Sci-Fi Wire has a piece on a job posting in Oregon. It’s just too weird.
Category Archives: Star Trek
Braga Fishing for Compliments
Well, he’s using the cover of his official website to do it, but since he’s contributed to the production of 100 episodes of Star Trek, he feels you should fire off a congratulatory message.
Go on, let him know what you really think of his “contributions” to Star Trek.
Enterprise Review: “Regeneration”
If Star Trek Continuity was a person, I’d be getting it to a rape victim support group.
Read more, if you care.
Enterprise Season Three Details
TrekToday has done a nice job of summerizing the article from next week’s TV Guide, detailing what’s to come in Season Three.
While I applaude the change of pace, I can’t help but be irked by their comparison of the use of a story arc to “The Fugitive.” Story arcs have been done before in Star Trek and they’ve worked really well. Berman is still toughting the “Earth’s never been attacked” angle. What an idiot.
I smell desperation in the air. Methinks two wannabe writers have their jobs’ on the line.
Enterprise Review: Cogenitor
A menage a toi, every time? Hmmm. Sounds like a Starfleet recruitment video to me.
DVD Review – Star Trek: The Motion Picture
I just got II and III and realized, I didn’t do a review of the first one. Here’s something to rectify that oversight.
Enterprise Review: “The Breach”
Here you go kids!
Rick Berman Defects
rickyjames writes, Check it out, then make your own!
More from rickyjames, I should have referenced this. Write it up together somehow, OK? If Bureau 42 can have a headline that RB is clearly insane, then it can have one that he’s defected…
Stewart done with Picard?
The IMDB daily news has the story. (The links change every day, so what you’ll be looking for starting tomorrow will be the archive for April 22, 2003, and it’s the second entry under “Studio Brief.”) Patrick Stewart is quoted as saying “I’ve probably said goodbye to Picard forever now.” Sherry Lansing, Paramount chairperson, says that the Star Trek “fan base has in some way shrunk.” Before we blame it all on Berman and Braga, we should note that the theatrical performance of Star Trek: Nemisis, which came out days before Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, was one of the keys to this analysis.
Enterprise Review – “Horizon”
And they say you can never go home again…