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• The episode title calls back to the VOY season two episode, “Tuvix”, in which Neelix and Tuvok are combined into a single being by due to the unique properties of an alien orchid and the transporter.

• This episode was written by series creator Mike McMahan.

• Boimler [Jack Quaid] has holodeck waste removal duty, a task Mariner [Tawny Newsome] was assigned in “Moist Vessel” as part of a plan to get her to transfer off the USS Cerritos.

• It’s the USS Voyager! From Star Trek!

     • The VOY theme plays as we see the ship, and again later when the ship is landed on Earth.

Voyager has been transformed into a museum piece. We see the ship displayed at the fleet museum in “The Bounty” some 20 years later. Exhibits on the ship commemorating the Voyager crew’s adventures include:

     • The Borg regeneration alcoves in Cargo Bay 2. One of the Cargo Bay 2s, anyway. - Established in “Scorpion, Part II”

     • The galley converted from what would have been the captain’s private dining hall, including authentic Talaxian foodstuffs.

     • The bridge.

     • The ”Neelix cheese”. - From “Learning Curve”

     • Janeway and Tom Paris’ hyper-evolved salamander forms after travelling at Warp 10. - Seen in “Threshold”

• The large battle in the title sequence has been updated again. In addition to Borg Cubes, Romulan Warbirds (season one), Klingon Birds-of-Prey, Pakled Clumpships (season two), and Crystalline Entity (season three), there is now a Breen Interceptor, and the Whale Probe introduced in “Star Trek: The Voyage Home”.

     • We can hear the Whale Probe’s call before the Cerritos warps away.

• Cap’n Freeman records the stardate as 58724.3 in her log.

• Tendi [Noël Wells] is moving a containment unit holding the orchid introduced in “Tuvix” when the lid pops off and a petal floats through the ventilation system into the transporter room.

• Billups tells Doctor T’Ana about the pet dragon he had growing up. Billups was established as coming from the Hysperian colony settled by “Ren faire type” people in “Where Pleasant Fountains Lie”

• Billups and Doctor T’Ana are combined into a single being calling himself T’Illups. Much like Tuvix, the yoke of T’Illups’ uniform has a floral pattern.

• Throughout the episode, more characters get Tuvixed:

     • Cap’n Freeman and Doctor Migleemo - Captain Doctor Frigleeman

     • Shaxs and Barnes - Shabarnes

     • Bartender Honus and Transporter Chief Lundy - Chondus

     • Matt the whale and Steve Stevens - Swhale Swhalens

     • Nurse Westlake and Jennifer - We don’t actually see the combined form

”She knows Janeway straight up murdered Tuvix, right?” This is an accurate description of the conclusion of that episode.

• Mariner accidently opens a panel on the Voyager bridge, releasing one of the Tak Takian macroviruses introduced in “Macrocosm”.

“Uh, you know, Chakotay served here.” Technically true up until about season five of VOY, at which point the only characters aboard the ship were Seven of Nine, the Doctor, and sometimes Captain Janeway.

”Dude, this is nothing compared to, you know, that Pike thing we aren’t supposed to talk about.” Mariner is referring to the events of “Those Old Scientists”.

”How many…physical memories do you have from before?” Shaxs and Doctor T’Ana have an intimate relationship, implied at least as far back as "Mugato, Gumato".

• One of the macroviruses impacts a panel, causing it to create holograms of Doctor Chaotica from “Night”, the Clown from “The Thaw”, and Michael Sullivan from “Fairhaven”.

     • While Chaotica and Sullivan were holodeck characters created by Tom Paris, the Clown was a manifestation of the fears of five aliens neurally linked together in stasis. Mariner does point out that the Clown wasn’t a holodeck program.

     • Martin Rayner, Michael McKean, and Fintan McKeown are not credited for the episode, so it would seem that none of them are reprising their roles.

• Beljo Tweekle installed holo-emitters throughout the ship. In “The Killing Game” the Hirogen did the same, for the purposes of their wargame simulations with the Voyager crew.

• One of the marcoviruses has Harry Kim’s clarinet. It was established in “Caretaker” that Kim played the instrument, though he gave it up in favour of the saxophone by season six’s “Ashes to Ashes”.

• A Borg nanite attempts to assimilate to macrovirus, becoming a macronanite.

“Computer, delete this guy! Come on, computer!” In “Fairhaven” Janeway uttered her famous line, “Delete the wife,” regarding Sullivan’s spouse.

     • “I miss my wife.” Apparently at some point Sullivan’s memories of his wife were restored to him, or he remarried.

• Boimler is concerned that if he’s promoted, it will negatively impact his relationship with Mariner, just as it did when he accepted the promotion to the USS Titan and left without telling any of his friends, or answering Mariner’s messages, in “No Small Parts”.

• Mariner was sent to Starbase 80 in “Trusted Sources”.

• T’Lyn is able to combine all the Tuvixed beings into one creature, which is then described by Tendi as a “Non-sentient blob of meat,” handily circumventing the ethical dilemma presented by “Tuvix”.

• Boimler claims to be the son of Captain Proton, the character whom Tom Paris played in these simulations, and Doctor Chaotica’s mortal enemy. First seen in “Night”.

• Rutherford [Eugene Cordero] gums up Voyager with the brill cheese as it did on it’s own in “Learning Curve”.

• Boimler, T’Lyn, Tendi, and Mariner all get promoted to lieutenant junior grade. Mariner was briefly a full lieutenant in “Moist Vessel”, and Boimler was lieutenant junior grade while serving aboard the Titan in “No Small Parts”, “Strange Energies” and “Kayshon, His Eyes Open”.

”My main objective here is to prove to the High Council that I should be reinstated to the Vulcan fleet.” T’Lyn was believes her provisional assignment to Starfleet is an unwarranted punishment, as per “wej Duj”.

• It’s the IKS Che’Ta’! From Star Trek! Specifically from “wej Duj”

     • The Mysterious Threat destroys the Che’Ta’, but even though we see a close up of the wreckage, including a spear and bloodwine barrel, but no bodies.

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I just started watching Voyager on Paramount Plus today, and noticed that the first two episodes, which are shown together, are presented as the appropriate 4:3 aspect ratio, but Episode 3 "Parallax" is presented in a distorted 16:9 or 16:10 format. I see no option to change this in Paramount Plus settings, and my Vizio TV will also not allow me to alter what ratio is being displayed.

Anyone else have this issue? Is this going to persist for the entire series? I didn't have this issue at all with TOS, Animated, TNG, or DS9.

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Qbyte?

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HAPPY STAR TREK DAY!!!! I started watching Star Trek last year and I started with TOS, my Star Trek watching has slowed down a bit but I love this franchise and can’t wait to finish TNG! For Star Trek day I’m celebrating by the only tv I’m allowed to watch (unless something huge happens in the world today) will be Star Trek. Hope you are all having a fantastic day and Live Long and prosper 🖖🏻

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Hollywood Strikes ‘Star Trek’ Day Celebrates 57 Years Of Franchise – Deadline

Meanwhile on Star Trek Day.

@startrek #StarTrek #StarTrekDay #WGAStrike #SAGAFTRAStrike
https://deadline.com/2023/09/star-trek-cast-crew-picket-la-ny-to-celebrate-gene-roddenberry-1235541010/

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Produced by: Awesome Inc
Created by: Casper Kelly
Executive Producers: Casper Kelly, Ashley Kohler
Supervising Producer: Brandon Betts
Producer/Director: Aaron Hawkins

Cast: Ethan Peck, Pete Holmes, Cristina Milizia, Bonnie Gordon, Eric Bouza

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Annotations for Star Trek: Lower Decks 4x02: “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee”:

The title is a play on the classic science fiction short story “I Have No Mouth But I Must Scream” by Harlan Ellison, best known in Star Trek for writing TOS: “The City on the Edge of Forever”, although what ended up on screen was significantly different from what he originally wrote.

The opening scene plays around with the stereotypically treacherous nature of Romulan society. Remans were the indigenous species of the planet Remus whom the Romulans enslaved for centuries. The markings on the Romulan officers’ foreheads mark them as Northern Romulans (as opposed to the smooth-foreheaded Southerners). The torture chair is of the same type that was used for Geordi La Forge in TNG: “The Mind’s Eye”. The design of the Romulan ship is not your standard D’deridex but based on the initial concept art for the class by designer Andrew Probert.

The outfits that Ransom and Shax are wearing as they stretch are the ones from the infamous exercise scene in TNG: “The Price”, with Ransom wearing Troi’s tights and Shax in Crusher’s colors. Ransom suggests hot fudge sundaes - chocolate sundaes were a favorite of Troi’s.

Tendi packs the model of the Cerritos she and Rutherford built (LD: “An Embarassment of Dopplers”) - later we also see the Deep Space 9 model she gave Rutherford in the same episode. She refers to an unseen adventure where they swapped bodies because of cosmic rays, mind swapping being featured in several Trek episodes, most recently in PRO: “Mindwalk”. Tendi also has a picture of “The Dog” (LD: “Much Ado About Boimler”) among her possessions.

Boimler has his Stargazer model (LD: “Reflections”), his promotion certificate (LD: “No Small Parts”), his Captain Freeman Day Banner (LD: “First First Contact”) and the Klingon headpiece he wears when playing bat’leths & biHnuchs (LD: “The Least Dangerous Game”). He also has a Mirror Universe Archer figure (ENT: “In a Mirror, Darkly”, although how the Prime Universe knows about that is unknown), a commemorative plate with the Cerritos on it, the recruitment poster with Number One (SNW: “Those Old Scientists”), Spock in his monster maroons and Data in his First Contact uniform holding a phaser rifle.

The shuttles are named after National Parks, in this case Yosemite, Kings Canyon and Redwood. Mariner refers to a “menagerie”, alien zoos that are always scooping up humans (TOS: “The Menagerie”).

I don’t recognize the purple starfish-like creature, but next to it is a glommer (TAS: “More Tribbles, More Troubles”) and a cylinder of florkas (LD: “Moist Vessel”). In the other display case is a Ceti Eel (ST II). We also see among the exhibits an Aldebaran serpent (TNG: “Hide and Q”), a koala (“Moist Vessel”), a unicorn alien dog (TOS: “The Enemy Within”) and an Hanonian land eel (VOY: “Basics, Part II”).

The visor Boimler puts on is the one Spock uses in TOS: “Is There in Truth No Beauty” to protect against madness for gazing on the Medusan form.

Narj points to his Pyrithian swamp gobblers. Other Pyrithian species include the Pyrithian Bat and the Pyrithian Moon Hawk. Dr Phlox on the NX-01 had a bat and used a paper model of a moon hawk to scare the bat when it escaped (ENT: “A Night in Sickbay”).

Rutherford is working on The Most Important Device in the Universe, a common prop in Star Trek and other science fiction related shows. Rutherford calls a two tube configuration Tucker Tubes, presumably after Chief Engineer “Trip” Tucker of the NX-01. A Cochrane is a measure of warp field strength, with 1 Cochrane equal to a field strength that will produce Warp Factor 1, or the speed of light.

Mariner refers to the time Ransom stabbed her in the foot (LD: “Temporal Edict”), when he turned into a head and tried to eat her (LD: “Strange Energies”), their time on the orbital lift (“The Least Dangerous Game”).

Rutherford could have been promoted when he saved the Cerritos from the Pakleds in LD: “No Small Parts” and the crew of the Roubidoux from a cosmozoan in “Much Ado About Boimler” but he turned it down. He finally gets his promotion to LT j.g. for the time he removed Cerritos’ hull in LD: “First First Contact”.

Ransom’s reference to humans being “The Most Dangerous Game” is to the eponymous 1924 short story by Richard Connell, which basically created the trope of hunting humans and the hunter eventually becoming the hunted. The short story has been adapted and copied innumerable times. The title was inverted for LD’s “The Least Dangerous Game”.

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Star Trek Defiant #7
Written by: Christopher Cantwell
Art by: Angel Unzueta
Cover Artist: Malachi Ward

"Day of Blood," Chapter Four. Thousands of years ago, Kahless the Unforgettable led his people to glory and raised an empire of honor. But his clone, Kahless II, has gone too far, murdering innocents in cold blood and hungering for power that can no longer be sated by Qo'noS and the Klingon people. He now stands alongside Alexander in front of Worf and Sisko, pitting father and son against each other and making a mockery of the Bajoran Prophets and their emissary. Meanwhile, the power of the Orb of Destruction surges from his ship above. Can Kahless be stopped, or will he once again prove to be the greatest warrior of them all? Find out in the penultimate chapter of the crossover between Star Trek and Star Trek: Defiant!

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The title refers to the legendarily controversial VOY episode “Tuvix”, which is still so divisive in fandom today that discussions on it are tightly regulated, if not outright banned, in some fan forums.

Boimler is put on holodeck waste disposal duty, removing all the organic material caught in the biofilters after holodeck sessions. It is a particularly odious chore that Mariner performed in LD: “Moist Vessel”. T’Lyn remarks that Boimler’s odor will be repulsive - Vulcans are known to find the smell of humans oppressive even under the best of circumstances, and some take nasal suppressants/numbing agents (Spock in SNW: “Charades”, T’Pol in ENT: “The Andorian Incident”) while getting used to it. Female Vulcans have more sensitive senses of smell than males.

The Portelo space station is a redress of the Regula-I type station first seen in ST II, with drydock facilities attached. The original was the orbital station model at the start of TMP turned upside down. The Regula I model has been reused in TNG, VOY and LD and we’ve seen a better armed variant of it in DS9.

Beljo Tweekle (named after the original superfan Bjo Trimble?) from his facial markings, is a native of Rigel V (ENT: “Affliction”). LT Drew Pratchett, of the USS Oakland, is also a Rigelian (LD: “Much Ado About Boimler”).

In the titles, the increasingly crowded battle between the Crystalline Entity, the Romulans, the Borg, the Klingons and the Pakleds is now joined by the Whale Probe (ST IV) and what I think is a Breen warship.

This episode takes place on Stardate 58724.3, which is c. 2381. Freeman mentions that Voyager will spend some time on the surface of Earth before being moved to orbit. The Intrepid-class was specifically designed to be able to perform a planetary landing and takeoff (VOY: “The 37s”).

By 2401, the Voyager will be on display at the Fleet Museum orbiting Arthan Prime (PIC: “The Bounty”). However, the ship at the museum has some differences from the original (and this restored version), most notably the prominence of the hull plating and the lack of a name and registry number on the underside of the primary hull.

The mannequin that Boimler drops is that of ENS Harry Kim, from the hairstyle. Tweekle calls it a “mission-worn uniform”, much like the “screen-used” props and uniforms that are occasionally auctioned off. Rutherford refers to the time when an alien cheese infected the bio-neural gel packs of Voyager’s computer system (VOY: “Learning Curve”).

Kayshon says, “Unzak, when he guided the florkas to their roost.” Florkas are small green winged insects used by Tamarians who are trying to ascend to a higher plane of existence (“Moist Vessel”).

T’Lyn says Voyager is outdated and smells like Borg (how does she know what they smell like?). The ship did have an inordinate number of encounters with the Borg, and of course the ex-Borg Seven of Nine served on board. The storage cylinder Tendi holds contains the infamous orchid that caused the Tuvix incident.

Like all Cerritos shuttles, the Yosemite II is named after a United States National Park. The original Yosemite appeared in several episodes before it crash landed and was considered unsalvageable in LD: “Where Pleasant Fountains Lie”. The current shuttle first appeared in LD: “Grounded”.

T’Lyn says she enjoys an accurate label. That woman is out of control.

When T’Illups materializes on the pad, they are wearing clothes with the same swirly floral pattern that Tuvix had on their “combined” uniform. Mariner isn’t wrong when she says Janeway “straight up” murdered Tuvix - the argument is whether she was right in doing so.

The creature Mariner releases is a macrovirus (VOY: “Macrocosm”) that once infected Voyager in 2373. While Janeway managed to lure what she thought was all of the virus to the holodeck and eliminated them with an antigen bomb, obviously she missed at least one.

Mariner mentions the “Pike Thing” they aren’t supposed to talk about (SNW: “Those Old Scientists”), possibly placing that episode between the events of Seasons 3 and 4.

Shax asks about T’Illiups’ “physical memories” as he and T’Ana are romantically involved. In the corridors of Voyager we see an exhibit with two mechanical salamander creatures (VOY: “Threshold”).

Chaotica (VOY: “Night”, et al.) and Michael Sullivan (VOY: “Fair Haven”) are holodeck programs on Voyager. The Clown is actually from an alien simulation (VOY: “The Thaw”) and was never actually hooked up to Voyager’s holodeck (as Mariner points out).

Tweekle says he installed holo-emitters all over the ship, like the Hirogen did when they took over Voyager (VOY: “The Killing Game”). The USS Prometheus also had shipwide holo-emitters.

Tweekle’s remark about “subtle updates that don’t impact historical consistency are an acceptable compromise for conservation” may be a reference to the updating of VFX in the remastered versions of TOS, as well as the visual updates in various Star Trek shows, notably DIS and SNW. This explains the presence of the Clown in the database. Sullivan kisses Mariner - he was Janeway’s character’s love interest in the “Fair Haven” simulation.

Harry’s clarinet is embedded in the macrovirus that topples the Borg regeneration alcoves, and it then picks up a stray nanite (as does one of the salamanders), probably one of Seven’s.

The entry on Freeman’s PADD about Tuvix is stardated 49678.4, the of the second log entry in “Tuvix”, two weeks after Tuvix was created.

Shax has been merged with Ops officer ENS Barnes to create Shabarnes. T’Illups orders that Honus the bartender be merged with Transporter Chief Lundy to create Chondus. An unconscious LT-CMD Steve Stevens is also dragged out with an unknown blonde female officer. Stevens is merged with Matt the Whale from Cetacean Ops to create Swhale Swhalens.

On Voyager, the Borg-Salamander sets a course for Borg Cube 858779. Sullivan holds Ransom, Kayshon and Rutherford captive in Voyager’s Astrometrics lab. Sullivan sighs that he misses his wife - in a notorious scene from “Fair Haven”, Janeway, to advance her romance with the married Sullivan, tells the computer to “delete the wife”. While Janeway banned herself from altering his program again, as far as we know she never restored Frannie, so it’s not explained why Sullivan even remembers her.

Boimler claims he is the son of Captain Proton, who was of course Tom Paris’ character and Chaotica’s arch-nemesis in the simulations. Rutherford uses the alien cheese to break Voyager’s bio-neural systems.

The California-class starship seal displayed behind Freeman at the promotion ceremony has the color scheme and the bear from the state flag of the Republic of California, combined with a California-class silhouette above the state motto “Eureka!”

Boimler, Mariner and Tendi are promoted to LT j.g. and T’Lyn to Provisional LT j.g. Rutherford is left out because he “broke” Voyager, even if it was for a good cause.

The Klingon Bird of Prey is the IKS Che’Ta’, last seen in LD: “wej Duj”, commanded by Captain Ma’aH. The Klingon spear is a gin’tak, first seen in TNG: “Redemption”. Ma’aH gives the order, “Destroy those qoHpu’!” qoH means “fool” and -pu is a suffix meaning people, so it literally means “foolish people” or just “fools”.

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"Twovix" loglineThe Cerritos ensigns must assist a caretaker on the voyage of a historically significant starship.


Written by: Mike McMahan

Directed by: Barry J. Kelly & Jason Zurek


"I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee" loglineMariner tries to get demoted, Rutherford tries to get promoted, and Boimler makes a big move.


Written by: Aaron Burdette

Directed by: Megan Lloyd

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As previously advertised.

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The rebranded Star Trek magazine Explorer, published by Titan, is including original fiction.

For those who are fans of @DavidMack@davidmack@wandering.shop, this month’s issue may be one to add to your purchases if you’re not planning to already.

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I always thought that the idea of Enterprise was intriguing, and that the characters had a lot of potential. I don't think the show lived up to its own possibilities. But that's where books can make up the difference, maybe!

So, can anyone recommend some Enterprise novels that are worth reading?

(Especially if they have nothing to do with the "Temporal Cold War" and aren't simple jailbreak stories. The show already has those angles covered.)

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My partner is into DS9 and suggested we watch some last night. For some reason episode 1 was not available on Amazon Prime.(?) We watched Past Prologue and A Man Alone. As someone who is only barely familiar with the Star Trek universe, here are my thoughts:

  • Sisko is a fantastic leader and also terrifies me. His smile makes me uneasy. "Go over my head again, and I'll serve yours on a platter."

  • Kira's morality is super questionable and I'm amazed they didn't kick her off the station after episode 2.

  • Bashir is a dork and also needs to take a hint and leave Dax alone. Clearly they aren't interested.

  • I do love Dax as a sort of early mainstream media conversation starter on gender. The Trill overall are just a brilliant way to frame the idea of how gender and sex work.

  • It's rough seeing Odo so accustomed to hatred. When he just dips behind a glass door to watch as a mob call for his death...

I'm surprised by the level of dysfunction in the crew. I sort of always saw Star Trek as a bunch of Space Paladins that always did the right thing but in DS9 everyone has their own motives and interests and it's super interesting to watch them come together. I think I'll keep watching and see where things go.

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In honour of Star Trek day, this month Simon & Schuster is offering 23 ebooks at discount prices.

Books from every era are represented. (A special shout out from me for the Diane Duane one.)

As usual, look for the discounts in the US, Canada and UK through the major ebook platforms.

Enjoy!

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