Episodios

  • 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

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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

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    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

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

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    25 m
  • 14-13 Roddenberry Family Album – Stories from the Inside
    Dec 2 2025

    This week, The Trek Files returns to one of our most personal corners of Trek history.

    Reinelda Estupinian,known lovingly as Reina, joins us again to share rare family photos and her firsthand memories of life inside the Roddenberry household. Hired in 1974 as a nanny for six-month-old Rod Roddenberry, Reina became a trusted part of the family for over three decades, eventually working closely with Majel Barrett Roddenberry at Lincoln Enterprises.

    Reina shares candid and touching stories of those years: traveling with the family, managing Majel's whirlwind convention life, and offering emotional support through Gene's declining health and Majel's final days. With affection and a few sitcom-worthy anecdotes, she paints a vivid picture of the private lives behind Star Trek's public legacy.

    📸 Document and additional references: A collection of rare Roddenberry family photos from Reina's personal archives

    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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    27 m
  • 14-12 Fan Letters and Fandom Flashpoints – November 1986
    Nov 25 2025

    What happens when fans learn their beloved Star Trek is returning, but not the way they expect?

    This week on The Trek Files, we take a mid-season dive into the pre-internet letter-writing era of fandom with a look at Interstat #109, a Star Trek "LOC-zine" published just after the announcement of The Next Generation in late 1986. With Mission Log host and producer John Champion joining Larry, we revisit that first wave of passionate, skeptical, and sometimes prophetic reactions from fans adjusting to the idea of Star Trek without Kirk, Spock, or the original cast.

    From fears about recasting to early excitement about a new crew, these letters reveal a fandom both resistant to change and deeply hopeful for Trek's future. And while the tone may be more thoughtful than today's drive-by social media culture, the underlying emotions haven't changed.

    Together, John and Larry reflect on how fandom evolves, why backlash often masks deep investment, and how publications like Interstat helped shape the Trek we know today—slowly, one stamp at a time.

    📄 Document and additional references: Interstat Issue #109 (November 1986)

    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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    27 m
  • 14-11 Interface, Probes, and Saying Goodbye
    Nov 18 2025

    In the 1993 Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Interface," Geordi La Forge uses experimental technology to remotely explore a stranded starship and is confronted by a deeply personal mystery. Was the image of his mother real, or something else entirely?

    This week, returning guest Dr. David Williams joins Larry to explore the real-world science behind this episode. Using a vintage press summary as our entry point, they discuss how TNG anticipated advances in virtual interfaces and robotics: technologies that now drive space exploration through probes, planetary rovers, and immersive control systems.

    From the Voyager missions to Mars rovers and the growing role of augmented reality in mission planning, Star Trek's tech continues to align with our scientific future. Along the way, Dave and Larry reflect on the emotional themes of "Interface," and how fiction about space helps us prepare for its most human dimensions.

    📄 Document and additional references: Paramount press summary for TNG "Interface" (1993)

    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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    20 m
  • 14-10 Your Move, Doug – First Contact with TNG
    Nov 11 2025

    Imagine being invited to visit the Star Trek: The Next Generation set before it even aired by none other than Bob Justman.

    This week, The Trek Files welcomes back Doug Drexler to share the story of his very first visit to the TNG set in 1987, spurred by a letter from legendary Trek producer Robert H. Justman. That visit changed everything. Doug quickly transitioned from fan to crew member, taking any job that would get him in the door as he built the career that would shape the look of Star Trek for decades to come.

    With his signature energy and humility, Doug talks about what it meant to go from wide-eyed visitor to behind-the-scenes creative force, and why, even now, he understands fans who struggle with change in the franchise he loves so much.

    Plus, we're in the final stretch of the Kickstarter campaign for Trek Star, the documentary chronicling Doug's incredible Trek journey.

    📄 Document of the week: Letter from Robert H. Justman to Doug Drexler – August 12, 1987


    🎬 Support the doc: Trek Star – The Doug Drexler Documentary on Kickstarter

    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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    27 m
  • 14-9 From Saving Trek to Shaping It – Doug Drexler's Journey
    Nov 4 2025

    Before he was an Oscar-winning makeup artist and Star Trek's go-to designer, Doug Drexler was just a teenage fan fighting to save the show he loved.

    This week, Doug joins The Trek Files to reflect on a remarkable journey—from the 1968 Newsday article that quoted him as a 14-year-old letter-writing activist, to working for the legendary Federation Trading Post in New York, and eventually becoming one of the franchise's most beloved creative minds.

    Doug shares memories of fandom in the '60s and '70s like filming Star Trek episodes off his TV with an 8mm home movie camera, then waiting days for the film to be processed just to rewatch them. That early passion led to a career in Hollywood, where he helped shape the look of Trek for decades, from The Next Generation to Enterprise and beyond.

    Plus, a look ahead at the upcoming documentary Trek Star, chronicling Doug's unique Trek story from sidewalk protests to the Paramount lot.

    📰 Document of the week: Newsday clipping – "This Group Isn't Way Out, But Its Cause Is" (Feb. 1, 1968)

    🎬 Coming soon: Trek Star – The Doug Drexler Documentary on Kickstarter

    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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    26 m