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WeeklyTrek Podcast #254 — The STAR TREK UNIVERSE Unloads Lots of News at SDCC 2024

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek — TrekCore’s news podcast — host Alex Perry is joined by Lee Hutchison to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.
 

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

In addition, stick around to hear Lee’s opinion that Star Trek should always continue to push boundaries and explore new types of show, and Alex’s theory that a Star Trek show without Star Trek in the title is near (again)… and why that’s a good thing.

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!

STAR TREK: PRODIGY Season 2 Lands on Blu-ray in November

San Diego Comic Con weekend is just wrapping up here on the West Coast, but even with everything that came out of the Hall H Star Trek Universe panel, there’s still a bit more news beaming down!
 
This morning’s Star Trek: Prodigy panel — featuring Kate Mulgrew (Janeway), Brett Gray (Dal), and showrunners Kevin and Dan Hageman — didn’t have any news about a continuation of the series, but did include a screening an episode of the most recent season (“Cracked Mirror”) and answering questions from fans in the packed-house audience.
 

Kate Mulgrew and Brett Gray. (TrekCore)

Kevin and Dan Hageman. (TrekCore)

Those in attendance got to leave with a pair of fun, exclusive Murf-colored sunglasses… and were the first to hear that Star Trek: Prodigy Season 2 will be available for on-demand purchase beginning July 29 — and that the year’s 20 new episodes will arrive on Bu-ray and DVD on November 12.

SDCC-exclusive Murf-colored sunglasses, branded with the PRODIGY logo. (TrekCore)

Specific details on the Season 2 Blu-ray bonus features have not yet been announced, but CBS Studios have release this short clip from the collection’s bonus features:

You can preorder Star Trek: Prodigy Season 2 on Blu-ray now.

New STAR TREK Live-Action Comedy Series in Development from Justin Simien and LOWER DECKS’ Tawny Newsome

We just got a firehose of Star Trek Universe updates in San Diego Comic Con’s Hall H panel, with updates on what’s next with Strange New Worlds, Lower Decks, Starfleet Academy, and Section 31 — but in the midst of all that, Paramount+ has announced that ANOTHER Trek series is brewing!
 
Still in a very early development state, according to the discussion in today’s panel event, the live-action “action comedy” series would come from writer-director Justin Simien (Dear White People) and Lower Decks star Tawny Newsome, who also wrote on the Starfleet Academy series. Newsome and Simien, joined by Trek franchise boss Alex Kurtzman, would serve as writers and executive producers of the series.
 

If the show is picked up for active production, the still-unnamed series would focus on “Federation outsiders serving a gleaming resort planet who find out their day-to-day exploits are being broadcast to the entire quadrant.”

Beyond that, there isn’t too much known about the series — as the trio were deliberately vague during the SDCC panel — though Newsome did share that the show would be set in the post-Star Trek: Picard 25th century era.

Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest news from the Star Trek Universe!

Watch the First Trailer for Michelle Yeoh’s STAR TREK: SECTION 31

The big Star Trek Universe panel wrapped up today with a first look at the upcoming Michelle Yeoh-lead Star Trek: Section 31 movie — more than five years after the idea of a Emperor Georgiou spin-off project was first announced.
 
Section 31 director Olatunde Osunsanmi was joined on the Hall H stage by Trek franchise boss Alex Kurtzman and cast members Omari Hardwick, Sam Richardson and Kacey Rohl who spoke about the upcoming film set to hit Paramount+ in early 2025.
 
The teaser was introduced by the film’s star, Academy Award winner Michelle Yeoh, by way of a special video message for the assembled SDCC audience.

The teaser gives viewers a taste of one of the Section 31 team’s missions — an action-filled visit to some kind of space nightclub, with a spaceship chase sequence — along with a hint of some of the flashbacks to Emperor Georgiou’s initial rise to power, growing up in the Mirror Universe.

Some of the cast featured in the teaser includes Kacey Rohl as Rachel Garrett (eventual captain of the Enterprise-C), Omari Hardwick, Sam Richardson (playing a Chameloid), Sven Ruygrok as a Vulcan, Humberly Gonzalez as a Deltan, and Robert Kazinsky as some sort of technologically-enhanced humanoid — perhaps an ex-Borg?

Kacey Rohl. (Paramount+)
Omari Hardwick. (Paramount+)
Sam Richardson. (Paramount+)
Sven Ruygrok. (Paramount+)
Humberly Gonzalez. (Paramount+)
Robert Kazinsky. (Paramount+)

Also joining the cast is actor Miku Martineau, who portrays the younger version of Philippa Georgiou.

Miku Martineau. (Paramount+)

What this teaser does not give us is a taste of when the movie is expected to be set — the early 24th century, in the years after Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country and several decades before the events of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Aside from Garrett’s mention of Starfleet and a few familiar Trek aliens, there’s little connection to the “Lost Era” time period we’ve been expecting since Kacey Rohl’s character was announced back in March.

More news and footage from the film will roll out in the next several months, so we’re likely to get a wider look at the world of Star Trek: Section 31 before its 2025 debut.

Star Trek: Section 31 is in post-production now.

STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY Recruits VOYAGER’s Bob Picardo, DISCOVERY’s Mary Wiseman, Tig Notaro, and Oded Fehr

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy doesn’t go into production until later this summer, but the series made major news at today’s San Diego Comic Con Star Trek Universe panel, with some casting news that’s both very expected… and incredibly surprising.
 
Academy showrunners Alex Kurtzman and Noga Landau announced that Star Trek: Voyager (and Star Trek: Prodigy) actor Robert Picardo will be joining the upcoming series, bringing his holographic Doctor character back to live-action for the first time since 2001’s Voyager finale.
 

Robert Picardo. (Paramount+)

Picardo will be joining the show as a series regular. Set some 800 years after the events of Voyager and Prodigy, it’s unclear as of this writing exactly which version of The Doctor will be part of Academy — it could be the same old EMH we know and love, just eight centuries later, the duplicated EMH copy which survived far in to the future (through the events of “Living Witness”), or some amalgam of the two holo-programs.

(It would make the most narrative sense to be the “original” Doctor — who lived through the events of Voyager and Prodigy — but we’ll find out soon to be sure!)

Mary Wiseman, Tig Notaro, and Oded Fehr. (Paramount+)

Also announced was the long-expected return of Mary Wiseman, reprising her Star Trek: Discovery role as Lieutenant Sylvia Tilly in a guest-starring capacity. It’s been perhaps the most obvious bit of casting for the new series so far, as the character started working at Starfleet Academy during Discovery’s fourth season, and that show’s series finale established that Tilly would eventually spend decades as part of the Academy faculty.

In addition, both Tig Notaro (caustic engineer Jett Reno) and Oded Fehr (Admiral Charles Vance) will return to continue their Discovery roles in the upcoming series. Notaro will be billed as a series regular, like her time on Discovery, and Fehr will again be a recurring guest star.

Gina Yashere. (Paramount+)

In a final new casting announcement (made yesterday through StarTrek.com), comedian Gina Yashere will appear in a recurring role as one of Starfleet Academy’s instructors.

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Because the series has not yet begun active filming, there was no new trailer or other footage featured during the Hall H panel, but Kurtzman and Landau did share this lovely recording of the younger Academy cast — Kerrice Brooks, Bella Shepard, George Hawkins, Karim Diané and Zoë Steiner — being told they scored their parts in the new show.

Picardo, Wiseman, Notaro, Fehr, and Yashere join the five cadet actors in Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, along with previously announced stars Holly Hunter and Paul Giamatti.

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy heads into production later this summer — but in the meantime, be sure to check back soon for news about the Michelle Yeoh-led Star Trek: Section 31 movie!

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS’ Fifth and Final Season Arrives October 24, First Teaser Trailer Out Today

Star Trek: Lower Decks’ animated adventures are coming to a close this October, as Paramount+ announced the Season 5 release date during today’s big the Star Trek Universe San Diego Comic Con panel.
 
Joining Star Trek franchise leader Alex Kurtzman to debut today’s trailer was Lower Decks creator/showrunner Mike McMahan, along with castmembers Tawny Newsome (Mariner), Jack Quaid (Boimler), Noël Wells (Tendi), and Jerry O’Connell (Ransom).
 
October 24 brings a two-episode premiere for the final Lower Decks outing — which means the show will end a week ahead of Christmas — and today’s new teaser trailer skips right over Star Trek V with a fantastic homage to the original Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country teaser trailer from 1991.
 
(Boimler even calls the Cerritos crew “very important” — or VI!)

 

While Tendi (Noel Wells) was forced to return to Orion at the end of last year’s story, Season 5 of Star Trek: Lower Decks finds the USS Cerritos crew on a new mission: repairing the fabric of space itself.

In season five of STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS, the crew of the U.S.S. Cerritos is tasked with closing “space potholes” – subspace rifts which are causing chaos in the Alpha Quadrant. Pothole duty would be easy for Jr. Officers Mariner, Boimler, Tendi and Rutherford…if they didn’t also have to deal with an Orion war, furious Klingons, diplomatic catastrophes, murder mysteries and scariest of all: their own career aspirations.

 

This upcoming season on Paramount+ is a celebration of this underdog crew who are dangerously close to being promoted out of the lower decks and into strange new Starfleet roles.

Here are a few new images from the upcoming released by the studio in today’s announcement, showcasing Tendi back with her people, Ransom (Jerry O’Connell) and Boimler (Jack Quaid) heading on vacation, and Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) terrifying Mariner (Tawny Newsome).

(CBS Studios / Paramount+)
(CBS Studios / Paramount+)
(CBS Studios / Paramount+)

Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 5 will be hear before you know it — but in the meantime, stay tuned for the rest of today’s Star Trek Universe news out of San Diego!

Watch Five Logical Minutes of STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Season 3 — Plus, Roger Korby Casting News!

We’re still months away from of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’  2025 return — but to whet your appetite for the show’s upcoming third season, Paramount+ today released an extended clip from the next year of Enterprise adventures.
 
The new clip was unveiled during today’s Star Trek Universe panel at San Diego Comic Con, where franchise boss Alex Kurtzman was joined by showrunners Akiva Goldsman and and Henry Alonso Myers, plus actors Ethan Peck (Spock) and Rebecca Romijn (Number One).
 

 
In the Season 3 clip, an undercover mission requires Captain Pike (Anson Mount), Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding), La’an (Christina Chong), Christine Chapel (Jess Bush) to biologically transform into Vulcans so that they — and Spock (Peck) — can infiltrate and repair some kind of malfunctioning planetary base.

Using the Kerkhovian serum developed to restore Spock’s Vulcan biology in last season’s “Charades,” Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) and Pelia (Carol Kane) watch in surprise as their crewmates are transformed into Vulcans — easily complete their mission, to the shock of Number One (Rebecca Romijn) and Ortegas (Melissa Navia) — and return to the ship… only to find that their humanity can’t be easily restored.

Pike (Anson Mount), Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding), La’an (Christina Chong), and Chapel (Jess Bush). (Paramount+)
Spock (Ethan Peck), M’Benga (Babs Olusunmokun), and Pelia (Carol Kane). (Paramount+)
M’Benga, the Vulcan-ized crew, and Number One (Rebecca Romijn). (Paramount+)

In addition to the Season 3 clip, the studio also announced that Irish actor Cillian O’Sullivan has been cast as Dr. Roger Korby — mentioned last season, and the eventual fiancée to one Nurse Chapel, as established in the Original Series episode “What Are Little Girls Made Of?”

Cillian O’Sullivan (left), original Korby actor Michael Strong (right).

While the character’s dismal fate is revealed in that classic episode, Strange New Worlds will explore the beginning of the Chapel/Korby relationship as she spends time studying archeological medicine under his tutelage.

Season 3 of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is in post-production now, expected to return to Paramount+ in 2025.

Stick around for all the rest of today’s Star Trek Universe news as the big Hall H panel at San Diego Comic Con continues!

Nubeo Watches Announces STAR TREK Franchise Collaboration

Luxury watch company Nubeo has set a course for the final frontier with the company’s first collaboration with the Star Trek franchise.
 
Nubeo has previously aligned with with both NASA and the classic arcade game franchise Space Invaders for themed watch designs celebrating each partnership, and now they are bringing Star Trek into their portfolio with a set of four franchise-inspired releases.
 
The new Nubeo x Star Trek watches are available in four colors — “Explorer Yellow,” “Danger Red,” “Warp Blue,” and “Beam Black” — and are limited to a total run 200 pieces per color (800 watches in total).
 

 
Here’s the company’s description of the new watches, which also has glow-in-the-dark elements for nighttime viewing.

Nubeo proudly announces its inaugural partnership with the iconic Star Trek franchise, marking a historic leap into the cosmos of pop culture. Introducing the Magellan Automatic Star Trek Starfleet Limited Edition—a collection that embodies the spirit of exploration, adventure, and innovation.

 

Each timepiece in this limited-edition collection pays homage to the intrepid spirit of Starfleet, capturing the essence of humanity’s boundless quest for discovery. With four striking variants — Explorer Yellow, Danger Red, Warp Blue, and Beam Black — the collection offers a unique blend of style and functionality. Each watch is crafted with 316L stainless steel, a hardened mineral lens with anti-reflective coating, Swiss luminous hands and indexes, and a durable rubber strap, all powered by a reliable Japanese automatic movement.

(Photos: Nubeo)

Full disclosure: Nubeo sent us one of the new watches to check out in person, and we’ve shared some photos below.

This is most certainly a men’s watch — with a heavy with a 120-gram weight and large 48mm x 17mm dimensions. It’s also, in our opinion, a bit over-designed with the various elements (especially the yellow edition), making it difficult to read the time. Of the four versions, the blue or black-and-white editions are probably the most legible… or at least, they’re more subtle than the bright yellow or red designs!

The watch and hard-case packaging include many familiar franchise assets, though there’s a bit of an odd jumble of elements from different eras: the original Star Trek series title treatment on the case and watch, a replica of The Motion Picture refit Enterprise saucer on the rear face of the watch, the 32nd century Starfleet emblem (from Star Trek: Discovery) on the watch face and edition card — and for some reason, the Enterprise-D on case’s inner artwork.

(It seems like there should have been a bit more direction there from the Star Trek licensing team.)

Like most of the company’s watches, also has a luxury-level price point: it retails for $940, which is a big ask and clearly puts it out of reach for most collectors. It’s also a little disappointing that there isn’t a women’s-sized variant of the design, with smaller dimensions. Nubeo’s announcement calls this an “inaugural” partnership with the Star Trek franchise, so perhaps that may come in a later release.

If this type of high-end wristwatch is your kind of thing, though, you can order one of the new Star Trek watches at Nubeo’s website starting today.

Keep watching TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!

INTERVIEW — Time, Space, Thought: Wil Wheaton Revives Wesley Crusher for STAR TREK: PRODIGY’s Newest Adventure

One of the biggest surprises about Star Trek: Prodigy’s second season was the inclusion of long-lost Wesley Crusher, the young Enterprise-D helmsman who went off with The Traveler to explore other planes of existence at the end of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
 
Though he made a cameo appearance in Star Trek: Picard’s Season 2 finale back in 2022, plans for the modern Star Trek franchise to revisit the character began with Prodigy, as series creators Kevin and Dan Hageman told us in earlier this month — the character had not been seen since 1994’s “Journey’s End” (not counting, of course, a deleted scene cut from Star Trek: Nemesis).
 
We caught up with Star Trek’s own lord of time — actor Wil Wheaton — to talk about his return to the Trek universe, connecting his appearance on Picard with his time on Prodigy, finding the voice of “Wesley the Traveler,” and more.
 

Wesley Crusher returns for STAR TREK: PRODIGY’s Season 2 adventure. (CBS Studios)

TREKCORE: Let’s jump right in — what was it like when you got the call, asking you to bring Wesley Crusher back for Star Trek: Prodigy?

WIL WHEATON: Well, a good friend of mine is on the Prodigy writing staff, and she called me up and said, “How do you feel about being Wesley again?” I was like, “Uh, I’m extremely into it!” (Laughs)

She pitched me the broad idea of what they were thinking about, and then asked me if I had any ideas. I said, “You know, I don’t want to overstep, but I’ve been writing fan fiction about Wesley the Traveler for years… and in my stories he’s kind of like The Doctor from Doctor Who.” She got really excited and said that the Prodigy writers were thinking the same thing – so we were all leaning in the same direction.

She asked me, “What do you think about this? What do you think about that?” I couldn’t believe it — I’d never been invited into the creative process as early as on Prodigy, so I feel even closer to this character than I already would have. And then a few days, I got the official request to join the show, which of course was operating under a code name at that point; we were calling it ‘Captain Video’ during production. (Laughs)

Then it all just came together.

Wesley encounters Kore Soong (Isa Briones) in STAR TREK: PICARD. (CBS Studios / Paramount+)

TREKCORE: So you know you’re going to come back to Star Trek with Prodigy… and then you get a call from the Star Trek: Picard team to play Wesley in live-action, too.

WHEATON: There have been a few moments in my life where I just feel like, “This can’t possibly be real… all this wonderful, amazing stuff that’s happening to me without some kind of catch.” And it turned out there was no catch! (Laughs)

You know, I have held onto this secret since before we did Picard — and that filmed like four years ago! — and then when Akiva Goldsman told people that two Star Trek shows “went to war” over Wesley Crusher, I couldn’t believe it was even happening. It was just so wonderful, and so exciting. It was just lovely.

We are at a moment in Star Trek’s life where we have people working really hard to ensure that every Trek show is supporting every OTHER Trek show. We have this giant, shared universe where everything gets into each other, and everything makes sense. We’re not hand-waiving anything, so they had to figure out how to make Wesley the Traveler in Picard tie in with Wesley the Traveler in Prodigy.

I’ll tell you this — when I got to write a story for IDW’s Star Trek #400 in 2022, I bridged the two together. I was able to sneak in a moment where Wesley is trying to get away from The Loom [the reality-eating time monsters introduced in Prodigy] and put them into the background of that comic… and make it so that Wesley goes to recruit Kore Soong in Picard because the Loom are coming in that alternate-timeline reality. He knows it’s happening, and it became a fun kind of Easter egg thing for me.

Wesley saves Jean-Luc Picard from the Loom in a panel from “A Matter of Choice.” (IDW Publishing)

Personally, you know, being on Trek wasn’t the greatest time for me when I was a kid. Adults who knew better were really cruel to me, a child, and it was deeply hurtful — that wasn’t okay. And for a really long time after that, I felt like I should probably also not love Wesley, and I should run away from all that — and I did, for a while.

But boy, do I regret that; it was wasted time. Seeing Wesley in Prodigy — after a long time between when I recorded the episodes and today — it’s the first time in my acting career that I have looked at a role I played and I didn’t see Wil Wheaton. I didn’t even hear myself. I only saw and heard this character that I love so much, and I had the incredible privilege of enjoying my work in the way I hope the audience does.

I told my friend Jen Muro, who wrote for the show, that I did not think it was possible that I could love Wesley Crusher more than I already do. Seeing him like this, with these kids – seeing him as a mentor and an elder, being this interesting guy who’s all over the place – I just love him so much… and I’d forgotten he was me.

Like, it was lovely that he appeared in Picard — that was a beautiful cameo, and it felt so good to be part of that — but seeing him in Prodigy, doing what he does best, it felt like Wesley had finally come home after all these years. I watched some of those episodes through some tears because I was so moved by it.

I didn’t take a single second for granted.

Wesley share similar messages with both the PRODIGY gang and with Kore Soong in PICARD. (CBS Studios)

TREKCORE: Well it certainly sounds like it was a very lovely experience for you. Beyond the storytelling, what did you think about Wesley’s animated look, with his early-TNG sweater? Did you have any part in the final design?

WHEATON: I did — Kevin and Dan Hageman are so wonderful. They’re so generous, and they encouraged me to collaborate with them. There’s always a bit of collaboration that happens in the recording booth when I’m working with a director — and Kevin’s a great director — but I never expected to be consulted on the animated design. I never thought that I’d be able to give feedback on that at all.

When I was an actor on Next Generation, I was frequently ‘put in my place’ by the producers; my feedback was rejected. It was a very much shut-up-and-do-your-job kind of place, my opinions didn’t matter.

TREKCORE: Is that because you were “just the kid,” and not one of the adult actors?

WHEATON: Yeah. I mean, my castmates always treated me as an equal, but a majority of the directors and producers always treated me as a kid who just didn’t have the right to speak up. I couldn’t possibly know anything — and I think the reality of what I had to offer at that time probably falls in the middle a little bit.

Wheaton relaxes between takes during TNG’s second season. (Star Trek: The Next Generation 365)

There are ways to talk to somebody that aren’t insulting, right? You can say “Here’s what we’re going to do, and this is why.” But that was a different time — my point is, it wasn’t like that with Prodigy at all. I was in the booth with Kevin, and we’re finding the character. I had just come out of doing the cameo on Picard, and I initially approached him the same way for Prodigy — very reflective and calm, sort of like the original Traveler on Next Gen.

Kevin tells me that the tone has to be different, because it’s an animated show and everybody is more high-energy… so let’s try some things! So we tried Wesley sort of like Doc Brown from Back to the Future, as Ian Malcolm from Jurassic Park, even as the Professor from Gilligan’s Island. (Laughs)

Then at one point, I said, “Wesley is like The Doctor… hey Kevin, can we try something?” So we go and do the scene with him acting very distracted and all over the place. “Oh look, a coin slot! A hat… you ever tried one of these Earth hats?” (Laughs) There’s a line where Wesley is like, “Would you like some Earth grapes?” which I improvised and thought was very funny — he doesn’t remember how to interact with people who aren’t Travelers anymore.

We brought all of that through in the performance, and the Prodigy team really supported that in the writing going forward. As a fan of both franchises — Star Trek and Doctor Who — this is the closest I will ever get to being The Doctor. Because when they cast the next Doctor, it’s definitely not gonna be me! (Laughs)

Wesley’s orange sweater returns. (CBS Studios)

And then on the character design: the sweater conversation came up, and I said that I think it should be that orange one from “Where No One Has Gone Before” because it’s kind of iconic and it’s the one that stands out the most from his sweater collection. I love that he’s all into those sweaters now, because when I was a kid I hated them! (Laughs) I thought they were dumb and I didn’t like the way they looked; they were uncomfortable. I wanted to be cool, I wanted to be neon… because that’s what teenager girls in the Eighties liked!

I ended up coming back around and loving them, the same way Wesley did. But my two pieces of suggestion were: one, I really wanted to see him on Doc Martins. And if he can’t be in Doc Martins, I would like him to be in kind of those Eighties punk rock combat boots that are, uh, legally distinct from the Doc Martins that I wore as a kid. So we managed to get away with the boots… and I also thought it would be cool if he wore one of those calf-length jackets that evoke another particular Time Lord!

TREKCORE: Beyond time playing Wesley, what are your thoughts about Prodigy as a whole? What does the show mean to you as a fan?

WHEATON: There are three things that really stand out to me about Prodigy. First, I love that Wesley is in the show because Wesley was written into Trek to bring people into the universe and get kids interested in making a better tomorrow — and Prodigy is doing the same thing. I’ve heard Kevin and Dan say that Wesley was the original prodigy, so we need him in Prodigy — that’s just a gift.

Second, I love that Prodigy doesn’t talk down to kids, it reaches kids where they are. It gives their parents something to watch so they can watch it together. I agree with all the fan feedback I’ve seen saying this was probably the best Trek season since Deep Space Nine… just in terms of satisfying, great storytelling, it’s checking all the different boxes.

Wesley and the STAR TREK: PRODIGY crew say goodbye to the USS Protostar. (CBS Studios)

Third, I love that at its core, Prodigy is about teamwork. It’s about outsider kids who have no place to call home, all coming together and finding a home in Starfleet. That is just a gorgeous message for kids who feel weird, feel like they don’t fit in — there is a place for you to fit in.

It’s with your fellow weirdos, and the Star Trek world is a place where you’re special and you matter — so welcome aboard!

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

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.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #253 — STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY Starts Casting Its Cadets

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek — TrekCore’s news podcast — host Alex Perry is joined by Nathan Hanson to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.
 

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

In addition, stick around to hear Nathan’s opinion that you should stop saying that the Prodigy characters “stole” the Protostar, and Alex’s predictions for what we’ll learn about the Star Trek Universe at next week’s big San Diego Comic Con panels.

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!