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"How Star Trek: The Animated Series Influenced the Future Star Trek Franchises" at 12:00 noon, a prerecorded slideshow presented by Mark McCray, author of The Best Saturdays of Our Lives, and Dan Klink, co-host of the podcast "The Best Saturdays of Our Lives," followed by an open discussion
Star Trek: The Animated Series (TAS) is an American animated science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry.It originally aired simply under the title Star Trek, subtitled Created by Gene Roddenberry, on Saturday mornings from September 8, 1973 to October 12, 1974 on NBC, spanning 22 episodes over two seasons.
Star Trek: Lower Decks (season 5) Paramount+: Does not employ WGA writers; production covered by The Animation Guild [324] Untitled Among Us animated series CBS: Does not employ WGA writers; production covered by The Animation Guild [348] The Walking Dead: Dead City (season 1) AMC Series premiere unaffected; filming commenced in France [336]
When Donald Glover first approached showrunner Francesca Sloane about adapting “Mr. & Mrs. Smtih” for Amazon Prime, she “started laughing,” and thought it was a “weird Donald Glover joke ...
Charting a brand new frontier for the “Star Trek” franchise, the cast and creators of Paramount Plus’ “Star Trek: Prodigy” debuted the teaser trailer for the animated kids series on ...
Fontana saw a position on a Marine Corps-based series called The Lieutenant and applied; [13] Fontana began working as a secretary for producer Del Reisman. [11] Around this time, she adopted the gender-blind pen name D.C. Fontana for her writing, to prevent her pitches being prejudged on the basis of her gender, as she was one of the few female writers at NBC at the time.
For the first time in its 57-year existence, "Star Trek" made a musical episode. Our television critic and 'Star Trek' fan Robert Lloyd discusses the episode with reporter and musical theater ...
The Starfleet emblem as seen in the franchise. As early as 1964, Gene Roddenberry drafted a proposal for the science fiction series that would become Star Trek.Although he publicly marketed it as a Western in outer space—a so-called "Wagon Train to the stars"—he privately told friends that he was modeling it on Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, intending each episode to act on two ...