Star Trek: Forbidden Episodes: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "'''Star Trek: Forbidden Episodes''' is an archive of Star Trek episodes recovered from alien quantum states using techniques adapted from high-energy literature. The arch...")
 
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Disaster strikes when rip in time causes the Enterprise to beam Ethel and Julius aboard the Enterprise, fusing their two bodies into a single blob of agonized protoplasm.   
Disaster strikes when rip in time causes the Enterprise to beam Ethel and Julius aboard the Enterprise, fusing their two bodies into a single blob of agonized protoplasm.   


Doctor McCoy leaps in to euthanize the blob, but is himself caught in the time rip and thrown back to 1953, where he witnesses the execution of Rosenbergs in 1953. The authorities then force McCoy to sign death certificates for both Ethel and Julius.
Doctor McCoy leaps in to euthanize the blob, but is himself caught in the time rip and thrown back to 1953, where he sees the first Ethel, then Julius, executed by electrocultion. The authorities then force McCoy to sign death certificates for both bodies.


== In the News ==
== In the News ==

Revision as of 06:21, 29 April 2020

Star Trek: Forbidden Episodes is an archive of Star Trek episodes recovered from alien quantum states using techniques adapted from high-energy literature.

The archive is manifested as an anonymous transdimensional corporation, widely believed to be the work of rogue mathematician Fell Swoop.

Episodes

"The Rosenbergs"

Mister Spock, while conducting research on Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, finds it curious that historical sources speak of "the Rosenbergs" in an almost collective sense, as if they were two halves of a single creature.

Disaster strikes when rip in time causes the Enterprise to beam Ethel and Julius aboard the Enterprise, fusing their two bodies into a single blob of agonized protoplasm.

Doctor McCoy leaps in to euthanize the blob, but is himself caught in the time rip and thrown back to 1953, where he sees the first Ethel, then Julius, executed by electrocultion. The authorities then force McCoy to sign death certificates for both bodies.

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links