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WeeklyTrek Podcast #119: Nhan’s DISCOVERY Farewell, New STAR TREK Products, and More

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek — brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by William Overton to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

This week, Alex and his guest discuss the following stories from around the web:

In addition, stick around to listen to William’s theory on what’s going on with the music that everyone seems to know in the 32nd century — and Alex’s theory about whether we’ll see any Klingons in Star Trek: Discovery Season 3!

(Programming Note: WeeklyTrek will be taking a week off for the Thanksgiving holiday in the US next week, but will return with an all new episode on Monday, December 7.)

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!

REVIEW: ‘The Autobiography of Kathryn Janeway’

Continuing their way through some of Starfleet’s greatest captains, Titan Books has now added The Autobiography of Kathryn Janeway to their line of in-universe autobiographies, a perfect way to honor Star Trek: Voyager’s 25th anniversary.

The Janeway book, whose tagline reads “The history of the captain who went further than any had before,” is in the same style as the previous two releases — covering the life and times of James T. Kirk and the exploits of Jean-Luc Picard — but with a different author.

Una McCormack, who has written a number of Star Trek novels over the years, takes over from Kirk and Picard writer David A. Goodman. That change works particularly well for Janeway, as McCormack succeeds in exploring the many complexities of Captain Janeway’s tale, with some of the appropriate lived experiences to help portray that.

The Autobiography of Kathryn Janeway is a great character study for Kate Mulgrew’s alter ego. Tracking her entire life –from childhood, through Starfleet Academy, her earlier career, time on Voyager, and then a little beyond — McCormack has Janeway’s voice and inflection absolutely spot on. At no time do you think this book is about anyone other than Kathryn Janeway.

McCormack echoes the eloquence and thoughtfulness of the Janeway character, and really gets inside the character’s head in a number of areas where the series fell silent. Given Janeway’s position as captain on Voyager, there was never much of an opportunity for her to share her deepest thoughts with any of the other series regulars, because they were all members of her crew.

But in this book, we get a much deeper reflection from Janeway on a number of aspects of her life, including her views on relationships and the partners she had both before and during her time on Voyager. We get much more, for example, on Janeway’s relationship with Mark Johnson — how it developed, how she felt about him after being stranded in the Delta Quadrant, and her reaction to the news that he had married someone else.

The Autobiography of Kathryn Janeway also gives us additional snippets of insight on many of the show’s most pivotal episodes. As with the Kirk and Picard autobiographies, when they reach the parts of their lives we’ve seen on screen they tend to jump around providing a few addition bits of insight here or there.

But it is in the portion covering Janeway’s early life that the book triumphs. From Voyager, we actually do not know a massive amount about Janeway — and particularly her career — before the crew ended up in the Delta Quadrant. We have a sense of her family, the broad outlines of her career, and her relationship with Mark, but there are a lot of gaps for McCormack to fill in.

We get a chance to see how Janeway became the capable and confident captain of Voyager in the most difficult of circumstances, and this book will deepen your appreciation for this great character, and rev up your excitement for Janeway’s return in Star Trek: Prodigy.

But if you’re looking for some clues about what Prodigy might bring, I don’t think this book has any. Like the previous autobiographies, the book only dwells briefly on what happens after the events of “Endgame,” the Voyager finale. Obviously, we know Janeway became an admiral (thanks to her cameo in Star Trek: Nemesis), and there is a small twist for the character that I won’t spoil here that did come a little out of left field.

But there are obviously still adventures for the character to be had, though this book does not appear to tease of any of them.

In addition to McCormack’s stellar prose, like the previous releases there are a number of glossy photos included in an insert to the book. My personal favorite of these, which include digitally manipulated pictures of Kate Mulgrew — ever wanted to see what Janeway looked like as a Starfleet cadet? Now you can! — is the last picture, which shows Admiral Janeway wearing the 2399 Starfleet admiral’s uniform seen on Admiral Clancy in her appearances on Star Trek: Picard. It suits Janeway very well!

If there’s one area where this book is a little bit of a letdown compared to the Picard and Kirk autobiographies, though, it is that it does not diverge into the same imaginative territory as those other two releases.

That’s to be expected, though, and is not a criticism of McCormack. The Kirk and Picard books were written before Star Trek came back to TV, and given that it is now back on the air in multiple timeframes new tie in content should be respectful of allowing the TV shows to develop and tell their own stories. But we do lose some of the more colorful inclusions of the Goodman books, like the Picard book’s explanation for why the Denobulans have not been seen since the Star Trek: Enterprise era..

The Autobiography of Kathryn Janeway plays it straight –b ut there’s still so much here to like. Una McCormack is a terrific Star Trek author, and despite her passion clearly being Deep Space Nine and the Cardassians specifically (who end up playing a bigger role in Janeway’s life than you might have thought), she takes extremely well to Janeway and the Voyager milieu.

If you’re a Janeway or a Voyager fan, this book is definitely for you.

Star Trek: Voyager
A Vision of the Future



Star Trek: Voyager
Complete Series on DVD



Star Trek: Voyager
A Celebration



STAR TREK: DISCOVERY 307 Photos: “Unification III”

This week brings us to the seventh of this season’s Star Trek: Discovery episodes, and we’ve got a new round of photos from the tantalizingly-titled “Unification III” for you today!

The search for answers to the mystery of The Burn takes the Discovery to some Vulcans in this new episode, a sequel in title — and it is assumed, in story — to the two-part 1991 tale from Star Trek: The Next Generation — where Burnham must stand for the Federation in an effort to obtain new scientific data on the disaster.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkDyhiDW6Sk

The original “Unification” story focused around Ambassador Spock’s (Leonard Nimoy) efforts to bridge the divide between the long-separated Vulcan and Romulan civilizations; Spock later died (as far as the universe believes, at least) in an effort to save Romulus from the supernova which destroyed that planet in the 2009 Star Trek film — leading the the Romulan refugee diaspora seen in Star Trek: Picard earlier this year.

Here are five new photos from “Unification III” — barely revealing anything about the upcoming episode.

Finally, if you didn’t catch it at the end of “Scavengers,” here’s a new preview for the episode, and a clip from the opening moments of the episode from last week’s The Ready Room, where Tilly and Burnham discuss the data found on the three Starfleet ‘black box’ devices found after The Burn.

UNIFICATION III — While grappling with the fallout of her recent actions, and what her future might hold, Burnham agrees to represent the Federation in an intense debate about the release of politically sensitive – but highly valuable – Burn data.

Written by Kirsten Beyer. Directed by Jon Dudkowski.

Star Trek: Discovery returns Thursday, November 26 with “Unification III” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel. International viewers get the episode November 27 on Netflix, in all other global regions.

REVIEW: Eaglemoss STAR TREK Romulan Warbird Model

The D’Deridex-class Romulan Warbird is the first Romulan ship to join the XL-sized line of The Official Starships Collection, Star Trek Starships XL Collection. Designed by veteran Star Trek concept artist Andy Probert, the D’Deridex-class Romulan Warbird first appeared in the Star Trek: The Next Generation first-season finale “The Neutral Zone,” and then on many subsequent occasions throughout the remainder of the franchise.

Alongside the Klingon Bird of Prey, the Romulan Warbird has probably become one of the most iconic Star Trek alien starship designs, and so any model needs to it absolute justice. Andy Probert originally designed the ship to be vertically-oriented — which the Eaglemoss team have said they are exploring making a concept ship model for — but that the horizontal ship design was developed out of the creative process.

The iconic design has been rendered as a nicely detailed model for the Eaglemoss Star Trek XL line, and it’s an impressively-detailed one. It comprises a metal forward section and plastic secondary hull and nacelles. Along the forward section — or, the head of the bird, to interpret the ship’s shape literally — there are lots of nice details including many small windows that depict the gargantuan size of the Romulan Warbird.

The model appears to match the second studio model (two Romulan Warbirds were built and used for production), as well as the CG model created by Foundation Imaging later in Trek: the nacelles have extra greebles that were not present on the first studio model built for “The Neutral Zone.”

The coloring of the model and its vibrant green is a close match to the model as seen on screen, though in real-life the studio model’s paint scheme uses a duller shade of green. But that very strong green is how we know the ship best from the vessel’s on-screen look, and so Eaglemoss has replicated that well. Like a lot of Eaglemoss models, this too suffers slightly from the problem of the window paint not quite matching up with the window notches on the model’s body, but given their tiny size, this is not as noticeable as it has been on some of the larger Starfleet model ship.

The main body of the Warbird also has a number of raised details and panel lines that add a lot of visual interest to the model. This really is an impressively-detailed model.

But it’s also one that feels a bit small. Though it measures nearly nine inches in length from bow to stern, when lined up against some of the other Star Trek XL releases, it is one of the stockiest of the bunch. That’s a shame, given the Romulan Warbird is one of the most impressive ships in the fleet, but standing next to some of its bigger brother models, it is a little dwarfed.

In addition, the ship’s stand is not the greatest: it grips the lower shelf of the secondary hull, but it does not feel secure and the model is prone to slipping from the stand if you are not careful with it. In addition, because the ship is long — and the metal parts are all the way at the front — the novel is very close to being forward heavy and dragging the ship over.

This is definitely one of those models that you want to be very comfortable is secure in its intended display position before you walk away from it… or you might be in for a nasty surprise.

Overall, the D’Deridex-class Romulan Warbird is a great addition to your Eaglemoss Star Trek XL starships collection, especially if you love the franchise’s alien ship designs. Though it may not have the size of some of the other XL models, it more than makes up for that in the intricate details and that cover the entire model and make it a lot of fun to examine.

If you’re interesting in adding the Romulan Warbird to your fleet of Star Trek starship models, you can pick it up now in the United States for $74.99. While as of this writing the model is on backorder in the UK, but keep an eye for its availability for £49.99 here if you’re in that region.

Book Review: THE WISDOM OF PICARD

You’d be hard-pressed to encapsulate a lifetime of wise words from Jean-Luc Picard in a 10-volume series of Encyclopedia Britannica, let alone in a pint-size, mini coffee table book – but that is pretty much what Chip Carter has done in compiling The Wisdom of Picard, a 208-page tradebook of the two-time Enterprise captain’s most sage quotes.

The presentation is as sharp as the content, with one easily digestible quote on almost every page of the compact, 4″ x 4″ full-color, hard-cover book, printed on a thick, high-quality paper stock.

The book’s layout is interspersed with various photos of Picard in action and is broken down into five specific chapters, each including their own short introduction:

  • The Final Frontier: Philosophy and Humanity
  • Where No One Has Gone Before: History and Science
  • New Life and New Civilizations: Literature and the Arts
  • Strange New Worlds: Exploration and Adventure
  • To Boldly Go: Politics, Leadership, and Diplomacy

As much as the book is exactly what you think it is — a ton of inspirational quotes from the many grandiose speeches and quiet, personal moments of the great captain’s life on screen throughout seven seasons and four films of Star Trek: The Next Generation, and one season of Star Trek: Picard — it’s also full of surprises.

Below is a smattering of what you can expect when you thumb through the pages of The Wisdom of Picard, including the book’s first quote on page 10, the last quote on page 207, and a bunch of random ones in between (that we literally chose arbitrarily to get a feel for the broad scope of observations that are included in this publication).

There is no greater challenge than the study of philosophy.

— “Samaritan Snare”

 

You may learn that being first, at any cost, is not always the point

— “Tin Man”

Data’s capacity for expressing and processing emotion was limited. I suppose we had that in common.

— “Broken Pieces”

We were once as you are now. To study you is to understand ourselves.

— “Who Watches the Watchers”

I like climbing. There’s something about actually having your fate in your own hands.

— “Bloodlines”

Lieutenant, sometimes the moral obligations of command are less than clear. I have to weigh the good of the many against the needs of the individual, and try to balance them as realistically as possible. God knows, I don’t always succeed.

— “The Enemy”

Imprisonment is an injury, regardless of how you justify it.

— “Allegiance”

If there is on ideal that the Federation holds most dear, it is that all men, all races can be united.

— “Star Trek: Nemesis”

Chip Carter has previously authored two other Star Trek books, including the spectacularly good trivia book, Obsessed with Star Trek, and The Book of Lists, which was fun, but a little hit-and-miss..

Interestingly, all the quotes are presented here by the author with almost no context — beyond the targeted chapters they have landed in — and it doesn’t seem to matter. The advice and observations offered from Starfleet’s most revered hero, Captain Jean-Luc Picard, always stand the test of time, as does this great compilation of his overall insights.

Jim Moorhouse is the creator of TrekRanks.com and the TrekRanks Podcast.
He can be found living and breathing Trek every day on Twitter at @EnterpriseExtra.

Delta Flyer XL and Section 31 Hou Yi-Class Ships Lead February’s Hero Collector STAR TREK Lineup

There’s always more additions to The Official Starships Collection dropping into our sector, and the new year is bringing a few more to expand your fleet of Star Trek models!

We’ve got a trio new starships coming from Hero Collector in February 2021, starting with a tough little ship from the Delta Quadrant!

The first comes in the form of the highly-anticipated XL-sized Delta Flyer, the hero support craft designed by Tom Paris during the fifth season of Star Trek: Voyager. The original small-sized Delta Flyer model was released back in early 2015 — and after six years, fans will get their chance at the largest edition yet, measuring in at 11 inches (284mm).

Improvised in the Delta Quadrant at the urging of Lieutenant Tom Paris, the Delta Flyer was an advanced shuttle that incorporated both Starfleet and Borg technology. Larger than a standard shuttlecraft, the Delta Flyer had retractable warp nacelles, and was more able to handle the hostile environments that the crew of the USS Voyager faced in the depths of the Delta Quadrant.

Retail Price: $75.00 / €64.99 / £49.99

The second is the smaller of two four-nacelled Section 31 stealth starships, the 8.5-inch Hou Yi-class, seen in the season-ending battle against Control’s forces in Star Trek: Discovery two-parter “Such Sweet Sorrow.”

Named for the mythological Chinese archer who shot down the sun, the medium-sized, four-nacelled Hou Yi-class was a starship developed in secret to pursue Section 31’s shadowy goals. It was deployed by the rogue artificial intelligence Control to attack the U.S.S. Discovery and U.S.S. Enterprise, near the planet Xahea.

Retail Price: $54.95 / €44.99 / £34.99

Expanding the line of Star Trek Online starships is the USS Avenger (NCC-97500), an  Avenger-class Federation battlecruiser operating in the 25th Century.

Product Description: An agile vessel available to Starfleet players in Star Trek Online, the Avenger-Class Battlecruiser was intended to compete with the smaller, more nimble vessels fielded by the Klingon Defense Force. Intended primarily for war rather than exploration, the Avenger-class sparked a minor arms race on its debut.

Retail Price: $29.95 / €24.99 / £19.99

Finally, in addition to the three new starship models scheduled for February, four more hardcover reprints of classic Star Trek comic tales are coming from The Official Graphic Novels Collection.

Included are Deep Space Nine stories The Maquis, Soldier of Peace, as well as N-Vector; the Voyager story Splashdown, and the graphic adaption of William Shatner’s post-Star Trek VI tale The Ashes of Eden.

#123 – Star Trek DS9: The Maquis, Soldier of Peace
The Maquis Resistance abduct Julian Bashir to help with a covert mission, but the Cardassians are one step ahead of them – and the good doctor must develop some much-needed wisdom as prisoner of a terrorist group!

#124 – Star Trek Voyager: Splashdown
The USS Voyager crew expect to face dangers — but drowning aboard their own starship isn’t typically among them! A drone swarm attacks the Voyager, leaving it badly damaged. Captain Janeway follows the drones to an ocean world, but her crew faces grave problems when the starship plunges deep into the waters…

#125 – Star Trek TOS: The Ashes of Eden
The Enterprise is being decommissioned, and Captain James T. Kirk finds himself standing at a crossroads… Following Jim Kirk’s death in Star Trek: Generations , the captain’s story continued in several novels known colloquially as the “Shatnerverse” – written by William Shatner, and adapted here in comic form!

#126 – Star Trek DS9: N-Vector
Deep Space Nine has been sabotaged, and all signs point to Miles O’Brien — but could he truly be the culprit? Wildstorm’s N-Vector miniseries explores the stories after DS9’s conclusion – as a bonus, this volume features rare comic strips that are virtually impossible for collectors to find in today’s market!

Retail Price (each): $19.95 / €16.99 / £12.99

Stick around for looks at more from Hero Collector and the Official Starships Collection — and in case you missed it, check out our exclusive interview with director Ben Robinson about all the upcoming plans the company has for Star Trek publications!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review: “Scavengers”

With this week’s action-packed “Scavengers,” Star Trek: Discovery appears to be beginning to settle into its new groove, now the ship and crew have joined up with 32nd century Starfleet. Based on this week’s episode, Discovery is potentially setting the remainder of this season — and the show itself — as a whole different story than perhaps we may have been expecting.

During the first few episodes of Discovery’s third season, the show echoed Star Trek: Voyager more than any of its counterparts. The USS Discovery was a ship alone, in a new time that had made the familiar locales of the Alpha Quadrant as alien as the Delta Quadrant was to Voyager. But with contact established with Starfleet, and Saru joining Admiral Vance’s staff meetings, I no longer believe the show Discovery is looking to echo is Voyager…. but rather, Star Trek: Enterprise.

Saru stands in line with his fellow Starfleet captains. (CBS All Access)

Instead of a ship alone searching for a specific destination, “Scavengers” establishes that Discovery is now about building something new, much like Captain Archer and the crew of the Enterprise NX-01 — only now, Discovery is not creating but helping to resurrect the Federation out of the chaos and bloodshed caused by The Burn, supporting Starfleet in its missions, and finding its place within the chain of command.

“Scavengers,” written by Anne Cofell Saunders and directed by Doug Aarniokoski, opens with the most notable change yet: Discovery has had a massive overhaul to bring the Crossfield-class starship up to 32nd century specs, so much that the ship’s been given a new registry number (NCC-1031-A!) to signify just how significant these upgrades are to the original design — as well as to potentially hide the ship’s time-travel history (banned by the Temporal Accords), making it a “new” Discovery for the 32nd century.

A dorsal view of the new-and-improved USS DISCOVERY (NCC-1031-A). (CBS All Access)

Along with the new registry number comes all-new hull armor and external lighting, new deflector plating, minor changes to the hull configuration itself (removing the support struts between the outer rings in the saucer, angling and cutting large gaps into the secondary hull’s ‘wings’), new impulse engine assemblies…

A look underneath the DISCOVERY-A reveals even more changes. (CBS All Access)

…and the biggest change of all, brand-new warp nacelles that are physically separated from the Discovery, like some of the other wild new 32nd century starship designs we saw in last week’s episode. We don’t get a chance to see the ship in action this week, which is a little disappointing, but I’m curious how it looks with detached nacelles in motion.

(But I’m most curious to see how Eaglemoss will build their sure-to-come Discovery-A model!)

Good luck, Eaglemoss model design team! (CBS All Access)

In addition to all the outer upgrades, the internal workings of Discovery have also been equipped with the ubiquitous programmable matter we’ve been introduced to this season — seen already on Book’s ship, at the Coridanite bar, and at Starfleet Headquarters. As we see more of the ways in which Starfleet and the Federation have evolved in the last several centuries, I am particularly enjoying the imaginative futuristic technology.

Keeping the ship in the 23rd century was always going to limit what the producers could show us to what had been established as futuristic technology when the Original Series was filmed in the late 1960s. Even holographic communications, a logical achievement by the 23rd century by today’s standards, rang hollow in the pre-classic Trek era (given it had never been established before).

Owosekun tries out the new programmable matter built into her console. (CBS All Access)

But the Discovery production office can now let their imagination run wild, and so far, their decisions have been effective ones. The ships and technology feel familiar, but also so much more advanced — and Discovery can now show us new speculative technology that is genuinely imaginative, echoing back to what Star Trek of eras past was able to accomplish.

And though the Discovery crew do not get new uniforms in line with the Starfleet uniforms of this era — just like Voyager never upgraded to the First Contact designs, for viewer recognition (and budgetary issues, likely!) — they do get new combadges, which combine combadge, holographic PADD, tricorder, and personal transporter tech all into one wearable device.

A nice advancement from today’s tech given everything the mobile phones in our pocket can accomplish!

The bridge crew has fun with their new holo-projector combadges. (CBS All Access)

However, as much as this episode illustrates how Discovery is integrating into Starfleet’s new structure, “Scavengers” is here to remind us that Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) remains far from a model Starfleet officer.

Despite direct orders from Captain Saru (Doug Jones), Burnham enlists the help of Philippa Georgiou (Michele Yeoh) to save Book (David Ajala) from an Emerald Chain prison camp — managed by what seems to be the primary adversary of Starfleet these days, the combined strength of Andorian and Orion forces.

The scenes on Hunhau — a grimy, hostile junkyard world controlled by evil people — nicely contrast with the clean, antiseptic Starfleet Headquarters, reminding us that the galaxy is still an unforgiving place, despite Discovery’s seemingly safe new home with their ‘Federation family.’ The Emerald Chain are presented as rather blandly evil pirate villains, but hopefully they will deepen and become more nuanced if they are really being established as the main villain for Starfleet in this new era.

Book and Burnham share a moment on Hunhau. (CBS All Access)

The episode appears to be drawing connections between Burnham’s decision to go rogue and rescue Book with the year she spent separated from the Discovery after arriving in the future. But this is a fairly well-trodden character beat for Burnham, given the series began with her disobeying her captain’s orders, placing her own judgement above that of the people around her, and getting thrown into prison for her actions.

The simmering trust issues between Saru and Burnham hinted at in “People of Earth” come racing back to the fore off after a dressing down from Admiral Vance (Oded Fehr). And though you might think, on the face of it, that Burnham has shown little character growth by making such a reckless decision, “Scavengers” presents a more nuanced perspective. It is not that Burnham has not evolved, it’s just that she has accepted much more readily who she is.

Saru’s not mad, just disappointed. (CBS All Access)

“You’re doing the right thing,” Burnham tells Saru, as he removes her from the position of first officer on Discovery. I wish there had been a little more time to explore and grow with the idea of being Burnham being the first officer before changing up the status quo again, but I’ve also long since accepted that while I’m comfortable with the plot moving at warp speed, this show sometimes moves at the speed of spore drive. Character developments come fast on this show, and it does not seem inclined to slow things down too much.

And amidst the ship upgrades, with tensions running high in what’s left of the Federation, and Burnham’s betrayal, we also have the latest mystery around Georgiou to solve. Several times during this episode, the Emperor-turned-Section 31 agent becomes incapacitated by shocking visions or flashbacks, which appear to relate to her time in the Mirror Universe (is she saying “Son!”?).

I was able to make out a man in a helmet covered in blood, the Terran Empire insignia, and the iconic Terran knife — but what is happening remains a mystery, perhaps one connected to last week’s encounter with Kovich (David Cronenberg).

Georgiou’s having a serious problem — teasing a new mystery. (CBS All Access)

OTHER OBSERVATIONS

  • Like its assignment under Captain Lorca during the Klingon War in Season 1, the Discovery now serves as Starfleet’s secret rapid-response unit, as the only ship with a functional spore drive.
     
  • The recurring gag about Linus (David Benjamin Tomlinson) learning to use his new personal transporter badge was genuinely funny. Discovery has become a much funnier show since Michelle Paradise became showrunner.
     
  • Director Doug Aarniokoski loves his crazy close-up shots, as he once again gets right up in an actor’s face: this time Michelle Yeoh, last time Hannah Cheesman (Airiam) in “The Sound of Thunder.”
Next year it’ll be a camera just pressed against an eyeball. (CBS All Access)
  • Along with the ship’s new tech upgrades, Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp) also gets a new spore drive interface – one that doesn’t need those pesky arm implants – thanks to Adira Tal’s (Blu del Barrio) ingenuity.
     
  • Among the lineup of Starfleet captains is a female Cardassian; the only other Cardassian ever seen in a Starfleet uniform was in one of the alternate realities Worf visited in “Parallels.”
     
  • Admiral Vance’s office details some interesting developments for the Alpha Quadrant in the years since we last saw it during Star Trek: Picard — with the absence of the Romulan Empire after its destruction, the Emerald Chain seems to have expanded through much of local space — along with the Ferengi and Cardassians.
     
  • Federation Headquarters seems to be nestled between Ferengi and Cardassian territories, very near to the location of Subpace Relay AR-558.
Cardassia, Bajor, Trill, Earth, Orion, and Andoria can be seen on Admiral Vance’s map. (CBS All Access)
  • It’s nice to see Stamets and Culber having their cute domestic scenes again. It’s only been a season and a half — one death, one resurrection, and a whole lot of tortured feelings in between — for us to get back there.
     
  • We learn that Burnham spent her year along searching for “black box” data modules from Starfleet ships destroyed by The Burn, theorizing that there must be a spatial origin point for whatever caused the disaster. We saw one of her earlier black box finds in “People of Earth,” featuring Starfleet registry NCC-4774; the one book finds is from NCC-316608.
Two ‘black box’ devices from destroyed Starfleet ships. (CBS All Access)
  • Most the ships in the sky above the labor camp date back to the 23rd century – thankfully, they’re specifically called out as “ancient” designs in dialogue — including several ships first introduced in “Battle at the Binary Stars,” and a Hiawatha-type frigate.
     
  • The poor Bajoran worker who got his head blown off for crossing the security barrier is a solid homage to The Running Man.
     
  • There are some fun canon connections to the 24th century at the labor camp, including a reference to the Deep Space Nine favorite self-sealing stem bolts, the appearance of an antique Voyager-era Type II phaser, and a bucket of badges from 2370’s Starfleet and the Klingon Empire.
Badges from the past. (CBS All Access)
  • Grudge a very loud cat, who is constantly vocalizing… whether there seems to be a reason for it or not. As a cat owner myself, I’m wondering if this is a meaningful character choice, or simply a sound-design decision made by somebody who doesn’t have a cat of their own?
     
  • Another glimpse of the USS Voyager-J can be seen while Discovery is parked at Starfleet Command, now easily identified thanks to this graphic from the official Star Trek account. Thanks to a graphic in Admiral Vance’s office, we also get on-screen confirmation of our report from last week: it’s a 32nd century Intrepid-class.
More views of the USS VOYAGER-J. (CBS All Access)

Overall, “Scavengers” may not reach the lofty heights of the last two episodes, but it’s a solid entry in what has so far been a great third season for Star Trek: Discovery. Though the episode probably asked more questions than it answered, it still provided some good character developments for Burnham, Book, Saru, and Georgiou — as the setup for Season 3’s overarching plot seems to be in place for the second half of the season to begin.

Star Trek: Discovery returns Thursday, November 26 with the tantalizingly-titled “Unification III” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel. International viewers get the episode November 27 on Netflix, in all other global regions.

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There’s a lot happening in the world of Star Trek these days, and even if you’re a loyal reader here at TrekCore, it’s tough to keep up with everything!

That’s why we’re happy to announce our new partnership with the WeeklyTrek podcast, bringing you a recap of each week’s top Trek stories — along with lively discussion, insights, and predictions — in an easy-to-consume audio format.

Let’s be honest: there is a ton of misinformation flooding the internet about the latest news and developments for the Star Trek franchise. Through TrekCore’s partnership with WeeklyTrek — distributed on The Tricorder Transmissions podcast network — we can expand the venues through which our record of honest, fact-based reporting is communicated to fans, cutting through the dubious rumors and flat-out falsehoods which often permeate social media.

WeeklyTrek #118
‘Star Trek: Discovery’ Pays Tribute to Aron Eisenberg’s Nog

Shore Leave podcast co-host Marina Kravchuk returns to WeeklyTrek to discuss a touching tribute to Aron Eisenberg and the character of Nog in this week’s episode of “Star Trek: Discovery.” In addition, we talk about interviews with Blu del Barrio and Ian Alexander about Adira and Gray, the Nimoy family’s support for a new memorial to Leonard Nimoy, and a new Blu Ray release of William Shatner’s Star Trek documentaries. 

All that, and our theories about what’s coming next for Star Trek!

Hosted for the last two years by frequent TrekCore contributor Alex Perry, WeeklyTrek brings you all the news you need — curated from TrekCore and other popular news outlets, each providing quality reporting on the Star Trek franchise.

Each week, Alex is joined by a guest to break down each of the week’s stories — from fans who follow the show on social media, convention pals, and professionals like Star Trek science advisor Dr. Mohamed Noor and Star Trek novelist Scott Pearson. (If you’re interested being part of the show, be sure to follow WeeklyTrek on Twitter for notice of available guest slots.)

In addition to discussing all the latest news, at the end of each episode Alex and his guest allow their imaginations to run wild and their speculation to take flight by each offering a wish or theory about where they think Star Trek is heading or what they would like to see in the future — like if Discovery’s jump to the future is setting up the Section 31 series, if other legacy characters will appear on Lower Decks, and new ideas for Trek merchandise from our favorite licensees!

WeeklyTrek covers it all: news on Discovery, Picard, Lower Decks, Strange New Worlds, Prodigy, Section 31, merchandise, Star Trek’s cultural impact, major life developments for franchise stars — and of course, any news impacting the nearly 800 episodes of Star Trek that have premiered to date or any of the 13 previous films.

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY 306 Photos: “Scavengers”

This week brings us to the sixth of this season’s Star Trek: Discovery episodes, and we’ve got a new round of photos from “Scavengers” for you today!

After rejoining the fleet, Discovery and crew are tasked as ‘rapid responders’ under Admiral Vance’s (Oded Fehr) command — but when Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) received a distress signal from Book (David Ajala), she recruits Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh) to leave on an unsanctioned mission to save her friend.

Here are seventeen new photos from “Scavengers,” as Burnham and Georgiou head off on their attempt to rescue Book from danger.

Finally, if you didn’t catch it at the end of “Die Trying,” here’s a new preview for the episode, and a clip from the opening moments of the episode from last week’s The Ready Room, where Admiral Vance reveals the existence of the Spore Drive to the rest of Starfleet Command.

SCAVENGERS — After receiving a message from Book, Burnham and Georgiou embark on a rogue mission to find him, leaving Saru to pick up the pieces with Admiral Vance. Meanwhile, Stamets forms an unexpected bond with Adira.

Written by Anne Cofell Saunders. Directed by Doug Aarniokoski.

Star Trek: Discovery returns Thursday, November 19 with “Scavengers” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel. International viewers get the episode November 20 on Netflix, in all other global regions.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review: “Die Trying”

In a season of Star Trek: Discovery where literally everyone and everything is rediscovering themselves and working to find their place in the 32nd century, Starfleet is no different. And that is where we find ourselves as the series’ superb fifth episode begins.

“Die Trying” is an extremely dense hour of Star Trek, featuring an introductory look at a modern Starfleet Command — sandwiched around a complex retrieval mission, staff interrogations, the departure of a fan-favorite crew member, and an analysis of Philippa Georgiou’s motivating demons that have been building for more than a season.

The episode opens with a deep dive into Trek nirvana that has rarely been seen in 54 years: from advanced tech, flying rain forests, and starships with holographic hulls and detached nacelles, the opening minutes of the episode are a wonder as Discovery approaches Starfleet’s cloaked headquarters and is introduced to a strange new world that is less brave than it is pragmatic.

The Voyager-J, ten generations of evolution past the original starship. (CBS All Access)

We also get an emotional glimpse of an unexpected descendent of Captain Janeway’s starship in the form of the USS Voyager (NCC-74656-J), a welcome surprise among all the new futuristic designs in the Federation fleet.

We’ve confirmed with CBS that the Voyager-J is 32nd century Intrepid-class starship — the same class designation as Captain Janeway’s Voyager, but with 800 years of evolution beneath the hull.

The crew’s reaction to all the new technology serves as the perfect stand-in for the fans watching at home. Organic hulls, holographic containment walls, flying rain forests – the crew is all of us in these early moments as Captain Saru (Doug Jones) prophetically trusts that “what matters most will have endured.”

In charge of this advanced metropolis is Admiral Charles Vance (Oded Fehr), Starfleet’s commander-in-chief, who questions everything when meeting the Discovery crew — and rightly puts them through the paces before allowing them to assist in an important search for a galaxy-trotting “seed vault” ship that needs to be accessed to help save some refugees they are assisting. (Told you it was dense!)

From the opening minutes, the episode moves at breakneck speed as Starfleet very deliberately dissects Discovery’s arrival in an appropriately real-world way. The episode rarely gives you a chance to catch your breath — for example, blink and you’ll miss the USS Nog parked nearby, as we detail in our feature on the tribute to the late Aron Eisenberg.

Admiral Vance is suspicious of the Sphere Data, of the ships uncorroborated conflict with Control, and the spore drive – and when he meets Adira Tal (Blu del Barrio), he makes sure everyone knows he is familiar with Tal’s previous Trill host, Senna, but not yet with Adira. In the end, after processing everything in the reports from Saru and Commander Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green), he quite sensibly warns that “two truths now exist in one space; that never goes well.”

Fehr is phenomenal as Vance, ultimately telling the crew when they meet that they “aren’t home yet” — and that their very presence in the 32nd century is a crime, adding even more context to the long-established Star Trek: Enterprise tale of the Temporal Cold War, and agents of the 31st century who fought to subvert the Temporal Accords in a century-spanning battle eventually called the Temporal War.

While suspicious of tales about a Red Angel suit, time crystals, and temporal wormholes, Vance makes it clear that he is working with Starfleet’s end goals in mind, indicating that  after a series of debriefs, the ship will be requisitioned and the crew reassigned.

Those debriefs are successfully played for laughs and include snippets of interrogations with Jett Reno (Tig Notaro) getting snacky, Ensign Tilly (Mary Wiseman) trying to recount her stint as ‘Captain Killy,’ Commander Nhan (Rachael Ancheril) sticking to name, rank and serial number, Hugh Culber (Wilson Cruz) blithely explaining his trip through the afterlife, and Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp) incredulously being asked if he’s “essential personnel.”

And then there’s Philippa Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh), whose rebellious interview also takes place under the watchful guise of bespectacled, observer Kovich — played by renowned director David Cronenberg in a surprise cameo appearance for the body horror genre auteur. (The character’s name comes from CBS episode information.)

The back-and-forth between Georgiou and Cronenberg’s creepy operative is superb, revealing a number of major Terran details: the subatomic cell variance that makes them “wicked” (a fact Georgiou vigorously dismisses), the fall of the Terran Empire (the aftermath of which we saw in Deep Space Nine), and the fact that there has not been a crossing between the two universes in in 500 years as the two quantum realities drift apart.

In the end, Georgiou is adversely affected by Cronenberg’s character, saying at one point in defiance that “the weakness of people is generally other people,” a fact every observer of Discovery has seen in her relationship to Burnham. It seems now, however, that the former Terran emperor might be coping with this realization for the first time herself.

As for Saru, he is starting to realize that his contrasting style with Burnham is becoming a problem. They push Vance on offering up Discovery to use their spore drive to help find the USS Tikhov (which houses the seed vault), but they do it in vastly different ways. “Our first Federation act will not be to pilfer its property and violate a direct order,” says Saru, chiding Burnham about a lesson he’d thought she would have learned by now.

Burnham has been doing things her own way since we first met her in “The Vulcan Hello,” and this season alone she has already hijacked Discovery’s dilithium in “People of Earth” and quickly phasered a couple of Trill dignitaries in “Forget Me Not.” It’s pretty clear that her year alone in the 32nd century has only intensified her process of doing things on her own terms.

Saru is fully aware of this fact, and that he will be held responsible by Starfleet for her actions moving forward. Despite knowing this, it is Saru that convinces Vance to let Discovery “serve as she is able,” by putting Burnham in command of the mission while staying behind as a bit of Kelpien collateral.

Like the rest of the episode, the mission to the seed vault is crammed with intense moments and interesting story points that could have easily stood on their own as one full episode. There is a great mystery to be solved, a transporter accident, a ship overgrown with vegetation, and a bunch of strong character beats for the Discovery crew.

As seen throughout the season, Keyla Detmer (Emily Coutts) continues to struggle mentally with the ship’s situation, hesitating at a key moment during the rescue operation. Her friend Joann Owosekun (Oyin Oladejo) helps her fight through her trauma in the ship’s attempt to reach the Tikhov, adding a layer of depth to both the bridge crew and the series. (Her trauma is not gone just because everyone shared their true feelings during the epic dinner scene last week.)

This scene, as well as another round of productive banter between Stamets, Tilly and Reno, helps Starfleet realize the crew can deliver when tasked, and is a sign of the maturity and nuance in Michelle Paradise’s run at the helm of Star Trek: Discovery.

We also learn much more about Nhan’s backstory as a Barzan for the first time. (Before Discovery, the Barzan were a race previously only featured once in TNG’s “The Price.”)

It turns out the family taking care of the seed vault is from Barzan, but sadly only the father is left alive — albeit out of phase from the aforementioned transporter accident caused by a solar flare. The Discovery crew eventually secures the material necessary to help save the Kili refugees back at Starfleet, but only through a process in which Nhan rediscovers herself.

We learn that Nhan’s family was devastated by her decision to join Starfleet, and that Barzan’s don’t have the same idea of death as humans. It takes Burnham to help the grieving Dr. Attis (Jake Epstein), the Barzan caretaker of the seed vault, to see past his loss to help other families in need, an act that also motivates Nhan to forgive herself for the death of Airiam in “Project Daedalus,” so she can move on — and move on she does.

With Jefferson Russo’s brilliant score propping up the emotion in the compelling scenes on the Tikhov, Nhan recounts Burnham’s speech at Airiam’s funeral in “The Red Angel,” to “reach for the best in ourselves and each other.” As a popular character who defined the role of ‘adventurer’ since she was first introduced in “Brother,” the former Enterprise security officer decides to stay and take charge in protecting the seed vault, where she will guide the ship to Barzan — so she can see her home again and make sure Attis and his family receive proper burials.

It’s a powerful moment replete with some excellent debate on duty, cultural mitigation and Starfleet’s place in an officer’s personal decisions. The departure for Nhan is a surprise, and while there is certainly potential for everyone’s paths to cross again, it also feels definitive.

If all that wasn’t enough, one more mystery seed is planted when Burnham recognizes a melody being hummed by the Barzan family on a holo-recording. It’s the same one that Adira played on a cello after accessing her Trill memories in “Forget Me Not.” Burnham believes there is something more to it than just being a catchy earworm, a revelation that will bear watching in future episodes.

Other Observations

  • One ship in the Federation fleet is the USS Armstrong (pictured above).
     
  • Owosekun is excited to see a starship that might hold a crew of 1,000 or 2,000 people; in her own time, Captain Pike’s Enterprise carried 203; by the time of The Next Generation, the Enterprise-D carried 1,014 aboard.
     
  • Admiral Vance details that both Starfleet Command and the civilian Federation government both reside in the same hidden “starbase,” addressing some fan concerns that the two entities were being portrayed as one organization this season.
     
  • At its peak, there were 350 member worlds in the United Federation of Planets; by Discovery’s arrival, that number has been reduced to 38, including Saru’s homeworld Kaminar, and Nhan’s homeworld Barzan.
     
  • “Die Trying” was expertly directed by Maja Vrvilo, who has now helmed three standout episodes of Star Trek in 2020, including Star Trek: Picard’s “The Impossible Box” and “Broken Pieces.” Her distinctive, spare style adds weight to the quiet moments and gravitas to the comedic ones. Her work is impressive.

  • The holographic galactic map floating in Starfleet’s command center includes Voyager-established Delta Quadrant locations like the Ankari homeworld (“Equinox”), Ocampa (“Caretaker”) a Kazon Clan Forum (perhaps planet Sobras from “Alliances”), Neelix’s homeworld Talax, the Devore homeworld (“Counterpoint”), and the Silver Blood demon planet (“Demon”) — along with new locations like Federation Deep Space Outpost #36 and #72.
     
  • Alpha and Beta Quadrant locations on the map include the Valt system (“The Perfect Mate”), Cardassia Prime, Zetar, Earth, Argus, Tellar, Delta, and Cor Caroli. 
     
  • The holographic map also lists the Founder’s first — and fourth! — homeworlds, indicating that the Changelings of the Gamma Quadrant still like to move around every so often for their protection.
     
  • The holographic helmets worn by Burnham and Culber when they beam on to the Tikhov are reminiscent of the life support belt forcefields seen in The Animated Series.

  • The Barzan Dr. Attis fittingly shares a name with Attis, the Phrygian god of vegetation in Greek Mythology.
     
  • The USS Tikhov’s registry number is NCC-1067-M, indicating it is not a 1,000-year old ship, but more likely one that’s been upgraded and replaced over the centuries. The ship was likely named after 20th century Soviet astronomer Gavriil Andrianovich Tikhov.
     
  • The USS Cuyahoga is mentioned to have detected Orion and Andorian ships — the ‘Emerald Chain’ cabal — in the Sigma Draconis system, an area of space famous for the episode “Spock’s Brain.” (Episode writer Sean Cochran hales from Cuyahoga County in Ohio.)
     
  • In addition to the mention of the Temporal Accords, the episode also references the events of Star Trek: Enterprise’s “In a Mirror, Darkly,” when the Mirror Universe’s Zefram Cochrane killed the just-landed Vulcan delegation with a shotgun.

In the end, Discovery’s successful mission to the Tikhov helps Vance and his staff to finally “look up,” as Saru tells him; the crew is officially welcomed home and will remain together and await their orders from Starfleet on where they go from here.

Of course, Burnham has been singularly focused on finding out what Starfleet knows about The Burn, but Vance has more theories than ships in the fleet. He tells her they have far more immediate concerns, and haven’t had the ability to chase down all the different leads — which immediately becomes a challenge that Burnham accepts to see what she can find on her own.

What did you think of Cronenberg’s appearance? And Nhan’s surprising departure? And how about those tributes to Voyager and Nog? Sound off in the comments below… but don’t let the blinking at your harmonic rate disrupt your holo protocols and create a reference loop that shuts down your program!

Star Trek: Discovery returns Thursday, November 19 with “Scavengers” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel. International viewers get the episode November 20 on Netflix, in all other global regions.