“Everybody thinks if you’re an actor, and certainly if you’re an actor and on a television series, you must be doing very well,” Koenig said. “Well, I was barely making more than minimum the first season. The second season I was on the show … I had a contract. I was paid a week’s wage whether I worked a day or a week. So I made a little bit more. Whereas I made $10,000 for the whole year in 1967, I made $11,000 in 1968. Well, that’ll only go so far.”
$10,000 in 1967 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $92,911.98 today, an increase of $82,911.98 over 57 years. The dollar had an average inflation rate of 3.99% per year between 1967 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 829.12%.
While not A list pay, that’s still not bad and a livable wage, unless I’m missing something obvious.
I think it’s about the continuation of pay. If you made $100,000 this year but then make nothing next year… Your average really starts pulling that number down.
I live in California. Individuals making less than $130k per year can get financial assistance.
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What? How??
That’s one way and it depends on the median household income of the county. Help is available through to moderate income.
First paragraph and the charts are the main thing.
Interesting - thank you, kind internet stranger!
An absolute shame as he’s honestly a wonderful actor.
Edit; GIF isn’t working properly on my end, should be a face fall.
After Shatner and Nimoy, I think Koenig got more work after Star Trek than anyone else. Babylon 5 sure didn’t hurt.
When I picture Koenig, I think of Bester, not Chekov. He was amazing in Babylon 5.
I know TV was different then, and they were making Trek the Kirk/Spock and sometimes McCoy show, but man, Chekov should’ve been more than just a comedy relief character with a bad accent.
I seem to recall him writing some good episodes of Land Of The Lost during this period.
I do wonder if the current age of television means actors are less likely to be typecast after working on a franchise.