Friday's Child
0 sources
Friday's Child
Summary
Friday's Child is a Star Trek episode[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of star_trek_episode entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (289 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Friday's Child's image is recorded as William Shatner Julie Newmar Star Trek 1967.jpg[3].
- Friday's Child's instance of is recorded as Star Trek episode[4].
- Friday's Child's instance of is recorded as television series episode[5].
- Friday's Child's director is recorded as Joseph Pevney[6].
- Friday's Child's screenwriter is recorded as D. C. Fontana[7].
- Friday's Child's genre is recorded as science fiction[8].
- Friday's Child's follows is recorded as Journey to Babel[9].
- Friday's Child's followed by is recorded as The Deadly Years[10].
- Friday's Child's cast member is recorded as William Shatner[11].
- Friday's Child's cast member is recorded as Leonard Nimoy[12].
- Friday's Child's cast member is recorded as DeForest Kelley[13].
- Friday's Child's cast member is recorded as James Doohan[14].
- Friday's Child's cast member is recorded as George Takei[15].
- Friday's Child's cast member is recorded as Nichelle Nichols[16].
- Friday's Child's cast member is recorded as Walter Koenig[17].
- Friday's Child's cast member is recorded as Bill Blackburn[18].
- Friday's Child's part of the series is recorded as Star Trek: The Original Series[19].
- Friday's Child's director of photography is recorded as Gerald Finnerman[20].
- Friday's Child's IMDb ID is recorded as tt0708431[21].
- Friday's Child's original language of film or TV show is recorded as English[22].
- Friday's Child's distribution format is recorded as video on demand[23].
- Friday's Child's distribution format is recorded as VHS[24].
- Friday's Child's review score is recorded as 6.0/10[25].
- Friday's Child's original broadcaster is recorded as NBC[26].
- Friday's Child's color is recorded as color[27].
Why It Matters
Friday's Child ranks in the top 4% of star_trek_episode entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (289 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]