath of McCarthyism, why the Yellow Peril angle? Why have a plot about a race of people who live super-long lives and ultimately do nothing with it? Why, all of a sudden, does America matter in Star Trek?

    That last part sounds weird, but consider the humanity as depicted in the show is not supposed to be nationalistic. We as a collective had left behind nationalism and religious fanaticism, and even capitalistic greed. How could Shatner, a Canadian, keep a straight face when reciting the US Constitution? Really the finale to this episode was just the cherry on top, given a final punctuation mark by the American national anthem being incorporated into the score. Nothing less than embarrassing. Even D. C. Fontana could not redeem it—not even close.

    1. This is beautifully said, but I will push back on a couple of points:

      "Why, all of a sudden, does America matter in Star Trek?"

      Because it is an American show, and American values (like the constitution and freedom), duplicated in documents throughout the galaxy (per Kirk) are something to be admired and promulgated.  The waving of the flag was less about nationalism and more about the concepts behind the founding of our country.  The problem is Roddenberry did it so hamhandedly and with more than a little racism, that it undercuts what could have been a fine point.

      "even capitalistic greed. "

      I'm not sure where folks get that Trek is a post-capitalist society.  In "Devil in the Dark", "Mudd's Women", "The Trouble with Tribbles", nothing is more important than the greenback credit.  Scotty "earns his pay for the week" in "The Doomsday Machine."

      The world of the future is more enlightened, but it's still our world.

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