Episodios

  • 14-21 Questor Rebooted
    Jan 27 2026

    This week, we're joined once again by Cash Edwards, who shares an intimate look at his longtime friendship with Star Trek: The Next Generation producer Herbert J. Wright. Their relationship, and shared history with Gene and Majel Roddenberry, sparked a bold attempt to revive one of Gene's most personal concepts: The Questor Tapes. In 2004, Herb, Cash, Rod Roddenberry, and a team that included Mike Okuda and Jules Urbach put together a new pitch for Questor—a project updated for the post-9/11 world but still driven by the timeless Roddenberry themes of evolution, ethics, and survival. From detailed series bibles to pilot treatments and fan outreach, Cash walks us through the chaotic early years of TNG, the roots of Questor, and the bittersweet story behind its final pitch.

    Document and additional references: Questor promo revision 10 - 2004

    The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha

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    22 m
  • 14-20 How Star Trek: The Next Generation Built a Believable Warp Drive
    Jan 20 2026

    This week on The Trek Files: warp coils, dilithium chambers, and a whole lot of gamma rays.

    Returning guest Rick Sternbach joins Larry Nemecek once again for a lively exploration of Star Trek: The Next Generation's scientific backbone. Using early technical memos and a classic 1987 warp engine sketch, Rick walks us through how the team brought real-world physics into the heart of the Enterprise-D's design and when they just had to make it up.

    From working with Los Alamos physicists to devising the ejection system for the warp core, Rick shares stories of how he and Mike Okuda grounded the show's tech in reality while still serving the drama. Ever wonder why deuterium goes on top, antimatter on the bottom, or how a photon torpedo really works? This one's for the technobabble lovers and science fans alike.

    Documents and additional references:

    • "TNG Warp Engine Concept Sketch" by Rick Sternbach, February 18, 1987

    • Excerpt from the internal Star Trek: TNG Technical Primer, May 1, 1989

    The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha

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    23 m
  • 14-19 The Book That Launched a Franchise Revival
    Jan 13 2026

    Long before The Next Generation brought LCARS to life or 3D printers made cosplay easier, Star Trek fans relied on one book to make the Enterprise feel real: The Starfleet Technical Manual by Franz Joseph.

    In this week's episode, Larry Nemecek welcomes back Karen Schnaubelt, daughter of Franz Joseph, to mark the 50th anniversary of that seminal 1975 publication, just weeks after its surprise appearance atop the New York Times bestseller list. More than just a how-to guide for warp drives and turbo lifts, the Tech Manual became a cornerstone of Trek fandom and helped lay the foundation for the Star Trek revival that followed.

    Karen reflects on her father's unique journey from retired engineer to pop culture icon, how the Technical Manual grew out of lunch-hour sketches and club meetings, and what it was like watching fandom embrace a book that treated Star Trek like a living universe. Plus, Larry and Karen discuss how that very success may have stirred some tension in Gene Roddenberry's orbit.

    Documents and additional references: The New York Times Book Review – January 4, 1976

    The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha

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    26 m
  • 14-18 Exploring Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek: The Motion Picture Novel Preface
    Jan 6 2026

    Writer/producer Mike Sussman returns to The Trek Files with a personal favorite: the creative and very meta preface to Gene Roddenberry's novelization of Star Trek: The Motion Picture. In it, Gene (writing as himself and as Admiral Kirk) casts the original Star Trek series as a fictionalized dramatization of real events. Wait… what?

    Join Mike and Larry Nemecek as they unpack Roddenberry's playful (and possibly defensive) retcon of Trek canon, written at a time when Gene was emerging as a sci-fi thought leader in the post-Star Wars, post-lecture-circuit era. It's Roddenberry as revisionist historian, spinning group consciousness, mind control revolts, and alternate human evolution… all in the introduction to his own movie tie-in novel.

    You may never look at the "real" Kirk, or Trek canon, the same way again.

    Documents and additional references: Admiral Kirk's Preface, Star Trek: The Motion Picture novelization by Gene Roddenberry (1979)

    Reference: Star Trek: The Motion Picture novelization – Memory Alpha

    The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha

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    26 m
  • 14-17 How Star Trek TNG's Tech Stayed (Almost) Scientifically Accurate
    Dec 30 2025

    What happens when your sci-fi franchise is also a part-time science think tank? This week, Rick Sternbach returns to The Trek Files to discuss a set of internal memos he and Michael Okuda sent to the TNG production team, an essential peek behind the curtain at how plausible science and week-to-week TV production collided during the Berman era.

    These "tech notes" weren't just background noise. They helped shape the direction of key episodes, lent credibility to futuristic concepts like nanotechnology and AI, and quietly preserved Trek's internal logic. From computer core comparisons to white dwarf fragments, Rick walks us through how the art department helped make the 24th century feel real and even got a line read by Scotty.

    Whether you're a longtime fan of the TNG Technical Manual or just someone who geeks out over starship systems, this one's for you.

    Documents and Additional References:

    • Technical Memo: "Evolution" – notes on nanotechnology, AI behavior, and micro-replication systems in TNG S3E1

    • Technical Memo: "Hollow Pursuits" – science commentary and plausible extrapolations for the episode's holodeck failure storyline

    • Technical Memo: "The Most Toys" – suggestions on transporter physics and energy beam effects

    • Naren Shankar (science advisor and writer, TNG Seasons 3–7)

    • Joan Pearce (continuity consultant, Roddenberry-era Star Trek)

    The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha

    All episodes and documents: The Trek Files on Memory Alpha

    Visit the Trekland site for behind-the-scenes access and exclusive merchandise.

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    23 m
  • 14-16 The Breen, From TNG to Discovery: Trek Writer Carlos Cisco Explains
    Dec 23 2025

    Before Star Trek: Discovery unmasked the Breen in season 5, they were little more than an enigma in the Trek canon, name-dropped but rarely seen. This week on The Trek Files, Discovery writer and producer Carlos Cisco joins us to talk about tracing those first cryptic mentions of the Breen, buried in The Next Generation scripts for "The Loss" and "Hero Worship," and how they helped inspire the character of L'ak and a new chapter in Star Trek storytelling. Carlos reflects on working with the Discovery team to shape the Breen arc and what it means to tell stories that are simultaneously new and rooted in Trek history.

    Along the way, we look at how offhand script references from 1990 can fuel major plot threads decades later and how today's writers sometimes find the best inspiration in yesterday's margins.

    Don't miss this conversation about canon archaeology and how the smallest details can echo across centuries.

    Documents and additional references: "The Loss" (TNG Season 4, Episode 10) – Final Script Pages (1990)

    "Hero Worship" (TNG Season 5, Episode 11) – Script Pages (1991)

    Character Reference: L'ak - L'ak on Memory Alpha

    For more on the Breen - Breen on Memory Alpha

    The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha

    All episodes and documents: The Trek Files on Memory Alpha

    Visit the Trekland site for behind-the-scenes access and exclusive merchandise.

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    22 m
  • 14-15 What really happened to Jonathan Archer after Enterprise?
    Dec 16 2025

    This week, we open the Starfleet personnel file for Admiral Jonathan Archer, a detailed biographical memo written by Star Trek: Enterprise writer/producer Michael Sussman for the fan-favorite episode "In a Mirror, Darkly." It was only meant to be a quick background graphic, so how did it evolve into a fan-favorite bit of canon? And why did Mike sneak "President of the UFP" into the character's résumé without telling the showrunners?

    Larry welcomes Mike to The Trek Files to revisit the creation of this in-universe bio, share behind-the-scenes memories from the final days of Enterprise, and unpack how a throwaway idea from 2005 became the seed of a new series pitch, Star Trek: United, which imagines Archer in his presidential years. From secret nods to The West Wing, to collaborating with Andy Probert on "Space Force One," this episode is a crash course in how Trek canon can be built with equal parts creativity and chaos.

    Documents and additional references: Starfleet Personnel File: Archer, Jonathan

    The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha

    All episodes and documents: The Trek Files on Memory Alpha

    Visit the Trekland site for behind-the-scenes access and exclusive merchandise.

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    32 m
  • 14-14 Designing Voyager with Rick Sternbach
    Dec 9 2025

    Before it was a spoon-shaped ship lost in the Delta Quadrant, the U.S.S. Voyager was a series of sketches, foam-core models, and engineering daydreams from the mind of artist and tech consultant Rick Sternbach. As we continue marking the 30th anniversary of Star Trek: Voyager, Rick returns to The Trek Files to walk us through the behind-the-scenes process of designing one of Trek's most distinctive starships. From the early design directives—"smaller, leaner, faster"—to the collaborative process with producers like Rick Berman and Jeri Taylor, we explore how Voyager took shape on paper and on screen.

    Along the way, Rick and Larry discuss the evolution of Voyager's signature articulated nacelles, the integration of set blueprints into exterior design, and the legacy of real-world science and scientists (including Minsky and Bussard) that informed Trek's fictional tech. And yes, Rick even drops a bit of headcanon about post-Delta Quadrant refits to the Intrepid-class.

    Is the EMH evidence that Voyager's computer is sentient? Did the Voyager design secretly borrow from The Runabout? Could curvier nacelles have saved the timeline? This week, we boldly go into the mind of one of Star Trek's most influential designers.

    Documents and additional references: Star Trek: Voyager concept art and related documents

    The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha

    All episodes and documents: The Trek Files on Memory Alpha

    Visit the Trekland site for behind-the-scenes access and exclusive merchandise.

    The conversation continues on Discord with live chats and the Roddenberry Podcasts community! Join today!

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    25 m