Star Trek: 1966-2005

Today’s Op-Ed section of the NYTimes prints the obituary of our long-beloved Star Trek. Since the Times only has its articles available for a short time, I’ll reprint the whole thing here:

By the middle of May, the “Star Trek” franchise will be no more, having died a death as long and lingering as — well, insert your favorite Trekkie long-and-lingering-death simile here. UPN has decided to bring “Star Trek: Enterprise” – the latest version of the saga – to an end and to give the whole idea of “Star Trek” a creative rest. The producers of the show have rejected a hopeless last-ditch effort to raise funds directly from fans to continue production.

The original “Star Trek” series proved what a little imagination, a little patience and a lot of plywood and foam core could do for televised science fiction. It ran for only three seasons on NBC in the late 1960′s but attracted a devoted following that seems, somehow, to have replicated itself by cloning. It also inspired four additional series, 10 “Star Trek” movies and a delightful parody called “Galaxy Quest,” starring Tim Allen and Sigourney Weaver, which flirted momentarily with the nihilistic possibility that a television show about space might merely be a television show about space.

For “Star Trek” fans, a future with no “Star Trek” at all must seem as empty as one of those great space voids the ever-endangered starship Enterprise kept getting sucked into. But somewhere, a TV executive is undoubtedly repeating the slogan about going where no one has gone before – and wondering how to make that idea about direct fan-financing work.

It was so young, but felt so damn old. I know it was tired and suffering. I say, may it rest in peace for a long time before some executive gets the idea to resurrect it as Star Trek: The Geriatric Generation. Let’s wipe away the tears and turn our attention toward the future, shall we?

Connect

If you'd like to receive update notifications via email, enter your address below. Don't worry, I hate spam, too, so you'll never get it from me.

,

One Response to Star Trek: 1966-2005

  1. Kip July 21, 2006 at 10:42 am #

    Dude, you too!!!!! Where is the intellectual thought I feed upon while I move through my highly educated, underpaid ghetto on a daily basis? I am thirsty for new thought!

Leave a Reply