All language subtitles for 50 Years of Star Trek (2016)

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese Download
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 0 00:00:01,000 --> 00:00:06,000 Ripped, corrected & synched by Fingersmaster. Enjoy! 1 00:00:13,800 --> 00:00:16,469 On September 8th, 1966, 2 00:00:16,569 --> 00:00:19,839 America tunes in to catch a glimpse of the future 3 00:00:19,939 --> 00:00:23,076 and launches a global phenomenon. 4 00:00:23,176 --> 00:00:25,913 A television series like no other 5 00:00:26,013 --> 00:00:27,480 that unites us in its vision 6 00:00:27,580 --> 00:00:29,049 of a better world to come. 7 00:00:29,149 --> 00:00:32,485 - Here's a group of people who are solving problems together, 8 00:00:32,585 --> 00:00:34,221 and they're all different, diverse people. 9 00:00:34,321 --> 00:00:37,857 This is the secret history of "Star Trek." 10 00:00:37,957 --> 00:00:39,993 It's epic 50-year mission. 11 00:00:40,093 --> 00:00:41,761 - That was what was so brilliant about "Star Trek" 12 00:00:41,861 --> 00:00:44,932 was that it was human nature and human instinct 13 00:00:45,032 --> 00:00:47,467 and the drive to want to know more 14 00:00:47,567 --> 00:00:49,269 combined with adventure. 15 00:00:49,369 --> 00:00:51,939 The mastermind of the "Star Trek" universe. 16 00:00:52,039 --> 00:00:54,507 - And Gene says, "Do you want to be on Star Trek?" 17 00:00:54,607 --> 00:00:58,145 I said, "Yes. Yes!" 18 00:00:58,245 --> 00:01:00,347 The cast and crew reveal the stories 19 00:01:00,447 --> 00:01:01,681 you've never heard. 20 00:01:01,781 --> 00:01:03,050 - Roddenberry looked at the beard and goes, 21 00:01:03,150 --> 00:01:05,485 "I love the beard. It's nautical." 22 00:01:05,585 --> 00:01:09,022 Plus Leonard Nimoy's final full interview. 23 00:01:09,122 --> 00:01:11,158 - If I were given the choice of any character 24 00:01:11,258 --> 00:01:14,928 ever portrayed on television, I would choose Spock. 25 00:01:15,028 --> 00:01:16,329 - Happy anniversary, "Star Trek." 26 00:01:16,429 --> 00:01:18,531 Happy 50th. Wow, way to go. 27 00:01:18,631 --> 00:01:20,934 - Before anybody else were touching on subjects, 28 00:01:21,034 --> 00:01:23,736 racism, segregation, discrimination, 29 00:01:23,836 --> 00:01:25,638 before any other TV shows did. 30 00:01:25,738 --> 00:01:28,541 - "Star Trek: Voyager" is probably my first acting job. 31 00:01:28,641 --> 00:01:30,077 - There's an optimism to it 32 00:01:30,177 --> 00:01:32,445 that I think we've never needed more than now. 33 00:01:32,545 --> 00:01:34,247 - Seven of Nine's one of my favorite "Star Trek" characters 34 00:01:34,347 --> 00:01:35,782 because she was so hot. 35 00:01:35,882 --> 00:01:38,551 Featuring an intimate conversation with cast members, 36 00:01:38,651 --> 00:01:41,254 comedians, scientists, and academics 37 00:01:41,354 --> 00:01:43,423 covering all things "Star Trek." 38 00:01:43,523 --> 00:01:45,592 - That was one of my big fears in accepting the role. 39 00:01:45,692 --> 00:01:48,828 - Happy 50th anniversary, "Star Trek." 40 00:01:48,928 --> 00:01:50,563 You know how old that makes me? 41 00:01:50,663 --> 00:01:54,134 "50 Years of 'Star Trek." 42 00:01:57,537 --> 00:02:00,273 - We're here on the 50th anniversary of "Star Trek" 43 00:02:00,373 --> 00:02:02,475 at the Griffith Observatory 44 00:02:02,575 --> 00:02:04,777 outside the Leonard Nimoy theater 45 00:02:04,877 --> 00:02:08,615 to discuss "Star Trek" with a lot of great people 46 00:02:08,715 --> 00:02:10,717 and a lot of fine minds and Kevin Pollak. 47 00:02:13,052 --> 00:02:14,988 Let's just jump right into it. 48 00:02:15,088 --> 00:02:18,058 Let's talk about the general impact of "Star Trek." 49 00:02:18,158 --> 00:02:21,228 - The great sense of discovery and curiosity 50 00:02:21,328 --> 00:02:24,131 on this five-year mission to seek out new worlds. 51 00:02:24,231 --> 00:02:25,632 You know, those--those-- 52 00:02:25,732 --> 00:02:28,235 that phraseology was kind of impactful. 53 00:02:28,335 --> 00:02:30,537 - "The Measure of Man" where Data's on trial, 54 00:02:30,637 --> 00:02:33,273 that's the episode that led me to create my class. 55 00:02:33,373 --> 00:02:34,507 - Oh, wow. - Because it has references 56 00:02:34,607 --> 00:02:36,309 to slavery in it, and I thought about, 57 00:02:36,409 --> 00:02:37,744 "Gee, this is very interesting." 58 00:02:37,844 --> 00:02:40,047 You know, there's a whole pro-slavery argument. 59 00:02:40,147 --> 00:02:42,715 It's really the Dred Scott decision worked out there. 60 00:02:42,815 --> 00:02:44,284 - Yeah. - Is Data property or not? 61 00:02:44,384 --> 00:02:45,885 - I saw a couple of episodes 62 00:02:45,985 --> 00:02:47,454 of the original series when I was a kid 63 00:02:47,554 --> 00:02:50,190 because you can't not have seen some things. 64 00:02:50,290 --> 00:02:51,791 I saw the Tribble episode, I think, 65 00:02:51,891 --> 00:02:54,994 and I saw the planet of kids, "grups." 66 00:02:55,094 --> 00:02:56,129 And they were saying, "Grups, grups," that one. 67 00:02:56,229 --> 00:02:57,497 Whatever. - Yeah. 68 00:02:57,597 --> 00:02:59,532 - But I was never a sci-fi fan, so I wasn't into it. 69 00:02:59,632 --> 00:03:01,701 And I never watched any of the other incarnations 70 00:03:01,801 --> 00:03:02,802 until I was on the show. 71 00:03:02,902 --> 00:03:05,305 - I saw "Star Trek" as this, you know, 72 00:03:05,405 --> 00:03:07,640 amazing way of bringing humanity together, right? 73 00:03:07,740 --> 00:03:09,209 You had the height of the Cold War. 74 00:03:09,309 --> 00:03:11,444 You had a Russian and American people working together. 75 00:03:11,544 --> 00:03:14,314 You had black people and white people working together. 76 00:03:14,414 --> 00:03:16,449 That's an incredible thing to see as a kid 77 00:03:16,549 --> 00:03:19,486 when, you know, you're from two worlds 78 00:03:19,586 --> 00:03:21,521 that really also don't get along. 79 00:03:21,621 --> 00:03:22,889 - I first started on the original series, 80 00:03:22,989 --> 00:03:24,624 my mother was a big fan, and those were reruns 81 00:03:24,724 --> 00:03:25,892 that were happening at the time. 82 00:03:25,992 --> 00:03:28,295 It was right before "Next Generation" started 83 00:03:28,395 --> 00:03:30,363 and it was--I just always was fascinated 84 00:03:30,463 --> 00:03:32,599 by Dr. McCoy's grumpiness. 85 00:03:32,699 --> 00:03:34,867 That relationship with Spock I thought was amazing. 86 00:03:34,967 --> 00:03:36,803 He just was, like, "I can't stand you, 87 00:03:36,903 --> 00:03:38,171 but I love you." - Yeah. 88 00:03:38,271 --> 00:03:40,173 - And I was like, "Oh, that's my family." 89 00:03:41,508 --> 00:03:43,810 I understand everything from "Star Trek." 90 00:03:43,910 --> 00:03:45,212 - Yes. - You know, it's funny 91 00:03:45,312 --> 00:03:47,880 because I wasn't allowed to watch TV 92 00:03:47,980 --> 00:03:49,449 when "Star Trek" was on the air. 93 00:03:49,549 --> 00:03:51,050 My parents wouldn't let me watch it. 94 00:03:51,150 --> 00:03:53,653 So I snuck downstairs and I turned on the TV. 95 00:03:53,753 --> 00:03:57,490 And, uh, that was my first-- the first time I saw the show. 96 00:03:57,590 --> 00:03:59,559 I think it was, um, "This Side of Paradise" 97 00:03:59,659 --> 00:04:00,827 was the episode. - Oh. 98 00:04:00,927 --> 00:04:04,297 - And you could tell that whoever was doing the show 99 00:04:04,397 --> 00:04:05,932 was a science fiction fan. 100 00:04:06,032 --> 00:04:11,138 * 101 00:04:11,238 --> 00:04:14,307 "Star Trek" begins as the brainchild of one man, 102 00:04:14,407 --> 00:04:17,477 Gene Roddenberry, a former World War II pilot 103 00:04:17,577 --> 00:04:19,746 and policeman turned screenwriter. 104 00:04:19,846 --> 00:04:23,250 His first television series premieres in 1963, 105 00:04:23,350 --> 00:04:25,985 and features a few faces that will soon become familiar 106 00:04:26,085 --> 00:04:28,455 to "Trek" fans. 107 00:04:28,555 --> 00:04:31,124 - He was a big man, enthusiastic. 108 00:04:31,224 --> 00:04:34,761 He really, really loved producing a show, 109 00:04:34,861 --> 00:04:36,329 which he had never done before. 110 00:04:36,429 --> 00:04:37,697 He created "The Lieutenant." 111 00:04:39,766 --> 00:04:43,503 - It was "The Lieutenant." It was his first big TV show. 112 00:04:43,603 --> 00:04:45,938 And he cast me. 113 00:04:46,038 --> 00:04:49,976 - I had acted in an episode of a series called "The Lieutenant" 114 00:04:50,076 --> 00:04:51,878 that was produced by Gene Roddenberry. 115 00:04:51,978 --> 00:04:53,813 My agent called me and said, "He's interested in you 116 00:04:53,913 --> 00:04:57,750 for a science fiction pilot that he's gonna produce. 117 00:04:57,850 --> 00:05:00,320 "The Lieutenant" runs for just one season, 118 00:05:00,420 --> 00:05:03,656 but Roddenberry's already working on a bigger idea. 119 00:05:03,756 --> 00:05:07,860 In 1964, he begins pitching a series about a starship 120 00:05:07,960 --> 00:05:09,596 with a multi-ethnic crew. 121 00:05:09,696 --> 00:05:12,999 - I had worked for him directly when his secretary was ill. 122 00:05:13,099 --> 00:05:16,369 And he knew that I had sold some things 123 00:05:16,469 --> 00:05:19,472 that I wanted to be a writer, a full-time writer. 124 00:05:19,572 --> 00:05:21,941 And he called me into his office and said, 125 00:05:22,041 --> 00:05:24,010 "What do you think of this?" And he showed me 126 00:05:24,110 --> 00:05:28,448 about a 10-12 page piece that was called "Star Trek." 127 00:05:28,548 --> 00:05:32,485 - Well, he had done... - "The Lieutenant." 128 00:05:32,585 --> 00:05:35,388 - I went in to do a pitch on a story. 129 00:05:35,488 --> 00:05:38,858 Somehow or another, he asked if I was interested 130 00:05:38,958 --> 00:05:41,027 in doing "Star Trek." 131 00:05:41,127 --> 00:05:43,730 I said, "Yeah, I would be interested in that." 132 00:05:43,830 --> 00:05:44,964 - And I went home, and I read it, 133 00:05:45,064 --> 00:05:46,132 and I came back the next day, and I said, 134 00:05:46,232 --> 00:05:47,234 "Who plays Mr. Spock." 135 00:05:47,334 --> 00:05:49,936 - The script was very good, very good. 136 00:05:50,036 --> 00:05:52,104 I didn't quite understand how it was gonna work 137 00:05:52,204 --> 00:05:54,774 as a television show because it was so unique. 138 00:05:54,874 --> 00:05:57,076 It was really quite special. 139 00:05:57,176 --> 00:05:59,111 But it was a very intelligent script. 140 00:05:59,211 --> 00:06:02,048 It had layers of ideas in it 141 00:06:02,148 --> 00:06:04,551 that you didn't often get in television. 142 00:06:04,651 --> 00:06:06,118 - Roddenberry was very inspired 143 00:06:06,218 --> 00:06:08,788 by Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver's Travels." 144 00:06:08,888 --> 00:06:11,324 And wanted to tell stories 145 00:06:11,424 --> 00:06:13,326 that you couldn't normally tell on television 146 00:06:13,426 --> 00:06:14,861 through the prism of science fiction. 147 00:06:14,961 --> 00:06:17,797 - He was such a complex and interesting man. 148 00:06:17,897 --> 00:06:20,933 Very bright, very bright. 149 00:06:21,033 --> 00:06:23,236 Hard-working. 150 00:06:23,336 --> 00:06:24,771 Tough job, tough job. 151 00:06:24,871 --> 00:06:26,606 Particularly getting "Star Trek" right 152 00:06:26,706 --> 00:06:28,040 the first couple of seasons. 153 00:06:28,140 --> 00:06:30,977 To get it--to get it what he wanted it to be. 154 00:06:31,077 --> 00:06:33,079 - They didn't think there was a big enough audience out there. 155 00:06:33,179 --> 00:06:35,282 They thought it was gonna be sci-fi kooks and kids. 156 00:06:35,382 --> 00:06:37,083 And they didn't think they could make enough money 157 00:06:37,183 --> 00:06:40,720 from their sponsors to put these on in prime-time. 158 00:06:40,820 --> 00:06:42,522 Well, they had put on "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea" 159 00:06:42,622 --> 00:06:46,092 in fall of '64, winning its timeslot for ABC. 160 00:06:46,192 --> 00:06:48,995 Fall of '65, he puts on "Lost In Space" on CBS. 161 00:06:49,095 --> 00:06:51,564 It's winning its timeslot for CBS. 162 00:06:51,664 --> 00:06:53,633 That was when they made the decision to put it on 163 00:06:53,733 --> 00:06:56,235 for the fall of '66. NBC wants one. 164 00:06:56,335 --> 00:06:58,505 They felt they were missing the boat. 165 00:06:58,605 --> 00:06:59,939 President John F. Kennedy 166 00:07:00,039 --> 00:07:01,508 issues a challenge: 167 00:07:01,608 --> 00:07:04,811 To put a man on the moon before the end of the decade. 168 00:07:04,911 --> 00:07:09,015 The space race heats up as America looks to the stars. 169 00:07:09,115 --> 00:07:12,952 And one unlikely supporter sees an opportunity. 170 00:07:13,052 --> 00:07:15,922 - Well, "Star Trek" may be the first TV show 171 00:07:16,022 --> 00:07:17,590 I can really remember. 172 00:07:17,690 --> 00:07:20,393 "Star Trek" and "Mission: Impossible." 173 00:07:20,493 --> 00:07:23,496 In fact, the both--the two great Desilu productions. 174 00:07:23,596 --> 00:07:26,699 - The other player in "Star Trek" 175 00:07:26,799 --> 00:07:28,535 and get it on the air was Lucille Ball 176 00:07:28,635 --> 00:07:30,637 with Desilu Studios. 177 00:07:30,737 --> 00:07:34,341 - It was Lucille Ball who said, "Let's make this." 178 00:07:34,441 --> 00:07:37,677 - That studio was built on reruns. 179 00:07:37,777 --> 00:07:40,313 And when "I Love Lucy" was in production, 180 00:07:40,413 --> 00:07:42,014 they wanted to film it here in LA. 181 00:07:42,114 --> 00:07:44,183 So they said, "We'll pay the difference and film this 182 00:07:44,283 --> 00:07:45,852 if we can have the rerun rights." 183 00:07:45,952 --> 00:07:48,154 And the answer from Harry Ackerman at CBS was, 184 00:07:48,254 --> 00:07:49,322 "What's a rerun?" 185 00:07:49,422 --> 00:07:51,458 Nobody had ever rerun anything on TV. 186 00:07:51,558 --> 00:07:53,560 They shot it live, it was gone. 187 00:07:53,660 --> 00:07:55,728 And "Star Trek" was brought in. 188 00:07:55,828 --> 00:07:59,699 And Lucy said, "I think that could rerun for ten years. 189 00:07:59,799 --> 00:08:01,568 Well, here we are 50 years later. 190 00:08:01,668 --> 00:08:03,503 "I Love Lucy" is still on five days a week 191 00:08:03,603 --> 00:08:05,004 in every city around the country. 192 00:08:05,104 --> 00:08:06,706 And probably the second most rerun show 193 00:08:06,806 --> 00:08:08,408 in the history of television is "Star Trek." 194 00:08:08,508 --> 00:08:12,144 Let's give her credit, Lucy loved "Star Trek." 195 00:08:12,244 --> 00:08:14,013 And we wouldn't have had "Star Trek" without Lucy, 196 00:08:14,113 --> 00:08:15,247 so we love Lucy. 197 00:08:15,347 --> 00:08:18,951 - You know, my father passed away when I was 17. 198 00:08:19,051 --> 00:08:21,388 He's got such a legacy and he's touched so many people 199 00:08:21,488 --> 00:08:24,791 that I've learned a great deal about him after his passing. 200 00:08:24,891 --> 00:08:27,326 You know, he was a bomber pilot in World War II. 201 00:08:27,426 --> 00:08:32,399 He flew something like, uh, is it 79 or 89 missions. 202 00:08:32,499 --> 00:08:34,534 My father had seen the best of humanity 203 00:08:34,634 --> 00:08:36,202 and he'd seen the worst of humanity. 204 00:08:36,302 --> 00:08:38,571 But I think that really helped shape his view 205 00:08:38,671 --> 00:08:40,773 of "Star Trek" and that better future. 206 00:08:45,945 --> 00:08:49,616 The pilot episode of "Star Trek" is filmed in 1965, 207 00:08:49,716 --> 00:08:51,618 introducing the world to what would become 208 00:08:51,718 --> 00:08:54,587 one of the most iconic characters of all time, 209 00:08:54,687 --> 00:08:56,823 Mr. Spock. 210 00:08:56,923 --> 00:08:59,058 - And he shoved a picture of Leonard Nimoy 211 00:08:59,158 --> 00:09:00,259 across the desk at me. 212 00:09:00,359 --> 00:09:04,230 At that point, he was a Martian first officer. 213 00:09:04,330 --> 00:09:06,265 - He said a character with pointed ears, 214 00:09:06,365 --> 00:09:08,735 and that set me back a bit. 215 00:09:08,835 --> 00:09:10,603 I had to think about that one. 216 00:09:10,703 --> 00:09:16,175 - Leonard was an actor. He was a real actor. 217 00:09:16,275 --> 00:09:17,744 - And he walked me through the various departments. 218 00:09:17,844 --> 00:09:19,646 He showed me where they were making the props. 219 00:09:19,746 --> 00:09:22,014 He showed me where the sets were being designed, 220 00:09:22,114 --> 00:09:24,216 the design for the Enterprise, the ship. 221 00:09:24,316 --> 00:09:27,620 And I realized that he was selling me on this job. 222 00:09:27,720 --> 00:09:30,356 And that's the way it would happen. 223 00:09:30,456 --> 00:09:33,359 The network orders a new "Star Trek" pilot. 224 00:09:33,459 --> 00:09:34,994 Spock stays on board, 225 00:09:35,094 --> 00:09:37,430 but the Enterprise gets an entirely new crew, 226 00:09:37,530 --> 00:09:40,332 including a brash, young captain, 227 00:09:40,432 --> 00:09:41,701 James T. Kirk. 228 00:09:41,801 --> 00:09:45,838 - William Shatner had Kirk down 229 00:09:45,938 --> 00:09:47,940 from act one, scene one, 230 00:09:48,040 --> 00:09:49,576 and he played that through right till the end 231 00:09:49,676 --> 00:09:51,911 in "Star Trek: Generations" in 1994. 232 00:09:52,011 --> 00:09:54,080 - You know, Shatner, who's totally nailing the part, 233 00:09:54,180 --> 00:09:57,349 but DeForest Kelley, the person that Gene wanted 234 00:09:57,449 --> 00:09:59,819 from the beginning for Dr. McCoy. 235 00:09:59,919 --> 00:10:02,522 - Scotty felt like he was a little more fully formed 236 00:10:02,622 --> 00:10:04,090 as a character. 237 00:10:04,190 --> 00:10:06,626 There was an empathy with Jimmy Doohan's performance. 238 00:10:06,726 --> 00:10:08,761 We just liked Scotty. You wanted to hang out with Scotty. 239 00:10:08,861 --> 00:10:11,798 You wanted to go have a drink in the bar with Scotty, you know? 240 00:10:11,898 --> 00:10:13,399 - It's a very hallowed and beloved thing 241 00:10:13,499 --> 00:10:15,167 that you don't want to mess up. 242 00:10:15,267 --> 00:10:16,769 I feel honored to play Scotty. 243 00:10:16,869 --> 00:10:18,538 I will always defer to the greatest Scotty ever, 244 00:10:18,638 --> 00:10:20,006 which was James Doohan, 245 00:10:20,106 --> 00:10:22,942 but if I can do half as good as he did, then I'll be happy. 246 00:10:23,042 --> 00:10:26,613 - George Takei, who plays Mr. Sulu, sat at the helm. 247 00:10:26,713 --> 00:10:29,782 - An Asian man on a show like this, 248 00:10:29,882 --> 00:10:31,518 you seldom saw anything like that. 249 00:10:31,618 --> 00:10:33,620 And here he was, a man with responsibilities. 250 00:10:33,720 --> 00:10:34,854 He was the helmsman. 251 00:10:34,954 --> 00:10:37,524 - Everyone, Nichelle, just beautiful and smart 252 00:10:37,624 --> 00:10:40,593 and an incredible role model as Uhura. 253 00:10:40,693 --> 00:10:45,532 - I think the first memory of "Star Trek" really was going, 254 00:10:45,632 --> 00:10:47,366 "Oh, look..." 255 00:10:47,466 --> 00:10:49,101 "There's a black lady in the future." 256 00:10:49,201 --> 00:10:51,403 And this was the first time I knew 257 00:10:51,503 --> 00:10:53,740 we would be in the future. 258 00:10:53,840 --> 00:10:55,642 - Later on, Walter Koenig as Chekov. 259 00:10:55,742 --> 00:10:58,611 - If the circumstances hadn't fallen the way they did, 260 00:10:58,711 --> 00:11:00,146 if things hadn't happened the way they did, 261 00:11:00,246 --> 00:11:02,882 then I probably never been in for the role 262 00:11:02,982 --> 00:11:05,084 of Chekov on "Star Trek." 263 00:11:05,184 --> 00:11:08,087 I read one line. He says, "You got the part." 264 00:11:08,187 --> 00:11:09,689 And that was the part of a Russian. 265 00:11:09,789 --> 00:11:11,123 - Who had a Russian on the show? 266 00:11:11,223 --> 00:11:14,426 We were still just reaching out trying to make contact 267 00:11:14,526 --> 00:11:16,262 with Russia in a friendly sense. 268 00:11:16,362 --> 00:11:17,997 - To bring these people together 269 00:11:18,097 --> 00:11:20,767 created the magic that is "Star Trek." 270 00:11:20,867 --> 00:11:24,036 - From day one, we got along... 271 00:11:24,136 --> 00:11:25,872 just like that. 272 00:11:25,972 --> 00:11:27,406 With the cast and crew assembled, 273 00:11:27,506 --> 00:11:30,710 the Enterprise is nearly ready to begin its mission. 274 00:11:30,810 --> 00:11:33,980 But Roddenberry knows something is missing. 275 00:11:34,080 --> 00:11:38,084 - G.R said, "I gotta do an opening for the show." 276 00:11:38,184 --> 00:11:41,153 So he said, "You take a shot at it, 277 00:11:41,253 --> 00:11:43,623 I'll take a shot at it, we'll see what happens." 278 00:11:43,723 --> 00:11:45,224 - It was, "Space... the final frontier," 279 00:11:45,324 --> 00:11:48,294 was yours, wasn't it? - Yeah. 280 00:11:48,394 --> 00:11:49,929 "The final frontier." 281 00:11:50,029 --> 00:11:51,263 - "Space... 282 00:11:51,363 --> 00:11:53,232 "the final frontier. 283 00:11:56,869 --> 00:12:00,607 - So it was some Roddenberry, it was some Black. 284 00:12:00,707 --> 00:12:04,443 We came out with... 285 00:12:04,543 --> 00:12:07,814 "Boldy go where no man has gone before." 286 00:12:07,914 --> 00:12:11,350 - To boldly go where no man has gone before. 287 00:12:11,450 --> 00:12:18,758 * 288 00:12:18,858 --> 00:12:20,392 NBC premieres "Star Trek" 289 00:12:20,492 --> 00:12:23,763 on a Thursday night in the fall of 1966. 290 00:12:23,863 --> 00:12:25,932 - Well, the first episode of "Star Trek,""The Man Trap," 291 00:12:26,032 --> 00:12:28,534 had 47% audience share. 292 00:12:28,634 --> 00:12:31,303 Lucy wrote a memo to Gene Roddenberry saying, 293 00:12:31,403 --> 00:12:33,740 "Congratulations, boys, you're a hit." 294 00:12:33,840 --> 00:12:35,374 - Back in the late '60s, 295 00:12:35,474 --> 00:12:38,577 what "Star Trek" was doing on television was cutting edge. 296 00:12:38,677 --> 00:12:40,012 It was ahead of its time. 297 00:12:40,112 --> 00:12:42,615 - This was the first time we saw a miniskirt on television. 298 00:12:42,715 --> 00:12:45,151 "Star Trek" premiered in September of '66, 299 00:12:45,251 --> 00:12:47,920 the mini made its debut in London 300 00:12:48,020 --> 00:12:51,223 in the summer of '66 and had not made it to America. 301 00:12:51,323 --> 00:12:53,192 He was way ahead of his time. 302 00:12:53,292 --> 00:12:55,995 - It was also a science fiction series 303 00:12:56,095 --> 00:12:59,832 that took the subject matter very seriously. 304 00:12:59,932 --> 00:13:02,468 "Star Trek" is unlike anything on television 305 00:13:02,568 --> 00:13:04,937 at the time, but what makes it unique 306 00:13:05,037 --> 00:13:11,010 also threatens to destroy it. 307 00:13:11,110 --> 00:13:12,679 "Star Trek" premieres in 1966, 308 00:13:12,779 --> 00:13:15,915 and instantly becomes one of the most ground-breaking series 309 00:13:16,015 --> 00:13:18,017 in the history of television. 310 00:13:18,117 --> 00:13:19,618 Gene Roddenberry's vision 311 00:13:19,718 --> 00:13:22,454 is a sign of changing times in America. 312 00:13:22,554 --> 00:13:26,458 - A story about a hopeful future made in a difficult time. 313 00:13:26,558 --> 00:13:28,427 The times were tough. 314 00:13:28,527 --> 00:13:31,497 The war in Vietnam, the racial issues that were happening, 315 00:13:31,597 --> 00:13:35,534 riots in the streets, riots at political conventions. 316 00:13:35,634 --> 00:13:38,070 People were angry and upset and nervous and concerned. 317 00:13:38,170 --> 00:13:39,739 And it was this thing that said, "Hey, 318 00:13:39,839 --> 00:13:41,573 "in the future we have a way of dealing with these issues. 319 00:13:41,673 --> 00:13:43,175 "It's gonna be okay. 320 00:13:43,275 --> 00:13:45,912 "Here's a group of people who are solving problems together. 321 00:13:46,012 --> 00:13:48,214 And they're all different, diverse people." 322 00:13:48,314 --> 00:13:50,016 "Star Trek" tackles the most pressing 323 00:13:50,116 --> 00:13:52,551 social issues of its day. 324 00:13:52,651 --> 00:13:55,755 - We had the one where Uhura and Kirk kissed. 325 00:13:55,855 --> 00:13:58,157 That, I think, was more of-- I mean, I think that was great. 326 00:13:58,257 --> 00:14:00,793 And the people in the South, there were probably 327 00:14:00,893 --> 00:14:03,129 a lot of people jumping out of windows at that. 328 00:14:03,229 --> 00:14:04,931 - The director was nervous. 329 00:14:05,031 --> 00:14:07,767 The front office at Paramount was nervous, 330 00:14:07,867 --> 00:14:10,770 which was just dumb, you know, then don't do it, 331 00:14:10,870 --> 00:14:12,104 which is what I said. 332 00:14:12,204 --> 00:14:14,206 And they went, "You don't want to do it?" 333 00:14:14,306 --> 00:14:17,076 I said, "I want to do it. It's written in the script. 334 00:14:17,176 --> 00:14:18,778 It's a great scene." 335 00:14:18,878 --> 00:14:23,082 This is the first interracial kiss on television. 336 00:14:26,118 --> 00:14:27,386 * 337 00:14:32,624 --> 00:14:37,363 - They were writing some pretty major stuff in those days. 338 00:14:37,463 --> 00:14:40,499 I mean, very eloquent writers. Very knowledgeable. 339 00:14:40,599 --> 00:14:43,903 - They did "Mark of Gideon," which got a lot of flack, 340 00:14:44,003 --> 00:14:47,573 about birth control, overpopulation. 341 00:14:47,673 --> 00:14:49,141 'Cause nobody had talked about that on TV 342 00:14:49,241 --> 00:14:50,642 up until that point. 343 00:14:50,742 --> 00:14:55,414 NBC was disappointed with "Star Trek" from the get-go, 344 00:14:55,514 --> 00:14:57,917 but the rating were not bad 345 00:14:58,017 --> 00:15:00,953 and the fan mail was huge. 346 00:15:01,053 --> 00:15:02,889 "Star Trek" is doing things 347 00:15:02,989 --> 00:15:05,257 that a lot of the affiliates were uncomfortable with, 348 00:15:05,357 --> 00:15:08,094 so they kept moving it from one bad slot to another 349 00:15:08,194 --> 00:15:10,229 until they finally put it in the death slot 350 00:15:10,329 --> 00:15:12,431 to get rid of this show. 351 00:15:12,531 --> 00:15:14,466 That is what killed "Star Trek." 352 00:15:14,566 --> 00:15:16,168 The original series is canceled 353 00:15:16,268 --> 00:15:19,171 after 3 seasons and 79 episodes. 354 00:15:19,271 --> 00:15:20,739 But it's gained a cult following 355 00:15:20,839 --> 00:15:23,075 that's become undeniable. 356 00:15:23,175 --> 00:15:25,945 Within four years, "Trek" is back on the air. 357 00:15:26,045 --> 00:15:29,882 This time reaching a new generation of young fans. 358 00:15:32,919 --> 00:15:34,720 * 359 00:15:34,820 --> 00:15:36,122 - My first contact with "Star Trek" 360 00:15:36,222 --> 00:15:39,291 was probably watching the animated series 361 00:15:39,391 --> 00:15:42,895 on Saturday morning TV in the early '70s. 362 00:15:42,995 --> 00:15:46,232 And, you know, I was really struck by the, you know, 363 00:15:46,332 --> 00:15:48,500 the bright colors of the uniforms. 364 00:15:48,600 --> 00:15:50,937 - The fans were very wary. 365 00:15:51,037 --> 00:15:53,305 In fact, some of the cast was wary too. 366 00:15:53,405 --> 00:15:55,441 They felt, "Hey, 'Star Trek' is starting to get momentum. 367 00:15:55,541 --> 00:15:57,076 "We think there could be more life in this. 368 00:15:57,176 --> 00:15:59,011 But if we do a cartoon, it's gonna kill it." 369 00:15:59,111 --> 00:16:01,580 And Gene Roddenberry was very cagey and very smart. 370 00:16:01,680 --> 00:16:03,615 He says, "No, this will fan the flames. 371 00:16:03,715 --> 00:16:05,952 This will keep it alive rather than let it disappear." 372 00:16:06,052 --> 00:16:07,453 And he was right. 373 00:16:07,553 --> 00:16:09,989 - It sounds funny for saying this, 374 00:16:10,089 --> 00:16:13,025 but it has never been canceled. 375 00:16:13,125 --> 00:16:19,365 You know, um, we were just off longer than we wanted to be. 376 00:16:26,505 --> 00:16:28,440 - So then we have the '70s, right, '70s hit. 377 00:16:28,540 --> 00:16:30,943 Everyone went to see that "Star Wars" situation. 378 00:16:31,043 --> 00:16:32,912 I think we can make some money. 379 00:16:33,012 --> 00:16:35,147 - So you had a TV script that was being padded out 380 00:16:35,247 --> 00:16:36,515 into a motion picture. 381 00:16:36,615 --> 00:16:38,317 They took themselves a little too seriously 382 00:16:38,417 --> 00:16:40,386 and they were trying to be a little more like, "2001." 383 00:16:40,486 --> 00:16:42,221 Then they brought in Robert Wise 384 00:16:42,321 --> 00:16:45,958 because he was known as a big-time movie director. 385 00:16:46,058 --> 00:16:47,626 - There never really been a movie 386 00:16:47,726 --> 00:16:49,495 years after a show was canceled. 387 00:16:52,198 --> 00:16:53,599 "Star Trek" would be the beginning 388 00:16:53,699 --> 00:16:56,435 of that phenomena, which--now, you know, 389 00:16:56,535 --> 00:16:57,970 well, unceasing phenomena. 390 00:16:58,070 --> 00:17:01,173 - When we came back to do the first really big one 391 00:17:01,273 --> 00:17:05,477 that we did after being away so long, 392 00:17:05,577 --> 00:17:08,647 it was amazing. 393 00:17:08,747 --> 00:17:10,316 "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" 394 00:17:10,416 --> 00:17:13,585 hits theaters in December of 1979. 395 00:17:13,685 --> 00:17:16,222 But the cast has its doubts. 396 00:17:16,322 --> 00:17:19,125 - So Robert Wise was a very good filmmaker. 397 00:17:19,225 --> 00:17:22,161 He was a multiple Academy Award-winning director, 398 00:17:22,261 --> 00:17:24,263 but he did not know "Star Trek." 399 00:17:24,363 --> 00:17:27,566 - We sat down to watch that first movie 400 00:17:27,666 --> 00:17:29,435 and the beginning was great. 401 00:17:29,535 --> 00:17:32,404 Dat-dat-dat-dat-dat-dat-dat. Bum-bum-bum-bum. 402 00:17:32,504 --> 00:17:35,374 And then it suddenly became a talking heads movie. 403 00:17:35,474 --> 00:17:37,276 Where was the friction? Where was the conflict? 404 00:17:37,376 --> 00:17:38,844 Where was the passion? 405 00:17:38,944 --> 00:17:40,312 - It had very little to do with "Star Trek." 406 00:17:40,412 --> 00:17:41,948 You had the spaceship, the Enterprise. 407 00:17:42,048 --> 00:17:43,882 You had the crew. 408 00:17:43,982 --> 00:17:45,584 But the story had very little to do 409 00:17:45,684 --> 00:17:47,486 with anything "Star Trek-y." 410 00:17:47,586 --> 00:17:50,489 The characters were not in shape, in place, 411 00:17:50,589 --> 00:17:52,058 playing off of each other and with each other 412 00:17:52,158 --> 00:17:53,993 the way we did best. 413 00:17:54,093 --> 00:17:55,995 - Why are they wearing pajamas? 414 00:17:56,095 --> 00:18:01,033 Why, you know, does it look like they're in a Holiday Inn? 415 00:18:01,133 --> 00:18:03,235 So a lot of what "The Wrath of Khan" 416 00:18:03,335 --> 00:18:06,172 proved to be about aesthetically 417 00:18:06,272 --> 00:18:09,375 and maybe even intellectually as well 418 00:18:09,475 --> 00:18:12,244 was a reaction to what I saw. 419 00:18:12,344 --> 00:18:15,181 - And for a movie that was so poorly received, 420 00:18:15,281 --> 00:18:16,782 we had done extremely well. 421 00:18:16,882 --> 00:18:19,952 To my great surprise, they said, "Star Trek II." 422 00:18:20,052 --> 00:18:23,122 "The Wrath of Khan" becomes an instant classic. 423 00:18:23,222 --> 00:18:26,125 It's villain is a genetically engineered superhuman, 424 00:18:26,225 --> 00:18:28,094 who first appeared in the original series 425 00:18:28,194 --> 00:18:31,130 bent on revenge against Captain Kirk. 426 00:18:31,230 --> 00:18:32,764 - "Wrath of Khan" is a classic. 427 00:18:32,864 --> 00:18:36,435 I mean, "Wrath of Khan" just works on every level. 428 00:18:36,535 --> 00:18:39,538 You know, it just does. It's pop entertainment. 429 00:18:39,638 --> 00:18:44,343 It's a fan's dream. It's fun. It's funny. 430 00:18:44,443 --> 00:18:46,212 The visual effects are state of the art 431 00:18:46,312 --> 00:18:48,080 and really hold up even to this day. 432 00:18:48,180 --> 00:18:49,848 Those space battles are fantastic. 433 00:18:49,948 --> 00:18:53,519 - Montalban was a charismatic actor. 434 00:18:53,619 --> 00:18:56,022 He really gave us this wonderful performance. 435 00:18:56,122 --> 00:18:58,290 It was theatrical, imaginative, creative 436 00:18:58,390 --> 00:19:01,227 performance as Khan in "Star Trek II." 437 00:19:01,327 --> 00:19:03,895 And he looked great. 438 00:19:03,995 --> 00:19:06,598 And that was his chest that people thought 439 00:19:06,698 --> 00:19:08,867 had been built up with makeup or something. 440 00:19:08,967 --> 00:19:10,636 That was him, you know? 441 00:19:10,736 --> 00:19:13,972 It was really Ricardo Montalban. 442 00:19:14,072 --> 00:19:16,842 - That's his chest. It's his chest. 443 00:19:16,942 --> 00:19:20,312 Gives you an idea of "Star Trek-ian" scholarship 444 00:19:20,412 --> 00:19:24,950 that that's the most, you know, frequently asked question. 445 00:19:25,050 --> 00:19:26,185 Behind the scenes, 446 00:19:26,285 --> 00:19:28,487 the cast didn't always get along. 447 00:19:28,587 --> 00:19:31,890 - I had immediately had a good rapport with with Nick Myers, 448 00:19:31,990 --> 00:19:34,126 but as we went through several rehearsals 449 00:19:34,226 --> 00:19:35,827 working with the camera, 450 00:19:35,927 --> 00:19:38,097 Shatner would come over to me 451 00:19:38,197 --> 00:19:39,865 and start trying to redirect me. 452 00:19:39,965 --> 00:19:43,001 Is the word given, Admiral? - The word is given. 453 00:19:43,101 --> 00:19:45,437 - So I finally said, "Can I stop for a second?" 454 00:19:45,537 --> 00:19:47,206 Nick said to me, "What's the matter, Ike?" 455 00:19:47,306 --> 00:19:49,007 I said, "Well, I'm getting direction 456 00:19:49,107 --> 00:19:50,509 "from other people on the set, 457 00:19:50,609 --> 00:19:52,144 "and it's making me very uncomfortable. 458 00:19:52,244 --> 00:19:54,446 "I just want to make sure I'm doing my job correctly, 459 00:19:54,546 --> 00:19:56,115 So I'm listening to you." 460 00:19:56,215 --> 00:19:57,716 And he said, "That's right. 461 00:19:57,816 --> 00:19:59,885 You're listening to me. We good?" 462 00:19:59,985 --> 00:20:02,254 I said, "We're good. Thank you very much." 463 00:20:02,354 --> 00:20:05,057 And I just stood back. 464 00:20:05,157 --> 00:20:08,059 No one else ever said anything to me again after that. 465 00:20:09,561 --> 00:20:12,564 Khan uses mind control to achieve his ends, 466 00:20:12,664 --> 00:20:15,101 delivered in a gruesome way. 467 00:20:15,201 --> 00:20:20,005 - They're young. Enter through the ears. 468 00:20:20,105 --> 00:20:23,642 And wrap themselves around the cerebral cortex. 469 00:20:23,742 --> 00:20:25,077 - Yeah, well, that was fun. 470 00:20:25,177 --> 00:20:27,279 You know, being on the other end of that. 471 00:20:27,379 --> 00:20:29,948 What it was, it was a stunt bug. 472 00:20:30,048 --> 00:20:31,683 No, it wasn't a stunt bug. 473 00:20:31,783 --> 00:20:34,853 It was--it was a little thing that had 474 00:20:34,953 --> 00:20:37,089 a little rubbery plastic thing, 475 00:20:37,189 --> 00:20:41,560 and they had a fine filament thread attached to it. 476 00:20:41,660 --> 00:20:43,529 It was very hard to see. 477 00:20:43,629 --> 00:20:45,531 When it was going up my face, 478 00:20:45,631 --> 00:20:48,134 there was actually a guy standing above me, 479 00:20:48,234 --> 00:20:50,802 and they had drilled a hole in my helmet, 480 00:20:50,902 --> 00:20:54,473 and he was pulling it up my face on that filament. 481 00:20:54,573 --> 00:20:58,277 And when they got to my ear, 482 00:20:58,377 --> 00:21:01,847 and them I made all those screams, 483 00:21:01,947 --> 00:21:04,650 really unbecoming an officer, 484 00:21:04,750 --> 00:21:07,118 but they--that's what they wanted. 485 00:21:14,092 --> 00:21:15,827 But there is one scene that has become 486 00:21:15,927 --> 00:21:18,764 the defining moment in "The Wrath of Khan." 487 00:21:18,864 --> 00:21:22,268 - I read that script and I saw the conflict, 488 00:21:22,368 --> 00:21:23,935 and I saw the passion in it, 489 00:21:24,035 --> 00:21:28,039 and when I saw the scene where Spock tries to save the ship 490 00:21:28,139 --> 00:21:29,575 and dies in the process, I said, 491 00:21:29,675 --> 00:21:32,144 "This is a good, good film." 492 00:21:32,244 --> 00:21:33,579 - I really believed that this was going to be 493 00:21:33,679 --> 00:21:35,181 the final "Star Trek" movie. 494 00:21:35,281 --> 00:21:38,750 So I thought if "Star Trek" is coming to an end, 495 00:21:38,850 --> 00:21:41,587 maybe it's fitting that Spock should die 496 00:21:41,687 --> 00:21:43,222 saving the ship and the crew, 497 00:21:43,322 --> 00:21:45,291 and be a hero and go out in a blaze of glory. 498 00:21:45,391 --> 00:21:48,460 During the making of the movie, I began to be concerned 499 00:21:48,560 --> 00:21:50,028 that maybe I'd made a mistake. 500 00:21:50,128 --> 00:21:54,099 And on the day we went to shoot Spock's death scene, 501 00:21:54,199 --> 00:21:56,134 Harve came to me on the set. 502 00:21:56,234 --> 00:21:57,469 He came to me on the set and he said, 503 00:21:57,569 --> 00:22:00,939 "What can you give us that might be a thread 504 00:22:01,039 --> 00:22:04,176 for the future for Spock or 'Star Trek'?" 505 00:22:04,276 --> 00:22:05,711 And it took me a moment. I said, 506 00:22:05,811 --> 00:22:07,846 "I can do a mind-meld on DeForest Kelley 507 00:22:07,946 --> 00:22:09,415 "who's laying there unconscious, 508 00:22:09,515 --> 00:22:13,051 and I can say something ambiguous like, 'Remember.'" 509 00:22:13,151 --> 00:22:14,820 And that's how that moment came about. 510 00:22:14,920 --> 00:22:16,988 Remember. 511 00:22:17,088 --> 00:22:19,291 - And then you have "Star Trek's" finest hour 512 00:22:19,391 --> 00:22:21,059 between Kirk and Spock. 513 00:22:21,159 --> 00:22:24,630 That death scene through the radiation chamber-- 514 00:22:24,730 --> 00:22:26,198 cried like a baby. 515 00:22:26,298 --> 00:22:29,201 - I was always very touched by what happened 516 00:22:29,301 --> 00:22:31,136 in that--in that sequence. Ahem. 517 00:22:31,236 --> 00:22:34,706 I thought it was beautifully written, the death scene. 518 00:22:34,806 --> 00:22:36,575 And it really worked in the film. 519 00:22:36,675 --> 00:22:39,110 I have people still today who write me and say, 520 00:22:39,210 --> 00:22:40,546 "Every time I still see that picture 521 00:22:40,646 --> 00:22:42,781 "for the fifth, tenth time, I still cry when Spock-- 522 00:22:42,881 --> 00:22:45,317 at that death scene," you know? 523 00:22:45,417 --> 00:22:47,219 I have been... 524 00:22:47,319 --> 00:22:50,021 and always shall be... 525 00:22:50,121 --> 00:22:52,123 your friend. 526 00:22:57,429 --> 00:23:00,566 Live long... 527 00:23:00,666 --> 00:23:02,668 and prosper. 528 00:23:10,842 --> 00:23:13,545 Two short years after the success of "Khan," 529 00:23:13,645 --> 00:23:15,914 "Trek" returns to the big screen, 530 00:23:16,014 --> 00:23:18,950 and the franchise is truly reborn. 531 00:23:19,050 --> 00:23:22,087 - "Star Trek III" was the first movie that Nimoy directed, 532 00:23:22,187 --> 00:23:25,190 and it was also his way to come back to "Star Trek" 533 00:23:25,290 --> 00:23:26,625 to bring Spock back. 534 00:23:26,725 --> 00:23:30,729 - Nicholas Meyer, a very talented guy, was directing. 535 00:23:30,829 --> 00:23:33,532 I thought, "I-I can do what he does. 536 00:23:33,632 --> 00:23:35,401 I know what he's doing and I can do that." 537 00:23:35,501 --> 00:23:36,968 So I went in the next morning, 538 00:23:37,068 --> 00:23:38,870 and I put it to them very simply. 539 00:23:38,970 --> 00:23:40,839 I said, "Michael, you have two problems. 540 00:23:40,939 --> 00:23:43,409 "You want me to play Spock in 'Star Trek III,' 541 00:23:43,509 --> 00:23:44,810 "and you need a director. 542 00:23:44,910 --> 00:23:47,413 I solved both of your problems with one stroke." 543 00:23:47,513 --> 00:23:48,614 And that's the way it went, 544 00:23:48,714 --> 00:23:50,782 and he said, "Okay, let's make a deal." 545 00:23:50,882 --> 00:23:52,918 And we immediately made a deal and went to work. 546 00:23:53,018 --> 00:23:56,922 - You Klingon bastard. 547 00:23:57,022 --> 00:24:00,626 - There are two more prisoners, Admiral. 548 00:24:00,726 --> 00:24:02,361 Do you want them killed too? 549 00:24:02,461 --> 00:24:06,798 - It's just such a delicious badass son of a bitch, you know? 550 00:24:06,898 --> 00:24:10,969 He's just--he's just a bad guy with no remorse. 551 00:24:13,271 --> 00:24:15,541 I killed Kirk's son 552 00:24:15,641 --> 00:24:17,909 and I blew up the original Enterprise. 553 00:24:18,009 --> 00:24:20,846 Just freaking wiped it out. 554 00:24:22,848 --> 00:24:26,051 And I could do it again. 555 00:24:30,689 --> 00:24:34,960 - I was asked to do "III," I didn't know how to do it. 556 00:24:35,060 --> 00:24:38,697 So I said I wasn't interested in doing it. 557 00:24:38,797 --> 00:24:41,500 I was not part of "IV" either. 558 00:24:41,600 --> 00:24:43,469 They had had a script written 559 00:24:43,569 --> 00:24:46,438 tailor-made to star Eddie Murphy, 560 00:24:46,538 --> 00:24:49,841 who was Paramount's other big star at the time. 561 00:24:49,941 --> 00:24:51,610 And Paramount didn't like the idea 562 00:24:51,710 --> 00:24:56,047 of putting all their golden eggs in one basket, 563 00:24:56,147 --> 00:24:59,184 Eddie Murphy and the Star Trek people. 564 00:24:59,284 --> 00:25:01,219 So I went to see Harve and Leonard, 565 00:25:01,319 --> 00:25:04,055 and they told me the story about the whales. 566 00:25:04,155 --> 00:25:07,125 And Harve said, "I'll write the outer space parts 567 00:25:07,225 --> 00:25:10,396 if you do the on Earth parts, you know, the bookend. 568 00:25:10,496 --> 00:25:13,331 And I said, "Okay." 569 00:25:13,431 --> 00:25:15,867 - "Star Trek V" is hurt by it's budget 570 00:25:15,967 --> 00:25:18,336 more than anything else. It's not a badly directed film. 571 00:25:18,436 --> 00:25:21,407 In fact, Bill did a nice job directing for the most pt, 572 00:25:21,507 --> 00:25:26,044 but they just didn't have enough money to recognize the vision, 573 00:25:26,144 --> 00:25:27,546 so it looks very cheap, and as a result, 574 00:25:27,646 --> 00:25:28,947 it feels like a bad movie. 575 00:25:29,047 --> 00:25:30,449 - We watched the movie, we were like, 576 00:25:30,549 --> 00:25:31,817 "Yeah, that was great." 577 00:25:31,917 --> 00:25:33,284 And I remember my brother, 578 00:25:33,384 --> 00:25:34,753 he was the one who had not been drinking. 579 00:25:34,853 --> 00:25:36,422 He was looking at, like, 580 00:25:36,522 --> 00:25:38,256 "I don't think it really was great." 581 00:25:38,356 --> 00:25:40,291 We were like, "No, it was great. Let's watch it again." 582 00:25:40,391 --> 00:25:41,893 And we did, so we watched it again. 583 00:25:41,993 --> 00:25:44,696 That's probably the last time I saw "Star Trek V." 584 00:25:44,796 --> 00:25:49,034 - Then "Star Trek V" came out and didn't perform well. 585 00:25:49,134 --> 00:25:52,838 And then Leonard came, and he had this genesis, 586 00:25:52,938 --> 00:25:55,474 you should pardon the pun, of an idea for "VI," 587 00:25:55,574 --> 00:25:59,144 which was all about the wall coming down in outer space. 588 00:25:59,244 --> 00:26:01,246 It was about the Klingons have been their substitute 589 00:26:01,346 --> 00:26:03,281 for the Russians. I went, "They were?" 590 00:26:03,381 --> 00:26:05,283 And we wrote it. 591 00:26:05,383 --> 00:26:08,353 - His idea was that, you know, time's change. 592 00:26:08,453 --> 00:26:11,189 You know, you can't be, you know, mad at a group 593 00:26:11,289 --> 00:26:14,526 for 100 years and you don't know anything about them. 594 00:26:14,626 --> 00:26:16,227 - Michael Dorn was my idea. 595 00:26:16,327 --> 00:26:19,064 He could play his own grandfather. 596 00:26:19,164 --> 00:26:22,868 I thought that would be funny. 597 00:26:25,971 --> 00:26:29,908 - So "Star Trek IV" does gangbusters at the box office. 598 00:26:30,008 --> 00:26:32,043 They're like, "Hang on, this is a hot property." 599 00:26:32,143 --> 00:26:34,245 Gene's like, "Guess what, fellas? 600 00:26:34,345 --> 00:26:35,814 I want to do I on TV again." 601 00:26:35,914 --> 00:26:38,149 And then Paramount's like... - "Yes, please." 602 00:26:38,249 --> 00:26:39,417 - "I might as well." - Yeah. 603 00:26:39,517 --> 00:26:40,652 - "Well, it's sitting here doing nothing." 604 00:26:40,752 --> 00:26:41,853 - "How soon will you start?" - So then we have 605 00:26:41,953 --> 00:26:43,555 "Star Trek: The Next Generation" comes out. 606 00:26:48,259 --> 00:26:49,661 In 1987, 607 00:26:49,761 --> 00:26:52,564 21 years after the original series hits the air, 608 00:26:52,664 --> 00:26:55,200 "Star Trek" returns to television with the premiere 609 00:26:55,300 --> 00:26:57,435 of "The Next Generation." 610 00:26:57,535 --> 00:27:00,105 - Gene Roddenberry called me and he was talking about 611 00:27:00,205 --> 00:27:01,339 a new version of "Star Trek" 612 00:27:01,439 --> 00:27:04,142 bouncing off the movies, of course. 613 00:27:04,242 --> 00:27:08,446 He came up with the basics for the older captain, 614 00:27:08,546 --> 00:27:11,783 for the characters that we see in "Star Trek: Next Gen." 615 00:27:11,883 --> 00:27:14,720 Diehard fans are skeptical of the reboot. 616 00:27:14,820 --> 00:27:17,656 - We got a bald, English captain with a French name 617 00:27:17,756 --> 00:27:20,726 and you got a Klingon on the bridge? 618 00:27:20,826 --> 00:27:23,729 Really? You got a blind guy driving the ship? 619 00:27:23,829 --> 00:27:25,831 - Gene was there during the first couple of years 620 00:27:25,931 --> 00:27:30,569 and all the spinoffs carried on the tradition of "Star Trek." 621 00:27:30,669 --> 00:27:33,705 - When that cast was first assembled and the show 622 00:27:33,805 --> 00:27:35,140 first went into production, "The Next Generation," 623 00:27:35,240 --> 00:27:36,542 I invited them here to this house, 624 00:27:36,642 --> 00:27:38,243 the whole bunch of them, all of them. 625 00:27:38,343 --> 00:27:40,145 "Come to my house. Let's get to know each other. 626 00:27:40,245 --> 00:27:43,348 And good luck, and bon voyage. I think--I hope it works." 627 00:27:43,448 --> 00:27:46,417 - When I first auditioned for "Next Gen," 628 00:27:46,517 --> 00:27:48,253 I was one of the few people in the world 629 00:27:48,353 --> 00:27:51,723 who was not quite aware of the phenomenon 630 00:27:51,823 --> 00:27:54,425 that we were about to get involved with. 631 00:27:54,525 --> 00:27:57,462 - When I heard that they were doing a next generation, 632 00:27:57,562 --> 00:28:00,331 I went, "Oh, afraid I gotta do this," you know? 633 00:28:00,431 --> 00:28:02,568 - I got a call from my agent who said, "You know what? 634 00:28:02,668 --> 00:28:04,069 They're casting 'Star Trek.' Oh, my God." 635 00:28:04,169 --> 00:28:05,537 And she was a huge "Star Trek" fan. 636 00:28:05,637 --> 00:28:09,207 I had no clue it was going to be a big show. 637 00:28:09,307 --> 00:28:12,611 - So LeVar Burton and I go to eat. 638 00:28:12,711 --> 00:28:14,145 I say, "What are you doing?" 639 00:28:14,245 --> 00:28:18,884 He said, "Oh, you'll love this. I'm doing 'Star Trek.'" 640 00:28:18,984 --> 00:28:21,687 I said, "Well, I want to be on that." 641 00:28:21,787 --> 00:28:23,354 And he was like, "What?" I was like, "No, no. 642 00:28:23,454 --> 00:28:25,490 You gotta tell them I want to be on the show." 643 00:28:25,590 --> 00:28:28,994 And I made an appointment to go see Gene. 644 00:28:29,094 --> 00:28:32,598 And Gene says, "You want to be on 'Star Trek'?" 645 00:28:32,698 --> 00:28:35,967 I said, "Yes. Yes." 646 00:28:36,067 --> 00:28:40,238 - And he asked me would I please write the pilot script, 647 00:28:40,338 --> 00:28:43,374 "Encounter At Farpoint." And I said, "Fine," did that. 648 00:28:43,474 --> 00:28:45,911 The question had been whether Gene Roddenberry would do, 649 00:28:46,011 --> 00:28:48,880 you know, like a retrospective back to the original "Star Trek" 650 00:28:48,980 --> 00:28:53,585 to lead into this or would he add to my pilot script. 651 00:28:53,685 --> 00:28:55,687 He added all the stuff that had to do with Q. 652 00:28:55,787 --> 00:28:58,924 - Three days into shooting, uh, you know, 653 00:28:59,024 --> 00:29:01,860 somebody came up behind me and put his hand on my shoulder 654 00:29:01,960 --> 00:29:05,897 and said, "You have no idea what you've gotten yourself into." 655 00:29:05,997 --> 00:29:08,566 And it was-- it was Roddenberry. 656 00:29:08,666 --> 00:29:11,737 And I didn't have any idea. I mean, you know. 657 00:29:11,837 --> 00:29:13,471 - Riker's relationship with Picard, 658 00:29:13,571 --> 00:29:16,441 which was filled with respect. 659 00:29:16,541 --> 00:29:18,644 With Data, the curiosity that Data had 660 00:29:18,744 --> 00:29:20,478 about being a human being. 661 00:29:20,578 --> 00:29:25,450 And I worked with Worf and Geordi, 662 00:29:25,550 --> 00:29:26,918 the three of us were sort of, you know, 663 00:29:27,018 --> 00:29:29,688 we made the--we kept the together on the ship. 664 00:29:29,788 --> 00:29:34,192 And it was--it all got more natural. 665 00:29:34,292 --> 00:29:35,761 And as it got more natural, 666 00:29:35,861 --> 00:29:38,229 I think it got more appealing to the audience. 667 00:29:38,329 --> 00:29:39,731 - I decided to write a spec script, 668 00:29:39,831 --> 00:29:42,367 so I wrote a script called "The Bonding." 669 00:29:42,467 --> 00:29:45,436 Michael Piller came aboard to be the new head writer, 670 00:29:45,536 --> 00:29:47,238 and he found my script. 671 00:29:47,338 --> 00:29:49,240 And I get this call one day 672 00:29:49,340 --> 00:29:51,777 that he wants to buy it and produce it, 673 00:29:51,877 --> 00:29:53,645 which literally changed my life. 674 00:29:53,745 --> 00:29:57,248 - We used to do 26 episodes a year, and it was great. 675 00:29:57,348 --> 00:29:58,684 So we'd work for ten months, 676 00:29:58,784 --> 00:30:00,852 and then the first Monday after the 4th of July, 677 00:30:00,952 --> 00:30:02,153 we'd come back to work. 678 00:30:02,253 --> 00:30:06,357 And that lasted for seven years and could have lasted, 679 00:30:06,457 --> 00:30:08,694 in all fairness, for ten years probably. 680 00:30:08,794 --> 00:30:12,497 - The humans of the 24th century on "Next Generation" 681 00:30:12,597 --> 00:30:15,333 didn't have the kinds of problems and squabbles 682 00:30:15,433 --> 00:30:19,470 and petty jealousies that we have today. 683 00:30:19,570 --> 00:30:21,673 - Chief O'Brien talks to me. 684 00:30:21,773 --> 00:30:24,342 Keiko talks to you. 685 00:30:24,442 --> 00:30:25,911 Why do they not talk to each other? 686 00:30:26,011 --> 00:30:29,314 That's a good question, Data. 687 00:30:29,414 --> 00:30:31,783 I wish I had a good answer for you. 688 00:30:31,883 --> 00:30:33,785 Perhaps when they're ready, they will. 689 00:30:33,885 --> 00:30:38,724 - Hmm. Many aspects of this situation are puzzling to me. 690 00:30:38,824 --> 00:30:43,528 - Roddenberry somehow magically made us--made me 691 00:30:43,628 --> 00:30:48,433 believe in his vision of the 24th century, right? 692 00:30:48,533 --> 00:30:51,703 He said to me, "In the 24th century, 693 00:30:51,803 --> 00:30:55,673 there will be no hunger, and there will be no greed. 694 00:30:55,773 --> 00:30:59,778 And all of the children will know how to read. 695 00:30:59,878 --> 00:31:01,012 Gene Roddenberry. 696 00:31:01,112 --> 00:31:03,882 - He was given the right to do "Star Trek" 697 00:31:03,982 --> 00:31:05,316 the way he wanted to do it. 698 00:31:05,416 --> 00:31:08,086 Unfortunately his health was failing by the time 699 00:31:08,186 --> 00:31:10,922 they even got "Star Trek: The Next Generation" on. 700 00:31:11,022 --> 00:31:12,991 So he didn't really get the chance to do 701 00:31:13,091 --> 00:31:15,160 all of the things he wanted to do. 702 00:31:15,260 --> 00:31:18,196 When Gene Roddenberry dies in 1991, 703 00:31:18,296 --> 00:31:21,532 "The Next Generation" is more popular than ever. 704 00:31:21,632 --> 00:31:25,370 Carrying on his legacy, week after week, 705 00:31:25,470 --> 00:31:27,806 for the next three years. 706 00:31:27,906 --> 00:31:30,041 - There were those of us, myself included, 707 00:31:30,141 --> 00:31:32,243 who thought it could go on for ten years. 708 00:31:32,343 --> 00:31:33,912 That we weren't done yet. 709 00:31:34,012 --> 00:31:37,648 Knowing that there was another series waiting in the wings 710 00:31:37,748 --> 00:31:40,018 where we could continue to tell stories 711 00:31:40,118 --> 00:31:42,653 that we hadn't told yet made that okay. 712 00:31:42,753 --> 00:31:46,124 And it seemed smart to take "Next Gen" off 713 00:31:46,224 --> 00:31:47,793 at the peak of its popularity. 714 00:31:47,893 --> 00:31:49,761 'Cause it was a very popular show. 715 00:31:49,861 --> 00:31:52,230 There is a part of me that wished, 716 00:31:52,330 --> 00:31:55,500 that wishes "Next Gen" had continued. 717 00:32:00,638 --> 00:32:04,342 - I was asked to direct the first "Next Generation" movie. 718 00:32:04,442 --> 00:32:05,811 I just-- I wasn't attracted to it. 719 00:32:05,911 --> 00:32:07,678 I read it, 720 00:32:07,778 --> 00:32:09,347 and it didn't feel like something 721 00:32:09,447 --> 00:32:11,582 that I was gonna have a good time doing. 722 00:32:11,682 --> 00:32:14,552 - Ron Moore and I were asked to write 723 00:32:14,652 --> 00:32:16,922 the first "Next Generation" movie. 724 00:32:17,022 --> 00:32:19,157 We were very excited. 725 00:32:19,257 --> 00:32:21,492 It was the first movie either of us had written. 726 00:32:21,592 --> 00:32:24,629 We loved these characters. We knew these characters. 727 00:32:24,729 --> 00:32:27,799 And we set about conceiving the first "Next Gen" movie. 728 00:32:27,899 --> 00:32:29,567 Kind of hand-off from the original series, 729 00:32:29,667 --> 00:32:30,768 Kirk to Picard. 730 00:32:30,868 --> 00:32:32,570 - There was sort of a list of things 731 00:32:32,670 --> 00:32:34,372 that the movie had to have, 732 00:32:34,472 --> 00:32:35,573 so when Bran and I stepped in, 733 00:32:35,673 --> 00:32:37,575 here's the list of things it has to be. 734 00:32:37,675 --> 00:32:39,777 "It's gonna be the next first "Next Gen" movie. 735 00:32:39,877 --> 00:32:41,446 "It can have the original cast in it. 736 00:32:41,546 --> 00:32:43,581 "We want a transition film, but the original cast 737 00:32:43,681 --> 00:32:45,050 "can only be in the first ten minutes 738 00:32:45,150 --> 00:32:47,052 "or 15 minutes of the movie tops. 739 00:32:47,152 --> 00:32:48,453 "It has to be a Picard story. 740 00:32:48,553 --> 00:32:50,588 "There has to be a Data humorous runner in it. 741 00:32:50,688 --> 00:32:53,825 "We want to have a big villain, sort of like Khan. 742 00:32:53,925 --> 00:32:55,927 "We also want to have the Klingons in it. 743 00:32:56,027 --> 00:32:58,629 And it should probably have some time travel involved." 744 00:32:58,729 --> 00:33:01,432 And you're just going, "Okay. 745 00:33:01,532 --> 00:33:04,102 - By the time "Generations," the first movie, is coming out, 746 00:33:04,202 --> 00:33:06,771 you have Kirk and Picard on the cover of "Time" magazine. 747 00:33:06,871 --> 00:33:09,674 That's the apex, it's the zenith of the show. 748 00:33:09,774 --> 00:33:11,609 - "Generations" was still in the theaters 749 00:33:11,709 --> 00:33:13,811 when the said, "Hey, let's do another one. 750 00:33:13,911 --> 00:33:14,846 And we want you guys to do the second one." 751 00:33:14,946 --> 00:33:16,247 And we said, "Okay." 752 00:33:16,347 --> 00:33:19,384 - "First Contact" was the film that they should have made 753 00:33:19,484 --> 00:33:21,219 every time after that. 754 00:33:21,319 --> 00:33:23,021 - Then the second movie, "First Contact," 755 00:33:23,121 --> 00:33:24,990 is, you know, a roller coaster ride 756 00:33:25,090 --> 00:33:28,026 and wonderful and really sort of redeems that franchise. 757 00:33:28,126 --> 00:33:31,262 - That movie was a huge success. It made a lot of money. 758 00:33:31,362 --> 00:33:32,663 And everybody liked it. 759 00:33:32,763 --> 00:33:34,933 And Alfre Woodard was great in it. 760 00:33:35,033 --> 00:33:36,301 And Cromwell was great in it. 761 00:33:36,401 --> 00:33:41,672 - I'm not a drinker, so I got a fifth of Jamesons. 762 00:33:41,772 --> 00:33:45,911 And I took one before when we rehearsed. 763 00:33:46,011 --> 00:33:49,880 And then between every shot, I would go back up to my tr-- 764 00:33:51,616 --> 00:33:56,321 So by the time I did the thing we're at the bar, 765 00:33:56,421 --> 00:34:01,927 when I take the drink... 766 00:34:02,027 --> 00:34:04,829 Ahh! 767 00:34:04,929 --> 00:34:07,398 Oh! 768 00:34:09,134 --> 00:34:10,936 "Star Trek: First Contact" 769 00:34:11,036 --> 00:34:14,405 debuts in 1996 with Commander Riker himself, 770 00:34:14,505 --> 00:34:17,242 Jonathan Frakes in the director's chair. 771 00:34:17,342 --> 00:34:18,676 - It was great to work with Jonathan, you know? 772 00:34:18,776 --> 00:34:20,711 We'd worked with him before as a director on the show, 773 00:34:20,811 --> 00:34:23,481 so we knew his working methods, he knew us, you know. 774 00:34:23,581 --> 00:34:25,250 There was a great shorthand, obviously, 775 00:34:25,350 --> 00:34:27,218 between him and the entire cast and the crew. 776 00:34:27,318 --> 00:34:30,855 - This was our first movie that was just "Next Gen." 777 00:34:30,955 --> 00:34:33,925 So that--that was a life-changer, you know. 778 00:34:34,025 --> 00:34:35,893 - I think "Star Trek's" a TV show. 779 00:34:35,993 --> 00:34:39,164 The movies are fun, but, you know, 780 00:34:39,264 --> 00:34:40,698 it's--it's a TV show. 781 00:34:40,798 --> 00:34:44,069 It needs to tell the stories each week. 782 00:34:44,169 --> 00:34:47,138 - "First Contact" is fanta-- it's like-- 783 00:34:47,238 --> 00:34:49,640 it's the best of the "Next Generation" movies. 784 00:34:49,740 --> 00:34:51,409 I'm sorry, everyone, that's how I feel. 785 00:34:51,509 --> 00:34:53,578 - Probably. - I see some grunting happening 786 00:34:53,678 --> 00:34:55,513 over on the corners here. 787 00:34:55,613 --> 00:34:57,848 Bobak, you grunted particularly hard. 788 00:34:57,948 --> 00:34:59,684 - I'm just a big "Insurrection" fan because-- 789 00:34:59,784 --> 00:35:01,052 - What? What? 790 00:35:01,152 --> 00:35:02,620 - It's the most like a "TNG" episode. 791 00:35:02,720 --> 00:35:05,256 The movies really, like, diverge from my thought 792 00:35:05,356 --> 00:35:06,524 what made the show great. 793 00:35:06,624 --> 00:35:09,995 And I like that it was a little bit more of that 794 00:35:10,095 --> 00:35:12,930 "TNG"-style episode than I felt the rest of the movies were. 795 00:35:13,030 --> 00:35:14,832 - So we go from "Insurrection." 796 00:35:14,932 --> 00:35:17,602 "Voyager's" still running at this point. 797 00:35:17,702 --> 00:35:21,139 And then we end up with, I hate to say it, 798 00:35:21,239 --> 00:35:22,974 "Star Trek: Nemesis," so Janeway-- 799 00:35:23,074 --> 00:35:24,475 - They asked me to be in that. Did you know that? 800 00:35:24,575 --> 00:35:26,077 - Really? What were you gonna do in that? 801 00:35:26,177 --> 00:35:27,545 Were you gonna be on the Enterprise? 802 00:35:27,645 --> 00:35:28,713 - Evidently. - Why would you say no? 803 00:35:28,813 --> 00:35:30,048 What is wrong with you? 804 00:35:30,148 --> 00:35:31,516 - 'Cause I had just gotten off of "Voyager." 805 00:35:31,616 --> 00:35:33,318 - Oh, my God, Jeri. - My biggest fear is in signing 806 00:35:33,418 --> 00:35:36,254 on to "Star Trek" to begin with, not having been a fan, 807 00:35:36,354 --> 00:35:37,755 and not really knowing much about it other than that 808 00:35:37,855 --> 00:35:39,457 the actors get pigeonholed. - Yeah. 809 00:35:39,557 --> 00:35:40,725 - And it was sort of known for that. 810 00:35:40,825 --> 00:35:43,294 - Yeah. - That was one of my big fears 811 00:35:43,394 --> 00:35:46,564 in accepting the role is ever breaking out of that character. 812 00:35:46,664 --> 00:35:48,499 I don't know if that's even... - No, please. 813 00:35:48,599 --> 00:35:50,135 - Known by anybody, but apparently they were 814 00:35:50,235 --> 00:35:51,269 replacing a character. 815 00:35:51,369 --> 00:35:53,304 They were gonna yank and character out 816 00:35:53,404 --> 00:35:55,173 and stick Seven of Nine in there. 817 00:35:55,273 --> 00:35:56,607 It's a popular character, get her in the movie. 818 00:35:56,707 --> 00:35:58,643 And that's what it felt like. And it didn't feel like 819 00:35:58,743 --> 00:35:59,777 it would be anything other than that story-wise. 820 00:35:59,877 --> 00:36:05,483 - Yeah. 821 00:36:05,583 --> 00:36:08,085 "Deep Space Nine" is the most meaningful to me. 822 00:36:08,485 --> 00:36:10,521 Because it gets into 823 00:36:10,621 --> 00:36:11,756 the darker side. 824 00:36:11,856 --> 00:36:13,491 I mean, it's after Gene Roddenberry's death. 825 00:36:13,591 --> 00:36:16,627 They're kinda free to kind of get away from this, you know, 826 00:36:16,727 --> 00:36:18,796 - everything ends happily. - Yeah. 827 00:36:18,896 --> 00:36:21,132 - You know, you look at war in a variety of different ways. 828 00:36:21,232 --> 00:36:23,501 I mean, there's a great episode on PTSD, 829 00:36:23,601 --> 00:36:26,437 where Nog has to deal with the loss of his leg. 830 00:36:26,537 --> 00:36:27,772 Nobody does that kind of stuff. - Right. 831 00:36:27,872 --> 00:36:29,207 On science fiction in particular. 832 00:36:29,307 --> 00:36:32,543 And so I think that show in terms of its depth, 833 00:36:32,643 --> 00:36:34,779 in terms of the issues it would address, 834 00:36:34,879 --> 00:36:36,547 I thought made it the best. 835 00:36:36,647 --> 00:36:38,649 And, you know, arguably there are some of the best episodes 836 00:36:38,749 --> 00:36:41,252 of all 700-plus hours. 837 00:36:45,990 --> 00:36:47,558 - "The Next Generation" had become such a success 838 00:36:47,658 --> 00:36:49,294 in first-run syndication for the studio 839 00:36:49,394 --> 00:36:51,896 that they wanted more, so you had "Deep Space Nine," 840 00:36:51,996 --> 00:36:55,066 which was about a space station 841 00:36:55,166 --> 00:36:56,534 and it was a little darker. 842 00:36:56,634 --> 00:36:58,303 - "Next Gen" was my undergraduate studies 843 00:36:58,403 --> 00:37:00,105 in TV writing and production, 844 00:37:00,205 --> 00:37:01,572 and "Deep Space Nine" was graduate. 845 00:37:01,672 --> 00:37:05,410 - "DS9" had such a different feel 846 00:37:05,510 --> 00:37:06,777 while still being "Star Trek." 847 00:37:06,877 --> 00:37:08,379 It took things even deeper. 848 00:37:08,479 --> 00:37:10,848 - We were attracted to doing darker stories. 849 00:37:10,948 --> 00:37:12,683 We were attracted to doing stories 850 00:37:12,783 --> 00:37:14,152 that had much more conflict in them, 851 00:37:14,252 --> 00:37:15,920 that were more morally ambiguous, 852 00:37:16,020 --> 00:37:18,723 that were tackling difficult subject matter 853 00:37:18,823 --> 00:37:20,057 with our characters. 854 00:37:20,157 --> 00:37:22,927 And we all felt that we were pushing "Trek," 855 00:37:23,027 --> 00:37:24,729 but none of us felt like we were breaking it. 856 00:37:24,829 --> 00:37:29,167 - That was the first time that you see 857 00:37:29,267 --> 00:37:36,174 what television is now, which is dark and foreboding. 858 00:37:36,274 --> 00:37:39,043 - And I really wanted to do the show. 859 00:37:39,143 --> 00:37:41,179 Really wanted to do the show. 860 00:37:41,279 --> 00:37:42,880 I-I was like-- 861 00:37:42,980 --> 00:37:46,451 I just--not only as an actor who would get a steady paycheck, 862 00:37:46,551 --> 00:37:49,053 but more importantly, as a fan of the show 863 00:37:49,153 --> 00:37:52,490 I wanted to be part of the ethos that was "Star Trek." 864 00:37:52,590 --> 00:37:55,526 - It's really nice to see that people could stick with the show 865 00:37:55,626 --> 00:37:59,230 when it became darker and more demanding of its audience. 866 00:37:59,330 --> 00:38:05,035 - But no victory can make this moment any easier for me. 867 00:38:05,135 --> 00:38:12,109 And I promise I will not rest until I stand with you again. 868 00:38:12,209 --> 00:38:14,111 - Somebody had the brilliant idea 869 00:38:14,211 --> 00:38:18,416 of bringing Worf onto our show. 870 00:38:18,516 --> 00:38:21,852 - Unfortunately, I will be away from the station at that time. 871 00:38:21,952 --> 00:38:23,688 - What they hoped would happen did happen. 872 00:38:23,788 --> 00:38:26,924 Thousands, if not millions, of people 873 00:38:27,024 --> 00:38:29,960 watched because Worf was on the show. 874 00:38:30,060 --> 00:38:33,464 And so our fan base got resurrected 875 00:38:33,564 --> 00:38:34,899 because of Michael Dorn. 876 00:38:34,999 --> 00:38:37,468 - And I had my concerns about that 877 00:38:37,568 --> 00:38:39,970 'cause I didn't want Worf to be standing around, 878 00:38:40,070 --> 00:38:42,307 just to be a, you know, some guy that just-- 879 00:38:42,407 --> 00:38:43,574 they throw in there. 880 00:38:43,674 --> 00:38:45,843 I really want him to open up as a character. 881 00:38:45,943 --> 00:38:49,480 - Worf was, like, really the only choice from that cast 882 00:38:49,580 --> 00:38:51,382 that made any sense and that would actually add 883 00:38:51,482 --> 00:38:52,750 something to the puzzle. 884 00:38:52,850 --> 00:38:55,553 Here's the war-like character coming into a situation 885 00:38:55,653 --> 00:38:57,121 that's a war-torn environment. 886 00:38:57,221 --> 00:38:59,590 So that made a certain amount of sense. 887 00:38:59,690 --> 00:39:02,927 - What is that smell? 888 00:39:03,027 --> 00:39:08,098 Is there a pile of rotting forshak in here. 889 00:39:08,198 --> 00:39:10,501 I loved my time on "Next Generation," 890 00:39:10,601 --> 00:39:13,938 but the work I did on "Deep Space" was much better. 891 00:39:14,038 --> 00:39:16,707 - Over my tenure on "Deep Space," 892 00:39:16,807 --> 00:39:18,042 that was the mantra was, 893 00:39:18,142 --> 00:39:20,311 "How far can we push this franchise? 894 00:39:20,411 --> 00:39:21,912 "Or what are the places we can go 895 00:39:22,012 --> 00:39:23,348 "that none of the other shows can go? 896 00:39:23,448 --> 00:39:25,015 "What can't they do in 'Star Trek,' 897 00:39:25,115 --> 00:39:26,584 and is there a way we can do it?" 898 00:39:26,684 --> 00:39:29,019 - Every "Star Trek" show broke grounds in some way, you know? 899 00:39:29,119 --> 00:39:32,390 "Deep Space Nine," Sisko, he was a black captain. 900 00:39:32,490 --> 00:39:35,092 And then you have Janeway in "Voyager," a woman. 901 00:39:35,192 --> 00:39:37,728 I mean, they were always thinking ahead. 902 00:39:42,700 --> 00:39:45,270 When "Voyager" launches in 1995, 903 00:39:45,370 --> 00:39:47,238 "Star Trek" has been pushing the envelope 904 00:39:47,338 --> 00:39:49,139 for nearly 30 years. 905 00:39:49,239 --> 00:39:52,009 The new series pushes further. 906 00:39:52,109 --> 00:39:54,379 - A lot of women of a certain age 907 00:39:54,479 --> 00:39:57,348 who that show meant a lot to because of Kate. 908 00:39:57,448 --> 00:39:58,949 You know, they look at it, you know, 909 00:39:59,049 --> 00:40:00,751 the same way that guys of my generation 910 00:40:00,851 --> 00:40:02,453 look at Kirk as a role model, 911 00:40:02,553 --> 00:40:04,689 they look at Kate's Janeway and say, 912 00:40:04,789 --> 00:40:07,292 "You know, she proved that, you know, 913 00:40:07,392 --> 00:40:10,728 "I could be thoughtful and smart and commanding, 914 00:40:10,828 --> 00:40:13,364 and not necessarily use my sexuality to get what I want." 915 00:40:13,464 --> 00:40:16,801 - Then you leave me no choice. 916 00:40:16,901 --> 00:40:19,570 You are hereby relieved of duty until further notice. 917 00:40:19,670 --> 00:40:21,606 - As a writer, writing Captain Janeway, 918 00:40:21,706 --> 00:40:23,441 I didn't think of her as a woman. 919 00:40:23,541 --> 00:40:24,909 I thought of her as the captain. 920 00:40:25,009 --> 00:40:28,145 And I think it's great that she ended up being a role model 921 00:40:28,245 --> 00:40:30,681 to a lot of people, men or women. 922 00:40:30,781 --> 00:40:32,950 - I was very happy and proud 923 00:40:33,050 --> 00:40:36,887 of what the producers had done with this cast in "Voyager." 924 00:40:36,987 --> 00:40:39,189 First of all, starting off with a female captain 925 00:40:39,289 --> 00:40:40,658 'cause we had not seen that before. 926 00:40:40,758 --> 00:40:43,761 - My friend, Rene, got cast in "Deep Space." 927 00:40:43,861 --> 00:40:47,164 And he told me how cool it was, and I envied him. 928 00:40:47,264 --> 00:40:49,033 I said, "What a great show to be on," you know. 929 00:40:49,133 --> 00:40:50,735 And then a couple of years later, 930 00:40:50,835 --> 00:40:52,437 boom, I was in "Voyager." 931 00:40:52,537 --> 00:40:54,339 And I-I had no idea 932 00:40:54,439 --> 00:40:56,441 what the character was makeup-wise, you know? 933 00:40:56,541 --> 00:40:59,310 But I flew out and I-I went into the room, 934 00:40:59,410 --> 00:41:01,512 and there was UPN, and there was Paramount, 935 00:41:01,612 --> 00:41:04,949 and there were the creators of "Star Trek." 936 00:41:05,049 --> 00:41:07,217 And, um, I read 937 00:41:07,317 --> 00:41:09,387 and I guess I was exactly what what they were looking for. 938 00:41:09,487 --> 00:41:12,256 - "Star Trek: Voyager" is probably my first acting job. 939 00:41:12,356 --> 00:41:14,291 And I was so excited, and I was so nervous. 940 00:41:14,391 --> 00:41:18,329 It was a two-part special and I was playing a scientist. 941 00:41:18,429 --> 00:41:19,764 - What do you do here? 942 00:41:19,864 --> 00:41:22,667 - We watch the skies. - For what? 943 00:41:22,767 --> 00:41:25,302 - Signs of extraterrestrial life. 944 00:41:25,402 --> 00:41:27,037 Nice meeting you. 945 00:41:27,137 --> 00:41:29,540 I remembered going to my acting coach, 946 00:41:29,640 --> 00:41:32,109 and he read through the script. 947 00:41:32,209 --> 00:41:34,512 I was looking to him for guidance. 948 00:41:34,612 --> 00:41:37,214 And he just went, uh, 949 00:41:37,314 --> 00:41:39,884 "You know, sometimes when you're running from lasers, 950 00:41:39,984 --> 00:41:44,154 you just--you just gotta pretend you're running from lasers." 951 00:41:44,254 --> 00:41:47,725 - Get down! 952 00:41:47,825 --> 00:41:49,527 - I was like, "Oh.' Ahem. 953 00:41:49,627 --> 00:41:50,995 It gave me so much freedom. 954 00:41:51,095 --> 00:41:53,631 I was like, "Oh, yeah, I just--I pretend," you know? 955 00:41:53,731 --> 00:41:58,002 You don't really draw from your childhood or something. 956 00:41:58,102 --> 00:42:00,505 You just pretend you're running from lasers. 957 00:42:02,640 --> 00:42:04,341 What the hell? 958 00:42:04,441 --> 00:42:06,477 - What I wanted to do was bring the Borg in. 959 00:42:06,577 --> 00:42:08,379 It was my feeling that the Borg 960 00:42:08,479 --> 00:42:10,981 could always be "Voyager's" Klingons. 961 00:42:11,081 --> 00:42:12,249 They needed a recurring villain. 962 00:42:12,349 --> 00:42:14,118 And for better or worse, 963 00:42:14,218 --> 00:42:15,786 that's what we ended up doing. 964 00:42:15,886 --> 00:42:18,055 And it's one of the things that defined "Voyager" 965 00:42:18,155 --> 00:42:20,758 was the introduction of the Seven of Nine character. 966 00:42:20,858 --> 00:42:25,496 You had a very sexy woman in a very sexy outfit. 967 00:42:25,596 --> 00:42:26,764 You know, it was supposed to lure in 968 00:42:26,864 --> 00:42:28,165 a certain male demographic. 969 00:42:28,265 --> 00:42:31,168 But, in reality, she was the Spock character. 970 00:42:31,268 --> 00:42:33,203 She was the Data character. 971 00:42:33,303 --> 00:42:34,405 - Report. 972 00:42:34,505 --> 00:42:36,841 - I've applied 10,053 algorithms 973 00:42:36,941 --> 00:42:40,044 to the energy signatures produced by chaotic space. 974 00:42:40,144 --> 00:42:43,313 - The Roddenberry influence was always respected. 975 00:42:43,413 --> 00:42:45,583 We didn't want to do something 976 00:42:45,683 --> 00:42:49,520 totally, outrageously anti-Roddenberry. 977 00:42:49,620 --> 00:42:51,656 - It's almost like you have to keep pinching yourself. 978 00:42:51,756 --> 00:42:54,459 You show up on these sets and you have to remind yourself, 979 00:42:54,559 --> 00:42:57,194 "I'm in the middle of something that when we do it right, 980 00:42:57,294 --> 00:42:59,296 is really important, can really affect people." 981 00:42:59,396 --> 00:43:01,532 Now it's hard to do that on every single episode. 982 00:43:01,632 --> 00:43:03,768 I don't know who has ever succeeded in that, 983 00:43:03,868 --> 00:43:06,537 but I think that we all could feel as a cast 984 00:43:06,637 --> 00:43:09,774 when we were telling a good story and doing it well. 985 00:43:15,279 --> 00:43:16,747 - There was a lot of discussion what "Enterprise" 986 00:43:16,847 --> 00:43:19,316 would look like and feel like. 987 00:43:19,416 --> 00:43:20,751 "Star Trek: Enterprise" 988 00:43:20,851 --> 00:43:23,053 is a prequel to the entire franchise. 989 00:43:23,153 --> 00:43:24,789 Set in the 22nd century, 990 00:43:24,889 --> 00:43:28,258 as Starfleet's first explorers venture into space. 991 00:43:28,358 --> 00:43:30,294 - You know, we were trying to, I think, 992 00:43:30,394 --> 00:43:32,196 deconstruct "Star Trek" and figure out, you know, 993 00:43:32,296 --> 00:43:33,498 how it all came together. 994 00:43:33,598 --> 00:43:35,265 You know, we'd certainly seen the future 995 00:43:35,365 --> 00:43:37,735 of where it was all going. 996 00:43:37,835 --> 00:43:40,738 And it was a real challenge to kind of back that up 997 00:43:40,838 --> 00:43:43,841 and imagine, you know, what was this-- 998 00:43:43,941 --> 00:43:47,011 what was this like 150 years before Captain Kirk. 999 00:43:47,111 --> 00:43:49,213 - I called my mother and said, 1000 00:43:49,313 --> 00:43:51,482 "Ma, I'm not gonna have to stress about work. 1001 00:43:51,582 --> 00:43:52,650 I got a job." 1002 00:43:52,750 --> 00:43:56,120 - I had to audition with a slight alien accent 1003 00:43:56,220 --> 00:43:59,056 for the character of Dr. Phlox, which puzzled me. 1004 00:43:59,156 --> 00:44:00,825 I didn't really know what to do, so I-- 1005 00:44:00,925 --> 00:44:02,693 I sort of tried out a variety of funny voices 1006 00:44:02,793 --> 00:44:04,461 with my wife before I settled on the voice 1007 00:44:04,561 --> 00:44:06,296 I eventually arrived at. 1008 00:44:06,396 --> 00:44:07,965 Sounds sort of vaguely East Indian. 1009 00:44:08,065 --> 00:44:11,869 I don't believe you'll be needing my services. 1010 00:44:11,969 --> 00:44:13,538 - You know, I thought that we were gonna make it 1011 00:44:13,638 --> 00:44:15,139 and that we were gonna do seven years 1012 00:44:15,239 --> 00:44:16,707 like all the rest of these shows. 1013 00:44:16,807 --> 00:44:19,844 - I was just trying to tell good stories 1014 00:44:19,944 --> 00:44:23,981 and do Gene's vision proud. 1015 00:44:24,081 --> 00:44:26,917 Tell the best "Star Trek" stories that I could, you know? 1016 00:44:27,017 --> 00:44:29,286 And now that I'm no longer involved with the show, 1017 00:44:29,386 --> 00:44:35,693 I'm the fan eagerly awaiting the next television show. 1018 00:44:37,762 --> 00:44:40,497 - So in the '60s, I mean, it a period of racial discord. 1019 00:44:40,597 --> 00:44:43,300 We got the Vietnam War, youth rebellions, 1020 00:44:43,400 --> 00:44:45,736 emerging feminism, and, you know, TV-- 1021 00:44:45,836 --> 00:44:48,272 - Dirty hippies. - Dirty hi--exactly. 1022 00:44:48,372 --> 00:44:50,174 There's no series or television show 1023 00:44:50,274 --> 00:44:51,475 really addressing these things. 1024 00:44:51,575 --> 00:44:53,578 You know, Roddenberry's able to do is kind of explore 1025 00:44:53,678 --> 00:44:57,314 these things, but again, in a way which is-- 1026 00:44:57,414 --> 00:44:59,183 not only avoids the censors, 1027 00:44:59,283 --> 00:45:00,818 which he had a lot of problems with, 1028 00:45:00,918 --> 00:45:03,520 but also allows the audience 1029 00:45:03,620 --> 00:45:06,090 to kind of look at it from a different perspective. 1030 00:45:06,190 --> 00:45:08,525 And if they were looking at race in America 1031 00:45:08,625 --> 00:45:10,828 on a documentary, that's just not gonna have 1032 00:45:10,928 --> 00:45:12,329 the kind of impact, whereas in 1033 00:45:12,429 --> 00:45:13,764 "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield," 1034 00:45:13,864 --> 00:45:15,532 we have the black and white faces. 1035 00:45:15,632 --> 00:45:17,367 You know, and you can imagine what the American public 1036 00:45:17,467 --> 00:45:19,336 was looking at this going, "You know, 1037 00:45:19,436 --> 00:45:20,805 yeah, this is right. This is kinda strange." 1038 00:45:20,905 --> 00:45:23,307 And again, this is an episode that was done right after Mart-- 1039 00:45:23,407 --> 00:45:24,308 it was produced right after 1040 00:45:24,408 --> 00:45:25,610 Martin Luther King's assassination. 1041 00:45:25,710 --> 00:45:27,578 - That's the beauty of sci-fi. You can sort of 1042 00:45:27,678 --> 00:45:30,414 have these allegories without 1043 00:45:30,514 --> 00:45:32,282 people knowing they're being taught a lesson. 1044 00:45:32,382 --> 00:45:33,584 - Yeah. - Big two on the nose. 1045 00:45:33,684 --> 00:45:34,719 - Yeah, they just think they're watching 1046 00:45:34,819 --> 00:45:37,554 a fun space adventure with a Canadian. 1047 00:45:41,225 --> 00:45:44,629 - "Star Trek" very much at a time when, you know, 1048 00:45:44,729 --> 00:45:47,464 race, in particular, in the '60s was such a big thing. 1049 00:45:47,564 --> 00:45:49,399 It broke down those barriers in terms of talking-- 1050 00:45:49,499 --> 00:45:53,303 talking about color, multi-culturalism, other people. 1051 00:45:53,403 --> 00:45:57,842 And instead of making walls, and instead of trying to 1052 00:45:57,942 --> 00:45:59,509 villainize others, 1053 00:45:59,609 --> 00:46:01,345 it was all about embracing the other. 1054 00:46:01,445 --> 00:46:05,716 - Because, you know, when you look at the "Star Trek" world, 1055 00:46:05,816 --> 00:46:09,419 you know, Gene really wanted to create a world 1056 00:46:09,519 --> 00:46:12,489 where everybody could be, you know? 1057 00:46:12,589 --> 00:46:14,925 And if we were having some kind of trouble, 1058 00:46:15,025 --> 00:46:16,226 we could talk it out. 1059 00:46:16,326 --> 00:46:19,697 - We had one of the most wonderful icons 1060 00:46:19,797 --> 00:46:22,967 in Nichelle Nichols, who was not only African American, 1061 00:46:23,067 --> 00:46:25,102 she was a woman. 1062 00:46:25,202 --> 00:46:27,705 And, you know, she was there on the bridge all the time. 1063 00:46:27,805 --> 00:46:29,173 She was important. 1064 00:46:29,273 --> 00:46:30,875 Sometimes she would just say, "Channels open, sir," 1065 00:46:30,975 --> 00:46:33,377 but the thing was that she was there. 1066 00:46:33,477 --> 00:46:37,581 - She speaks perfect English. 1067 00:46:37,681 --> 00:46:41,051 She's the communications officer 1068 00:46:41,151 --> 00:46:43,353 and she takes that very seriously. 1069 00:46:43,453 --> 00:46:46,791 - She is not only gorgeous, 1070 00:46:46,891 --> 00:46:49,827 but she is the communications officer. 1071 00:46:49,927 --> 00:46:51,595 She's the one you have to talk to 1072 00:46:51,695 --> 00:46:53,964 if you want to talk to anybody out in space. 1073 00:46:54,064 --> 00:46:56,233 And she's fly, okay? 1074 00:46:56,333 --> 00:46:59,737 And they all want to bone her, and you know it. 1075 00:46:59,837 --> 00:47:02,106 - And there were some stations in the South that said, 1076 00:47:02,206 --> 00:47:03,640 "Oh, you're having," what was then, 1077 00:47:03,740 --> 00:47:06,410 "a black woman on the bridge. 1078 00:47:06,510 --> 00:47:07,812 We're not gonna show your show." 1079 00:47:07,912 --> 00:47:10,247 And Roddenberry said, "you," you know. 1080 00:47:11,415 --> 00:47:13,617 And, you know, "Too bad. You lose." 1081 00:47:13,717 --> 00:47:16,453 - A woman of color in the late '60s 1082 00:47:16,553 --> 00:47:19,056 while the civil rights riots were going on. 1083 00:47:19,156 --> 00:47:22,126 Her presence there was a big deal. 1084 00:47:22,226 --> 00:47:24,929 - I had just been offered 1085 00:47:25,029 --> 00:47:28,098 a major role in a Broadway musical. 1086 00:47:28,198 --> 00:47:32,436 And I met Dr. Martin Luther King. 1087 00:47:32,536 --> 00:47:36,807 And I was so excited to tell him. 1088 00:47:36,907 --> 00:47:38,876 And he said, "You can't do that." 1089 00:47:38,976 --> 00:47:41,846 He said, "Don't you understand what you're doing? 1090 00:47:41,946 --> 00:47:45,349 "This is television and there's nobody like you on TV. 1091 00:47:45,449 --> 00:47:49,653 You can't-- you can't abdicate." 1092 00:47:49,753 --> 00:47:50,921 And I couldn't. 1093 00:47:51,021 --> 00:47:52,689 - The main thing that has struck me 1094 00:47:52,789 --> 00:47:58,362 about Gene's series at the time was how he mirrored 1095 00:47:58,462 --> 00:48:00,530 the things that were going on in our society 1096 00:48:00,630 --> 00:48:03,467 by using the aliens and the humans 1097 00:48:03,567 --> 00:48:05,069 to carry out those storylines. 1098 00:48:05,169 --> 00:48:06,771 He was very clever in doing that. 1099 00:48:06,871 --> 00:48:07,972 - I liked the idea. 1100 00:48:08,072 --> 00:48:11,108 I'm not sure it was always executed 1101 00:48:11,208 --> 00:48:12,810 as well as it might have. 1102 00:48:12,910 --> 00:48:14,244 I think we used the bludgeon 1103 00:48:14,344 --> 00:48:17,014 when we did the story of the half black and half white. 1104 00:48:17,114 --> 00:48:19,383 You know, but we did it you know? 1105 00:48:19,483 --> 00:48:22,152 And good for us for taking on the issue. 1106 00:48:22,252 --> 00:48:24,321 - I am black on the right side. 1107 00:48:27,357 --> 00:48:28,692 * 1108 00:48:28,792 --> 00:48:31,829 - I fail to see the significant difference. 1109 00:48:31,929 --> 00:48:33,463 - Lokai is white on the right-- 1110 00:48:33,563 --> 00:48:36,733 all of his people are white on the right side. 1111 00:48:36,833 --> 00:48:39,837 - Frank Gorshin was a wonderful performer, 1112 00:48:39,937 --> 00:48:42,807 and he and Lou Antonio were the two actors 1113 00:48:42,907 --> 00:48:45,009 who played these opposing roles. 1114 00:48:45,109 --> 00:48:47,544 People who were actually mirror images of each other 1115 00:48:47,644 --> 00:48:50,647 should hate each other they way they did. 1116 00:48:50,747 --> 00:48:53,150 And there was that great moment where Kirk says, 1117 00:48:53,250 --> 00:48:55,352 "Why do you people hate each other so much? 1118 00:48:55,452 --> 00:48:57,687 You're--you're the same." 1119 00:48:57,787 --> 00:48:59,123 "Don't you get it? 1120 00:48:59,223 --> 00:49:01,826 He's black on the right side, I'm black on the left." 1121 00:49:01,926 --> 00:49:05,229 You know, "Oh." 1122 00:49:05,329 --> 00:49:07,031 - Science fiction is at its best 1123 00:49:07,131 --> 00:49:08,732 when it challenges you. 1124 00:49:08,832 --> 00:49:11,936 It presents a message while disguising itself 1125 00:49:12,036 --> 00:49:13,403 as entertainment. 1126 00:49:13,503 --> 00:49:15,672 - In an episode called "Symbiosis," 1127 00:49:15,772 --> 00:49:18,809 there's a planet where they're all addicted. 1128 00:49:18,909 --> 00:49:21,745 And there's another species 1129 00:49:21,845 --> 00:49:23,814 that always supplies them with their drug. 1130 00:49:23,914 --> 00:49:25,816 And we know that-- that this is 1131 00:49:25,916 --> 00:49:28,752 this horrible enabling situation. 1132 00:49:28,852 --> 00:49:32,256 And we could easily cure the addicts. 1133 00:49:32,356 --> 00:49:36,693 - Please, help us. - I'm not sure that I can. 1134 00:49:39,029 --> 00:49:40,430 - But do we get involved 1135 00:49:40,530 --> 00:49:41,932 or do we let them figure it out? 1136 00:49:42,032 --> 00:49:45,035 - The moment that I felt was so haunting to me 1137 00:49:45,135 --> 00:49:47,737 was the one where B'Elanna is pregnant 1138 00:49:47,837 --> 00:49:50,841 and can see that her child will have Klingon DNA 1139 00:49:50,941 --> 00:49:54,111 and be born with the forehead and she has developed a way 1140 00:49:54,211 --> 00:49:56,046 to possibly alter that so her daughter 1141 00:49:56,146 --> 00:49:58,515 doesn't have to go through what she went through. 1142 00:49:58,615 --> 00:50:01,518 And I wept when I read the episode. 1143 00:50:01,618 --> 00:50:03,187 But then to be responsible for a child 1144 00:50:03,287 --> 00:50:06,790 and to have the technology to change the future of this child. 1145 00:50:06,890 --> 00:50:09,259 And it was, um-- 1146 00:50:09,359 --> 00:50:11,128 it was a difficult and wonderful episode. 1147 00:50:11,228 --> 00:50:12,796 - When you look at Data, you know, 1148 00:50:12,896 --> 00:50:15,900 at one point he is on trial, you know. 1149 00:50:16,000 --> 00:50:20,604 And it's, like, is he on trial because he's different? 1150 00:50:20,704 --> 00:50:24,641 Is he on trial because he should be not be thinking 1151 00:50:24,741 --> 00:50:26,776 the way that he's thinking because he's, after all, 1152 00:50:26,876 --> 00:50:28,845 a machine and should not be moving-- 1153 00:50:28,945 --> 00:50:32,716 I mean, they're all the questions that we deal with. 1154 00:50:32,816 --> 00:50:36,020 And whether it's race because it's skin color, 1155 00:50:36,120 --> 00:50:38,855 or race because you're an android, 1156 00:50:38,955 --> 00:50:41,992 or, you know, race because you're only this big and fuzzy. 1157 00:50:42,092 --> 00:50:43,460 You're a Tribble, you know? 1158 00:50:43,560 --> 00:50:46,663 It's all of these stories go into saying, 1159 00:50:46,763 --> 00:50:50,167 "Hey, we actually all have to try to do this together." 1160 00:50:52,102 --> 00:50:53,904 - The cultural makeup of the bridge, 1161 00:50:54,004 --> 00:50:55,705 that was science fiction... - Absolutely. 1162 00:50:55,805 --> 00:50:57,441 - In the mid '60s. 1163 00:50:57,541 --> 00:50:59,709 People who watch it today have no idea 1164 00:50:59,809 --> 00:51:02,312 how startling that was. 1165 00:51:02,412 --> 00:51:04,681 You had this multi-cultural crew, 1166 00:51:04,781 --> 00:51:05,882 not just multi-cultural, 1167 00:51:05,982 --> 00:51:09,053 but it was male and female as well. 1168 00:51:09,153 --> 00:51:11,989 I mean, I know that when Roddenberry did the first pilot 1169 00:51:12,089 --> 00:51:13,790 and Majel Barrett was Number One, 1170 00:51:13,890 --> 00:51:15,725 the studio was like... - Yeah. 1171 00:51:15,825 --> 00:51:21,865 - Who's gonna believe a woman in charge of a starship? 1172 00:51:21,965 --> 00:51:23,667 - The thing that's really amazing about "Star Trek" 1173 00:51:23,767 --> 00:51:25,235 is that it definitely has inspired people 1174 00:51:25,335 --> 00:51:27,637 to sort of, you know, proceed down that path, right? 1175 00:51:27,737 --> 00:51:29,273 - Yeah. - A lot of technologists, 1176 00:51:29,373 --> 00:51:31,841 of course talk about the StarTAC Motorola phone, right? 1177 00:51:31,941 --> 00:51:33,510 The flip phone coming from the communicator. 1178 00:51:33,610 --> 00:51:36,513 But it gives people a vision to sort of think about, 1179 00:51:36,613 --> 00:51:38,048 "Well, why isn't that possible? 1180 00:51:38,148 --> 00:51:39,449 - Well, the PADD is an obvious thing, 1181 00:51:39,549 --> 00:51:41,585 which the iPad, I think, was designed after specifically. 1182 00:51:41,685 --> 00:51:43,153 - Didn't they say... - Yes. 1183 00:51:43,253 --> 00:51:44,321 - He took the design from iPad-- - Yes. 1184 00:51:44,421 --> 00:51:47,024 - Well, they wanted to call it a PADD, 1185 00:51:47,124 --> 00:51:48,558 Personal Access Display Device, 1186 00:51:48,658 --> 00:51:49,726 which is what we called it on the show, 1187 00:51:49,826 --> 00:51:51,495 but Paramount wouldn't allow it. 1188 00:51:51,595 --> 00:51:53,263 - And what's really neat, I mean, 1189 00:51:53,363 --> 00:51:54,931 the computer interaction is things like we get 1190 00:51:55,031 --> 00:51:57,367 with Siri and Alexa. - Well, yes, exactly. 1191 00:51:57,467 --> 00:51:59,169 I mean, you literally talk to a computer, 1192 00:51:59,269 --> 00:52:01,038 and it, you know, responds to your queries. 1193 00:52:01,138 --> 00:52:02,806 - Wow, you don't even think about that. 1194 00:52:02,906 --> 00:52:03,807 - Yeah. - I mean, I think this is 1195 00:52:03,907 --> 00:52:06,643 a really--kind of a neat dynamic 1196 00:52:06,743 --> 00:52:09,279 of science sort of influencing science fiction 1197 00:52:09,379 --> 00:52:12,916 and in return, getting some sort of inspiration back. 1198 00:52:13,016 --> 00:52:14,784 - The only thing they got really, really wrong for me 1199 00:52:14,884 --> 00:52:16,386 is the fact that they plugged Data in. 1200 00:52:16,486 --> 00:52:17,921 I feel like he'd have Bluetooth. 1201 00:52:20,424 --> 00:52:21,825 - They got to put him in his charger every night. 1202 00:52:22,859 --> 00:52:24,161 - When I see someone in a restaurant 1203 00:52:24,261 --> 00:52:26,796 and they have the Bluetooth in their ear 1204 00:52:26,896 --> 00:52:28,765 while dining with someone else, 1205 00:52:28,865 --> 00:52:31,901 I usually shout out, "Let it go, Uhura." 1206 00:52:33,903 --> 00:52:34,804 And you know what? 1207 00:52:34,904 --> 00:52:36,040 They know what I'm talking about. 1208 00:52:36,140 --> 00:52:37,974 - Oh, there you go. - And they feel horrible. 1209 00:52:42,746 --> 00:52:45,515 - Gene was clearly a visionary. 1210 00:52:45,615 --> 00:52:47,151 He went and studied, though, 1211 00:52:47,251 --> 00:52:49,353 the technologies that would be involved 1212 00:52:49,453 --> 00:52:52,122 in order to make his show credible. 1213 00:52:52,222 --> 00:52:54,658 - Believability was a huge thing for my father. 1214 00:52:54,758 --> 00:52:58,295 If you go back and read some of the original writers' guides 1215 00:52:58,395 --> 00:53:00,097 and bibles for the original series, 1216 00:53:00,197 --> 00:53:03,800 He says in there, you know, "Believability is essential." 1217 00:53:03,900 --> 00:53:05,569 - He brought Harvey Lynn, his cousin 1218 00:53:05,669 --> 00:53:08,172 who worked with the RAND company, to advise. 1219 00:53:08,272 --> 00:53:10,540 And that's where a lot of the technology came from. 1220 00:53:10,640 --> 00:53:12,942 - I think because I loved the space program, 1221 00:53:13,042 --> 00:53:15,745 "Star Trek" to me at that point felt real. 1222 00:53:15,845 --> 00:53:17,581 It felt like they all took it kinda seriously. 1223 00:53:17,681 --> 00:53:19,283 There was a real ship like that. 1224 00:53:19,383 --> 00:53:21,585 I do remember when I was a kid I thought that was a real ship. 1225 00:53:21,685 --> 00:53:23,220 I thought, you know, "There's a big ship 1226 00:53:23,320 --> 00:53:25,222 that flies around in space. I see it every week." 1227 00:53:25,322 --> 00:53:27,824 - The technology absolutely captured my imagination. 1228 00:53:27,924 --> 00:53:31,761 I mean, especially the idea of being able to 1229 00:53:31,861 --> 00:53:33,863 live in this giant spaceship. 1230 00:53:33,963 --> 00:53:36,633 - He wanted to do adult stories, adult science fiction, 1231 00:53:36,733 --> 00:53:39,903 so he knew that in order to make that kind of a show work, 1232 00:53:40,003 --> 00:53:43,006 he had a very credible design for his starship. 1233 00:53:43,106 --> 00:53:45,008 - But there's a reason the Enterprise hangs 1234 00:53:45,108 --> 00:53:47,811 in the Smithsonian Institute. 1235 00:53:47,911 --> 00:53:50,247 It is such-- not just an iconic ship, 1236 00:53:50,347 --> 00:53:51,781 but such a beautiful ship. 1237 00:53:51,881 --> 00:53:54,050 It's a magnificent aesthetic achievement. 1238 00:53:54,150 --> 00:53:57,053 - Roddenberry said, "We want our audience to believe 1239 00:53:57,153 --> 00:53:59,456 "that for the hour they're watching 'Star Trek,' 1240 00:53:59,556 --> 00:54:02,959 "they're really on a spaceship out exploring the galaxy. 1241 00:54:03,059 --> 00:54:04,728 "So we have to design the bridge. 1242 00:54:04,828 --> 00:54:06,930 "We have to think about navigation. 1243 00:54:07,030 --> 00:54:09,032 We have to think about what powers the ship." 1244 00:54:09,132 --> 00:54:10,367 And then he thought, "You know, 1245 00:54:10,467 --> 00:54:13,036 "why don't we set up a system 1246 00:54:13,136 --> 00:54:14,571 "in the sick bay called the biobed? 1247 00:54:14,671 --> 00:54:16,840 "A crewman comes in, lays down on the biobed, 1248 00:54:16,940 --> 00:54:18,642 "and on a computer screen above the bed, 1249 00:54:18,742 --> 00:54:21,611 it instantly displays all of their vital signs." 1250 00:54:21,711 --> 00:54:23,180 The creators of "Star Trek" 1251 00:54:23,280 --> 00:54:25,482 designed and engineered gadgets for the crew 1252 00:54:25,582 --> 00:54:27,351 that are decades ahead of their time. 1253 00:54:27,451 --> 00:54:30,687 And inspire the devices that are second nature to us today. 1254 00:54:30,787 --> 00:54:33,957 - But also the smaller things like the tricorder 1255 00:54:34,057 --> 00:54:36,726 or the communicator, which, I mean, 1256 00:54:36,826 --> 00:54:39,028 you know I have one in my pocket right now 1257 00:54:39,128 --> 00:54:40,797 that's not dissimilar. 1258 00:54:40,897 --> 00:54:42,866 - Leonard Nimoy, years ago, 1259 00:54:42,966 --> 00:54:47,237 he told me the flip phone was purposely designed 1260 00:54:47,337 --> 00:54:49,038 to look like a communicator. 1261 00:54:49,138 --> 00:54:51,007 That the inventor of the flip phone 1262 00:54:51,107 --> 00:54:54,211 wanted it to be a pastiche of "Star Trek." 1263 00:54:54,311 --> 00:54:57,247 - A guy named Martin Cooper in the 1970s 1264 00:54:57,347 --> 00:55:01,117 was tasked by Motorola and Bell Labs 1265 00:55:01,217 --> 00:55:04,288 to create a, you know, one of the first cell phones. 1266 00:55:04,388 --> 00:55:06,690 A portable telephone that, you know, 1267 00:55:06,790 --> 00:55:08,492 you could carry and walk around with, 1268 00:55:08,592 --> 00:55:10,627 and it would ultimately be small enough 1269 00:55:10,727 --> 00:55:12,061 to fit in a pocket. 1270 00:55:12,161 --> 00:55:16,366 And Cooper explicitly said, "When I was designing 1271 00:55:16,466 --> 00:55:19,869 "that first handheld phone, I thought, 1272 00:55:19,969 --> 00:55:21,305 "'You know, this thing is kinda big. 1273 00:55:21,405 --> 00:55:24,341 "'It's a little bulky, but if I fold it in half, 1274 00:55:24,441 --> 00:55:27,043 "'that'll save-- that'll save space. 1275 00:55:27,143 --> 00:55:28,812 "'It'll make it smaller and easier to carry. 1276 00:55:28,912 --> 00:55:30,514 "'Plus, it'll be really cool to flip open 1277 00:55:30,614 --> 00:55:32,449 "'Like the communicators on "Star Trek."'" 1278 00:55:32,549 --> 00:55:35,785 - You have these PADDs that are now iPads and everything. 1279 00:55:35,885 --> 00:55:39,723 Well, we didn't have iPads then, so it was--it was like 1280 00:55:39,823 --> 00:55:41,891 we were doing it, we'd be making things up. 1281 00:55:41,991 --> 00:55:43,493 But if you set it down too hard, you gotta do-- 1282 00:55:43,593 --> 00:55:44,661 it would make a clunk. 1283 00:55:44,761 --> 00:55:45,662 You'd have to take the whole shot over. 1284 00:55:45,762 --> 00:55:48,398 - The PADDs that they used, 1285 00:55:48,498 --> 00:55:50,800 which had nothing on them, 1286 00:55:50,900 --> 00:55:55,205 we'd use them in the stories to somehow advance the plot, 1287 00:55:55,305 --> 00:55:57,741 or they're looking at a report. 1288 00:55:57,841 --> 00:56:01,311 Never in a million years did any of us think 1289 00:56:01,411 --> 00:56:03,547 this would be a thing. 1290 00:56:03,647 --> 00:56:05,515 It was total science fiction to us. 1291 00:56:05,615 --> 00:56:07,917 - It was 20 years after 1292 00:56:08,017 --> 00:56:10,019 "Star Trek: The Next Generation" premiered 1293 00:56:10,119 --> 00:56:12,656 that Apple introduced the iPad. 1294 00:56:12,756 --> 00:56:17,927 And that's, you know, that's a dead ringer, really, 1295 00:56:18,027 --> 00:56:20,230 for the PADDs that we had on "Star Trek: The Next Generation" 1296 00:56:20,330 --> 00:56:21,331 20 years earlier. 1297 00:56:21,431 --> 00:56:24,468 - Universal translation technology, 1298 00:56:24,568 --> 00:56:26,270 artificial intelligence, all kinds of things, 1299 00:56:26,370 --> 00:56:30,006 and it instilled in some fans a passion for sce, 1300 00:56:30,106 --> 00:56:32,542 and who knows what they went on to discover or will discover. 1301 00:56:32,642 --> 00:56:34,744 - People forget this. They look at it now, they say, 1302 00:56:34,844 --> 00:56:36,680 "Oh, 'Star Trek's' so dated. It's so primitive." 1303 00:56:36,780 --> 00:56:37,847 They have no idea. 1304 00:56:37,947 --> 00:56:39,949 Supermarkets didn't have sliding doors yet. 1305 00:56:40,049 --> 00:56:41,985 That's how prescient "Star Trek" was. 1306 00:56:42,085 --> 00:56:44,521 - It was Roddenberry's idea for the holodeck, 1307 00:56:44,621 --> 00:56:47,156 which I always thought was revolutionary, you know? 1308 00:56:47,256 --> 00:56:48,892 Virtual reality was being explored 1309 00:56:48,992 --> 00:56:51,328 in science fiction novels, 1310 00:56:51,428 --> 00:56:54,130 but he was really the first to kind of put 1311 00:56:54,230 --> 00:56:57,567 true, thorough virtual reality, 1312 00:56:57,667 --> 00:56:59,135 certainly onto a television show. 1313 00:56:59,235 --> 00:57:01,605 - The holodeck, which was a wonderful invention 1314 00:57:01,705 --> 00:57:05,542 taken to imaginative creative extremes in "Next Generation," 1315 00:57:05,642 --> 00:57:07,577 has its origins in the "Star Trek" animated series 1316 00:57:07,677 --> 00:57:08,745 that most people don't know. 1317 00:57:08,845 --> 00:57:10,614 The holodeck was in an episode 1318 00:57:10,714 --> 00:57:12,449 of the "Star Trek" cartoon, "Practical Joker." 1319 00:57:12,549 --> 00:57:13,850 That was the first time we saw that. 1320 00:57:13,950 --> 00:57:16,019 - If you look at "Star Trek," the original "Star Trek," 1321 00:57:16,119 --> 00:57:19,389 you will see Spock holding little cards 1322 00:57:19,489 --> 00:57:21,925 and data cards that he would slip 1323 00:57:22,025 --> 00:57:23,727 into a slot on the computer. 1324 00:57:23,827 --> 00:57:26,430 They look exactly like the 3 1/2" floppy disks 1325 00:57:26,530 --> 00:57:28,465 that were created 20 years later. 1326 00:57:28,565 --> 00:57:30,567 - It's remarkable to think, you know, 1327 00:57:30,667 --> 00:57:31,901 Siri's getting pretty close 1328 00:57:32,001 --> 00:57:33,537 to the computer on the Enterprise. 1329 00:57:33,637 --> 00:57:36,940 - "Star Trek," I think, on the technology side, 1330 00:57:37,040 --> 00:57:39,809 partly it's the extraordinary vision of Gene and the people 1331 00:57:39,909 --> 00:57:42,346 that he worked with in creating that original show 1332 00:57:42,446 --> 00:57:46,249 and thinking about how things can be better in the future, 1333 00:57:46,349 --> 00:57:48,485 and then people growing up watching "Star Trek" 1334 00:57:48,585 --> 00:57:50,119 making those things happen 1335 00:57:50,219 --> 00:57:52,088 because they were inspired by "Star Trek." 1336 00:57:52,188 --> 00:57:55,224 So it's a really fascinating kind of feedback loop 1337 00:57:55,324 --> 00:57:57,927 between art and science. 1338 00:57:58,027 --> 00:58:00,397 - I can't think of another show that had nearly the impact 1339 00:58:00,497 --> 00:58:04,434 for people who really, you know, work in the aerospace industry 1340 00:58:04,534 --> 00:58:06,002 that "Star Trek" did, right. 1341 00:58:06,102 --> 00:58:08,137 Or even for a lot of cases, physics and things like that. 1342 00:58:08,237 --> 00:58:11,641 Because it did take a realistic approach to science 1343 00:58:11,741 --> 00:58:13,877 and using science to solve problems. 1344 00:58:13,977 --> 00:58:19,415 But you try to solve them with a rational approach. 1345 00:58:20,784 --> 00:58:21,818 "Star Trek" begins as a prime-time 1346 00:58:21,918 --> 00:58:23,219 television series, 1347 00:58:23,319 --> 00:58:24,854 but over the next half century, 1348 00:58:24,954 --> 00:58:27,290 it reaches far beyond the airwaves 1349 00:58:27,390 --> 00:58:29,593 to help shape our world. 1350 00:58:29,693 --> 00:58:32,195 - "Star Trek" inspired people. 1351 00:58:32,295 --> 00:58:35,932 "Star Trek," like, people became scientists. 1352 00:58:36,032 --> 00:58:37,501 They became physicists. 1353 00:58:37,601 --> 00:58:40,169 They became doctors and astronauts 1354 00:58:40,269 --> 00:58:42,105 because of "Star Trek." 1355 00:58:42,205 --> 00:58:44,874 - When you see someone who says, "You were such a role model. 1356 00:58:44,974 --> 00:58:46,743 You know, I went to med school because of you." 1357 00:58:46,843 --> 00:58:48,678 Or, "I got into nursing because of you." 1358 00:58:48,778 --> 00:58:51,314 It made it richer for me. It made it a richer experience. 1359 00:58:51,414 --> 00:58:54,884 - I've received a lot of letters from people 1360 00:58:54,984 --> 00:58:57,987 who were inspired by "Star Trek" in general 1361 00:58:58,087 --> 00:59:00,657 and from my character, specifically, 1362 00:59:00,757 --> 00:59:02,959 to go into the sciences, into engineering. 1363 00:59:03,059 --> 00:59:05,895 It's cool that you can make science cool. 1364 00:59:05,995 --> 00:59:09,399 And that it can inspire somebody to move in that direction. 1365 00:59:09,499 --> 00:59:11,300 - One of the reasons I wanted to become an engineer 1366 00:59:11,400 --> 00:59:13,169 was because of "Star Trek." 1367 00:59:13,269 --> 00:59:16,940 Because there was something different about it 1368 00:59:17,040 --> 00:59:21,511 in that the world felt more thought through and real 1369 00:59:21,611 --> 00:59:24,080 than other things that you had seen. 1370 00:59:24,180 --> 00:59:27,551 - I mean, there's a picture of NASA and Mission Control 1371 00:59:27,651 --> 00:59:29,719 and people were wearing Spock ears. 1372 00:59:29,819 --> 00:59:33,723 - People who went to college to study physics 1373 00:59:33,823 --> 00:59:36,392 or engineering or medicine because they grew up 1374 00:59:36,492 --> 00:59:38,127 and were inspired by "Star Trek." 1375 00:59:38,227 --> 00:59:40,930 And wanted to be the next Scotty or the next Dr. McCoy. 1376 00:59:41,030 --> 00:59:42,466 - Jimmy Doohan, who played Scotty, 1377 00:59:42,566 --> 00:59:44,868 and DeForest Kelley, who played McCoy, 1378 00:59:44,968 --> 00:59:48,938 were always relating stories 1379 00:59:49,038 --> 00:59:50,474 of people who had written to them 1380 00:59:50,574 --> 00:59:52,542 and would become engineers and doctors 1381 00:59:52,642 --> 00:59:54,478 because of "Star Trek." 1382 00:59:54,578 --> 00:59:56,713 I think that was great. 1383 00:59:56,813 --> 01:00:00,016 But how does that apply to me? And it didn't. 1384 01:00:00,116 --> 01:00:02,051 And for the longest time, it didn't. 1385 01:00:02,151 --> 01:00:05,555 Until I met a young lady, who after "Star Trek" 1386 01:00:05,655 --> 01:00:08,992 had gone to school to learn Russian 1387 01:00:09,092 --> 01:00:12,161 and went to work for the State Department. 1388 01:00:12,261 --> 01:00:16,833 Her mission was so important 1389 01:00:16,933 --> 01:00:18,802 that she couldn't tell me what it was about. 1390 01:00:18,902 --> 01:00:20,904 But it had to do with the Russians, 1391 01:00:21,004 --> 01:00:24,173 so I actually helped inspire a spy. 1392 01:00:25,374 --> 01:00:27,511 - I was so fascinated by "Star Trek" 1393 01:00:27,611 --> 01:00:30,980 that maybe the first filmmaking book I can remember reading was 1394 01:00:31,080 --> 01:00:33,483 "The Making of Star Trek" by Stephen Whitfield. 1395 01:00:33,583 --> 01:00:35,351 And I remember being so fascinated 1396 01:00:35,451 --> 01:00:38,755 by looking at the behind-the-scenes pictures, 1397 01:00:38,855 --> 01:00:41,591 the layout of how the sets were put together 1398 01:00:41,691 --> 01:00:44,227 at Desilu and Paramount Studios. 1399 01:00:44,327 --> 01:00:46,462 The idea of using a colored light 1400 01:00:46,562 --> 01:00:48,431 to create different planets. 1401 01:00:48,531 --> 01:00:51,835 Just all the imagination that went into it, 1402 01:00:51,935 --> 01:00:53,670 it just really excited me, 1403 01:00:53,770 --> 01:00:57,206 and it really became a doorway into the idea of filmmaking 1404 01:00:57,306 --> 01:01:00,710 and into television, which obviously, you know, 1405 01:01:00,810 --> 01:01:02,078 I've spent my whole life on. 1406 01:01:02,178 --> 01:01:04,748 - Probably one of the most influential books in my life 1407 01:01:04,848 --> 01:01:06,650 was discovering "The Making of Star Trek" 1408 01:01:06,750 --> 01:01:09,218 by Stephen Whitfield, which I found at a school book fair 1409 01:01:09,318 --> 01:01:10,787 in the sixth grade. 1410 01:01:10,887 --> 01:01:14,257 And I read that thing cover to cover over and over again 1411 01:01:14,357 --> 01:01:17,060 'cause that really was about the making of a television series, 1412 01:01:17,160 --> 01:01:20,463 about selling a pilot, you know, show bibles 1413 01:01:20,563 --> 01:01:22,932 and production questions and issues 1414 01:01:23,032 --> 01:01:24,067 and fighting with networks. 1415 01:01:24,167 --> 01:01:26,636 And I was completely enthralled with it. 1416 01:01:26,736 --> 01:01:30,574 And it sort of--it imprinted itself in me in a profound way. 1417 01:01:30,674 --> 01:01:32,642 You know, I didn't really think about 1418 01:01:32,742 --> 01:01:34,944 becoming a television writer at that age, 1419 01:01:35,044 --> 01:01:36,145 and wouldn't for many, many years. 1420 01:01:36,245 --> 01:01:37,947 'Cause that wasn't a real job. 1421 01:01:38,047 --> 01:01:40,784 But reading that book gave me a hunger to do that. 1422 01:01:40,884 --> 01:01:43,519 I wanted, on some basic level, to do that, too, 1423 01:01:43,619 --> 01:01:46,022 to make a television series and to do those things 1424 01:01:46,122 --> 01:01:47,390 like Gene had done. 1425 01:01:47,490 --> 01:01:50,960 - We were invited to the rollout of the Enterprise shuttle. 1426 01:01:51,060 --> 01:01:54,463 I didn't have an understanding of how significant it was 1427 01:01:54,563 --> 01:01:56,332 until we got there. 1428 01:01:56,432 --> 01:01:58,234 And there were several hundred people there. 1429 01:01:58,334 --> 01:02:00,570 And they had the Air Force Band. 1430 01:02:00,670 --> 01:02:05,474 The conductor raised the baton and waved his hand 1431 01:02:05,574 --> 01:02:08,544 and the band started playing up. 1432 01:02:08,644 --> 01:02:11,881 The Enterprise rolled out from behind the building, 1433 01:02:11,981 --> 01:02:14,283 and it was amazing to see. 1434 01:02:14,383 --> 01:02:16,886 As it came out, the band started playing 1435 01:02:16,986 --> 01:02:19,055 the theme music from "Star Trek." 1436 01:02:19,155 --> 01:02:25,261 And we jumped up as one, and were cheering and screaming. 1437 01:02:25,361 --> 01:02:28,131 It was just the most remarkable moment. 1438 01:02:28,231 --> 01:02:30,900 And, you know, across the nose of the shuttle 1439 01:02:31,000 --> 01:02:33,236 was the word "Enterprise." 1440 01:02:33,336 --> 01:02:37,273 For the first time, I realized that there was a significance 1441 01:02:37,373 --> 01:02:41,344 beyond the fact that we were a television show 1442 01:02:41,444 --> 01:02:42,979 that went on once a week. 1443 01:02:43,079 --> 01:02:46,750 That we really had an influence in the culture. 1444 01:02:46,850 --> 01:02:48,184 And I guess it was the first time 1445 01:02:48,284 --> 01:02:51,587 that I really felt that I could take a bow. 1446 01:02:51,687 --> 01:02:55,491 Up until then, my sense was, "I'm a supporting character 1447 01:02:55,591 --> 01:02:57,727 "with very little to do. 1448 01:02:57,827 --> 01:03:01,731 I'm riding the coattails of this television project, 1449 01:03:01,831 --> 01:03:04,000 and I haven't really contributed very much. 1450 01:03:04,100 --> 01:03:07,303 Well, that was all true, but I realized then 1451 01:03:07,403 --> 01:03:11,207 that I was part of a group that, as a group, 1452 01:03:11,307 --> 01:03:12,676 we had an influence. 1453 01:03:12,776 --> 01:03:15,845 That we had an influence in society 1454 01:03:15,945 --> 01:03:17,613 - Because of "Star Trek," I am all the things I just said. 1455 01:03:17,713 --> 01:03:20,884 Engineer, physicist, doctor, psychiatrist. 1456 01:03:20,984 --> 01:03:23,452 I've joined the military. I became a policeman. 1457 01:03:23,552 --> 01:03:27,323 But the most potent, I think, 1458 01:03:27,423 --> 01:03:29,192 are the stories where someone comes up 1459 01:03:29,292 --> 01:03:32,896 and looks you in the eye and says, 1460 01:03:32,996 --> 01:03:36,465 "Star Trek was the only time in my house 1461 01:03:36,565 --> 01:03:38,534 "where there was peace. 1462 01:03:38,634 --> 01:03:41,738 "Where my dad or my mother or the abuse or the alcohol," 1463 01:03:41,838 --> 01:03:44,373 or whatever it was, "the only time where we sat together 1464 01:03:44,473 --> 01:03:48,812 and it was peaceful and trouble-free." 1465 01:03:48,912 --> 01:03:51,080 And--and it's heartbreaking. 1466 01:03:51,180 --> 01:03:52,281 And it's true. 1467 01:03:52,381 --> 01:03:53,983 You can see it in their eyes how true it is 1468 01:03:54,083 --> 01:03:55,284 and how important it is. 1469 01:03:55,384 --> 01:04:00,523 - There are people who have gone to nine foster homes, 1470 01:04:00,623 --> 01:04:05,528 and the only steady thing in all of those foster homes 1471 01:04:05,628 --> 01:04:07,697 was that the family watched "Star Trek." 1472 01:04:07,797 --> 01:04:10,734 - "Star Trek" over the years has inspired people. 1473 01:04:10,834 --> 01:04:16,105 And whether it's inspired them to follow their dreams 1474 01:04:16,205 --> 01:04:18,074 or believe in themselves, 1475 01:04:18,174 --> 01:04:21,110 I mean, that's the-- one of the key messages 1476 01:04:21,210 --> 01:04:25,381 in "Star Trek" is, "You're a great person. 1477 01:04:25,481 --> 01:04:27,683 "You have valid thoughts, valid ideas. 1478 01:04:27,783 --> 01:04:30,954 "Never think of yourself as less than anyone else. 1479 01:04:31,054 --> 01:04:35,591 Now go out there and follow your dreams." 1480 01:04:35,691 --> 01:04:37,226 - We were talking earlier, Doug, 1481 01:04:37,326 --> 01:04:40,930 before we started shooting here and I just found out, 1482 01:04:41,030 --> 01:04:44,367 somehow, just found out about a book right here. 1483 01:04:44,467 --> 01:04:45,935 - How could you have missed this book? 1484 01:04:46,035 --> 01:04:50,774 - Here it is, "The Making of Star Trek." 1485 01:04:50,874 --> 01:04:52,308 - That's the book. 1486 01:04:52,408 --> 01:04:54,077 - The book. - The book. 1487 01:04:54,177 --> 01:04:56,445 That book changed my life completely. 1488 01:04:56,545 --> 01:04:57,613 That book came out, I guess, like, 1489 01:04:57,713 --> 01:04:58,915 the second season of "Star Trek." 1490 01:04:59,015 --> 01:05:00,950 - Uh-huh. - I was crazy about the show. 1491 01:05:01,050 --> 01:05:03,552 - That book was, I mean for me, 1492 01:05:03,652 --> 01:05:05,922 it was like Popeye downing a can of spinach. 1493 01:05:06,022 --> 01:05:06,956 Can I see it? - I mean, look at this. 1494 01:05:07,056 --> 01:05:08,291 This is the diagram of the bridge. 1495 01:05:08,391 --> 01:05:11,627 - Honestly, I mean, it totally gave me a direction. 1496 01:05:11,727 --> 01:05:14,197 I knew what I wanted to do after I read that book. 1497 01:05:14,297 --> 01:05:17,400 And I could say that "Star Trek" and that book 1498 01:05:17,500 --> 01:05:19,668 made me who I am today, and that kinda sounds a little sad. 1499 01:05:19,768 --> 01:05:22,171 But, you know, it led me to a couple of Emmys. 1500 01:05:22,271 --> 01:05:24,207 Led me to an Academy Award, you know. 1501 01:05:24,307 --> 01:05:26,308 And that's all because of "Star Trek." 1502 01:05:29,146 --> 01:05:31,180 - My favorite episodes were always the ones-- 1503 01:05:31,280 --> 01:05:33,116 personally, 'cause, you know, I was doing 'em. 1504 01:05:33,716 --> 01:05:34,984 Were the ones where Seven 1505 01:05:35,084 --> 01:05:36,385 was really exploring her humanity. 1506 01:05:36,485 --> 01:05:38,587 So I think it was "Someone To Watch Over Me" 1507 01:05:38,687 --> 01:05:40,089 where the doctor's teaching Seven how to date. 1508 01:05:40,189 --> 01:05:42,291 - Oh, that's a great one. - And I just-- 1509 01:05:42,391 --> 01:05:44,828 I thought that was so lovely and so touching, 1510 01:05:44,928 --> 01:05:46,429 and it just broke my heart at the end 1511 01:05:46,529 --> 01:05:47,864 when he's kinda falling in love with Seven 1512 01:05:47,964 --> 01:05:49,632 and she's like, "Yeah, there's nobody here for me." 1513 01:05:49,732 --> 01:05:51,167 I hated that moment. 1514 01:05:51,267 --> 01:05:53,702 That's where you break the exoskeleton if I'm not mistaken. 1515 01:05:53,802 --> 01:05:55,238 - Yes! - The lobster. 1516 01:05:55,338 --> 01:05:56,905 - The creature has an exoskeleton, yes. 1517 01:05:57,773 --> 01:05:59,775 So that was one of my favorites, definitely. 1518 01:06:04,847 --> 01:06:08,517 - Well, a truly great "Star Trek" episode, 1519 01:06:08,617 --> 01:06:12,922 in my opinion, has a list of ingredients. 1520 01:06:13,022 --> 01:06:14,958 It's an equation. 1521 01:06:15,058 --> 01:06:17,961 And that equation includes: 1522 01:06:18,061 --> 01:06:20,897 a great high concept 1523 01:06:20,997 --> 01:06:24,167 that provides cool character dynamics 1524 01:06:24,267 --> 01:06:27,370 and conflict, but also is a parable. 1525 01:06:27,470 --> 01:06:28,804 It has some deeper theme. 1526 01:06:28,904 --> 01:06:30,273 - "Devil in the Dark" 1527 01:06:30,373 --> 01:06:31,707 I thought was a wonderful episode 1528 01:06:31,807 --> 01:06:35,411 about--about fear of the unknown. 1529 01:06:35,611 --> 01:06:37,046 How we fear--and even hate 1530 01:06:37,146 --> 01:06:39,182 something that we don't know anything about. 1531 01:06:39,582 --> 01:06:41,317 Learn who your enemy is and maybe then-- 1532 01:06:41,417 --> 01:06:44,420 maybe then it's no longer your enemy. 1533 01:06:45,588 --> 01:06:47,223 Interesting episode. 1534 01:06:47,323 --> 01:06:49,558 - You know, I remember the "Devil in the Dark" episode 1535 01:06:49,658 --> 01:06:51,394 with the Horta. That really left 1536 01:06:51,494 --> 01:06:52,695 a big impression on me as a kid, 1537 01:06:52,795 --> 01:06:54,630 that he didn't kill the monster 1538 01:06:54,730 --> 01:06:55,965 and that the monster was a mother 1539 01:06:56,065 --> 01:06:57,400 and had all these eggs. 1540 01:06:57,500 --> 01:06:58,734 - They're eggs, aren't they? 1541 01:06:58,834 --> 01:07:00,669 - Yes, Captain. Eggs. 1542 01:07:00,769 --> 01:07:02,338 And about to hatch. 1543 01:07:02,438 --> 01:07:03,907 - "A City on the Edge of Forever" 1544 01:07:04,007 --> 01:07:06,042 which is, of course, the episode of "Star Trek" 1545 01:07:06,142 --> 01:07:08,544 that is the one that everybody knows is a great one. 1546 01:07:08,644 --> 01:07:11,014 It's a little bit-- it's an eccentric episode. 1547 01:07:11,114 --> 01:07:14,783 I love also the two-parter. 1548 01:07:14,883 --> 01:07:17,620 The repurposing of the original pilot 1549 01:07:17,720 --> 01:07:18,955 into "The Ca--" 1550 01:07:19,055 --> 01:07:20,924 What is it, "The Cage: Part one and two"? 1551 01:07:21,024 --> 01:07:25,061 And that's brilliant--we refer to these shows all the time 1552 01:07:25,161 --> 01:07:26,595 on "Breaking Bad" in the writer's room. 1553 01:07:26,695 --> 01:07:28,597 We prefer to, you know, Tranya. 1554 01:07:28,697 --> 01:07:31,834 We refer to Captain Pike with his--with the light. 1555 01:07:31,934 --> 01:07:34,403 I mean, which, you know, couldn't even think of 1556 01:07:34,503 --> 01:07:36,772 as being a little bit like a Hector Salamanca 1557 01:07:36,872 --> 01:07:38,942 when he's in the wheelchair and he's got the bell. 1558 01:07:39,042 --> 01:07:40,809 - I really loved "Yesterday's Enterprise." 1559 01:07:40,909 --> 01:07:42,378 It was a spec script that I had 1560 01:07:42,478 --> 01:07:44,914 that had gone through a couple of drafts already. 1561 01:07:45,014 --> 01:07:46,815 Then I took a pass at it 1562 01:07:46,915 --> 01:07:49,685 and reconceiving the story and kinda making it 1563 01:07:49,785 --> 01:07:51,687 a much more darker universe on the other side 1564 01:07:51,787 --> 01:07:54,090 and emphasizing the war aspect of it. 1565 01:07:54,190 --> 01:07:55,658 And the tragedy of it. 1566 01:07:55,758 --> 01:07:59,128 - My favorite is my favorite because it's just brilliant. 1567 01:07:59,228 --> 01:08:02,031 Brilliant writing. Brilliant directing. 1568 01:08:02,131 --> 01:08:03,599 Brilliant acting. 1569 01:08:03,699 --> 01:08:06,035 And it's called "Far Beyond the Stars." 1570 01:08:06,135 --> 01:08:08,972 It's where all the series regulars 1571 01:08:09,072 --> 01:08:10,940 appear as humans, 1572 01:08:11,040 --> 01:08:14,743 and the episode has to deal with racism. 1573 01:08:14,843 --> 01:08:16,745 It's not just good "Star Trek." 1574 01:08:16,845 --> 01:08:19,015 It's not just good science fiction. 1575 01:08:19,115 --> 01:08:20,449 It's great literature. 1576 01:08:26,489 --> 01:08:28,824 - Well, you know, I think I'm the last 1577 01:08:28,924 --> 01:08:30,659 character Gene created. 1578 01:08:30,759 --> 01:08:34,397 I think I'm the last one that he actually created 1579 01:08:34,497 --> 01:08:36,665 based on Texas Guinan. 1580 01:08:36,765 --> 01:08:39,568 - Guinan her name was. After Texas Guinan 1581 01:08:39,668 --> 01:08:41,470 who was a famous card player and gambler, 1582 01:08:41,570 --> 01:08:44,173 or whatever she was. 1583 01:08:44,273 --> 01:08:48,277 And Whoopi showed up in the show and brought in 1584 01:08:48,377 --> 01:08:52,148 this--this aura. 1585 01:08:52,248 --> 01:08:55,051 And the wild-- remember the shovelhead hats 1586 01:08:55,151 --> 01:08:57,586 she used to wear? That beautiful face 1587 01:08:57,686 --> 01:08:59,822 with those big eyes and that gorgeous skin 1588 01:08:59,922 --> 01:09:02,958 and the voice. And she played it so straight. 1589 01:09:03,058 --> 01:09:05,094 - Guinan was great, again, 'cause Whoopi's playing it. 1590 01:09:05,194 --> 01:09:07,130 Guinan was a strange, mysterioso character 1591 01:09:07,230 --> 01:09:08,431 that no--none of us really understood 1592 01:09:08,531 --> 01:09:09,765 what the hell she was. 1593 01:09:09,865 --> 01:09:12,635 When we started really getting into "Next Gen" 1594 01:09:12,735 --> 01:09:14,670 in the later years, what we said was, 1595 01:09:14,770 --> 01:09:16,705 "It's really about her relationship with Picard. 1596 01:09:16,805 --> 01:09:18,674 "Yes, she's the bartender and, yes, she listens 1597 01:09:18,774 --> 01:09:21,377 "to all their problems and gives insight to people 1598 01:09:21,477 --> 01:09:24,647 "for various issues, but she has some back-story 1599 01:09:24,747 --> 01:09:27,150 "with Picard, and it's a personal relationship with him 1600 01:09:27,250 --> 01:09:28,584 "that drives that character forward. 1601 01:09:28,684 --> 01:09:30,253 "And it's the only reason she's on the ship. 1602 01:09:30,353 --> 01:09:33,156 It's the only reason that she really matters on the show." 1603 01:09:33,256 --> 01:09:36,159 - In my mind, always believed that 1604 01:09:36,259 --> 01:09:38,994 Guinan was the great-great-great-great-great- 1605 01:09:39,094 --> 01:09:40,829 great-great-great-great-great- great-great-great-great- 1606 01:09:40,929 --> 01:09:43,466 great-great-great-great-great-- couple more greats 1607 01:09:43,566 --> 01:09:46,069 grandmother of Picard. 1608 01:09:46,169 --> 01:09:49,505 And the reason she's on the ship is just to see how he's doing. 1609 01:09:49,605 --> 01:09:51,674 'Cause, you know, she can go anywhere at any time, 1610 01:09:51,774 --> 01:09:54,343 and she just irritates the hell outta Q. 1611 01:09:54,443 --> 01:09:57,113 Which made me very happy. John is wonderful. 1612 01:09:57,213 --> 01:10:00,015 - You know him? 1613 01:10:00,115 --> 01:10:01,517 - We have had some dealings. 1614 01:10:01,617 --> 01:10:04,587 - Those dealings were two centuries ago. 1615 01:10:04,687 --> 01:10:07,323 This creature is not what she appears to be. 1616 01:10:07,423 --> 01:10:09,492 She's an imp, and where she goes 1617 01:10:09,592 --> 01:10:11,460 trouble always follows. 1618 01:10:11,560 --> 01:10:13,496 - You're speaking of yourself, Q, not Guinan. 1619 01:10:13,596 --> 01:10:16,065 - Guinan? Is that your name now? 1620 01:10:16,165 --> 01:10:18,334 - Guinan is not the issue here. You are. 1621 01:10:18,434 --> 01:10:23,606 - I ended up doing six episodes of "Next Generation." 1622 01:10:23,706 --> 01:10:25,341 - Anytime there was an episode with Q in it, 1623 01:10:25,441 --> 01:10:29,178 I loved because whenever he was in an episode, 1624 01:10:29,278 --> 01:10:31,214 he was, you know, he was Agent Mayhem. 1625 01:10:31,314 --> 01:10:34,650 He was--it was going to be something really intense, 1626 01:10:34,750 --> 01:10:36,685 and he was seemingly unstoppable. 1627 01:10:36,785 --> 01:10:38,921 And so it was always really fascinating to watch. 1628 01:10:39,021 --> 01:10:40,923 - Jonathan Frakes used to say to me, 1629 01:10:41,023 --> 01:10:42,991 "You're the litmus test. 1630 01:10:43,091 --> 01:10:44,693 You come back once a year." 1631 01:10:44,793 --> 01:10:48,264 I always looked forward to come back, but I never asked. 1632 01:10:48,364 --> 01:10:50,099 It's a little bit like asking whether you're gonna 1633 01:10:50,199 --> 01:10:52,235 be invited to somebody's dinner party. 1634 01:10:52,335 --> 01:10:55,538 - The character of Q-- that omnipotent, 1635 01:10:55,638 --> 01:10:57,506 Machiavellian, 1636 01:10:57,606 --> 01:10:59,208 cunning, bitter, 1637 01:10:59,308 --> 01:11:01,577 nasty, mean-spirited, 1638 01:11:01,677 --> 01:11:03,779 controlling character-- 1639 01:11:03,879 --> 01:11:06,482 I can't even fathom anybody else 1640 01:11:06,582 --> 01:11:08,717 doing as much with it. 1641 01:11:08,817 --> 01:11:11,187 Painting that canvas as completely 1642 01:11:11,287 --> 01:11:15,558 as de Lancie did and does with all his characters. 1643 01:11:15,658 --> 01:11:17,960 Have you any idea how far we'll advance? 1644 01:11:18,060 --> 01:11:20,929 - Perhaps in a future that you cannot yet conceive, 1645 01:11:21,029 --> 01:11:22,931 even beyond us. 1646 01:11:23,031 --> 01:11:25,268 - The character on the page is just not as entertaining. 1647 01:11:25,368 --> 01:11:26,602 You give it to John de Lancie, 1648 01:11:26,702 --> 01:11:28,471 and it becomes this other thing, right? 1649 01:11:28,571 --> 01:11:30,339 And everyone enjoyed writing for him. 1650 01:11:30,439 --> 01:11:32,608 It really-- people would just write 1651 01:11:32,708 --> 01:11:35,110 scene after scene after scene for Q in any of those shows, 1652 01:11:35,210 --> 01:11:38,581 and many of them were too silly or too over-the-top, 1653 01:11:38,681 --> 01:11:40,549 but you just really enjoyed it. 1654 01:11:40,649 --> 01:11:41,817 You really couldn't wait to dig your-- 1655 01:11:41,917 --> 01:11:43,686 dig into a Q episode. 1656 01:11:43,786 --> 01:11:45,688 Internally, what we said all the time was, 1657 01:11:45,788 --> 01:11:47,022 "Q is in love with Picard." 1658 01:11:47,122 --> 01:11:48,791 That was the fundamental of the relationship. 1659 01:11:48,891 --> 01:11:50,226 He's in love with him. He just is. 1660 01:11:50,326 --> 01:11:51,627 He loves Picard. 1661 01:11:51,727 --> 01:11:54,430 It's a particular relationship with this one human 1662 01:11:54,530 --> 01:11:56,432 and this omnipotent being that's bizarre, 1663 01:11:56,532 --> 01:12:02,438 but that's really what's at the heart of it. 1664 01:12:02,538 --> 01:12:04,540 - "Star Trek" is so character-oriented, 1665 01:12:04,640 --> 01:12:06,709 and there were so many great characters. 1666 01:12:06,809 --> 01:12:08,177 So many people got a chance to shine. 1667 01:12:08,277 --> 01:12:09,712 But I think that my favorite character 1668 01:12:09,812 --> 01:12:12,215 is "Mcskirk." - "Mcskirk"? 1669 01:12:12,315 --> 01:12:13,249 - "Mcskirk." 1670 01:12:13,349 --> 01:12:14,583 Which is McCoy, Scotty, and Kirk. 1671 01:12:14,683 --> 01:12:16,084 - Oh-- - 'Cause they're really one guy. 1672 01:12:16,184 --> 01:12:18,086 - I was like, "What did I miss?" 1673 01:12:18,186 --> 01:12:19,422 Mcskirk? - I didn't see that episode. 1674 01:12:19,522 --> 01:12:21,156 - It's a transporter malfunction. 1675 01:12:21,256 --> 01:12:22,858 - You take that-- those three-- 1676 01:12:22,958 --> 01:12:24,760 those three, it's like one guy 1677 01:12:24,860 --> 01:12:26,161 split up three ways. 1678 01:12:26,261 --> 01:12:27,563 You know, ordinarily, if you have one person, 1679 01:12:27,663 --> 01:12:29,064 if you want to know what's going on in their head, 1680 01:12:29,164 --> 01:12:31,334 you gotta have a voice-over or something. 1681 01:12:31,434 --> 01:12:33,902 But with those three guys, split up that way, 1682 01:12:34,002 --> 01:12:35,504 they could have a conversation... 1683 01:12:35,604 --> 01:12:36,772 - Yeah. - And it's really like one guy. 1684 01:12:36,872 --> 01:12:39,141 - I love, love, love Scotty. 1685 01:12:39,241 --> 01:12:41,577 I-I think that he's-- 1686 01:12:41,677 --> 01:12:44,213 A, he's always the funnier one of everybody. 1687 01:12:44,313 --> 01:12:47,350 He's always--I love that he's third in command of the ship. 1688 01:12:47,450 --> 01:12:49,818 - He saw himself equal with the captain. 1689 01:12:49,918 --> 01:12:51,654 - Oh, and he was. - The ship was his. 1690 01:12:51,754 --> 01:12:53,456 - He was the captain of that engine room. 1691 01:12:53,556 --> 01:12:54,957 100%. 1692 01:12:55,057 --> 01:12:57,526 - Scotty was great, and I love how he got mad 1693 01:12:57,626 --> 01:12:59,862 and would yell at the captain about the things he needed 1694 01:12:59,962 --> 01:13:01,163 and how he couldn't really do it, 1695 01:13:01,263 --> 01:13:02,765 but really he could do it. 1696 01:13:02,865 --> 01:13:03,799 I just love it. I just loved him. 1697 01:13:03,899 --> 01:13:05,067 As a kid I was just like, 1698 01:13:05,167 --> 01:13:06,602 "I don't know why this guy's amazing, 1699 01:13:06,702 --> 01:13:08,704 but I want to be an engineer." - I think that's a great answer. 1700 01:13:08,804 --> 01:13:10,873 - You know the techno-babble. - Yeah. 1701 01:13:10,973 --> 01:13:12,608 - Which is so difficult... - Yeah. 1702 01:13:12,708 --> 01:13:15,744 - For the actors to do that stuff. 1703 01:13:15,844 --> 01:13:17,580 LeVar Burton, it didn't matter how late it got. 1704 01:13:17,680 --> 01:13:19,047 - Oh, you kidding me? - It could be 2:00 1705 01:13:19,147 --> 01:13:21,717 in the morning and he was just, like, right on the money. 1706 01:13:21,817 --> 01:13:23,051 - He's--I--for some reason, 1707 01:13:23,151 --> 01:13:24,487 I can fix a warp core breach. 1708 01:13:24,587 --> 01:13:26,655 I know that I need to reroute 1709 01:13:26,755 --> 01:13:29,191 main power through the secondary coupling 1710 01:13:29,291 --> 01:13:32,160 if there's a coolant leak. 1711 01:13:32,260 --> 01:13:33,796 Why do I know that? 1712 01:13:33,896 --> 01:13:35,598 Because of LeVar Burton. - That's right. 1713 01:13:35,698 --> 01:13:37,333 - Uh, Worf. - Worf! 1714 01:13:37,433 --> 01:13:38,567 - Yes. - Really? 1715 01:13:38,667 --> 01:13:40,102 - Thank you. - I just--for some reason I-- 1716 01:13:40,202 --> 01:13:42,137 I mean, Data's the-- is really close, 1717 01:13:42,237 --> 01:13:44,307 but I just--something about Worf I really like. 1718 01:13:44,407 --> 01:13:46,008 - What is it about him? Is it the fact that he's 1719 01:13:46,108 --> 01:13:47,976 terrible at firing weapons? 1720 01:13:48,076 --> 01:13:50,045 He misses everything. 1721 01:13:50,145 --> 01:13:52,247 - I don't know. - The captain--Captain Picard 1722 01:13:52,347 --> 01:13:54,617 will never take a suggestion of his. 1723 01:13:54,717 --> 01:13:56,519 - Does that make him more human to you? 1724 01:13:56,619 --> 01:13:57,953 - Yeah, he was-- - Because 1725 01:13:58,053 --> 01:13:59,955 it's immigrant family raised by Russians? 1726 01:14:00,055 --> 01:14:01,290 - He drinks prune juice. 1727 01:14:01,390 --> 01:14:03,125 Come on, now, who doesn't--who does that? 1728 01:14:03,225 --> 01:14:04,727 And he's a big warrior, so... - Yeah? 1729 01:14:04,827 --> 01:14:06,762 - But I think, you know-- I think partly 'cause he also 1730 01:14:06,862 --> 01:14:09,031 went--he transcends the two series. 1731 01:14:09,131 --> 01:14:10,899 You know, "The Next Gen." and "Deep Space Nine." 1732 01:14:10,999 --> 01:14:12,868 - I gotta go with Kirk. 1733 01:14:12,968 --> 01:14:14,603 - You gotta go with Kirk. - I mean, the original series. 1734 01:14:14,703 --> 01:14:16,405 You just--the way he just kinda, you know, 1735 01:14:16,505 --> 01:14:17,873 sauntered around. - Yes. 1736 01:14:17,973 --> 01:14:18,974 - You gotta love him. 1737 01:14:23,512 --> 01:14:25,914 - The Shat was the guy I grew up on. 1738 01:14:26,014 --> 01:14:28,216 I admire Picard. 1739 01:14:28,316 --> 01:14:30,553 I love them all equally, but... 1740 01:14:30,653 --> 01:14:33,255 uh...I think there is no substitute 1741 01:14:33,355 --> 01:14:35,223 for Bill Shatner. 1742 01:14:35,323 --> 01:14:38,794 - Shatner's putting on such a great persona 1743 01:14:38,894 --> 01:14:41,263 of a trustworthy captain 1744 01:14:41,363 --> 01:14:43,466 with just enough sense of humor. 1745 01:14:43,566 --> 01:14:46,101 You know? And calm under pressure. 1746 01:14:46,201 --> 01:14:47,870 And good with the ladies. 1747 01:14:47,970 --> 01:14:49,505 Shatner had it all. 1748 01:14:49,605 --> 01:14:52,140 The way he presented that character was just so awesome 1749 01:14:52,240 --> 01:14:54,443 and believable and theatrical at the same time. 1750 01:14:54,543 --> 01:14:56,412 He's not a subtle guy. 1751 01:14:56,512 --> 01:14:58,714 But I just thought it was great. 1752 01:14:58,814 --> 01:15:00,449 He fought-- I think it was, like, 1753 01:15:00,549 --> 01:15:03,251 a Gorgan or whatever. It's where he had-- 1754 01:15:03,351 --> 01:15:05,621 Captain Kirk is stranded in the desert 1755 01:15:05,721 --> 01:15:07,322 and he's got, like, this lizard creature 1756 01:15:07,422 --> 01:15:08,991 he's gotta fight and he's gotta learn 1757 01:15:09,091 --> 01:15:10,726 how to make, like, gunpowder 1758 01:15:10,826 --> 01:15:12,695 and projectiles and stuff like that. 1759 01:15:12,795 --> 01:15:15,230 - Certainly the iconic, classic scene 1760 01:15:15,330 --> 01:15:17,733 in which Spock-- or Kirk 1761 01:15:17,833 --> 01:15:19,702 confronts "God" and says, 1762 01:15:19,802 --> 01:15:22,004 "What does God need with a starship?" 1763 01:15:22,104 --> 01:15:23,472 What other character in the history of cinema 1764 01:15:23,572 --> 01:15:25,874 would come up to God? Not even Charlton Heston 1765 01:15:25,974 --> 01:15:28,777 would say to God, "What do you need with a starship?" 1766 01:15:28,877 --> 01:15:30,145 - Absolutely, without question, 1767 01:15:30,245 --> 01:15:33,281 my favorite captain is James T. Kirk. 1768 01:15:33,381 --> 01:15:36,218 I mean, he just-- Kirk did the right thing. 1769 01:15:36,318 --> 01:15:38,521 He said the right thing. People looked up to him. 1770 01:15:38,621 --> 01:15:41,690 He was a man of action. He was a man of romance. 1771 01:15:41,790 --> 01:15:45,628 And, like, I mean, as performed by William Shatner? 1772 01:15:45,728 --> 01:15:47,563 I mean, there was a reason why as a little kid 1773 01:15:47,663 --> 01:15:49,398 I wanted to be Captain Kirk. 1774 01:15:49,498 --> 01:15:53,436 There's a reason why as an almost 50-year-old grown-up 1775 01:15:53,536 --> 01:15:55,337 that I still watch the original series 1776 01:15:55,437 --> 01:15:57,540 and I still wanna be James T. Kirk. 1777 01:15:57,640 --> 01:15:59,007 He is the best captain. 1778 01:16:01,710 --> 01:16:02,945 - The way he would stare down 1779 01:16:03,045 --> 01:16:06,048 100-foot tall Apollo, and with great... 1780 01:16:06,148 --> 01:16:08,350 sort of indignation: 1781 01:16:08,450 --> 01:16:10,919 "What gives you the right--" you know, 1782 01:16:11,019 --> 01:16:14,990 to a 100-foot tall god... 1783 01:16:15,090 --> 01:16:17,325 he shouted, "What gives you the right?" 1784 01:16:17,425 --> 01:16:19,495 When Apollo just could have... 1785 01:16:19,595 --> 01:16:21,396 done that. 1786 01:16:21,496 --> 01:16:24,700 Yeah, the sort of leadership and the fearlessness 1787 01:16:24,800 --> 01:16:28,336 and also...my first understanding 1788 01:16:28,436 --> 01:16:29,337 of what a... 1789 01:16:29,437 --> 01:16:30,839 you lead by example. - Yeah. 1790 01:16:30,939 --> 01:16:32,340 - The captain's setting, 1791 01:16:32,440 --> 01:16:34,076 the fish stinks from the head down, 1792 01:16:34,176 --> 01:16:36,645 all of those leadership qualities 1793 01:16:36,745 --> 01:16:40,949 that hadn't been shown to me by a family member 1794 01:16:41,049 --> 01:16:42,518 or by anyone at school, a teacher. 1795 01:16:42,618 --> 01:16:47,556 Really, it oddly was that leadership necessary 1796 01:16:47,656 --> 01:16:50,626 as put forth by Captain James Tiberius Kirk. 1797 01:16:50,726 --> 01:16:53,061 - I mean, I love Captain Kirk. However... 1798 01:16:53,161 --> 01:16:55,330 I have... you know, I have to say 1799 01:16:55,430 --> 01:16:57,566 that I think my favorite captain is Picard... 1800 01:16:57,666 --> 01:16:59,334 - Uh-huh. - Because the thing is 1801 01:16:59,434 --> 01:17:01,604 Kirk is really only 1/3rd of a guy. 1802 01:17:01,704 --> 01:17:03,271 - Oh... - He's only 1/3rd of a guy! 1803 01:17:03,371 --> 01:17:05,173 - Interesting. - Picard is a nice, 1804 01:17:05,273 --> 01:17:06,575 well-rounded guy. 1805 01:17:06,675 --> 01:17:08,844 And he doesn't have to punch anybody in the face 1806 01:17:08,944 --> 01:17:10,613 to get his point across, right? 1807 01:17:10,713 --> 01:17:11,880 - But if he has to, he can. - Well, he can, 1808 01:17:11,980 --> 01:17:13,949 but he usually has Riker do it or Worf. 1809 01:17:14,049 --> 01:17:16,184 Yeah, he, uh... 1810 01:17:16,284 --> 01:17:18,153 You know, for me, in a lot of ways, 1811 01:17:18,253 --> 01:17:20,756 "Next Generation" was a... 1812 01:17:20,856 --> 01:17:22,825 "Star Trek" kind of grown up. - Yeah. 1813 01:17:22,925 --> 01:17:24,527 - You know? And that started with Picard. 1814 01:17:24,627 --> 01:17:26,695 - Yeah. My answer's actually Picard too. 1815 01:17:26,795 --> 01:17:28,664 Just because I find him to be-- 1816 01:17:28,764 --> 01:17:31,033 I don't think he's the most realistic of a captain. 1817 01:17:31,133 --> 01:17:33,101 I think that Picard has so few flaws, 1818 01:17:33,201 --> 01:17:35,003 and he only really finally becomes human 1819 01:17:35,103 --> 01:17:37,272 after he's a Borg and then turned into a human. 1820 01:17:37,372 --> 01:17:38,574 You know, he really just starts like-- 1821 01:17:38,674 --> 01:17:40,709 They give him a love story once in a while... 1822 01:17:40,809 --> 01:17:42,177 But it just--I don't know. 1823 01:17:42,277 --> 01:17:44,880 I just love-- I found Picard to be virtuous 1824 01:17:44,980 --> 01:17:47,616 and I found Picard to be like, oh... 1825 01:17:47,716 --> 01:17:51,620 if humans could one day turn into that guy, 1826 01:17:51,720 --> 01:17:53,922 maybe "Star Trek's" plausible. 1827 01:17:54,022 --> 01:17:55,457 But it's not gonna happen. 1828 01:17:55,557 --> 01:17:56,925 - Yeah, he's a great representation 1829 01:17:57,025 --> 01:17:58,493 of kind of Rodenberry's vision. - Yeah, a vision of what 1830 01:17:58,593 --> 01:17:59,762 humanity can be. - A captain needs to be. 1831 01:17:59,862 --> 01:18:01,564 - What a captain is. - Exactly. 1832 01:18:01,664 --> 01:18:03,065 - Yeah. Just putting every-- 1833 01:18:03,165 --> 01:18:04,933 He just--I don't know. I just always... 1834 01:18:05,033 --> 01:18:06,702 And that accent. I mean, you can't really... 1835 01:18:06,802 --> 01:18:12,207 - Well, the accent, yeah. - Top that voice. 1836 01:18:12,307 --> 01:18:14,242 n - The show is about what it is to be human, 1837 01:18:14,342 --> 01:18:16,178 and that never goes out of style. 1838 01:18:16,278 --> 01:18:17,913 And it's the type of stories that they tell 1839 01:18:18,013 --> 01:18:20,248 that you don't generally get in other television shows. 1840 01:18:20,348 --> 01:18:22,217 - Yeah. - The introspective... 1841 01:18:22,317 --> 01:18:24,553 And the basis of it is who are we... 1842 01:18:24,653 --> 01:18:26,121 who are we as human beings? 1843 01:18:26,221 --> 01:18:27,923 - I think it's because 1844 01:18:28,023 --> 01:18:30,025 it's an optimistic view of the future. 1845 01:18:30,125 --> 01:18:31,727 - Hope. - Yeah. It's hope. 1846 01:18:31,827 --> 01:18:33,261 - Yeah. - I think that's exactly 1847 01:18:33,361 --> 01:18:34,963 what it is-- it's an optimistic portrayal 1848 01:18:35,063 --> 01:18:37,032 of what we could hopefully achieve 1849 01:18:37,132 --> 01:18:39,735 and what our society could be like 1850 01:18:39,835 --> 01:18:41,503 and that we finally accept each other 1851 01:18:41,603 --> 01:18:44,239 and we finally learn to look past differences 1852 01:18:44,339 --> 01:18:45,808 and things like that. 1853 01:18:45,908 --> 01:18:48,010 And I think that we so desperately hope 1854 01:18:48,110 --> 01:18:50,112 that we can achieve that. 1855 01:18:50,212 --> 01:18:52,781 - And it evolves, you know, from series to series, 1856 01:18:52,881 --> 01:18:54,249 over the 50 years. 1857 01:18:54,349 --> 01:18:56,351 It may have some core values and ideas 1858 01:18:56,451 --> 01:18:58,153 and the optimism and the hope, 1859 01:18:58,253 --> 01:19:00,288 but it evolves with the times, too. 1860 01:19:00,388 --> 01:19:04,292 So it, you know, it-- hopefully the next reiteration 1861 01:19:04,392 --> 01:19:07,562 will fit our times today much like, you know, 1862 01:19:07,662 --> 01:19:09,598 "The Next Gen" did in the late '80s, early '90s 1863 01:19:09,698 --> 01:19:11,734 or "Deep Space Nine" and "Voyager" in the '90s, 1864 01:19:11,834 --> 01:19:14,102 and, of course, the original series back in the '60s. 1865 01:19:14,202 --> 01:19:15,570 But it's been able to evolve. 1866 01:19:15,670 --> 01:19:17,339 It hasn't been a static kind of franchise. 1867 01:19:20,308 --> 01:19:21,308 - There's that Martin Luther King line... 1868 01:19:23,278 --> 01:19:26,314 "The arc of history bends toward justice." 1869 01:19:26,414 --> 01:19:27,950 I think for fans of this show, 1870 01:19:28,050 --> 01:19:30,085 the arc of history bends towards "Star Trek," 1871 01:19:30,185 --> 01:19:32,520 that we have this hope, this belief, 1872 01:19:32,620 --> 01:19:35,557 that...things are getting better. 1873 01:19:35,657 --> 01:19:37,993 And that, yeah, we're probably not gonna, you know, 1874 01:19:38,093 --> 01:19:40,128 run into guys with pointed ears out there. 1875 01:19:40,228 --> 01:19:43,131 But we will find a way 1876 01:19:43,231 --> 01:19:45,600 to fix our problems 1877 01:19:45,700 --> 01:19:48,236 and move out into the universe 1878 01:19:48,336 --> 01:19:50,405 and believe in, you know, the... 1879 01:19:50,505 --> 01:19:52,875 you know, the better angels of our nature 1880 01:19:52,975 --> 01:19:55,778 and...and make the world a better place. 1881 01:19:55,878 --> 01:19:59,147 - One thing about "Star Trek" that I've said before 1882 01:19:59,247 --> 01:20:00,883 and I really believe it 1883 01:20:00,983 --> 01:20:05,453 is it was the Beatles of 1960s TV. 1884 01:20:05,553 --> 01:20:07,555 And if you had to describe the Beatles, 1885 01:20:07,655 --> 01:20:09,124 you would say it's magic. 1886 01:20:09,224 --> 01:20:11,259 And take any one of them out of that band, 1887 01:20:11,359 --> 01:20:13,128 and it's not the Beatles. 1888 01:20:13,228 --> 01:20:15,397 Well, "Star Trek's" the same way 1889 01:20:15,497 --> 01:20:16,765 from the same period. 1890 01:20:16,865 --> 01:20:19,034 I mean, take William Shatner out. 1891 01:20:19,134 --> 01:20:20,535 Take Leonard Nimoy out. 1892 01:20:20,635 --> 01:20:22,905 Take Rodenberry or Coon or Fontana out 1893 01:20:23,005 --> 01:20:25,573 or Deforest Kelley, and you don't have it. 1894 01:20:25,673 --> 01:20:27,209 It's still gonna be good, 1895 01:20:27,309 --> 01:20:29,577 but it's not gonna be what it is, 1896 01:20:29,677 --> 01:20:32,748 and we wouldn't have what we have now 15 years later. 1897 01:20:32,848 --> 01:20:35,217 - I think there's a lot of reasons why it endures so long. 1898 01:20:35,317 --> 01:20:38,120 You know, I think, um... 1899 01:20:38,220 --> 01:20:39,654 I think the biggest thing to me, 1900 01:20:39,754 --> 01:20:41,790 in terms of its longevity and success, 1901 01:20:41,890 --> 01:20:46,161 is that it is unique in that its portrayal of the future, 1902 01:20:46,261 --> 01:20:48,697 the optimistic portrayal of the future, 1903 01:20:48,797 --> 01:20:51,099 does kind of stand alone in pop culture. 1904 01:20:51,199 --> 01:20:53,035 The vast majority of science fiction pieces 1905 01:20:53,135 --> 01:20:54,703 that take place in the future, you know, 1906 01:20:54,803 --> 01:20:57,639 show us a dystopian future, a terrible future. 1907 01:20:57,739 --> 01:21:00,508 Here's the only real science fiction construct 1908 01:21:00,608 --> 01:21:02,544 that I wanna go live in, you know, 1909 01:21:02,644 --> 01:21:03,979 that I want to be part of. 1910 01:21:04,079 --> 01:21:07,215 I want to join that crew. I want to live that life. 1911 01:21:07,315 --> 01:21:09,818 I want to have those adventures with those people. 1912 01:21:09,918 --> 01:21:13,555 - "Star Trek" has something to say about who we are as people, 1913 01:21:13,655 --> 01:21:15,724 who we aspire to be, 1914 01:21:15,824 --> 01:21:19,327 and it says that we will endure. 1915 01:21:19,427 --> 01:21:21,363 We will overcome all obstacles. 1916 01:21:21,463 --> 01:21:23,398 - I think "Star Trek" will be around 1917 01:21:23,498 --> 01:21:25,400 for a long, long time 1918 01:21:25,500 --> 01:21:28,136 because it's a unique piece of science fiction 1919 01:21:28,236 --> 01:21:30,939 in that it's optimistic. 1920 01:21:31,039 --> 01:21:32,207 "Star Trek" is optimistic. 1921 01:21:32,307 --> 01:21:34,209 It holds out the hope 1922 01:21:34,309 --> 01:21:37,712 not that humans are gonna be somehow perfect in the future 1923 01:21:37,812 --> 01:21:39,214 but things can get better. 1924 01:21:39,314 --> 01:21:40,916 - I think "Star Trek" succeeded 1925 01:21:41,016 --> 01:21:43,886 because a number of elements fell into place. 1926 01:21:43,986 --> 01:21:46,989 They had a great overall story. 1927 01:21:47,089 --> 01:21:51,593 They're modern-day pioneers where no man has gone before. 1928 01:21:51,693 --> 01:21:53,561 So it could be the Wild West. 1929 01:21:53,661 --> 01:21:57,165 It's the Wild West in space, really, led by a great captain 1930 01:21:57,265 --> 01:21:59,034 and an incredible team. 1931 01:21:59,134 --> 01:22:01,937 - And I think it's gone on for 50 years so far 1932 01:22:02,037 --> 01:22:06,041 because it is a show about human interest 1933 01:22:06,141 --> 01:22:09,511 and adventure and how far we will go 1934 01:22:09,611 --> 01:22:13,248 to try to learn more and to expand our own worlds 1935 01:22:13,348 --> 01:22:14,616 and our own minds. 1936 01:22:14,716 --> 01:22:16,551 And I think that's something that resonates 1937 01:22:16,651 --> 01:22:18,086 with people 50 years ago, 1938 01:22:18,186 --> 01:22:20,755 and it'll resonate with people 50 years from now. 1939 01:22:20,855 --> 01:22:25,127 - And now, of course, J.J. has taken it to a whole other place. 1940 01:22:25,227 --> 01:22:27,195 - Why "Star Trek" is still relevant 1941 01:22:27,295 --> 01:22:30,465 is because of the paradigm that Gene Rodenberry came up with, 1942 01:22:30,565 --> 01:22:33,068 the idea of unity, of humanity-- 1943 01:22:33,168 --> 01:22:36,371 and other species, actually-- working together. 1944 01:22:36,471 --> 01:22:38,106 There's an optimism to it 1945 01:22:38,206 --> 01:22:40,508 that I think we've never needed more than now. 1946 01:22:40,608 --> 01:22:42,945 - Well, it starts with the characters, you know. 1947 01:22:43,045 --> 01:22:44,446 I love the ensemble. 1948 01:22:44,546 --> 01:22:45,914 I love the idea that, you know, 1949 01:22:46,014 --> 01:22:47,315 this group of people came together 1950 01:22:47,415 --> 01:22:50,185 and through the shared journey, they become a family. 1951 01:22:50,285 --> 01:22:52,454 The sense of family that goes beyond blood. 1952 01:22:52,554 --> 01:22:55,390 And I also love every night there's a sense of discovery 1953 01:22:55,490 --> 01:22:56,992 and exploration, you know, 1954 01:22:57,092 --> 01:22:59,461 and that, to me, is the DNA of "Star Trek." 1955 01:22:59,561 --> 01:23:01,864 - You know, I think "Star Trek's" enduring appeal 1956 01:23:01,964 --> 01:23:04,933 is really because it presents a vision of humanity 1957 01:23:05,033 --> 01:23:07,903 that is united and, particularly in this day and age, 1958 01:23:08,003 --> 01:23:10,472 it's wonderful to have kind of a beacon of morality 1959 01:23:10,572 --> 01:23:13,942 to see that, you know, maybe the dystopian future 1960 01:23:14,042 --> 01:23:16,644 that you see in a lot of movies like the "Mad Max" movies 1961 01:23:16,744 --> 01:23:19,381 and the "Blade Runner" movies is not gonna be our future. 1962 01:23:19,481 --> 01:23:20,949 - Collectivism versus separatism, 1963 01:23:21,049 --> 01:23:23,385 which is a big thing in today's society, you know. 1964 01:23:23,485 --> 01:23:25,520 About how we're better together. 1965 01:23:25,620 --> 01:23:27,655 And that was something that we felt obligated to do. 1966 01:23:27,755 --> 01:23:28,991 This is "Star Trek." 1967 01:23:29,091 --> 01:23:30,893 "Star Trek" has always spoken about who we are now. 1968 01:23:30,993 --> 01:23:33,661 - And now it's, I guess, coming back on another network. 1969 01:23:33,761 --> 01:23:36,331 You know I'ma try to get on there, you know, just to see. 1970 01:23:36,431 --> 01:23:40,502 Because I try--You know, Guinan is everywhere all the time. 1971 01:23:40,602 --> 01:23:43,471 - A majority of the "Star Trek" fans that I've met 1972 01:23:43,571 --> 01:23:45,107 are proactive 1973 01:23:45,207 --> 01:23:48,610 in making that vision of a better future a reality. 1974 01:23:48,710 --> 01:23:51,880 - The "Star Trek" fans are the most unique people 1975 01:23:51,980 --> 01:23:53,481 you've ever met. 1976 01:23:53,581 --> 01:23:56,051 They know your character. 1977 01:23:56,151 --> 01:23:59,922 They know every episode and what it meant 1978 01:24:00,022 --> 01:24:01,957 and how it affected them. 1979 01:24:02,057 --> 01:24:03,858 - If I were given the choice 1980 01:24:03,958 --> 01:24:07,429 of any character ever portrayed on television-- 1981 01:24:07,529 --> 01:24:08,830 that I could play any character I wanted-- 1982 01:24:08,930 --> 01:24:10,432 I would choose Spock. 1983 01:24:10,532 --> 01:24:12,700 - Well, people identified with us. 1984 01:24:12,800 --> 01:24:15,904 They identified with "Star Trek," 1985 01:24:16,004 --> 01:24:18,873 they identified with the characters. 1986 01:24:18,973 --> 01:24:21,376 They were dressing in their own uniforms 1987 01:24:21,476 --> 01:24:22,945 and their own costumes. 1988 01:24:23,045 --> 01:24:25,813 - It resonated with that group of people 1989 01:24:25,913 --> 01:24:27,782 that were kids, you know, 1990 01:24:27,882 --> 01:24:30,118 and now they're young adults. 1991 01:24:30,218 --> 01:24:32,187 - "Star Trek" created an umbrella 1992 01:24:32,287 --> 01:24:34,856 for everybody else. 1993 01:24:34,956 --> 01:24:38,260 And then once we got in under the shade, 1994 01:24:38,360 --> 01:24:41,129 we then said, "Oh, come. Come and join us." 1995 01:24:41,229 --> 01:24:44,032 That's what "Star Trek" did. 1996 01:24:44,132 --> 01:24:47,202 And that tent will continue to grow. 1997 01:24:47,302 --> 01:24:48,971 - And it's now 30 years later for our show, 1998 01:24:49,071 --> 01:24:50,372 when I'm talking to you, 1999 01:24:50,472 --> 01:24:54,042 50 years for the original show, and, I mean, 2000 01:24:54,142 --> 01:24:57,212 it goes in waves, but people are still 2001 01:24:57,312 --> 01:24:59,847 attached to, committed to, 2002 01:24:59,947 --> 01:25:02,684 affected by, interested in 2003 01:25:02,784 --> 01:25:04,819 this thing that Gene invented, 2004 01:25:04,919 --> 01:25:07,019 and I was blessed enough to be part of. 2005 01:25:07,500 --> 01:25:08,500 -- English -- 160121

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.