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Arnold first met Roddenberry while attending the first [[Star Trek convention|''Star Trek'' convention]] in New York in January of 1972. He moved to Los Angeles and became a volunteer tour guide at [[Paramount Studios]] (from about the time of {{film|1}}), and greatly impressed Roddenberry with his memory for ''Star Trek'' trivia. He often assisted Roddenberry with a range of ''Star Trek''-related duties.
 
Arnold first met Roddenberry while attending the first [[Star Trek convention|''Star Trek'' convention]] in New York in January of 1972. He moved to Los Angeles and became a volunteer tour guide at [[Paramount Studios]] (from about the time of {{film|1}}), and greatly impressed Roddenberry with his memory for ''Star Trek'' trivia. He often assisted Roddenberry with a range of ''Star Trek''-related duties.
   
A fan extra, one of the [[Unnamed USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) personnel#Red deck crewmembers|''Enterprise'' crewmembers]], in {{film|1}}, Arnold was also interviewed in the [[Roger Nygard]]/[[Denise Crosby]] documentaries, ''[[Trekkies]]'' and ''[[Trekkies 2]]''. For many years, he wrote a regular column for the ''[[Star Trek Communicator]]'' (magazine of the now defunct ''[[Star Trek: The Official Fan Club]]'') in which he answered fans' questions about the shows and movies.
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A fan extra, one of the [[Unnamed USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) personnel#Rec deck crewmembers|''Enterprise'' crewmembers]], in {{film|1}}, Arnold was also interviewed in the [[Roger Nygard]]/[[Denise Crosby]] documentaries, ''[[Trekkies]]'' and ''[[Trekkies 2]]''. For many years, he wrote a regular column for the ''[[Star Trek Communicator]]'' (magazine of the now defunct ''[[Star Trek: The Official Fan Club]]'') in which he answered fans' questions about the shows and movies.
   
 
Arnold made a name for himself among fans with a series of decrees restricting what the tie-in novel and comic writers could and could not do. Many of these decrees were perceived as arbitrary and counter-intuitive by fans and the writers alike, and Arnold was ultimately fired by Paramount. Following his departure from the Trek universe, all of his decrees and arbitrary policies have fallen into disuse. The tie-ins are now vetted only by [[CBS Consumer Products]], led by [[Paula Block]] and a small team.{{incite}}
 
Arnold made a name for himself among fans with a series of decrees restricting what the tie-in novel and comic writers could and could not do. Many of these decrees were perceived as arbitrary and counter-intuitive by fans and the writers alike, and Arnold was ultimately fired by Paramount. Following his departure from the Trek universe, all of his decrees and arbitrary policies have fallen into disuse. The tie-ins are now vetted only by [[CBS Consumer Products]], led by [[Paula Block]] and a small team.{{incite}}

Revision as of 11:17, 25 February 2009

Template:Realworld Template:2008spoiler Richard Arnold (born 28 April 1954; age 69) was a research consultant on Star Trek: The Next Generation, holding the position title of "Star Trek Archivist", an appointment made not long after the premiere of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. As part of his duties, Arnold vetted proposals and final manuscripts for licensed tie-ins (novels, comics, guidebooks, video cover art, etc) on behalf of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, until Roddenberry died in 1991.

Arnold first met Roddenberry while attending the first Star Trek convention in New York in January of 1972. He moved to Los Angeles and became a volunteer tour guide at Paramount Studios (from about the time of Star Trek: The Motion Picture), and greatly impressed Roddenberry with his memory for Star Trek trivia. He often assisted Roddenberry with a range of Star Trek-related duties.

A fan extra, one of the Enterprise crewmembers, in Star Trek: The Motion Picture, Arnold was also interviewed in the Roger Nygard/Denise Crosby documentaries, Trekkies and Trekkies 2. For many years, he wrote a regular column for the Star Trek Communicator (magazine of the now defunct Star Trek: The Official Fan Club) in which he answered fans' questions about the shows and movies.

Arnold made a name for himself among fans with a series of decrees restricting what the tie-in novel and comic writers could and could not do. Many of these decrees were perceived as arbitrary and counter-intuitive by fans and the writers alike, and Arnold was ultimately fired by Paramount. Following his departure from the Trek universe, all of his decrees and arbitrary policies have fallen into disuse. The tie-ins are now vetted only by CBS Consumer Products, led by Paula Block and a small team. (citation needededit)

More recently, Arnold appeared as a background performer in 2009's Star Trek.

According to the Internet Movie Database, he appears as a Romulan. This has yet to be confirmed.

External link

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