In addition, stick around to listen to Jenn’s theory about a beloved genre actor who she would like to do a voice acting role in Star Trek: Prodigy, and Alex’s predictions for what kind of news we will get on Star Trek Day.
WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify— and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.
Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!
Star Trek Unlimited — the new franchise licensee which made a splash in July with their Star Trek: Lower Decks Tom Paris collectors plate — debuts their second release today, replicating a classic Next Generation prop for fans’ own home use.
Modeled after Geordi La Forge’s often-seen engineering toolkit, Star Trek Unlimited today unveiled a new home toolkit: an extensive, 100-piece set packed in a case right out of the Enterprise-D’s main engineering deck.
Star Trek Unlimited - 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' Engineering Kit
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Here’s the official description of this new product, produced by Ukonicfor Star Trek Unlimited, along with its contents:
Whether you’re a Chief Engineer, or a lower-decker field-tech, you’re never far away from your field kit; that ubiquitous case of indispensable tools which enable you to become the miracle worker you aspire to be. While we may not yet be at the technology for laser-spanners, or portable phase compensators, we do have enough bits, drivers, and pry-tools to help you disassemble and reassemble a variety of 21st century equipment.
So when you’re called to come down to the galley and figure out why the food slots keep pouring out nothing but “hot bananas,” make sure to bring your field kit! Like Montgomery Scott used to say, “the right tool for the right job.”
If you’re the one everyone turns to in order to fix their technology, be ready for any technical glitch with this Star Trek Engineering Field Kit Tool Set. Jeffries tubes clogged with tribbles? Replicator only spitting out “Tea, Earl Grey, Cold”? This 100-piece electronics tool kit has a solution amongst its 54 different screwdriver bits and dozens of instruments to pry, tweeze, and otherwise coerce computers, phones, tablets, and pads of all types to do your bidding.
It’s handy to have around, and it’s also a nice way to say thank you to your personal assistant.
The Next Generation Engineering Field Kit contains the following tools:
pry knife
mini suction cup
magnetized bit holder
prolong bar
6-inch wire cutter
9-millimeter utility knife
steel ruler
metal prybar
electrostatic ring
small suction cup + SIM card tools
anti-static cloth
2 plastic prybars
2 pry tools
3 metal prybars
3 precision tweezers
4 spudgers
20 cable ties
54 precision screwdriver bits
The original prop case used on The Next Generation was a consumer cassette tape carry case, repurposed for use on the television series; the Star Trek Unlimited toolkit is a new molded-plastic case created for this new product.
If you want to get your Starfleet engineering action on, you can order this new Star Trek: The Next Generation Engineering Field Toolkit from Star Trek Unlimited today for $89.99.
The official Star Trek magazine, an ongoing franchise publication which replaced the long-running Star Trek Communicator magazine in 2006, is getting a much-needed face-lift this fall as the project returns as Star Trek Explorer.
Relaunching with STAR TREK EXPLORER — ISSUE #1 this November, the quarterly-release magazine will have not just a new title, but a new look as well. Publisher Titan Publishing announced the new edition of the official Star Trek magazine this week, unveiling the updated cover styling and teased some of the new content coming with Explorer.
The standard and retailer-exclusive covers for STAR TREK EXPLORER – ISSUE #1.
TITAN ANNOUNCES STAR TREK TM EXPLORER – THE ALL-NEW OFFICIAL MAGAZINE
Titan Publishing is thrilled to announce the Official Star Trek Magazine is now STAR TREK EXPLORER – THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE. Issue #1 hits stores on November 2, 2021. EXPLORER is the no. #1 destination for everything Star Trek – filled with in-depth interviews and features taking you behind-the-scenes of all your favorite shows and movies.
The new-look EXPLORER magazine also includes two brand-new exclusive Star Trek short stories, and a bonus 16-page themed supplement bound inside each issue. The hotly anticipated premier issue features a definitive guide to Captain Kirk!
“The Star Trek brand is so exciting right now with new shows and storylines,” exclaimed editor Nick Jones. “We wanted to match this excitement with a new, fresh-look magazine that will thrill long-time and new readers alike. We will be exploring the entire Star Trek Universe in a cool, fun way. I can’t wait to share with our readers!”
Subscribers of STAR TREK EXPLORER – THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE will also receive an exclusive digital magazine, direct to their inbox with every quarterly issue. Each digital magazine will feature bonus short stories, printables, activities and much more!
STAR TREK EXPLORER – THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE #1 is on sale at all good magazine retailers and comic stores beginning November 2, 2021.
Along with the expected typical franchise coverage and interviews, the revamped magazine is also said to include “mini-magazines” inside each quarterly issue, and Star Trek short stories as well — however as of yet, no information on the authors behind that fiction content have been announced.
Interestingly, subscribers are also promised additional digital content with each print issue as well.
In addition to the updated official magazine, Titan is also releasing a celebratory publication covering the villains of Star Trek in September — through their Titan Comics brand — with a collection of archival interviews and rare photos from throughout the franchise’s history.
Here are some previews of this 176-page new release:
Star Trek: Villains
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Star Trek Villains will be released in late September, but can be preordered now (US or UK).
This fall’s new animated series, Star Trek: Prodigy, revealed its cast of young heroes to the world back in June — and today, two well-known stars have been unveiled as the voices of the show’s villains, set to capture the crew of the USS Protostar at all costs.
Deadline reports today that genre fan-favorite actor John Noble — known for his work as Denothor in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, Walter Bishop in Fringe, Henry Parrish in Sleepy Hollow and more — seems to be the primary antagonist of the series, voicing The Diviner, overseer of the asteroid mining facility from where Dal (Brett Gray), Zero (Angus Imrie), and the others escape in the series’ pilot.
He’s also the creator (?) of Gwyn (Ella Purnell), the 17-year-old member of the Vau N’ Akat species “who was raised on her father’s bleak mining planet — and grew up dreaming of exploring the stars.”
Here’s the full description of the character, which seems to imply that Gwyn may be some sort of clone or other artificially-created biological entity.
[John] Noble will voice The Diviner ,a ruthless tyrant who controls the asteroid of Tars Lamora, The Diviner exploits wayward species and will stop at nothing in his hunt for the Protostar ship, no matter the cost.
Though his goals are shrouded in mystery, his body is failing him and he created his progeny, Gwyn, to one day carry on his mission when she is ready for it.
(You can actually hear Noble in the first Prodigy teaser, with the opening line “No one shall escape…”)
****
In addition, television mainstay Jimmi Simpson (Westworld, House of Cards,It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia), has joined up as The Diviner’s right-hand robot Drednok, a “heartless” enforcer with a “spider-like” form created to make sure the Protostar is captured.
The full description:
[Jimmi] Simpson joins the cast as Drednok. The Diviner’s deadly robotic enforcer is heartless and cold. His sole purpose is to keep The Diviner on task and ensure that the Protostar is found.
Drednok is a friend to no one, including The Diviner’s own daughter Gwyn and uses his menacing spider-like form to impose The Diviner’s will.
Drednok also may be visible in the first Prodigy trailer, keeping the slaves in line in the open sequence.
Could this be Drednok? We’ll find out soon enough….
We don’t know much more about either character yet — nor how much of the series either one will appear in — but we’re certain to find out much more about Star Trek: Prodigy during the Star Trek Day celebration on September 8.
What are your thoughts on this casting news? Let us know in the comments below!
“We’ll Always Have Tom Paris,” written by M. Willis — who scripted last season’s “Much Ado About Boimler” — is another great episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks which packs an A, B, and C story into just 24 minutes. The episode skillfully brings back a fan-favorite legacy character, surprises us with a return of a Lower Decks character we thought was out of the picture for good, and finally gives us a great pairing between the female leads of the show.
In this year’s pre-season interviews, Lower Decks showrunner Mike McMahan indicated that we would see more legacy characters in Season 2, and just three episodes in, we’ve already gotten a big one: it’s a treat to see Tom Paris again (wearing a First Contact uniform for the first time!) and to hear Robbie McNeill voice the character once more… as two different versions of the Star Trek: Voyager helmsman.
“Just don’t send us to the Delta Quadrant!”
With all the legacy characters that have had speaking parts so far — Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes), and both Q (John de Lancie) and Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) last season — the show does a nice job of using those characters to elevate the Lower Deckers rather than just let them disappear into the background behind these beloved characters.
Riker and Paris’s presence on the show has served Boimler’s story in both cases, rather than the other way around. And I appreciate that as it allows Lower Decks to continue to craft its own identity.
In addition to legacy characters, it’s so fun the way in which this show weaves together not just nostalgic tropes from the franchise’s on-screen history, but it’s off-screen life as well. Collectors’ plates from the Hamilton Collection were a huge market in the 1990s, and are a staple of every Star Trek convention vendors room to this day.
Most fans have seen one, owned one, or been gifted one they don’t quite know what to do with, and there were probably close to 100 plates in the collection by the late 90s. So, it is a lot of fun that Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid), who in many ways is a stand in for nerdy Star Trek fans on this show, has his own collection of plates featuring the VOY crew that he is getting signed.
The decision to pair Tendi (Noel Wells) and Mariner (Tawny Newsome) together for the episode was also great, and felt distinctly like it was done as a direct response to Season 1 reviews of Lower Decks that encouraged the show to shake up the traditional Mariner-Boimler/Tendi-Rutherford pairings in future episodes.
“So weird we haven’t teamed up before now… sort of, like, a glaring omission,” Mariner jokes, in a wink to Lower Decks reviewers everywhere. Mariner and Tendi’s trip through TNG Seasons 5 and 6 locales gives the two characters a nice opportunity to bond and interact, which we haven’t had outside of group conversations thus far.
And lastly, while the decision to bring back Shaxs (Fred Tatasciore) is slightly disappointing from the perspective of wanting this show not to get locked into the “everything always stays the same” mold of other adult animated comedies like The Simpsons, you can’t fault the way the character was reintroduced. (After all, the bridge officers pretty much do always come back!)
Just having Shaxs casually appear — and to have everyone acknowledge he’s back from the dead but not explain how — is so perfectly Lower Decks. Because the reality is, for most crew aboard a starship, they would not know the true details behind our hero characters’ deaths and resurrections throughout franchise history.
They hate it when you ask how they came back.
TREK TROPE TRIBUTES
Boimler and Mariner run through a number of possible ways in which Shaxs might have returned from the dead, including:
A transporter pattern buffer thing (“Relics”)
The Borg rebuilt him (“Mortal Coil”)
That he was a restored katra or that he got Genesis Device’d (Star Trek III: The Search for Spock)
A Mirror Universe switcheroo (“The War Without, The War Within”)
Being a future son from an alternate timeline (“Firstborn”)
He was trapped in the Nexus (Star Trek: Generations).
“Bridge crew always come back.” Pretty much! Save for exceptions like Tasha Yar or Jadzia Dax, characters from Montgomery Scott (“The Changeling”) to Wesley Crusher (“Hide and Q”), from Harry Kim (“Deadlock”) and Neelix (“Mortal Coil”), and from Miles O’Brien (“Visionary) all the way to Hugh Culber (“The Wolf Inside” and “Saints of Imperfection”) have all died and been restored to life through various sci-fi means over the years.
This episode gives us a classic “Turbolift: halt.” scene as Shaxs explains to Rutherford how he came back from the dead.
Vic Fontaine, the Zebulon Sisters, Quark’s, and Amarie all appear on Qualor II signs.
CANON CONNECTIONS
Mariner and Tendi’s first stop is Qualor II, also home to the starship supply depot visited by the Enterprise-D in “Unification.”
Qualor II has a similar vibe to Freecloud, including a Quark’s Bar, a Vic Fontaine lounge (I guess he franchised too!), the Zebulon Sisters ofChu Chu dance fame are in town — and Amarie, the four-armed piano player from “Unification” is also featured on a billboard, so it seems she’s still in residence there.
Like the Enterprise NX-01, the Cerritos has a large catwalk area that can super-heat without warning — while the NX-01’s is inside the warp nacelles, but above the ship’s gravity stabilizers.
Tendi’s sickbay nemesis, Ensign Escher, got promoted after curing Captain Freeman’s Terellian Death Syndrome, a disease Reg Barclay incorrectly believed he had in “Genesis.”
One of Tendi’s favorite Klingon acid punk songs is about the Caves of Nu’Mat, where Worf described having a vision of Kahless as a young boy (“Rightful Heir”).
Mariner being easily turned green to emulate Orion coloring is yet another medical marvel from the Star Trek universe, as once again a simple make-a-human-look-alien procedure allows the ensign to go undercover. (At least, temporarily.)
Thanks to his disheveled nature, red complexion, and truly awful hair, Paris mistakes Boimler for the Delta Quadrant’s resident Kazon — the antagonistic species from the first two Voyager seasons.
The Cerritos’ Jefferies tube seems based upon the ‘Cold Station 12’ set.
This episode’s title, of course, is a play on “We’ll Always Have Paris,” from the early days of The Next Generation.
Star Trek: Lower Decks appears to take a definitive stand on the age-old debate about whether Star Trek: Voyager’s acronym is VOY or VGR: VOY is now canon!
Boimler hums the Star Trek: Voyager theme, and every time Tom Paris appears – both in real and plate form – the music includes a couple of distinctive notes from the Voyager title music. (Similar musical callbacks were used for a few of Jeri Ryan’s appearances on Picard.)
Boimler attempts to order a pupusafrom the mess hall’s replicator, while Shaxs orders a hot dog with spicy kiwi ketchup. (Gross.)
Worf puts Sito Jaxa through the false gik’tal test.
Much like the Vulcan pon farr, Caitians have to be intimate once a year or “their hormones make them go crazy.”
Mariner’s romantic outlook is without limits — except for Boimler! — as she goes for “bad boys, bad girls, bad gender-nonbinary babes, ruthless alien masterminds, and bad Bynars.”
While we saw Mariner aboard the USS Quito while docked at Deep Space 9 last season (“Much Ado About Boimler”), here we learn that she was actually posted to the Bajoran space station during the latter half of the 2370s — during Worf’s time as strategic operations officer.
Like the California-class uniforms, Tom Paris’ “standard” First Contact-style uniform also comes with boots that reflect his red division color on their soles, along with the same Starfleet delta seen on the base of other Lower Decks uniform boots.
Mariner mentions Odo as an example of someone with just one name, though technically his name began as “Odo’ital,” the Cardassian word meaning “unknown sample” — though it’s likely she would not know this, as it was a story Odo was not comfortable telling. (“Heart of Stone”)
Tendi’s not THAT kind of Orion — addressing that lingering fan question!
While she may not be able to control them with pheromones, we do learn that like the “Bound” trio, Tendi does command the immediate respect and deference of some Orion men, as the former “Mistress of the Winter Constellations” gets what she wants from her larger, male cousin with a minimal amount of effort at the pirate base.
Cat owners will particularly appreciate the resolution to the Doctor T’Ana sex post storyline; she was never interested in the post, only in the box it was delivered in.
In what may be the deepest of cuts from this week’s episode, half-buried among overlapping dialogue, the Enterprise-uniform-wearing Shaxs wonders a long-asked question: “What was the deal with T’Pol’s hair for that one year?'” likely referring to Jolene Blalock’s Enterprise Season 1 ‘helmet-hair’ wig.
“A Kazon!”
While “Kayshon, His Eyes Open” is worth a re-watch for all the visual Easter eggs, “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris” is worth a couple of watches just because there’s a lot of cool story in this one that’s worth taking time to appreciate.
Now go buy a Tom Paris commemorative plate and be just as cool as Boimler.
Star Trek: Lower Decks returns on September 2 with “Mugato, Gumato” on Paramount+ in the United States and CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada, followed by Amazon Prime Video (in select international regions) on September 3.
Announced back in July, this summer’s newest Hallmark ornament is the convention-exclusive HMS Bounty — decloaking just in time to coincide with the 35th anniversary of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home!
You may recall, of course, that Klingon Bird of Prey ship first makes its appearance in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock under the command of Commander Kruge. (I don’t think we need to give a spoiler alert on a movie of this vintage, right?)
In case you don’t remember: James T. Kirk and crew ultimately assume command of Kruge’s ship at the end of that movie — after killing off all but poor Maltz — and then cheekily rechristen her as the HMS Bounty while in exile on planet Vulcan.
They slingshot the old girl around the sun to go back in time, pick up some humpback whales, bring them forward in time and crash into the San Francisco bay: quite a journey for this “rust bucket.”
Now, is it worth the nerve-wracking rush to purchase during the exclusive window in October? If you’re a “gotta have ’em all!” type Star Trek ornament collector, or just a big old fan of the Klingons like I am, the obvious answer is Dochvetlh vIneH! (That’s Klingon for “I want the thing!” to you Earthers.)
You can never have too many Birds of Prey on your Christmas tree, but if you’re more of a casual fan — or pinching your pennies this year and don’t want to spend the required $35 USD on the special release — I’d recommend you instead track down one of Hallmark’s classic 1994 Bird of Prey ornaments in the secondary market instead.
Why the mixed review, you ask? Well, I’ll admit that an all-metal ornament of the Bounty is really cool. I love the heft of this thing, even if it means you need to find a rock solid branch on your Christmas tree to hang it from — it’s heavy — and I can’t help but love the little hand painted “H.M.S. Bounty” on the hull of the ship.
That said, I wish the overall paint job on this ornament was a bit less… flat. It really screams out for a good wash of a dark green or grey to settle into all the little crevices and highlight the cool details in the sculpt, details that don’t pop at all because of the single tone of green paint on this ornament.
The 1994 ornament (top) compared to this year’s release.
In fact, if you look at the photo on the ornament’s box, you can barely make out the details in the sculpt. Honestly, it doesn’t even photograph that well — but when you take a look at the 1994 Bird of Prey ornament, THAT ship looks like it flew right off the screen and onto my tree.
By comparison, the 2021 HMS Bounty is pretty boring, unfortunately; despite its heft and construction, it just looks like a toy. Now, I don’t work in ornament design, and logistically I’ve got no clue about the production or painting processes.
But I do paint miniatures as a hobbyist, and I have my 1994 ornament sitting right here next to this new one. It seems obvious — to me, at least — that the Bounty is in desperate need of some detail highlighting. It’s a beautiful sculpt, but the paint job just isn’t doing it any favors.
While the first opportunity to purchase this event-exclusive ornament passed by back in July during San Diego Comic Con, fans will have one more chance to pick it up during October’s New York Comic Con — but only 3,750 were produced in total, so you’ll want to engage warp speed if you hope to acquire one as the July allocation went quickly.
This ornament will be sold on a first-come basis starting at 12PM ET (9AM PT) on the first day of New York Comic Con — that’s Thursday, October 7 — and collectors will be limited to one sale per person, per transaction, while supplies last.
Keep an eye on this page at Hallmark’s online store for the sale to go live on that date, and if you’re on the hunt to bring this special Bird of Prey ornament home, all we can say is Qapla’!
Did you already manage to score one of these limited-edition ornaments back in July — or are you angling to snag one during the October order window? Let us know in the comments below!
This year’s edition of the celebratory event is set to coincide with Star Trek’s 55th anniversary, and to mark the occasion another live streaming event is scheduled to kick off at 8:30PM ET (5:30PM PT) on September 8, with multiple hours of interviews, live performances, and more — all live from the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles.
Hosted once again by Wil Wheaton and Mica Burton at the Star Trek Day website, the 2021 schedule is set to include “back-to-back in-person conversations with cast members and creative minds from the Star Trek Universe, legacy moments with iconic cast, plus surprise appearances, announcements and reveals” throughout the night’s programming.
Each of the five current series will get spotlight panels which are likely to include new reveals, trailers, and more throughout the event — and there will also be an special panel celebrating Gene Roddenberry’s legacy for the Star Trek creator’s 100th birthday.
STAR TREK: PRODIGY — with series voice cast including Brett Gray and Dee Bradley Baker, along with executive producers Kevin and Dan Hageman and co-executive producer/director, Ben Hibon.
STAR TREK: DISCOVERY — with series stars Wilson Cruz, Blu del Barrio and Ian Alexander and co-showrunner and executive producer Michelle Paradise.
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — with series stars Anson Mount, Rebecca Romijn and Ethan Peck, who will be joined by co-showrunners and executive producers Akiva Goldsman and Henry Alonso Myers.
STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS —with voice cast members Noël Wells and Eugene Cordero alongside series creator, showrunner and executive producer Mike McMahan.
STAR TREK: PICARD — with series stars Patrick Stewart and Jeri Ryan, co-showrunner and executive producer Akiva Goldsman and a special live performance from Isa Briones, singing “Blue Skies,” which was featured in the PICARD season one finale.
RODDENBERRY LEGACY PANEL — featuring a conversation with Gene Roddenberry’s son and the CEO of Roddenberry Entertainment, Rod Roddenberry, alongside Gates McFadden, LeVar Burton, and George Takei as they discuss the Star Trek creator’s indelible impact on science fiction and culture.
Along with the six main features, Discovery and Picard composer Jeff Russo will be leading a live orchestra performing renditions of Star Trek music from throughout the decades, and there will also be a series of “legacy moments” highlighting Trek shows of years past — which will feature appearances by Cirroc Lofton (DS9), Anthony Montgomery (ENT), Garrett Wang (VOY), George Takei (TOS) and LeVar Burton (TNG).
Finally, as with several of CBS’s recent events, the #StarTrekUnitedGives charity campaign will return for the day.
On Sept. 8, the #StarTrekUnitedGives campaign returns. For every person who tweets the hashtag StarTrekUnitedGives (#StarTrekUnitedGives), $1 will be donated and divided equally by Paramount+ and the Roddenberry Foundation to organizations who do the real-world work of championing equality, social justice, the arts and innovation.
Paramount+ and the Roddenberry Foundation are also partnering on a new global campaign to engage fans in honoring the legacy of Gene Roddenberry. The campaign will launch on September 8.
All of the day’s programming will be streaming at StarTrek.com/Day when the celebration begins on September 8; as with last year’s event, we expect the panels to be viewable by fans worldwide… though the time zone difference may be a large headache this year.
* * * *
The trailer for the Star Trek Day event doesn’t feature much in the way of new content, however we expect to see more from Prodigy Season 1, Discovery Season 4, Lower Decks Season 2, Picard Season 2 — and hopefully, our first look at Star Trek: Strange New Worlds during the September event — now that Discovery and SNW are both wrapped, and Picard is quite far into S2 (and possibly even S3) filming.
The video does, however, offer us this new title treatment for Strange New Worlds…
…along with one brief shot from Picard Season 2 not part of the Season 2 trailer from June: a quick clip of Q (John de Lancie) snapping his fingers in that classic fashion (minus ‘flash’ visual effects that are sure to be added in post-production).
Q snaps his fingers at Picard, ready to whisk him off to another adventure…
Finally, while there is a smattering of high-definition Star Trek: Deep Space Nine footage in this Star Trek Day teaser, it’s all material clipped from the 2019 retrospective documentary What We Left Behind: Looking Back at ‘Star Trek: Deep Space Nine’ — so nothing too get too excited about there.
Will you be tuning in for Star Trek Day this year — and if so, what news are you most hoping to see or hear? Let us know in the comments below!
In addition, stick around to listen to Thad’s theory about who else from the Star Trek: Voyager cast may show up on Prodigy (spoiler alert: it’s all of them!), and Alex’s theory about what the upcoming release of a Season 1-3 box set of Star Trek: Discovery in early November might mean for the premiere date for Season 4.
WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify— and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.
Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!
This week continues Star Trek: Lower Decks’ second season, and we’ve got a new set of photos from “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris” for you today!
In this new episode, Tom Paris beams aboard the Cerritos — Robbie McNeill, reprising his role from Star Trek: Voyager — while fan Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid) tries to show his Paris collectors plate to the Intrepid-class helmsman, facing one obstacle after another aboard ship.
Meanwhile, Tendi (Noel Wells) and Mariner (Tawny Newsome) go on a “girls trip” when the Orion ensign is assigned a special mission by Dr. T’Ana.
Here are 13 new images from this week’s episode:
Star Trek: Lower Decks -- 'We'll Always Have Tom Paris'
1 of 13
Tom Paris (Robbie McNeill) arrives. ( Paramount+)
The crew welcomes Tom Paris. ( Paramount+)
The crew grabs lunch. ( Paramount+)
Boimler and his plate. ( Paramount+)
Boimler and plate crawl through the ship. ( Paramount+)
Boimler faces a fiery challenge. ( Paramount+)
T'Ana assigns Tendi a special mission. ( Paramount+)
Tendi and Mariner go on a girls trip. ( Paramount+)
Mariner and Tendi on their shuttle. ( Paramount+)
The ladies arrive on a casino-type planet. ( Paramount+)
Tendi plays dom-jot with a Nausicaan. ( Paramount+)
Tendi enjoys a drink will on her mission. ( Paramount+)
And in case you missed it, here’s a preview for the remainder of Lower Decks‘ second season, which includes Tom Paris’ arrival to the Cerritos.
Star Trek: Lower Decks returns Thursday, August 26 with “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel; the episode airs Friday, August 27 on Amazon’s Prime Video service in select international regions.
Like many other attendees, we’re still recovering from our week-long away mission to the 2021 Las Vegas Star Trek convention — Creation Entertainment’s 55-Year Mission Las Vegas — and while we shared with many of you our favorite costume efforts from the STLV floor last week on social media, we wanted to make sure the rest of you got to share our joy in these wonderful fan creations!
STLV 2021 had a great balance of cosplay from all the television shows and many of the feature films — and even one of the most complicated recreations of on-screen Trek characters we’ve seen in a long time, a Xindi-Insectoid, created by a 13-year-old fan who built the costume with his mom over the course of a month.
Ephraim the tardigrade (with eggs!) from “Ephraim and Dot.”A mug of raktajino from DEEP SPACE NINE’s replimat.A familiar image to any classic STAR TREK fan.
Saturday night’s annual Star Trek costume contest also revealed some fantastic fan creations, as Star Trek: Discovery actors Mary Chieffo (L’Rell), Mary Wiseman (Tilly) and Noah Averbach-Katz (Ryn), and Star Trek III’s Robin Curtis (Saavik) led the event as hosts and judges.
Mary Chieffo with Andorian and Cardassian punks.
One of the highlights of the cosplay contest was when Averbach-Katz brought his own cosplaying mother onto the stage to show off her Terran Empire costume… as his Discovery uniform-wearing dad took photos from the audience.
Noah Averbach-Katz and his coplaying family.
Here’s our full gallery of all the great Trek costumes we saw over the convention week!
The Best of STLV 2021 Cosplay
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President T'Rina of Ni'Var
Disco McCoy
A pair of Lwaxana Trois
Kai Winn
Dr. Mirana Jones
Q vs. Guinan vs. Q
A disciple of the Qowat Milat
Tommy Starnes and Gorgon from "And the Children Shall Lead"
DISCOVERY Season 4 Starfleet Uniforms
USS Cerritos 'Chu-Chu' concert attire from "Terminal Provocations"
Dr. Migleemo
Ensign Tendi
A pair of ENTERPRISE-era uniform variants
THE MOTION PICTURE-era Starfleet admirals
Terran Empire family
THE VOYAGE HOME-era Gillian Taylor and Hikaru Sulu
'The Cleaner' from "Veritas"
"Worst Case Scenario" Seska
Landru and the Red Hour gang
Yeoman Rand
Judge Q
Two Judge Qs
Captain Proton and Queen Arachnia
Mademoiselle de Neuf from "The Killing Game"
Some Muppet / STAR TREK crossover costumes
Officers from the MIRROR BROKEN comic universe
Leila Kalomi from "This Side of Paradise"
Lego Spock
A Klingon Warrior
Intendant Kira
The Ilia Probe
Dr. Honey Bare ("Dr. Bashir, I Presume") and Neelix
Zefram Cochrane and a Vulcan visitor
A FIRST CONTACT spacesuit and phaser rifle
'Durango' Troi from "A Fistful of Datas"
Elizabeth Dehner
A pair of "Conspiracy" officers
A classic Romulan centurion
Dr. Chaotica and Queen Arachnia
Ensign Brad Boimler
Admiral Q from "Hide and Q"
Which of the dozens of outstanding costume ideas is your favorite? Sound off in the comments below!