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REVIEW: The Art of Juan Ortiz – Star Trek: TNG

In reviewing the Star Trek art created by Juan Ortiz, where do you even begin? His work is simply transcendent. Criss-crossing disparate artistic styles, themes and ideas, he captures the essence of Trek over-and-over again with a few well-placed brushstrokes and a broad range of colors.

As a follow-up to his Star Trek: The Original Series book released in 2013, Titan Books has finally compiled Ortiz’s episode art for Star Trek: The Next Generation in one vibrant, 208-page masterpiece arriving in stores Tuesday, September 5.

Covering all seven seasons of TNG episodes, Ortiz’s episode artwork is presented here as an arthouse movie poster, one page for each show.

The work has incredible range and will allow each reader to take away their own private interpretations from his unique style. Some pieces will be favorites, others less so, but as it is with most art of this type, you’ll be taking something different away every time you flip through the pages.

There is just so much to take in here, you’ll be surprised anew every time.

When compiling his poster art for the Original Series, Ortiz used a more retro vibe in his designs. In this compilation of his Next Generation art, he translates each episode with more modern artistic styles, ranging from indie film poster looks to images that would fit right in on a street corner decked out with local bands and punk rock posters.

Images ™ & © 2017 CBS Studios Inc. STAR TREK and related marks and logos are trademarks of CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The book opens with an interesting Q & A with the author, who discusses his inspirations, his process and how long it took to create all 177 full-page posters featured in this collection.

From that Q&A, and from just perusing the pages, you never quite know exactly how Ortiz will approach a title.

  • A deep meditation on some of Trek’s heavy themes? (“The Drumhead,” featuring the propaganda of three pointing hands with the words “Saboteur!,” “Guilty!,” and “Traitor!” coming down hard on an innocent victim.)
     
  • A play on words with an episode title? (“Conundrum,” featuring only three large, disconnected puzzle pieces of the Enterprise-D.)
     
  • A light-hearted approach to a unique moment? (“The Naked Now,” featuring Tasha and Data in silhouette… about to get fully functional.)

Instead of continuing to wax poetic about Ortiz’s creative choices and artistic prowess, below is a snapshot of three all-time great episodes contrasted with three less popular picks. In these selections, you can how he approaches a broad cross-section of episodes in many ways.

Images ™ & © 2017 CBS Studios Inc. STAR TREK and related marks and logos are trademarks of CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Three Classic Episodes

  • “Reunion”  A very simple red and black image of three large hands representing Worf, K’Ehleyr and Alexander laying on top of each other. Simple, clean and effective.
     
  • “The Inner Light” — A powerful, muted blue-grey image of the tree planted in Kamin’s community layered on top of a rough profile image of an aging Jean-Luc Picard.
     
  • “All Good Things” — Picard and Q are just barely featured in profiles on the edge of both sides of the page, but it’s the white space between them, morphing into a silhouette of judge Q sitting in his chair, that makes the image so memorable. The Q silhouette is filled with a starry landscape, an iris and the final shot of the Enterprise D moving away from the viewer.

Three Unpopular Episodes

  • “Code of Honor” — An 80’s pop-art mélange of colors zeroing in on a close-up of Tasha Yar’s face as she hangs upside down in the midst of hand-to-hand combat. A very meta thought bubble saying, “Dang! I didn’t sign up for this!,” teases not only her predicament, but Denise Crosby’s upcoming departure from the show.
     
  • “Aquiel” — A sparse, but dramatic, design featuring a white page with only a large pink circle with an alien eye, the word AQUIEL and a simple black outline of Beverly Crusher’s replicated hand extending down from the circle. Effective.
     
  • “Masks” — An amazing art deco style poster featuring Data wearing his mask and standing at the top of Masaka’s temple. The imagery supporting the temple, however, is the saucer section and nacelles of the Enterprise-D framing the steps leading to Data’s perch. It’s a striking image of black and gold angles.
Ortiz’ NEXT GENERATION artwork on display at Star Trek Las Vegas in August 2017.

Art of this type always lies in the eye of the beholder, but even with that being the case, if you are a fan of Star Trek: The Next Generation, it’s impossible to think there won’t be something in The Art of Juan Ortiz — Star Trek: The Next Generation for you to enjoy and peruse again and again.

James Moorhouse is the creator of TrekRanks.com and the TrekRanks Podcast,
and can be found living and breathing Trek every day on Twitter.

Eaglemoss’ OFFICIAL STARSHIPS Shuttlecraft Set #1

Shuttle, shuttle, who’s got the shuttle? It’s Eaglemoss’ Official Starship Collection, of course!

Branching out from their standard-sized model collection into smaller 2.5″ designs, the company first launched their four-ship shuttlecraft sets in late 2015, and we’ve finally gotten our hands on the first wave of releases, which covers a century of Star Trek auxiliary crafts.

The complete four-shuttle collection.

Like Eaglemoss’ full-size ships, the set includes a mini-magazine for each of the four ships written in an in-universe style, detailing the history, configuration, and general usage of each shuttlecraft.

Along with each vessel comes a unique LCARS-styled “Okudagram” graphic card — specially created for this set by the master of Trek interface design, Mike Okuda — providing technical details on each shuttle.

First up is the original: the classic Galileo shuttlecraft — classified as Class-F shuttle — is that iconic crew transport from the Original Series, complete with brilliant red Starfleet pinstriping and stylized hull markings identifying it as being attached to the USS Enterprise.

Original and digital versions of the Galileo.

While the now-restored Star Trek filming model now resides at Space Center Houston as an attraction for visitors, the Eaglemoss Gailieo model stays true to the original Matt Jefferies design from 1966 and will fit in at home in a display case or on the corner of your desk at the office.

Composed of a die-cast metal top and plastic undercarriage/nacelle design, the red-and-black paint is crisp on the solid-feeling hull — but if there’s one weak spot on the Galileo, it’s the gold landing strut extending from the aft section of the shuttle.

The strut is a plastic attachment, and is easily bendable with light pressure due to the thin point of contact with the rest of the assembly. It looks fine at a glance, just handle with care.

Next up is the chunky Type-6 shuttlecraft, one of the most used shuttle designs featured on Star Trek: The Next Generation, brought into service for Season 5’s “Darmok” after the full-size set piece completed its duty as Galileo-type shuttle in 1988’s Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

The Type-6, used on TNG and Voyager.

The top half of the Type-6 shuttle is molded plastic, a necessary choice to capture the level of hull detail and shaping in this angular craft, while the base of the shuttle is the typical die-cast metal to which the warp nacelles are attached.

This version of the Type-6 is the Goddard, the shuttle donated to Montgomery Scott after his rescue from transporter stasis in “Relics” – and was also notably issued as a Playmates action figure accessory in the 1990s.

The only thing that would make this one a little bit better is if that rear hatch would open up…

The third craft in the collection is the barely-seen Type-10 shuttle, which only appeared in a single episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Season 6’s “The Sound of Her Voice.”

Chaffee, away!

Attached to the USS Defiant, the Chaffee transported Sisko, O’Brien, and Bashir to the surface of a desolate world in an attempt to rescue stranded Starfleet captain Lisa Cusak, only to find she’d been dead for years by the time they arrived (due to a temporal anomaly surrounding the planet).

The tiny vessel just barely seemed to fit in the Defiant’s hold, and its Eaglemoss counterpart certainly reflects the on-screen size of the Chaffee — but still features the same technological stylings as the Defiant around the top of the engine section, clearly pairing it to DS9’s resident warship.

Like the Type-6 shuttlecraft, the Chaffee has a metal base and plastic upper half due to the detail on the engines.

Finally, we round out the set with Star Trek: Voyager’s tiny, two-person Type-9 shuttle — sometimes called a Class-2 — which debuted as the shuttle Cochrane in Season Two’s “Threshold,” there souped up by Tom Paris to break the impossible Warp 10 speed barrier.

The small Type-9 shuttle.

This Voyager craft was the final shuttle built as a studio model for Star Trek, transitioning to a digital replacement for later appearances in the series, and continued to be featured in the series even after the Delta Flyer began serving as the ship’s primary auxiliary craft.

Despite its winged look, the Type-9 is a surprisingly solid model, as the top half of the shuttle – including the nacelle struts – is a single piece of die-cast metal, leaving only the nacelles themselves and the underside of the ship as molded plastic.

You could probably step on this one and not do a speck of damage to it.

We do have to make note of the generic stand included with each shuttle, which is a notable step down from the full-size starship releases.

Instead of a plastic cradle to hold each ship in place, the shuttlecraft sets come with just a flat-topped stand that offers no stability when placing a shuttle on display — if the ship isn’t centered just right, a glancing bump of the hand will knock the small ships right off of the pedestal.

(This is noticeably an issue for the Chaffee and Type-9 shuttles, which have thin-widthed bases that makes each difficult to keep balanced on the stand.)

Each shuttle has a different structure on the underside, which makes this generic flat stand a bit ill-suited for the intended use; perhaps a pedestal with a larger surface area would be more appropriate for future releases.

We recommend a bit of double-sided tape or temporary adhesive to keep your shuttles properly docked.

The four-ship shuttlecraft set can be ordered over at Eaglemoss’ shop, and a second wave of shuttles is also available as well – with at least two more collections like these in development now.

Come back to TrekCore often for more Trek product reviews!

In Eaglemoss’ US store, TrekCore readers can use promo code TREKCORE at checkout for 10% off any ‘Star Trek’ collectible purchase $50 or greater (Starships, Plaques, Binders, Graphic Novels).

New DISCOVERY Commercial, Plus More DSC News Bites

We’ve got yet another roundup of Star Trek: Discovery news to round out your Wednesday evening — from one more promo video for the upcoming series to reactions from the cast on social media.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYbPbt0AytG/

First up tonight is a new Discovery promo released online today, which is mostly previously-released footage, but gives a good close-up to Chris Obi’s character T’Kuvma, angrily spitting the phrase “We come in peace!” to camera — likely aimed at Captain Georgiou and the USS Shenzhou crew.

This close-up gives us a great look at the false Klingon teeth worn by the actors, which Obi showed off once more in a humorous Twitter video this afternoon:

https://twitter.com/obidon1/status/902996384902561792

*   *   *

David Mack’s Desperate Hours, the first tie-in novel to the upcoming series, is due out in stores on September 25 — and the author took to Twitter this week to warn readers that if the book appears in stores ahead of the planned release date, which occasionally happens, the novel will contain spoilers for the September 24 premiere.

If you get your hands on a copy of the book early… keep those spoilers to yourself, fans!

*   *   *

Discovery actor Sam Vartholomeos — who we talked with at the Las Vegas Trek convention — is taking college courses in New York City this fall, and shared a view from one of his classes… where a professor showed off the Comic-Con Discovery trailer to his class without knowing Sam is featured in the video!

Hopefully Sam will have some new Star Trek insight to teach his professor!

Check back often for more Star Trek: Discovery news!

FanSets Reveals Expansion of DISCOVERY Pin Collection

Star Trek pin producer FanSets, who launched their first Star Trek: Discovery pins at the Las Vegas convention in early August, announced on social media this week that what started as a five-pin set is expected to expand at warp speed with almost two dozen more entries!

The company’s first Discovery releases include a pin featuring the series logo, as well as the USS Shenzhou, Starfleet officers Saru and Phillipa Georgiou, and Klingon leader T’Kuvma. In addition, a CBS All Access-themed Shenzhou variant has been produced by the company as a ThinkGeek exclusive.

On Tuesday, the company revealed they will be adding a whopping 19 more releases to their Discovery line.

With the six characters named above — Starfleet officers Stamets, Tilly, Lorca, and Culber; Ambassador Sarek; Klingon officer L’Rell — that leaves thirteen more pin designs yet to be revealed. Naturally we expect the USS Discovery, Michael Burnham, Harry Mudd, and Kol, but there’s still plenty of remaining slots to fill in that target number.

Lew Halboth from FanSets appeared on the TrekGeeks podcast earlier this month, where he confirmed a Burnham pin is on the way, and also detailed that while the company will be continuing to roll out Trek pins from across the franchise, they plan to heavily focus on Discovery for at least “the next eight months.”

We’ll bring you the latest news on this product line as soon as it breaks!

USS Discovery Bridge and More Revealed in New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Variety Cover Story

Continuing Star Trek: Discovery‘s trend of splashing across magazine covers this last month, Hollywood mainstay Variety sets sensors on the upcoming new series for their monthly issue’s newest cover piece – also featuring some lovely new imagery from the Toronto-based sets.

Variety’s Daniel Holloway covered a lot of the Discovery behind-the-scenes backstory we’ve heard before, but included some new details to round out some of those tales in his reporting.

Revealed is one emphasis of July’s Comic-Con presentations: to take fans’ minds off of the seemingly never-ending production holdups and realign expectations to the September premiere.

Heading into Comic-Con, CBS’ short-term objective was to flip the “Discovery” narrative, which had become about delays and departures. It got a galaxy-class narrative flipper in the form of Martin-Green, who emerged as the star of a packed San Diego panel featuring cast and producers.

Taking up the mantle of “Trek” heroes past, Martin-Green handily dismissed trolls who complained about an African-American woman leading a “Star Trek” series. She cited the franchise’s long record of inclusion and social progressivism.

“If you say you love the legacy of ‘Star Trek’ but you don’t love that, then you’ve missed it,” she told the crowd.

In addition, series stars Sonequa Martin-Green and Jason Isaacs detailed their initial reactions to joining the Discovery crew, and the decades-old Star Trek franchise.

Martin-Green:

Anyone doing a new iteration of ‘Star Trek,’ you have to understand how deep it is; you have to understand how important it is. You have to understand how much of a pillar it is to our culture.

When I first got started, I had my freak-out phase. I had my almost catatonic moment where I thought, ‘What is happening?’ And I knew very quickly that I couldn’t live there and that I couldn’t create [in that mindset].

I owed it to the story and I owed it to the legacy to get it together. And I had to focus myself in gratitude. I had to focus myself on the passion for the vision for the story that we’re doing.

Isaacs:

The world is complicated and horrible, and I don’t know how to explain to my children the insanity of the people who are in charge of it at the moment.

I thought [‘Star Trek: Discovery’] was a good story to tell — and something I would be happy to watch — about presenting a vision of the world that’s full of drama but also full of resolution and unity.

Michelle Yeoh, Jason Isaacs, and Sonequa Martin-Green on the DISCOVERY sets. (Photos: Caitlin Cronenberg/Variety)

In addition to the cast comments, Variety’s story also reveals more layers behind the now-infamous departure of series creator Bryan Fuller, here laying the blame more towards Fuller’s capabilities to meet CBS’s showrunner expectations for this behemoth of a series, including repeated overruns of script development timelines and budgetary allowances.

The official line is that Fuller departed via a mutual and amicable decision to focus on his other project, Starz’s “American Gods.”

He is still listed as co-creator of “Discovery” alongside executive producer Alex Kurtzman, who speaks glowingly of him. He shares a story credit with Kurtzman on the premiere, as well as a screenplay credit with another exec producer, Akiva Goldsman. CBS Corp. CEO Leslie Moonves calls him “brilliant.”

But sources close to Fuller and within CBS say that he was pushed out. Fuller is known as an innovative showrunner and the creator of critically adored television such as “Hannibal.” He is not known as someone who prioritizes deadlines and budgets above all else. In short: He is not a typical CBS showrunner. (Fuller declined to comment.)

Fuller failed to deliver scripts months after they were due. In September, he and Kurtzman met with Moonves to deliver the news that “Discovery” would not make the January premiere he had been publicly touting. Moonves accepted the delay, though not happily. “It wasn’t his favorite news, but he totally understood,” Kurtzman says.

A month later, Fuller was gone.

And speaking of budgets, Variety reports that the average episode of Discovery has climbed from earlier estimates of $6 million per episode, with single sets taking up huge amounts of the allotted budget.

Creating its environments involves doing more than scouting an appropriate Irish castle. The level of detail on the sets is exacting — to the point that visitors so inclined could convince themselves at times that they were not on a set. That exactitude proved more time-consuming than anticipated.

“Discovery” shoots at Toronto’s Pinewood Studios on multiple soundstages, one of which is the largest in North America. It is possible to get lost in the tangle of corridors and rooms that make up the starships Discovery and Shenzhou. The set for a third, a Klingon starship, cost $3 million.

Like a big sci-fi feature, “Discovery” hasn’t been cheap: The average episode costs $8 million-$8.5 million. “It was like shooting a movie, the scale of it,” [Michelle] Yeoh says of making the pilot, which was directed by David Semel, who clashed with Fuller. “It wasn’t just ‘Quick, let’s get the shot. Move, move.’”

The first clear look at the USS Discovery bridge set. (Photo: Caitlin Cronenberg/Variety)

Showrunners Aaron Harberts and Gretchen Berg, who took the helm of the series after Fuller’s departure, have also begun to map out the next phase of Discovery – and even the one after that, starting to think ahead to a potential second and third season of the show, expecting a renewal of the series already.

They sought Fuller’s blessing before accepting the showrunner job. “The only reason we stayed was because we believed in Bryan’s vision,” Harberts says. “So many people had already been giving so much, and there was something about handing this over to someone who hadn’t been involved in any of it and having that person just wipe the slate completely clean.”

Though no renewal is yet official, Berg and Harberts have a road map for season two and the beginnings of one for season three. They are Trekkers now.

In addition to the behind the scenes cast and creatives info we’ve highlighted here, Variety’s report also dives into the status of CBS All Access and its expectations for success in the growing digital marketplace; CBS president Les Moonves weighed in on the shifting broadcast landscape.

In 2008, advertising accounted for 66% of all CBS Corp. revenue. In 2016, that number fell to 48%. Affiliate and subscription fees made up 22% of revenue for the company last year versus 9% in 2008.

Moonves has spent the last few years shifting CBS away from a dependency on dwindling TV ad dollars. Licensing content to Netflix and other streaming services has been one source of revenue, but those services are increasingly focused on their own original programming. With All Access, CBS reaps more per subscriber than what it gets in retransmission fees for its linear-television products.

“It was no surprise to us that Netflix would eventually take this route into a greater and greater percentage of original content, which is why it’s important for us to produce original content for All Access going forward,” Moonves says.

You can read more comments from Martin-Green, Harberts, Berg, and Moonves at the Variety report, which arrived today.

Eaglemoss OFFICIAL STARSHIPS Catch-Up: Academy Trainer, USS Rhode Island, Assimilated Arctic One

With the overload of Star Trek news coming over the last several weeks – between the amazing week at Star Trek Las Vegas and the ramp-up of Star Trek: Discovery promotion and hooplah as we approach the new series’ launch – we’ve fallen a bit behind in our coverage of new Trek products… but we’re rectifying that today with a return to some of the latest Eaglemoss starship releases!

If you missed it, be sure and check out our coverage of STLV’s Eaglemoss news: our interview with program director Ben Robinson about the future of the Collection, and the news on upcoming Star Trek: Discovery ships too!

First up is the Starfleet Academy Flight Training Craft (Eaglemoss #97), flown by Wesley Crusher and Nova Squadron in the classic Next Generation episode “The First Duty.”

This ship didn’t make a huge on-screen appearance in “The First Duty,” only shown in partial views or long-range sensor imagery during the Academy courtroom proceeding following the death of cadet Joshua Albert.

Studio model showcased at STLV 2017 (top) vs. Eaglemoss model.

Nevertheless, Eaglemoss has rendered the original Greg Jein-built studio model into a 5.5″ reproduction of the small one-man craft, complete with minuscule text adorning the various hull plates and access panels – including a reproduction of the Nova Squadron logo on the nose of the craft, replacing the in-joke G.I. Joe “Cobra” logo which appears on the original model.

That studio model was on display at the 2017 STLV convention in Las Vegas earlier this month, providing a great opportunity to really compare it to the small-scale version – and in our opinion, while there are some small differences necessitated by the size of Eagelmoss’ model, it’s certainly a mostly-faithful recreation of that original design.

As with most of the Official Starship Collection, the top of the craft is a die-cast metal, while the underside of the ship is a plastic component – but because the Flight Training Craft lacks separate warp nacelles or other extended components in its design, it feels much more solid than some of the other ship reproductions.

Second is the Nova-class USS Rhode Island NCC-72701 (Eaglemoss #98), commanded by Captain Harry Kim in the Star Trek: Voyager finale “Endgame.”

While still part of the Nova-class design lineage, the Rhode Island is different enough from the USS Equinox NCC-72381 (Eaglemoss #15) that it really feels like a different type of Federation ship from Rudy Ransom’s ill-fated vessel.

The Rhode Island in action.

Harry Kim’s Rhode Island was a modified version of the original USS Equinox digital model, updated by artist Robert Bonchune for “Endgame” with an alternate bridge dome, nacelles, and most notably, the updated ‘nose’ with deflector array.

The Rhode Island does, however, feature an almost-overloaded amount of hull markings on its small 5.5″ presentation, with blue escape pod hatches, red and black outlines around various components, brown phaser strips, grey sensor panels, and golden thruster assemblies — perhaps a sign of just how cluttered Federation ship designs were becoming towards the end of Voyager‘s run.

(Our copy also featured some paint wear on the ventral phaser strip, likely because of how it extends from the hull and contacts any surface the ship touches when not on its stand.)

From a structural standpoint, the thin warp nacelles also feel a bit vulnerable to breakage if not properly handled; because of the small contact point between the nacelle and strut, we’d recommend handling the Rhode Island model only by the solid-feeling primary hull if you can.

Finally, here’s a look at the Assimilated Arctic One (Eaglemoss #99), an Earth vessel taken over by revived Borg drones in Star Trek: Enterprise‘s “Regeneration.”

Starting out as a basic transport ship used by the Earth Sciences institute and slowly transforming into a fully-assimilated vessel during the ENT Season 2 episode, this Borgified ship was designed by longtime Trek artist John Eaves.

Arctic One, after full assimilation.

This is an interesting model to examine: it’s covered in intricate surface detail, and features several thin components extending from the vessel – each molded in plastic, and at risk of snapping off if not properly handled.

Because of the high complexity of the assimilated vessel, the majority of Arctic One is plastic, while the ventral portion of the ship is the usual die-cast metal segment seen in other Eaglemoss models.

It’s also a nearly monochromatic ship, with every surface painted a uniform charcoal grey, save for intermittent dots of Borg green on the hull, mimicking the lighting seen in the on-screen version of the ship.

The Arctic One model also comes with what has to be one of the more confusing plastic stands in the Eaglemoss line, due to the unusual shape of the model ship it took us a few minutes to figure out how to properly mount the vessel on its included display stand without damaging the thing.

These ships can be ordered now from the Eaglemoss Official Starships Collection in both the US and UK.

…and for those of you interested in something special, Will Riker’s USS Titan model is now available for preorder in the US, headed for Earth this October!

Come back to TrekCore often for more Trek product reviews!

In Eaglemoss’ US store, TrekCore readers can use promo code TREKCORE at checkout for 10% off any ‘Star Trek’ collectible purchase $50 or greater (Starships, Plaques, Binders, Graphic Novels).

DISCOVERY Premiere Contest for All Access Subscribers Launches, Win Trip to Los Angeles for September 19 Event

As first revealed in last week’s reporting, CBS will be holding a Star Trek: Discovery premiere event in Los Angeles on September 19 — several days ahead of the global launch of the series — and today the network launched an exclusive contest for CBS All Access subscribers to win a trip to the event.

Announced today at CBS.com, US-based subscribers to the network’s streaming service — the official home of Discovery in the United States — have until September 4 to enter for a chance to win a flight for two to the L.A. premiere on September 19, along with spending cash and hotel accommodations.

Note the fine print, however: to register, your CBS All Access account must be in place prior to today — no signing up just to enter the contest.

This isn’t the only opportunity to score access to this event; as we reported last week, actor Rainn Wilson’s charity LIDE Haiti is also offering a contest for a pair of lucky fans to travel to Los Angeles for the Discovery reveal.

Remain Klingon! In New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Promo

After a long series of Starfleet-based Star Trek: Discovery promotional videos, it’s time to shift our sights to the Klingons! T’Kuvma (Chris Obi) takes center stage in this week’s newest Discovery spot, giving a fiery focus to the warrior race.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYOtQHcgwBw

T’Kuvma:

“They are coming. Atom by atom, they will silence us; cell by cell our souls shall become theirs. We must fight for one thing, above all: to remain Klingon.”

A tantalizing bit of voiceover from the leader of the House of T’Kuvma, adding some more mystery to the character’s motivation in the new series.

Already billed by CBS as a leader who “seeks to united the 24 great Klingon houses to halt the encroachment of others,” this new dialogue seems to indicate his concern is not just to hold back Federation expansion in space, but also on some kind of biological level as well.

And where have we seen a conflict between Human and Klingon biology? The last season of Star Trek: Enterprise, of course!

In 2005, Enterprise established that the Klingon race became affected by a modified version of the Augment genetic enhancements which came about during Earth’s Eugenics Wars, biological samples of which were secretly saved in deep storage at Cold Station 12 through the mid-22nd Century. (“Cold Station 12,” “Affliction,” “Divergence”)

Arik Soong breaks into the Cold Station 12 genetic vault.

The Klingon Empire experimented with stolen Augment DNA in an effort to create their own “Klingon Augments,” a scientific endeavor which ended in disaster when the modified Human genetic material combined with a strain of Levodian Flu and began to spread throughout the Empire with deadly effects – killing millions.

With the help of a kidnapped Phlox, the Klingons were able to halt the virus’ lethal effects, however those infected still succumbed to its most visible side effect: the elimination of their cranial head ridges.

Klingon scientist Antaak, before and after infection.

As seen in “Trials and Tribble-ations,” the aftereffects of the genetic virus were visible to the time-traveling Starfleet crew — solidifying the minimal, 1960’s era Klingon makeup design into canon — with Worf confirming a “long story” behind the biological differences between the centuries.

Worf confirms ridgeless Klingons are real… but it’s a “long story.”

With Discovery set a hundred years after the Klingon Empire first became affected by the Augment virus, perhaps T’Kuvma is fighting to “remain Klingon” not only on cultural levels — but on genetic levels as well.

We’ll find out when the series premieres in September!

Wednesday STAR TREK News Roundup: More DISCOVERY Promos, Plus: Canada Streaming Debut Date Announced

It’s only been a day, and there’s plenty of new Star Trek updates to share! From new Discovery promos to new Trek merchandise hitting the web, we break it all down for you below.

The costume experts at Anovos have announced that they’re bringing the often-maligned Star Trek: The Next Generation ‘skant’ uniform to their line of Trek wardrobe reproductions in 2018, complete with short sleeves and high hemline that made this uniform variant famous.

Set to arrive in all three division colors, the quickly-forgotten TNG uniform will be sold in a women’s cut starting at $250, and can be preordered now at Anovos.com.

Discovery makeup artist James MacKinnon (above, with director Jonathan Frakes) will be appearing with actor Doug Jones (Lt. Saru) and fellow DSC prosthetic artist Hugo Villaseñor at the Toronto International Makeup and Tradeshow (IMATS) this Sunday afternoon for a Star Trek: Discovery panel open to all attendees.

MacKinnon serves as the department head of prosthetics and makeup effects for the new series, previously serving on the makeup crews of Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and Star Trek: First Contact.

The marketing campaign for Star Trek: Discovery continues offline this week, as new billboards and outdoor advertisements are being spotted in the wild. DSC actors Mary Chieffo and Ken Mitchell found this billboard…

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYJ8ARCAUqP/

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYKNQNlDvru/

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYKNT8_DQ4Z/

…while another building-sized advertisement for the series was signed being painted in the Westwood district of Los Angeles.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYHJYbPA997/

If you’re in a major metropolitan area, watch for Discovery ads near you!

Geek-gear company LootCrate has announced a Star Trek-specific subscription called Star Trek: Mission Crate which will serve up “an exclusive collection of high-quality collectibles (like Mini-Masters by QMx, prop replicas and division-specific apparel) beamed to your door,” delivered in bimonthly shipments.

While individual crates can be purchased separately, a subscription package customized to the Starfleet division of your choice (command, sciences, operations, or medical) is available at $39.99 per bi-monthly shipment, with “4-6 items” valued at “$65+” per crate.

The first shipments are expected to arrive to subscribers in December 2017.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYJjPAPg3GT/

Two new Discovery promos arrived today! The first, from CBS entitled “Tolerance, Freedom, and Justice,” brings a new voiceover from Sonequa Martin-Green on the values of the Federation.

We come from a tradition of tolerance, freedom, and justice. From a legacy of fearless exploration; of allies who respect each other’s differences, honor, and civilizations.

We come on a mission to understand our world, and ourselves, better. We come in peace.

From Netflix — distributing Discovery outside of the USA and Canada — comes an additional promo focusing on the virtues of Starfleet… and the antagonism of the Klingons.

https://twitter.com/dailysonequa/status/900311824217886720

At present this second promo is only available in a region-locked release; we’ll replace the above fan-site rehosting with an official release if one becomes available.

Finally, fans in Canada have at last learned when they’ll be able to stream Star Trek: Discovery in their country.

Bell Media has announced that streaming service CraveTV will be releasing new episodes online in Canada starting Monday, September 25, the day after the Discovery premiere episode airs on CTV and Space in that nation.

Keep checking back for more Star Trek news here at TrekCore!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Premiere Contest & Other News

Well, it’s Tuesday again – time for another catch-up on Star Trek: Discovery news from around the web this past week!

First up, just announced today, is a Prizeo contest from Discovery guest star Rainn Wilson, where two lucky fan will win a trip to a Hollywood premiere of the new series, through donating to the LIDE Haiti foundation.

You and a friend can attend the Star Trek: Discovery premiere and cast party on September 19, 2017 as the guest of an interstellar con man—me! We’ll beam you out and put you up in a hotel. You’ll see CBS’ hit new show before anyone else and hobnob with the stars. All it takes is a donation of $10 to LIDÈ Haiti.

My wife, Holiday, and I started LIDÈ Haiti to help provide education to girls in rural Haiti. We use the arts to empower the girls in this community, and the results have been spectacular.

Other prizes are also available as donation perks, including Discovery shirts, pins, and puzzles.

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Retailer Popfunk has launched two lines of Discovery T-shirt designs, including both logo wear and a series of Discovery-themed uniform prints from all four assignment divisions.

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Writer/producer Ted Sullivan has continued to reveal Discovery production photos from the set of the show up in Toronto, revealing some more neat looks at the series’ sets.

First up is Captain Georgiou’s command chair from the USS Shenzhou:

https://twitter.com/karterhol/status/897847509711634433

Next is a look at a Starfleet medal awarded to the Shenzhou‘s commander: the Star Cross, also awarded to both Jonathan Archer in the 22nd Century, and Data in the 24th.

https://twitter.com/karterhol/status/898575933082279936

Finally, confirmation from Sullivan that the odd-looking honeycomb-like chamber glimpsed briefly in the May teaser trailer is in fact part of the Shenzhou sickbay set.

https://twitter.com/karterhol/status/898203947545931777
As seen on camera, doing… something.

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Over at the CBS All Access Star Trek: Discovery page, this new artwork cropped up featuring a thruster-suit-wearing Burnham standing on the edge of the USS Discovery saucer.

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Lastly this evening, another series of promotional videos released by CBS: a final character promo focusing on the Klingon Voq — played by an actor we still are unable to confirm…

https://www.instagram.com/p/BX9GSf0g4wU/

…another stylized look at the Starfleet gear worn by the new crews – along with a tiny, brief glimpse of the Discovery interior…

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYEK8fLgXeN/

…and a new promo released today, where Captain Lorca (Jason Isaacs) welcomes Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) to the Discovery, speaking the character’s name aloud for the first time.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYGzpfTgcG4/

While much of this newest trailer is familiar, a few shots of our lead show her in what seems like pretty severe emotional distress, including one view of Burnham on her knees, screaming on the Shenzhou transporter platform.

Perhaps her away mission to the Klingon vessel with Georgiou (seen in the Comic Con trailer) doesn’t go so well.

Keep checking back to TrekCore for more Star Trek: Discovery news as it breaks!