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Third Eye Brewing created a special Star Trek-themed beer in collaboration with the Cincinnati Comic Expo, likely going where no other beer in the area has gone before.
Star Trek: Section 31 begins when a spitwad flies across the screen and traces out the shape of the Starfleet logo. I would later learn that this spitwad was the show's hero ship.
J.J. Abrams’ “Star Trek” delivers enough eye-popping segments that choosing one to rep the film is difficult — heck, the opening sequence combines heroism, evil, kick-ass action, shit ...
In 2017, one of the greatest Star Trek episodes of all time celebrated its 25th anniversary. On June 1st, 1992, a fifth season episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation called “The Inner Light ...
Variety ranked the 57 best ‘Star Trek’ episodes across all 10 series — including The Original Series and The Next Generation — in honor of the franchise’s 57th anniversary.
In these darkest of times “Star Trek: Picard” is a humane light from a distant, possible future The first season finale streams at a precarious time for humanity, and leaves us hopeful despite ...
Star Trek: Voyager ‘s First Brush With Getting Home Is One of Its Best Thirty years ago today, 'Eye of the Needle' gave Voyager an impossible scenario, and gave it a perfectly Star Trek solution.
Nearly 50 years after Star Trek’s first television incarnation, subspace communications, which enabled secure faster than light galactic communications will likely remain science fiction.
The animation shows how long it takes the starship Enterprise in "Star Trek" to reach Pluto at warp factors that break the known laws of physics.
Idris Elba accidentally punched his co-star Chris Pine in the face while filming Star Trek Beyond, Elba told reporters at the film’s premiere at San Diego Comic-Con.
The script for Star Trek: Origins, which is not the official name for the movie, written by Seth Grahame-Smith [pictured above], author of the New York Times Bestselling novels, Pride and ...
You're ready to believe that the fantastic adventures of television's popular spacemen will be possible in 200 years, for their "science" is a logical projection of present knowledge.