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In 2012, Den of Geek listed this as the worst episode of Star Trek: Voyager. [10] Den of Geek included this episode on a binge watching guide that included a roadmap of episodes that although not typically achieving high ratings, were still entertaining. [11] In 2017, Screen Rant ranked this episode the fifth worst episode of the Star Trek ...
Lieutenant Thomas Eugene "Tom" Paris is a fictional character in the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager and is portrayed by Robert Duncan McNeill. Paris is the chief helmsman, as well as a temporary auxiliary medic, of the USS Voyager , a Starfleet ship that was stranded in the Delta Quadrant by an alien entity known ...
"Journey to Babel" is the tenth episode of the second season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek. Written by D. C. Fontana and directed by Joseph Pevney, it was first broadcast on November 17, 1967.
"Parturition" is the 23rd episode of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager, airing on the UPN network. It is the seventh episode of the second season and is the second of three Voyager episodes directed by Star Trek: The Next Generation castmember Jonathan Frakes (William Riker).
"Ex Post Facto" is the eighth episode of Star Trek: Voyager. In this science fiction television show episode, the 24th century spaceship USS Voyager is trying to make its way back to Earth, after being stranded on the other side of the Galaxy.
In the photonovel Star Trek: New Visions issue #11 "Of Woman Born", John Byrne retells the episode's ending and continues with the events during Palamas's pregnancy. [5] The first episode of Star Trek Continues, "Pilgrim of Eternity", was a 2013 fan-based sequel to the episode. In it, Forest reprised his role as an elderly Apollo who asks the ...
"The Omega Glory" is the twenty-third episode of the second season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek. Written by Gene Roddenberry and directed by Vincent McEveety, it was first broadcast March 1, 1968.
The scene in the South Park episode is taken from this episode of Star Trek "complete with similar incidental music". [4] The popular Star Trek catchphrase "Beam me up, Scotty" is a common misquotation, with The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations stating that the nearest equivalent is the phrase uttered in this episode: "Scotty, beam us up." [5]