As summer comes to an end, and Halloween merch has started to trickle into every major retailer, it means one crucial thing: it’s time to make plans to get your hands on all of this year’s Star Trek Hallmark ornaments!
One of the only ornaments to arrive for ‘Christmas in July’ was The Keeper, paying a lovely homage to the first Star Trek pilot, “The Cage.” The Keeper was the magistrate on Talos IV, and wore a necklace with a pendant that distinguished him from the other rank and file Talosians. He’s wonderfully recreated here in ornament form. The veins are nicely sculpted and painted, as is the necklace.
But the real standout for me is the texture of the Talosian robe. I was worried it may look a bit flat, based on the photo on the front of the box. In person though, it looks very cool. I think it’s going to look even better when hung on a lit Christmas tree. At approximately 4.5 inches tall, he seems bigger than some of the character ornaments from years past, settling in nicely between the giant 90s era sculpts of Picard, Janeway, etc. and the much smaller sculpts of Kirk, Spock, etc. from the 2010s era.
The second summer Star Trek release was the ‘Nexus-Damaged’ USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-B), a convention exclusive that debuted at San Diego Comic Con at the end of July. While a more widely-available edition will arrive this October, the Enterprise-B made this year’s slate to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Star Trek: Generations… and I have to say, I am in love. Damage has never been more beautiful!
Seriously though, this is so nicely done. I’m still a bit haunted by the battle-damaged Enterprise-C from 2017, which looked a bit like a toddler had gotten a hold of a magic marker and scribbled on it. This time, Hallmark has gotten it so right. Just look at the scorch marks by deflector control! I’m so relieved.
Now I think I’ve said this before, but I am not a hardcore ship aficionado — so please don’t come for me if I miss an inconsistency here between the ornament and the movie version. To my adoring fandom eyes? She’s perfect. I think the glow of the nacelles is especially powerful and it will look so nice on the tree. And let’s be real, there’s no such thing as too many versions of the Enterprise on a Christmas tree. Bring ‘em, Hallmark! I want enough versions of the Enterprise to fill a full size tree.
The ‘Nexus Damaged’ Enterprise-B is a convention exclusive, so if you missed your chance to pick one up at San Diego Comic Con, there will be another shot this October at New York Comic Con — and with only 3200 pieces produced, you’ll need to resort to eBay to find one (likely at significantly marked-up prices) if you don’t make it to NYCC.
For everyone else, there will be a Spacedock-clean wide release of the Enterprise-B ornament available October 12 through the Hallmark website for $34.99 — so if the Nexus damage isn’t that important to you, this would certainly be the easier way to bring the Enterprise-B home for the holidays.
October will also bring the rest of Hallmark’s 2024 Star Trek ornament lineup, which includes Dr. Beverly Crusher from The Next Generation, Captain Pike from Strange New Worlds, ‘Spock Meets Data’ from “Unification II,” and small renditions of Spockand the Enterprise from Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
What’s your favorite of this year’s Hallmark Star Trek ornament offerings? Is there one you were really hoping for that didn’t make 2024’s lineup? Let us know in the comments below!
Earlier this summer, record label Varèse Sarabande announced a massive three-album vinyl collection celebrating the 10 anniversary of Michael Giacchino’s Star Trek Into Darkness expanded soundtrack — and while this big box set hits stores next week, some of you can win a copy in our new giveaway!
Our friends at Varèse Sarabande have generously shared three copies of this big vinyl collection for you loyal TrekCore readers — and yes, this giveaway is open to Star Trek fans around the world!
To have your shot at winning, just fill out the entry form below by 5pm ET on Friday, September 6. Once the entry period closes, we’ll email our three winners to get complete contact information for delivery — so watch your inboxes (and make sure that @trekcore.com email addresses won’t be caught in your spam filter)!
This contest has ended and our winners have been notified.
Nearly 18 months after the series was announced by CBS Studios and Paramount+, the show’s cast assembled today to officially begin active production on on Star Trek: Starfleet Academy.
San Diego Comic Con also told us about some legacy characters coming back for the series, as the studio announced that Discovery’s Mary Wiseman, Oded Fehr, and Tig Notaro would be returning as Tilly, Vance, and Reno… and then most surprisingly, Star Trek: Voyager’sBob Picardo was beaming back to live-action Trek as his holographic doctor character.
On social media today, Paramount+ shared these photos of the Starfleet Academy cast together for the first time, joined by franchise boss Alex Kurtzman, showrunner Noga Landau, and more.
Oded Fehr, George Hawkins, Zoë Steiner, Bella Shepard, Kerrice Brooks, Bob Picardo, Holly Hunter, Paul Giamatti, Gina Yashere, Sandro Rosta, and Karim Diané. (CBS Studios)
Rear: Producers Frank Saracusa and Gaia Violo, Bob Picardo, Gina Yashere, director Olatunde Osunsanmi, Zoë Steiner, Kerrice Brooks, Secret Hideout’s Aaron Baiers, showrunner Noga Landau, franchise boss Alex Kurtzman. Front: George Hawkins, Karim Diané, Sandro Rosta, Bella Shepard, Holly Hunter, Paul Giamatti, Oded Fehr. (CBS Studios)
Not pictured for today’s table-read photo (bottom image) are Tig Notaro and Mary Wiseman, likely indicating they will not be making an appearance in the Starfleet Academy’s first episode — which will be directed by Alex Kurtzman.
The series is billed as:
Star Trek: Starfleet Academy introduces viewers to a young group of cadets who come together to pursue a common dream of hope and optimism. Under the watchful and demanding eyes of their instructors, they discover what it takes to become Starfleet officers as they navigate blossoming friendships, explosive rivalries, first loves, and a new enemy that threatens both the Academy and the Federation itself.
There’s still a long way to go until Star Trek: Starfleet Academy lands on our screens, so stick around for all the latest news on the upcoming series as it breaks!
In addition, stick around to hear Sam reflect on Star Trek’s impact following Congresswoman Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez’s comments this week on Late Night With Stephen Colbertabout the influence of Kathryn Janeway growing up, and Alex’s reflections on why it’s appealing to own production made and screen used props from the Star Trek shows.
WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, 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!
In “The Devourer of All Things,” Star Trek: Prodigy delivers a magnificently fantastical two-parter that ups the stakes and elevates the show into the stratosphere. The natural continuation of the overarching time paradox dilemma is explored and expanded in unexpectedly delightful ways. Its blend of half high-concept sci-fi and half classic creature-feature is invigorating.
Our crew has finally arrived at the mysterious coordinates, and we have earned the Enterprise theme reference Gwyn (Ella Purnell) makes in her personal log as it has, indeed, been a long road. And at first it seems like it was all for naught, as they do not see a planet where it should be. We are treated to a delicious run of technobabble as they sort it out.
First, our resident science officer Rok-Tahk (Rylee Alazraqui) notices that the asteroids appear to be orbiting some kind of strange attractor — which made my fluid dynamics-loving heart happy. And then when Gwyn hypothesizes that the whole planet could be out of phase, like her, Rok comes up with the Star Trek solution, involving remodulating the shields using the transporter’s Heisenberg compensators. I could eat it with a spoon.
(CBS Studios)
When the planet reveals itself, the Infinity touches down in an expansive structure that truly does seem to be of both the past and the future. It’s beautiful: meticulously engineered and dusty, sands of time flowing off the geometric edges. It’s later referred to as a ziggurat, which was honestly a new word to both my kids and to me. I love that! To my kids, the ziggurat had the feeling of a temple from The Legend of Zelda series and the sense of foreboding as our crew tentatively walked around added to the feeling that this was definitely going to turn out to be a boss-battle level.
They come across a giant statue of what appears to be a random alien to the crew and to my kids, but to us older fans is immediately recognizable as The Traveler. We hear echoes of a conversation about leaving this plane or staying to save it. When I watched initially, I has assumed it was pieced together from old dialogue, but I was tickled to see the name Eric Menyuk in the credits. A very surreal, cool cameo.
And the surreality rolls on, as our crew comes across a 20th century Earth vault door (Doesn’t every ziggurat have one?). Jankom (Jason Mantzoukas) prepares to bust it open, but no need as the door begins to open on its own. My kids had absolutely no idea who was going to appear on the other side of that door. By this time, I had figured it out, and yet, still, when grown Wesley Crusher (Wil Wheaton) introduces himself I have to admit I felt a little goosebumpy!
My kids could tell that this was a BIG reveal, so we paused when they asked me who that was. My oldest was delighted when I told her he was around her age when he was on Star Trek: The Next Generation and he was allowed to FLY THE SHIP — instant cred right there! But my quick intro turned out to be unnecessary as Rok covers the highlights and Wesley fills in the rest.
(CBS Studios)
The addition of Wesley Crusher is like a piece of the puzzle that I didn’t even realize was missing from the show, but ends up completing it. Of course we need Star Trek’s original prodigy to help mentor our next next generation. And what a great mentor he’s grown to be. He’s a guide and a guardian, the only timeless being who hasn’t given up on our reality. Dal (Brett Gray) and company might have been a little more weary, but my kids implicitly trusted him from the start. From his mission, to his cool look, to his hyper manner of speaking about complicated things, everything about him endeared him to my kids right away.
Wil Wheaton gives his best performance as Wesley Crusher to date. He plays it loose and confident in a way that makes perfect sense for a man who has taken the journey Wesley has taken in his life. He manages to evoke the growth of the character while maintaining the core of this person we’ve known, and he’s played, since he was a teenager. The way he made his voice crack on lines like “my mom lives here” felt like putting on your favorite old sweater.
He’s aided, of course, by the characteristically sharp and snappy dialogue of Jennifer Muro, who wrote Part I and other equally dynamic episodes this season. Here her talent for elevating characters helps Wesley come off as equal parts genius and unhinged in the best possible way.
When I was a young person watching The Next Generation, Ensign Wesley Crusher was my stand-in. I wanted to be him (or be his best friend and science with him, either one would work!). And now, for my kids, Traveler Wesley Crusher is like the cool uncle who’s going to let you stay up late and eat junk food and who you know you can trust with anything. I can not overstate just how deeply I felt the torch-passing of this beloved character from myself to my own next generation. Truly, a gift.
(CBS Studios)
After we meet our resident time traveler, he gives the gang some insights into the nature of how time works within the Star Trek universe. Another great Prodigy explainer graphic comes to life as he talks about how we are in the Prime timeline and there are many branches with things like alternate timelines and different planes of existence. Name drops of the Mirror Universe, the Narada incursion (aka the Kelvin Timeline film series), Fluidic Space (from Voyager), the Mycelial Plane from Discovery (you’re not supposed to know about that one!), and the Temporal Wars add a really great Star Trek touch to the otherwise generic sci-fi concept of a multi-verse.
Prodigy once again does a fantastic job of breaking down complicated concepts in ways kids new to such things can understand. My crew had no trouble understanding the situation with such a great breakdown and visual aids. And honestly: I think the reoccurring sweater metaphor helped! After the fifth or sixth mention, my daughter asked “Why is he so obsessed with sweaters?” and I laughed so hard. We paused again and had a really great time looking up pictures of young Wesley and his unparalleled fashion from TNG. They liked that his look now incorporated one of the old designs. “It looks good now!” my daughter laughed.
As our Traveler tries to figure out the next move, time stops once again for everyone — except the extra-temporal Gwyn and Wesley. And this time, we get to meet the cosmic scavengers threatening our timeline. They are called the Loom, and they are terrifying. They don’t just end your life, they erase your entire existence. And they are here. The creature design on the Loom is top notch. Every detail — from the chill inducing chittering sounds and screeches they make, to the way they just SHOW UP because they are drawn to your presence — ups the sense of dread the surrounds them.
(CBS Studios)
Visually, they are stunning: giant monsters covered in tentacles that wave like flames; color-changing dragons with tree frog arms and terrifying faces that look like they are covered with ancient masks. The tentacles themselves are thick and appendage-like, yet appear almost woven out of yarn, as if each one was forged out of a trophy from a piece of the fabric of existence they have destroyed. They are stunningly cool.
In keeping with their Temple-like surroundings my kids stuck with the Zelda theme and took to calling these guys “Time Blight Gannons” (in homage to the natural force bad guys in Breath of the Wild: Wind Blight, Thunder Blight, Fire Blight, and Water Blight Gannons), which is really a testament to how fantastic the Loom design is.
Gwyn and Wesley put temporal bands on the arms of the rest of the gang and they all make their escape: straight into Gary Seven’s apartment from “Assignment Earth”. Which really makes perfect sense now, but I never would have guessed in a million years. Amazing!
While our gang is safe for the moment, Admiral Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) and the Voyager-A are following the Infinty’s path from the last few episodes. Janeway receives another call from Admiral Jellico (Ronny Cox), who orders her back to Earth again. For the first part of her response, we are treated to Janeway’s three rules of captaining, first heard in the Voyager episode “Dark Frontier.” That really feels like it belongs in Prodigy. Next, some fun humor as Janeway perfectly executes a fake static and hang up maneuver— very satisfying! By the time they find the planet, the Loom have already arrived.
(CBS Studios)
Tysess (Daveed Diggs) prepares an away team and brave Mej’el (Michaela Dietz) volunteers to go, as she is the only one on board with a psychic link to Zero (Angus Imrie) which might make them easier to find. Some really great creature-feature action as Tysess, Maj’el, and some red shirt named Middleton tip toe through the ziggurat and we get glimpses of the Loom scurrying around. And then we get a taste of the full terror we are up against as poor Middleton becomes the first victim of the Loom. He disintegrates out of existence. Chilling! Even more chilling when Tysess reports the loss to Janeway and she has no idea who Middleton is. He never existed at all.
Maj’el makes a bold move worthy of a Trek hero and disobeys orders so she can stay behind and find the crew. She stumbles across Wesley’s temporal chamber and tries to contact Zero.
Meanwhile, back at Gary Seven’s pad, Wesley enjoys a mango juice. He mentions an old Earth record: Miles Davis’ “Kind of Blue”, which is a very worthy addition to the small canon of real world pop culture referenced in Star Trek. They are trying to wait out the Loom. In a very trippy moment the old fashioned telephone rings and it’s Maj’el asking for help as the Loom closes in on her.
Wesley doesn’t think they should save her, as it could expose their position to the Loom, but luckily, Dal isn’t having it and opens a portal for her. A nice moment of game recognizing game as Dal commends Maj’el on her rash decision making. Another nice moment as Maj’el and Zero reunite when she literally falls into their arms.
But only a moment, as the Loom have found them. Through another portal they go, in the closet, another lovingly recreated detail straight out of “Assignment Earth.” But the temple — the trans-dimensional time ziggurat, to be more specific — is overrun. They try to make their way to the Infinity, but it too is overrun with Loom and eventual poofs out of existence as well.
There’s no where to go and no more moves to make as the crew are surrounded by Loom. Until Janeway goes full hero-mode and lures the Loom to Voyager, buying them, as Wesley puts it, “their only shot to fix the Universe”. It’s incredibly satisfying to witness Janeway spring into action like this again. Furrowing her brows the way she did in live action. Kate Mulgrew is perfection as we get a “Stay away from my crew” and “Fire!” in the authoritative and commanding way we were lucky enough to experience so often in Star Trek: Voyager.
This sequence is incredibly suspenseful, aided by Nami Melumad’s fantastic score. There are real world consequences as crewmen get blinked out of existence and the rest try to out run the Loom making their way through the ship. The EMH (Robert Picardo) is building phase discriminators, but he’s a doctor, not an assembly line, and he doesn’t have enough for the whole crew yet. It appears nothing can stop the Loom, not even a level ten forcefield.
(CBS Studios)
Counselor Noem (Jason Alexander) bravely steps between the Loom and Maj’el’s Nova Squadron friends and they appear doomed, until Janeway goes full action-hero-mode and lures the Loom away from the Voyager and to her shuttle, which crashes onto the ziggurat after some hot-shot moves.
Janeway’s action-hero mode comes complete with her tank top from her fantastic Die Hard-style episode, “Macrocosm”. The thing that I love about that is that it is completely out of nowhere and unnecessary in such a delightful way. In “Macrocosm,” the ship was hotter than normal so she took her jacket off. Here, she does it just as a little gift to us, to signal her giving it all for her crew. I squealed with joy. My kids wondered what I was reacting to. “That’s what Janeway wears when she’s being a badass!” I told them. They didn’t care but it was a detail I certainly appreciated.
Our crew has made it back to Wesley’s chamber and this time we get references to Boreth time crystals and the Orb of Time, and that’s more than enough for me to believe in the tech of Wesley’s destiny calculator here. He gives them the warning not to look at the stream, or they will see their own future. Anyone surprised that Dal peeked? All three of my kids said that they would peek as well. I guess I’m too traumatized by Christopher Pike’s run in with a Boreth crystal to be so bold, as I voted “no spoilers.”
(CBS Studios)
The machine doesn’t work until he adds Maj’el to the equation and, as we all have felt since we first met her, she takes her rightful place as an official member of our crew. The portal to the next part of the journey opens and — with Janeway’s blessing — all seven step through. And we get one hell of a parting shot as through the portal are the Protostar —and Chakotay (Robert Beltran).
The end of “The Devourer of All Things” marks the midway point of the season — what an epic ten episode arc in and of itself! So much Trek, in every aspect of that word, has been packed into such relatively short episodes. The setup for the second half is clear in both the stakes and the solution and I feel very lucky that with the whole season dropping at once, I only had to wait as long as it took Netflix to load the next episode to continue the journey.
(CBS Studios)
Stay tuned for our next Star Trek: Prodigy review, covering Season 2’s “The Last Flight of the Protostar” two-parter!
Star Trek: Prodigy Season 2 is available to stream now on Netflix globally (excluding-Canada, Nordics, CEE, Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Poland, Russia, Belarus, and Mainland China). The show can also be viewed on SkyShowtime in the Nordics, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and Central and Eastern Europe.
We’ve got a couple of recent Star Trek product announcements to recap today, as there’s news about a new game, a new Blu-ray release, and some big news for you Funko POP! collectors.
First up: as was previously announced back in July,Star Trek: Prodigy Season 2 is headed to Blu-ray this November — and this week we got some of the details about the bonus features included in the new set.
Along with all 20 episodes from Prodigy Season 2, the collection will also feature these behind-the-scenes additions:
Producing Prodigy: The Legacy — Producers and Wil Wheaton discuss creating an introduction for new audiences of Prodigy, all the pieces of legacy Star Trek, and how Prodigy fits into the greater canon.
The Odyssey of Prodigy — Producers discuss the Protostar crew coming from being heroes on their ship to becoming part of something much bigger in Season 2, and Wil Wheaton speaks on his character Wesley Crusher coming back to Star Trek and how that return affected him.
Covers to LOWER DECKS #1 by Derek Charm, Megan Huang, and Chris Fenoglio. (IDW)
Star Trek: Lower Decks may be coming to a conclusion on television this fall, but IDW Publishing will keep the USS Cerritos at warp for a while longer — as the longtime Trek comics publisher has announced that a new ongoing Lower Decks comic series will kick off this fall.
Writer Ryan North and artist Derek Charm will helm the new Star Trek: Lower Decks ongoing series, launching in November, which will feature “episodic storytelling with each tale presented by a different artist.” While Charm will design the inaugural issue, he’ll be joined by artist Jack Lawrence and more as each issue proceeds.
“Just when you thought we couldn’t go lower… we’re BACK with the first ever ONGOING LOWER DECKS series,” proudly stated IDW Group Editor Heather Antos. “Just like the fans out there, we too want more LOWER DECKS and this time we’re giving it to you tenfold! Ryan North is showing us just how deep of a Trek nerd he is with these stories, and paired with the comedic geniuses of Derek Charm, Jack Lawrence and more on art duties for a rotating cast of ‘episodic’ issues, this series is a mission so fun that even the Lower Deckers themselves won’t want to miss it!”
Fans can preorder Star Trek: Lower Decks #1 at their local comic shop until October 7, and the first issue will hit stores on November 13.
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(Photo: Modiphius)
Modiphius has announced a new Star Trek: Lower Decks card game called Buffer Time, set to beam down to players this fall. Here’s the official description:
In this push-your-luck, low-stakes card game, 2-6 players must work together to complete their menial assignments while also making time for some well-earned rest and relaxation. Can the lower deckers squeeze enough buffer time into their duty rotation before the bridge crew figures out what’s going on?
Project manager Jim Johnson said: “Isn’t Mariner free to give you a quote? No? Fine, I’ll do it. It’s Star Trek. It’s Star Trek: Lower Decks. It’s a fast-playing card game that’ll have you laughing and crying. I’m super excited to be able to expand our Star Trek license into card games, and I hope you check it out and have fun with your group playing this one! Just watch out for those senior officers–they’re allergic to buffer time and will find new menial tasks for you and your fellow lower deckers to complete.”
This pick-up-and-play game will give both die-hard Star Trek fans and casual party game fans an easy way to enjoy the humor of Star Trek: Lower Decks, which will be available for £16 / $20.
(Photo: Modiphius)
Star Trek: Lower Decks – Buffer Time: The Card Game will be released through Asmodeelater in 2024.
The figures are available for preorder now at a price of $11.99, and are expected to ship in November. This is just the most recent Trek collection of POP! figures to join the massive product line, following past spotlights on the Original Series, The Next Generation, Discovery, Lower Decks, and the Kelvin Timeline crew.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for the latest in Star Trek product news!
We’re wrapping our coverage from San Diego Comic Con today with a bang — as Factory Entertainment generously shared their time with us during the busy convention to give us an up-close and personal look at three of their upcoming high-end Star Trek prop replicas.
With a special thanks to Factory Entertainment’s creative director Barry Eldridge, we’re today bringing you a special 15-minute preview of the company’s upcoming Star Trek V: The Final Frontier Starfleet “assault phaser,” their eagerly-anticipated Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Type II phaser, and the recently-announced Star Trek: The Next Generation medical tricorder.
In the presentation, Eldrige showcases some of the decisions that went into making each prop replica, areas in which the company added some extra flair to areas not fully complete in the original prop production (like the tiny Type I inside the assault phaser), and collaboration with the Strange New Worlds production team to make that phaser even more accurate than what’s been seen in the series to date.
He also goes into detail about some of the manufacturing limitations that have resulted in a few controversial deviations from accuracy in the Next Generation tricorder, including the screen dimensions, paint color, and why the device has an unusual raised power indicator.
We brought you a roundup of many of the new Star Trek prop replicas that Factory Entertainment showcased at last month’s San Diego Comic Con and Star Trek Las Vegas events — and one of them just became available for preorder.
The company is visiting Star Trek: The Next Generation once more to bring collectors an all-metal replica of Geordi La Forge’s iconic VISOR prop, worn by actor LeVar Burton during all seven seasons of the television show (and the Star Trek: Generations feature film).
Geordi’s visor in ‘Encounter at Farpoint,’ in Season 2, and in Season 5. (CBS Studios)
The VISOR prop was somewhat redesigned after the first season of the show — eliminating its original hair barrette look to a more industrial construction. The second design also was modified over the years with different levels of metal reflectivity, and the red reflective circles near Burton’s ears shifted position as well.
Factory Entertainment’s VISOR replica in its display case. (Photo: TrekCore.com)Factory Entertainment’s VISOR replica at San Diego Comic Con. (Photo: TrekCore.com)
That second general design of the prop is what Factory Entertainment has targeted as its “blended execution” of the VISOR props used in Seasons 2-5 As the company notes in the product description:
Multiple props were produced, with various revisions and changes made to the design over its long tenure. There was no single definitive VISOR prop.
Factory Entertainment’s VISOR prop replica has been created after careful study of resources in the Paramount archives, as well as authenticated props in private collections. The replica is intended to capture all VISOR props as they appeared in seasons 2 through 5 of Star Trek: The Next Generation, in a single blended execution.
The frame of the replica is cast from an aluminum alloy, while the rods and wire mesh are made from brass. It also features magnetic red neural output pods with screen accurate red prismatic tape, with two options: protruding or recessed, as seen on screen in different iterations of the prop.
While the original prop was adhered to Burton’s face using small filaments which ran behind the actor’s ears, Factory Entertainment’s metal replica will come with a display case and stand only — so if you want to wear it, it’s up to you to figure out how to make that work!
Here are some more photos of the company’s VISOR prop replica (which measures 6.25″ x 5″ x 1″), as well as the included display stand and acrylic case (which measures 10″ x 10″ x 8″).
Factory Entertainment — STAR TREK: TNG Geordi La Forge VISOR Replica
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The VISOR prop replica will be limited to a production run of only 500pc, and is available for preorder today — expected to ship this winter, it runs at a cost of $499.99 (after $50 deposit).
Check back to TrekCore shortly for our hands-on look at some of Factory Entertainment’s next full-electronics Star Trek prop replicas!
One of the surprises out of this year’s San Diego Comic Con extravaganza was the announcement that a live-action Star Trek comedy series is in development — coming out of a collaboration between writer/director Justin Simien and Star Trek: Lower Decks star (and Starfleet Academy) writer Tawny Newsome.
The gestating series is said to be tonally similar to The Office or Parks and Recreation, officially described as a show in which “Federation outsiders serving a gleaming resort planet find out their day-to-day exploits are being broadcast to the entire quadrant.”
Now, in a new interview with TV Line (conducted shortly after the July 27 SDCC panel), Simien shared how he came to be involved with the Star Trek franchise — and some of the Trek inspiration that lead to the potential new television show.
It was actually very organic. I’ve been a ‘Star Trek’ fan my whole life; I was a Trekker before I was in any other nerd category.
Around the time of ‘Discovery,’ I just sort of befriended the folks that were making it – Alex Kurtzman, and Tawny [Newsome] was hosting this aftershow podcast thing that I was on because I was a nerd.
Simien was referring to his May 2021 appearance on The Pod Directive, the official Star Trek franchise podcast:
Over time, that developed into us having a comedy pitch for ‘Star Trek’ that really grew out of our organic love for those bottle episodes — especially on ‘Deep Space Nine’ — where no adventure would happen but it was mostly a character-drama-slash-comedy.
We just sort of kept riffing, and here we are. We are in development. We are in a very early stage, we don’t even have a title… but I don’t know, it’s feeling really good, I have to say.
Simien continued, sharing how the show’s pitch eschews the longform storytelling which is part of many mainstream television projects these days — including, of course, Star Trek: Discovery and Star Trek: Picard — for more traditional, focused stories.
[With television seasons now] you’ve got thirteen episodes and you’ve got to keep that scripted arc going – but we kind of longed for those episodes that exist inside of like, a 39-episode season, you know, where you had time to hang out with Quark for a second. We came up with a pitch out of that space, and it’s going.
DS9 is a big, big inspiration, but also – and this is true for everything [I’ve done], true for ‘Dear White People,’ even – those episodes of ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’ where it wasn’t plot-heavy; it was more like you were with a character for a day and you got to see their perspective on a bigger thing.
Those were always my favorite episodes. So we decided to make a show that was made up of our favorite parts.
With a series this early in development, it may be quite some time until more news about its structure, characters, or even title becomes known — but when there’s more to share about this live-action comedy project, you can be sure to find it here at TrekCore.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest Star Trek franchise news!
Announced today by Lakeshore Records, the second volume of Star Trek: Picard music — by composers Stephen Barton and Frederick Wiedmann — will be available for digital download this Friday, August 16.
Lakeshore Records is set to release Star Trek: Picard Season 3, Volume 2—Original Series Soundtrack digitally on August 16 with music by Stephen Barton and Frederik Wiedmann who are sharing another volume of their fresh take on the classic themes that provided a thrilling backdrop to the third and final season of the beloved series.
STAR TREK: PICARD streams exclusively on Paramount+ in the U.S. and is distributed concurrently by Paramount Global Content Distribution on Amazon Prime Video in more than 200 countries and territories. In Canada, it airs on Bell Media’s CTV Sci-Fi Channel and streams on Crave.
Here’s a preview from the new Volume 2 collection called “Welcome to the Enterprise,” which played in “The Last Generation” as the Enterprise-D escapes from the exploding Borg hive and the crew reunites on the bridge following their ordeal.
In addition to the already-released 45 tracks in Volume 1, the new Volume 2 collection includes 38 additional tracks from the show’s final season.
01. Assimilated Delta
02. Captain’s Log
03. Missing The Chase
04. You Have To Go
05. Old Fashioned Road Trip
06. You Are A Warrior
07. Son & Shrike Revealed
08. Basically A Saint
09. Legendary Admiral
10. Captain No
11. Worf Splinters In
12. Titan On The Run
13. Commander Seven
14. Jack Crushes It
15. The Relentless Shrike
16. Seventeen Seconds
17. Wolf 359
18. What We Do Best
19. The Only Family I Need
20. Ro’s Investigation
21. Worf Reunion, No Hugging
22. To Burgle Daystrom
23. The Marvelous Moriarty
24. An Enterprising Titan
25. Ol’ Yellow Eyes Is Back
26. Imposter Voyager
27. I Am Vadic
28. Jackstral Projection
29. Finally Reunited
30. The Son Of Locutus
31. Her Majesty Returns
32. Futile Resistance
33. An Honor Serving With You All
34. Future’s End
35. Captain Seven
36. Welcome To The Enterprise
37. Star Trek Legacy
38. End Credits