Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Big week: Hear Sci-fi Diner & see you in Plano/Dallas!

Hey gang--the ever-cool Scott and Mike had me on for my first visit over at SciFi Diner this week, and we obviously had way too much fun pod-talking what's up with Trekland these days.

So much fun, in fact, that they have threatened to have me back...! (Grab it at the link above, of course, or get SciFi Diner on iTunes.)

 
And then... Well, if you find yourself anywhere near North Texas THIS weekend and have a week to kill before the Super Bowl, pay attention:

My mutley male mug joins the otherwise heavenly lineup with Nichelle Nichols and a raft of ladies for the next Sci-Fi Days convention honoring "Women of Sci-Fi."  It's at the Plano Center, and Dr. Daryl Frazetti is there with his irrestible fandom academics along with a couple other male holdouts...

But mostly we're inundated with the lovely likes of Morena Baccarin of Firefly and V, BSG's Tricia Helfer and Katee Sackhoff, Stargate Universe's Alaina Huffman, and more!   Looking forward to the wall-to-wall coverage from Chris and Charity at Subspace Communiques, as well.

I really hope all of you who gave us such a great response in October are up to it again—this time WITH my "Between the Cracks" show in store!

STV: A Culinary catch-up with Cirroc Lofton—in HD!

The hiatus here is OVER. Welcome to our first-ever "Switching to Visual"  in HIGH-DEF, finally!

And the honor of standing first in line in the backlog of videos waiting to be seen is none other than Cirroc "Jake Sisko" Lofton. He's no stranger to cons, but hardly over-exposed, either. So it was that we had a blast catching up at the heavily-guested but lightly-attended Hollywood Xpo last fall.  (Or, as they used to to say in the '20s: Everything's jake with Cirroc.) Look below for the proof!

Most of all, check out the info on his latest project these days, Cafe Cirroc; his wife has the adjoining Sara, The Wire Bar. I'll let him tell you the details, but for local SoCal-ers here's an update on special events at his community-oriented Italian fare eatery:

On Feb. 10, Cafe Ciroc is host to a Los Angeles Unified School District charity benefit for the victims of a tragic recent school shooting. For now, call the cafe at 310-776-3060 for more info.

And Trek fans take note: on Feb. 13 the joint is hosting an intimate Valentine's Day special, in the tradition of Gary Hasson's other Lightspeed Fine Art events, that features Cirroc and a bevy of other sci-fi stars amid a huge dinner buffet, auction and personal time, all benefiting the guests' various personal charities.

Most of all, whether you make it for these events or not, just GO BY and have some of his down-to-earth, simple and amazing entries. His website is still in process, but for now you can check out the glowing online user reviews here at Yelp.

Monday, January 24, 2011

"Trekland, Supplemental" repost: Advice for the '09ers

In case you missed it over at the NEW startrek.com last week:

Here's the home version of my fourth post as "Trekland, Supplemental" at their site—and it's a topic near and dear to we veterans' Trekjlanders' hearts: Whither the "JJ" generation?

If you like, the original outpost post is here—or please, read and discuss the original draft below, here at HQ ...

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Trekland, Supplemental #4:  Just for the ‘Newbies’
If you remember Star Trek before it grew lens flares, this might not be the read for you this week. But you’re welcome to tag along.

Now, in line with our last Trekland: Supplemental about all the new fans from J.J. ‘s ’09 blockbuster, it’s been suggested to me that perhaps it’s time to stop merely pointing it out and start DOING something to welcome them. So here’s my prescription for Trek happiness: and if it was good enough for me, it’s good enough for you.

But don’t worry—I’ll keep this Rx in capsule form.

Because anyone can go out and rent or buy DVDs or download episodes. The one ingredient you miss, though—even with the “bonus features on Disk 7”—is context. When the Star Trek monster first got big overseas, I always felt sorry for the fans in Europe and elsewhere who could only see Star Trek as just a wall o’ DVD boxes. They missed out on the headlines of media or the world at large, reflected in episodes … the dynamic of sequels, or even sister series on-air together … the latest cast or writer hiccup…

Most of all, they miss that simple week by week feeling of the eternal wait and wonder for next week’s episode. And don’t even talk to me about the summer eternity until the fall conclusion of a cliffhanger conclusion!

Of course, only a few can ever experience first-hand viewing. Unless you have a Bajoran orb arc in your back pocket, the (linear) time for that is long gone. Even now, only a few can claim memories of seeing TOS in first-run on NBC (is that a fandom equivalent to being a Mayflower descendant?), but at the same time anyone can remember fondly The First Time They Saw Star Trek. And for most of us, your favorite series is The One You Grew Up On.

The truth is, every fan came aboard at different points along the voyage. So, for all you “newbies”—and that can be far more than JJ’s new recruits—here’s my advice. I already praised Paula and Terry’s Star Trek: 365 book—it’s almost a cheat, it’s so gorgeous (but I really read it for the articles, too.). It’s a great read, but here’s what you really do:

      1)  Start off like everyone else did in the 1960s… or 1970s… or 1980s: get a copy of the original classic: The Making of Star Trek. Stephen Whitfield (Poe) wrote it during the first two seasons of TOS, and I guarantee it will unlock more insight and inside jokes alike for the next 45 years of Trek than anything else you can grab in one sitting. If you don’t know the “McCoy saltshaker” story… or the one about the Orion green-skin make-up test with Majel Barrett-soon-to-be-Roddenberry… or how creator Gene Roddenberry first got the nickname “The Great Bird of the Galaxy” (DID you know he was The Great Bird?) … then you must devour this 403-page paperback (Del Rey). 

Along the way, you get a full primer on all the wacky and wonderful ways that television gets made, planned and filmed. Of course, the “film” may now be “digital cards,” but TV production and the mindset of its “suits” hasn’t changed a lot in almost 50 years. We are so media-saturated today, but believe it or not this was about the first mass-market book that explained in simple language how all those names on the end credits actually fit together —complete with memos, call sheets, set plans, sketches. This is ALL we had for years, and it kept fandom alive and growing.

Best of all, The Making of Star Trek has been in print off and on since 1968! That means it’s probably around the corner at your local used bookstore right this second (if they still exist). Or, there’s that online thing, too; you can get it new or used, to boot.

The only downside is that TMOST only covers Star Trek’s first two seasons, after the two pilots—and thus cannot include the infamous letter-writing campaign that saved the show for a third season, made TV history and birthed modern media fandom of all kinds. 

     2)  TOS starter episodes? I may depart from others’ lists, but I have two recommendations:  The episode I always recommend as a “textbook” with the biggest all-in-one dose of Star Trek is Season 2’s “Journey to Babel.” It has everything: colorful and important aliens, intrigue, Spock’s parents and his internal Vulcan/Human struggle, the workings of the Federation, the sense of the Enterprise serving its government, heroic combat Kirk, heroic medical McCoy, and great Spock-McCoy scenes. About all it doesn’t have is Scotty, a Chekov “Russian joke” or a dead redshirt.

After that, go for either the fun of “The Trouble With Tribbles” (much of the above, plus Scotty and Chekov, now) or go back to characters with the intensity and humor of “The Naked Time.”  Then, maybe “Amok Time,”  or enter the “morality play” shows with “A Taste of Armageddon” or “The Devil In the Dark.” Save all the other obvious Top Ten Classics for later, when you can appreciate their off-putting situations a little more.

Sidebar:  My TOS episode to show a non-sci-fi’er: Season 1’s “Tomorrow is Yesterday.” That’s the episode I first showed my mom, because of its modern-day Air Force grounding.

Oh, and if people have a hard time watching an “old Sixties” show, tell ‘em to get a Remastered version. Sheesh.

      3)  If you insist on more reading, you can look for Inside Star Trek (Pocket Books, hardcover or paperback), written by two true TOS insiders: hands-on studio exec Herb Solow and The Bird’s right-hand man, Bob Justman—written just in 1996 and with some tales finally told.  It may be tougher to find, except as an audio book, but you’ll turn one up. You want the photos!
     4)  Or do it the way we did it: Get one of the books written by the guy who indeed wrote “Tribbles.” David’s Gerrold’s The World of Star Trek does cover that third season and the revival phenomenon, and—being written during the Great Rerun-Only Era of the 1970s when a Star Trek revival was only a dream—offers a host of critiques to “fix” should the dream ever come true. Which takes us to…







5)  …Indeed, the fixes of The Next Generation era, if you want to jump ahead. I hear there’s a great all-in-one companion to that series, but we can save the “future” for next time. 

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Happy birthday, De!

All our Star Trek favorites past and present have birthdays worth noting, of course...but as you veteran residents of Trekland know, I indulge my privilege and always take special care to mark the one of our late, great and much-beloved Dr. McCoy Prime—Jackson DeForest Kelley. He would have been 91 today had he not died on June 11, 1999—the first loss of the original regular cast. Jimmy Doohan followed six years later.

Aside from Trek and all those Westerns, here's a still from De's very first feature, a little film noir mystery from 1947 — that's *47* — called Fear in the Night (from Paramount, natch). De plays the lead: a guy who dreams he killed a man, then wakes up with spent bullets in his pocket .... And guys and gals, he's all of 27 here!

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Happy new year 1/1/11—and here's just the way to start it

Oh come on--you gotta be kidding me! Does it have to be THIS easy?