Fan Companion – Star Trek: Voyager Season Six
August 19th, 2010
In the fall of 1999, ‘Voyager’ began its final two seasons as the only Star Trek anyone would see at that time, a novelty that was lost on fans who had already grown jaded. Its sixth season would in fact turn out to be its least popular, which was not so surprising, given the circumstances. It was also a downright shame.
Fan Companion – Star Trek: Voyager Season Five
August 13th, 2010
The 1998-1999 season was the last time Star Trek would overlap itself on TV, ending a seven year stretch that saw the franchise reach the apex of its cultural appeal at the time, and its steady decline. ‘Star Trek: Insurrection’ would be released in the middle of the season, marking the first of two nails in the coffin of the film series from this incarnation, proving that even the once-mighty ‘Next Generation’ crew was not immune from this loss of interest, even though, two years earlier, it had just reached perhaps its widest mark of approval with ‘Star Trek: First Contact.’ So while ‘Deep Space Nine’ completed its seven year run, ‘Voyager’ was about to find out if it could carry the weight of expectations. Its fifth season would be crucial indeed.
Fan Companion – Star Trek: Voyager Season Four
August 11th, 2010
For some reason, Star Trek was never really good about changing cast members. The original series completely recast itself once, but it was between pilots, so no one ever really knew, before adding Chekov (the shaggy-headed Russian meant to boost popularity) in the second season. ‘Next Generation’ lost Yar in the first season, switched doctors in the second (before quickly switching back in the third). ‘Deep Space Nine’ brought in Worf in its fourth. But it’s safe to say that no Star Trek ever affected a complete reinvention with the addition of a single character like ‘Voyager’ did with Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan).
Fan Companion – Star Trek: Voyager Season Three
August 7th, 2010
In the fall of 1996, the franchise was celebrating its thirtieth anniversary, which was an event every incarnation got to celebrate. But perhaps more importantly, ‘Next Generation’ got to enjoy its most obvious parting gifts to the two shows that immediately succeeded it, thanks to the success of that winter’s ‘Star Trek: First Contact.’ Midway through its fifth season, ‘Deep Space Nine’ inherited the distinctive new movie’s uniforms. And midway through its third, ‘Voyager’ inherited the Borg.
Fan Companion – Star Trek: Voyager Season Two
August 4th, 2010
This is as far away from traditional wisdom as I’m willing to go: no Star Trek had a better second season than ‘Voyager.’ Flush from a strong push in the early months of 1995, and thanks to some production and network quirks, a few episodes from that early run were held back for the new season that started in the fall, but even from that point, the show only seemed to grow stronger and more bold, building the first true long arc of the franchise, at the same time that ‘Deep Space Nine’ was only just getting the hang of the Dominion, and getting a tad scuttled in its own efforts by the same studio (remember that ‘Voyager’ debuted during the other show’s third season, and so was in its second season as the older show went on to its fourth, with the debut of Worf and infusion of Klingons). How’s that for revisionism?
Fan Companion – Star Trek: Voyager Season One
August 2nd, 2010
In 1995, Paramount achieved its greatest dream buy launching its own TV network with a Star Trek, something it had been trying to do since the 1970s. That show was ‘Voyager,’ conceived to replace ‘Next Generation’ as a traditional space-faring adventure and contrast to ‘Deep Space Nine.’ But it wouldn’t be entirely episodic, since it was equipped with the high concept of a Starfleet crew abandoned far from home, and forced to join with rebels who had previously rejected everything it had stood for.
Fan Companion – Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Season Seven
July 31st, 2010
‘Next Generation’ had established a new mark for Star Trek TV shows with seven seasons, a full four more than the original series, which became the model for two of its three successors. So the fall of 1998 promised but one thing for fans who’d become so enamored of ‘Deep Space Nine’ the previous season, that this would be the final year of the show. Unburdened but still energized, the creators knew the best way to impress was to take out all the stops, which included limiting the writing staff to just the core names (at least in the final teleplay credits) that had developed over the past few seasons, who seemed to have the whole thing mapped out just nicely.
Fan Companion – Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Season Six
July 27th, 2010
Here’s the start of the ‘Deep Space Nine’ its most fervent fans to this day will still remember vividly, entering into serialized territory for the first six episodes of the season, exploring the opening months of the Dominion War. What its curious competitor, ‘Babylon 5,’ had been doing for most of its run, and what would become popular with ‘Battlestar Galactica’ and ‘Lost,’ a total immersion in storytelling, the show was now ready to exploit its own way.
Comics I Like – The 2010 Midyear Report
July 22nd, 2010
Now, I assume it’s always preferable to truly enjoy the things you enjoy. I mention this because as far as comics go, I think 2010 has been a pretty good year so far. I won’t try and suggest it’s been a great year, with a lot of things everyone will still remember ten years from now, but as far as my comics experience goes, it’s been pretty memorable, with a lot of strong material, deep into the pile, so to speak, so much so that, spoiler alert, there will be seventy-five ranked titles on the list that follows, which by no means is to be mistaken for the annual QB awards, but more like a rough draft (I fully intend to limit the 2010 QB50 exactly to that, where it’s been for three of the four years I’ve been doing it, with the first year limited to an even more exclusive ten). Some of what follows will be ongoing series, others limited, with a few individual issues sprinkled throughout.
Fan Companion – Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Season Five
July 22nd, 2010
If the third season opened the series up and the fourth season made it go widescreen, then the birth of the ‘Deep Space Nine’ that most fans would truly recognize was the fifth, which premiered in the fall of 1996, the thirtieth anniversary of Star Trek. By the end of the season, the Dominion War had begun. What else do you need to know?