Memory Alpha

Dear Doctor (episode)

  • 1.2 Act One
  • 1.3 Act Two
  • 1.4 Act Three
  • 1.5 Act Four
  • 2 Memorable quotes
  • 3.1 Story, script, and cast
  • 3.2 Continuity
  • 3.3 Reception
  • 3.4 Video and DVD releases
  • 4.1 Starring
  • 4.2 Guest stars
  • 4.3 Co-stars
  • 4.4 Uncredited co-stars
  • 4.5.1 Unreferenced materials
  • 4.6 External links

Summary [ ]

In the Enterprise NX-01 sickbay , Doctor Phlox enters in the morning to take care of the various creatures he keeps in the med lab, amusing himself by talking to them. Oddly, he sometimes eats the same food as a snack.

Act One [ ]

Hoshi Sato enters bearing a letter from Phlox's exchange doctor, Jeremy Lucas , who is a Human serving a term on Phlox' home planet as part of the Interspecies Medical Exchange . The rigors of the mating season are making things very difficult for the exchange doctor. Phlox begins to compose a letter in response describing his experiences with the crew, commenting on the many differences between his own society and point of view, and the ways in which Humans are different. Phlox shares that he thinks a crew member, Cutler , has a romantic interest in him.

On the bridge , the crew are discussing a pre-warp vessel they have encountered. It is not responding to hails , and has two weak bio-signs on board. They dock the vessel in Bay 2 and take the aliens to their medical bay. The alien they speak with begs them to assist with a medical emergency their species is facing. They are a pre-warp culture known as the Valakians . They have met two warp-capable species , the M'klexa and the Ferengi . T'Pol reveals that the Vulcans are unaware of either species. She states that as the Valakian culture has already been exposed to a couple of warp-capable races, the risk of cultural contamination is acceptable, and she agrees with Archer to help them.

Phlox starts to describe the new situation in his letter later, noting that it started with an act of Human compassion.

Act Two [ ]

Phlox continues his letter describing the situation, stating it as the greatest challenge he has faced – with over fifty million lives at stake. After time studying the alien, Sato joins Phlox in the mess hall , discussing the issue of crewman Cutler having a romantic interest over dinner (in English and Denobulan ). Sato says she thinks they'd make a good couple.

Valakis

A city on Valakis in 2151

The Enterprise arrives at the Valakian homeworld . T'Pol, Phlox, Archer, and Sato make a tour of the medical facility. Sato discovers that there is a second race, the Menk , which live alongside the Valakians but are apparently not as advanced. Interestingly, the Menk are apparently not affected by the disease.

Phlox continues his letter, describing the challenges of treating the disease, and his discussions with T'Pol about the possibilities of inter-species relationships.

Phlox makes the startling discovery that the Valakians are dying not from an easily curable medical condition, but because of a genetic disease which is experiencing an accelerated rate of mutation. He reveals this to Captain Archer, and states that he does not have confidence in curing it. He predicts that the Valakians will be extinct within two centuries.

Act Three [ ]

Cutler and Phlox

Crewman Cutler and Dr. Phlox examine blood tests from the Menk

Phlox describes how studying two humanoid cultures simultaneously is exciting. He continues that while he looks forward to the medical data, he finds the way that the two cultures live in harmony to be amazing. The Menk must live where the soil is not good for planting, despite the fact that the Menk culture is fairly agrarian. The Menk continue to state that the Valakians treat them well. The Valakians say that they can farm the land more efficiently with better technology, and just give the Menk whatever they need. Sato is upset and thinks that the Valakians are oppressing the Menk and treating them like "pets", but Phlox says that she is making assumptions based on Human history: from Phlox's perspective, the Valakians and Menk have found a way to live in harmony, when on most planets with more than one sentient race, they fight each other until only one survives. Phlox, Sato, and Cutler discover (while studying at one of the Menk settlements) that the Menk are actually surprisingly advanced – they demonstrate that they are able to learn some English, and organize tissue samples correctly.

After a long day of work, the group takes some time to pack up. Sato excuses herself to let Phlox and Cutler have some private time. Phlox reveals to Cutler that he has three wives, and each of those wives has three husbands including himself. He asks Cutler if she is interested in him romantically, or if he has been misinterpreting the signals. Cutler confirms that she was giving off romantic signals. She replies that she is not looking to become wife #4, but she's interested in Phlox as a friend, and is ready to see where it leads (hinting that a romantic relationship may indeed be on the horizon).

Archer visits, in the hospital, the first alien he rescued. The alien asks Archer for warp drive technology so that that if Enterprise cannot find a cure, the Valakians can search for other races who might be willing to help them. Archer returns to the ship to learn that Enterprise has received 29 hails and requests for help from other clinics, and has been approached by a couple of vessels, all of whom thought they already had a cure. Archer and T'Pol discuss the situation in the ready room. Archer tells T'Pol that he is reluctant about trying to teach the Valakians about warp drive: they do not possess much rudimentary knowledge about warp technology, and have almost no experience working with anti-matter, an essential part of the process. It would take years if not decades to teach the Valakians how to develop their own warp-capable ships. As T'Pol points out, the Vulcans stayed on Earth to help them along, but generations later they are still there. Archer tells T'Pol that he understands now how the Vulcans felt when they chose to contact Earth ninety years before.

Meanwhile, Phlox makes a startling discovery.

Act Four [ ]

Later that evening, Archer is mulling over the situation in the crew mess. Phlox enters and makes small talk (revealing that Denobulans hibernate for six days each year). Archer asks about the progress of Phlox's medical research. Phlox says that he thinks it is incorrect to be helping the Valakians – that the Menk are supposed to survive, and will only be allowed to properly evolve and prosper if they are not tied to the Valakians. Phlox explains that the "disease" is actually an inherent flaw in Valakian DNA; they've reached an evolutionary dead end. Archer demands a cure for the Valakians, saying he doesn't agree with Phlox's point of view. Phlox reveals that he already has a cure.

The next day, Archer enters the medical facilities. Phlox tries to again state that he does not believe that they should interfere with the natural pace of events on the planet. Archer cuts him off, and makes the statement that he has reconsidered the matter, and that he agrees that the Enterprise and the Human race did not go to the stars to play god for other species. They go down to the planet and give the Valakian doctors a medicine which will ease the symptoms and help them. They state they won't give them a warp drive , that their race must help itself.

Finishing off his letter to Doctor Lucas, Phlox expresses relief that he could trust Captain Archer with the results of his research, and that he wished the Vulcan diplomats had acted in a similar manner in letting the Humans make their own decisions over the past ninety years.

Sato enters to take the letter away, and suggests that he should take a break. Phlox contacts Cutler and asks her on a meal date in the mess hall.

Memorable quotes [ ]

" It's mating season, so you know how that goes. I thought Human reproduction was complicated – you Denobulans make us look like single-celled organisms! "

" They don't have movies where you come from, do they? " " We had something similar a few hundred years ago, but they lost their appeal when people discovered their real lives were more interesting. "

" Uh, something in my eye. "

" Are you the ship's doctor? " " I am. " " My people are dying. Will you allow him to help us? "

" Tik Tik. "

" The captain has committed all our resources to helping people he didn't even know existed two days ago. Once again, I'm struck by your species' desire to help others. "

" Your experience with lesser civilizations is limited, Captain. You might be surprised what a temptation our technology can be. "

" We could stay and help them. " " The Vulcans stayed to help Earth 90 years ago. We're still there. " " I never thought I'd say this, but… I'm beginning to understand how the Vulcans must have felt. "

" What do you suggest? We choose? One species over the other? " " All I'm saying is we let nature make the choice. " " To hell with nature. You're a doctor, you have a moral obligation to help people who are suffering. "

" My compassion guides my judgement. "

" Evolution is more than a theory. It is a fundamental scientific principle. "

" Someday my people are going to come up with some sort of a doctrine: something that tells us what we can and can't do out here – should and shouldn't do. But until somebody tells me that they've drafted that directive , I'm going to have to remind myself every day that we didn't come out here to play God. "

" I'd like to think, Dr. Lucas, that if I'd had the chance to talk to you face to face you'd have never let me even consider withholding my findings from the captain, but I'm ashamed to say that I almost did just that. […] If I hadn't trusted him to make the right choice, I'd have been no better than the Vulcan diplomats who held your species back because they felt you couldn't make proper decisions on your own. I came very close to misjudging Jonathan Archer, but this incident has helped me gain a new respect for him. "

Background information [ ]

Story, script, and cast [ ].

  • The writers' first draft script of this episode (dated 12 October 2001 ) was significantly different from how the installment turned out. For example, none of the voice-overs were spoken by Dr. Lucas, with Phlox instead speaking all of them.
  • This episode originally ended with Phlox disobeying Archer's orders. ("To Boldly Go: Launching Enterprise , Part III: First Flight", ENT Season 1 Blu-ray special features) Phlox actor John Billingsley offered, " In the original ending in this crisis of conscience, the Doctor essentially does something that violates the standard issue hierarchical obligations of a crewmember to his captain. In effect, he makes a decision that's rooted in 'I've got bigger fish to fry', rather than honoring his captain's wishes. " [1]
  • The final draft script of this installment was submitted on 22 October 2001 . In that version, Phlox discovers a cure for the Valakian plague but keeps it secret from Captain Archer. He firstly tells the captain he will "do [his] best" to find a cure for the virus but then, in a subsequent scene with Archer and T'Pol, Phlox lies to them that the Valakians' genetic structuring is "too fragile" to be tampered with. Though Archer considers the Vulcans thereafter searching for a cure, T'Pol comments that the Vulcans' medical techniques are no more advanced than Phlox's. Urged by T'Pol to depart from the planet since it seems they can do no more to help the Valakians, the three officers meet with Esaak in the hospital and Archer gives him a case full of medical ampules, telling the Valakian doctor they will "keep your species healthy for another three generations." On a shuttlepod journey back to Enterprise , Phlox admits the truth to Dr. Lucas, in voiceover dialogue, stating, " I couldn't bring myself to alter the evolutionary process on this planet. I consider myself a man who values Human compassion… but I find myself, in this case, a slave to Vulcan logic. Have I made the right decision? I suspect I'll be asking myself that question for many years to come. " A more minor change from the final version of the episode is that, after Phlox has a discussion with Hoshi and exits sickbay, a final view of Enterprise at warp was to be shown, though this doesn't appear in the episode's final edit.
  • The network UPN wanted the ending of this episode changed. Billingsley related, " The head of the studio [ Paramount Pictures ] suggested some revisions on the ending […] The network essentially felt that […] it was important to essentially make sure that everyone was here to support the captain's decisions. " [2] The episode was subsequently altered. Clarified Brannon Braga , " The studio made us change the ending. " ("To Boldly Go: Launching Enterprise , Part III: First Flight", ENT Season 1 Blu-ray special features)
  • John Billingsley was not fond of how this episode's conclusion was modified. " The ending that had initially been created (for the episode) I was fairly comfortable with […] What do you do? I wasn't as happy with the revisions, but it's not my show, " he reflected, " you have to sort of adjust, even if sometimes it does seem a bit of a contradiction in terms for what your character is supposed to be about […] Personally, I thought [about the network's decision], 'Well, I think you've kind of lost something interesting in this potential tension.' But, that's not my call. " [3]
  • Looking back on the series in 2006 , John Billingsley nominated this episode as one of his favorites, and a turning point in the development of Phlox. " I would say that I still have the fondest feelings for the episode 'Dear Doctor' in the first season because that was the first opportunity I had to actually begin to figure out how to three dimensionalize that character. It was the first episode I really had a lot to do and we began to see there was more to this guy than 'Hey fellow well met' which was the concern I'd had up to that point, that Phlox was going to essentially be the cheery fellow who has always got a little alien quirk to make us laugh. " [4]
  • In an interview conducted shortly before the filming of first season finale " Shockwave ", Mayweather actor Anthony Montgomery cited this as one of his personal highlights from Season 1, remarking, " I absolutely loved 'Dear Doctor'; I thought that was fantastic. " ( Star Trek: The Magazine  Volume 3, Issue 3 , p. 14)
  • Christopher Rydell, who played the unnamed alien astronaut , is the son of Joanne Linville , who played the Romulan commander in TOS : " The Enterprise Incident ".
  • At one point during the production of this installment, John Billingsley used the episode's voiceover aspect to play a prank on Archer actor Scott Bakula . " The way we managed to make sure that the image, the picture, lasted long enough to match the dialogue is we pre-recorded the dialogue and played it over the scene as we acted it, " explained Billingsley. " So, I asked them if they would allow me just to record some fake dialogue. So, the scene with me standing on the bridge, I was supposed to say something of the effect of, 'Isn't it marvelous the way these Humans are so kind and considerate, stopping to help people in need here in the middle of space?' Instead I said, 'Doesn't the captain look nice in that tight suit? Mmm. I wonder if he's wearing any underwear. My, how I'd like to get him somewhere off to myse–' Anyway, I went on in this vein, and everybody broke up. " ("O Captain! My Captain! A Profile of Scott Bakula", ENT Season 1 DVD & Blu-ray special features)

Continuity [ ]

  • This episode foreshadows more directly the concept of the Prime Directive , expanding upon brief mentions from " Civilization " and other episodes. Archer even uses the term "directive" when talking about the concept, although it will be introduced as Starfleet's "General Order 1" in the beginning and renamed Prime Directive only some time later.
  • Doctor Jeremy Lucas is later seen in the flesh in the season 4 episodes " Cold Station 12 " and " The Augments ", played by Richard Riehle .
  • This episode contains the second mention and first appearance of movie night . The movie being shown is the 1943 version of For Whom the Bell Tolls .
  • This episode follows a similar narrative structure to the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode " Data's Day ", in which a character provides narration in the form of correspondence to a colleague. It also bears a resemblance to DS9 : " In the Pale Moonlight "; however, that episode features a personal log being recorded, instead of a letter to a colleague.
  • The Valakians mention having met other warp-capable species, among them the Ferengi , a species both Starfleet and the Vulcans haven't met yet. Enterprise will encounter Ferengi (albeit without finding out their species' name) later this season in " Acquisition ".
  • Archer declares on most planets only one species suvives the evolutionary process. He himself comes from a planet which is not only home to Humans but also other sentient and intelligent species (a variety of cetaceans ); however, this was not discovered until the late 23rd century, prior to which said species were considered non-sentient.

Reception [ ]

  • In a 2011 interview, Brannon Braga characterized this episode as an early Enterprise installment "that I really loved, that I thought was a classic." He went on to say, " It was just a great episode of Star Trek . That's one I look at fondly. " [5] Braga further commented, " For a Star Trek episode to work, like 'Dear Doctor', it's gotta have a conceptual hook that's fresh, it's gotta have some sort of moral spine, and something that engages all the characters, most of the characters, in some interesting way. And if you look at that one, everyone's got a moment […] I thought 'Dear Doctor' was by far the best episode of the season. And it was very specific to Enterprise […] It dealt with a real issue. It had it all. It was charming, it was funny, it was well-paced, it had a good framing device, and it ended up […] dealing with a really good issue you'd never seen dealt with before. That's Star Trek at its best […] I wish they'd all been 'Dear Doctor's that first season. " ("To Boldly Go: Launching Enterprise , Part III: First Flight", ENT Season 1 Blu-ray special features)
  • This episode achieved a Nielsen rating of 3.7 and was watched by an average of 5.65 million viewers. [6]
  • Star Trek Magazine 's "Ultimate Guide" rated this episode 4 out of 5 arrowhead insignias and named it the fifth best episode of Enterprise 's first season . ( Star Trek Magazine  issue 164 , p. 78)
  • The unofficial reference book Beyond the Final Frontier (p. 364) regards this episode as having helped set the character of Phlox apart from that of Neelix , commenting, " This episode shows that [John Billingsley's] […] a talented and versatile actor, and his character has hidden depths and secrets (but thankfully not sinister ones). The plot – a population affected by a terrible plague that's afflicted them for generations which a single Starfleet medical officer can cure in a day or two – isn't original, but it isn't really the point of a genuinely character-driven episode. "
  • Among the items from this episode which were auctioned off on the It's A Wrap! sale and auction on eBay was a solar lantern . [7]

Video and DVD releases [ ]

  • UK VHS release (two-episode tapes, Paramount Home Entertainment ): Volume 1.7, 5 August 2002
  • As part of the ENT Season 1 DVD collection
  • As part of the ENT Season 1 Blu-ray collection

Links and references [ ]

Starring [ ].

  • Scott Bakula as Jonathan Archer
  • John Billingsley as Phlox
  • Jolene Blalock as T'Pol
  • Dominic Keating as Malcolm Reed
  • Anthony Montgomery as Travis Mayweather
  • Linda Park as Hoshi Sato
  • Connor Trinneer as Charles "Trip" Tucker III

Guest stars [ ]

  • Kellie Waymire as Cutler
  • David A. Kimball as Esaak

Co-stars [ ]

  • Christopher Rydell as Alien Astronaut
  • Karl Wiedergott as Larr
  • Alex Nevil as Menk Man

Uncredited co-stars [ ]

  • Solomon Burke, Jr. as Billy
  • Jane Bordeaux as command crewman
  • Amy Kate Connolly as sciences crewman
  • Mark Correy as Alex
  • Evan English as Tanner
  • Brian Freifield as Valakian doctor
  • Hilde Garcia as Rossi
  • Robert Garcon
  • Lindly Gardner as operations crewman
  • Jack Guzman as sciences crewman
  • Glen Hambly as Valakian patient
  • John Jurgens as command crewman
  • Martin Ko as command ensign
  • Marlene Mogavero as operations crewman
  • Bobby Pappas as operations crewman
  • Monica Parrett as command crewman
  • Beth Persky as Valakian doctor
  • Prada as Porthos
  • Steve Rosinski as Valakian astronaut
  • Heidi Schultz as Valakian nurse
  • Thelma Tyrell as operations crewman
  • Cynthia Uhrich as operations crewman
  • Jeremy Lucas (voice)
  • Menk villagers
  • Valakian medical staff
  • Valakian patient

References [ ]

24th century ; ability ; anterior tricuspid ; anthropomorphize ; antimatter ; artificial satellite ; astronaut ; Australia ; bacteria ; Bergman, Ingrid ; blood ; Brisbane ; " by comparison "; cardiopulmonary system ; case history ; caterpillar ; cavity ; century ; cheese ; chromosome ; clinic ; combatant ; Cooper, Gary ; contamination ; dairy ; Denobula ; Denobulan ; Denobulan language ; dentistry ; dermaline gel ; dominant species ; dose ; Earth ; eggplant ; emotional response ; epidemic ; ethics ; evidence ; evolution ; exobiology ; extended family ; exterior jugular ; extinction ; Ferengi ; fertility ; fictional character ; film ; first-degree burn ; For Whom the Bell Tolls ; gastrointestinal distress ; generation ; genetic ; genome ; gerund ; hand ; heart ; hibernation cycle ; Human ; humanoid species ; illness ; immunity ; infection rate ; intelligence ; internal maxillary ; Interspecies Medical Exchange ; interspecies relationship ; jealousy ; Jordan, Robert ; Kaybin District ; lab work ; letter ; linguistic ability ; livestock ; logic ; low orbit ; Lucas, Jeremy María ; Matalas ; Matalas refugees ; mating season ; Menk ; Menk language ; Minshara class ; millennium ; M'klexa ; molecular bioscan ; motor skill ; movie night ; mutant ; Neanderthal ; niaxilin ; nitrogen ; oxygen mask ; patient ; pen pal ; pheromone ; popcorn ; posterior auricular ; pragmatic ; pre-warp ; priaxate ; Prime Directive ; primitive species ; protein ; pump ; Pyrithian bat ; rate of mutation ; San Francisco ; Sato's pen pal ; solar lantern ; spacecraft ; Sunset Boulevard ; superior vena cava ; temporal vein ; tissue sample ; trifluorinate compound ; universal translator ; warp-capable starship ; Valakis ; Valakian ; Valakian language ; Valakian shuttle ; virus ; warp vessel ; washboard ; worker ; year

Unreferenced materials [ ]

bandage ; cabin fever ; chess ; circulation enhancer ; eye ; fellowship ; gender ; goggles ; Greek Islands ; Isles, Kate ; Iyax ; laceration ; Mastradonian flu elixir ; moussaka ; poag ; research hospital ; sleeper ; Tasmania ; weather

External links [ ]

  • " Dear Doctor " at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • " Dear Doctor " at Wikipedia
  • " Dear Doctor " at the Internet Movie Database
  • 1 Daniels (Crewman)
  • Try Paramount+
  • Star Trek: Enterprise
  • Collections

star trek enterprise season 1 episode 13

Star Trek: Enterprise • Season 1

S1 E13: Dear Doctor

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44M JAN 23, 2002 TV-PG

S1 E13: Dr. Phlox faces a serious dilemma as a dying race begs for help from Enterprise.

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star trek enterprise season 1 episode 13

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Dear Doctor

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Dear Doctor

13th episode of the 1st season of star trek: enterprise / from wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, dear wikiwand ai, let's keep it short by simply answering these key questions:.

Can you list the top facts and stats about Dear Doctor?

Summarize this article for a 10 year old

" Dear Doctor " is the thirteenth episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise , and originally aired on January 23, 2002, on UPN . The episode was written by Maria and Andre Jacquemetton , and was directed by James A. Contner .

Set in the 22nd century, the series follows the adventures of the first Starfleet starship Enterprise , registration NX-01. In "Dear Doctor", Dr. Phlox ( John Billingsley ) faces a serious dilemma as a dying race begs for help from the crew of the Enterprise . The culture consists of two related races, but only the more genetically advanced race has been stricken by a planet-wide plague.

The episode is significant for introducing the concepts and motivations of the Prime Directive just prior to the founding of the United Federation of Planets . UPN requested that the ending of the episode be changed, something that Billingsley did not like. However, he and other members of the cast and crew approved of the final episode. Due to the subject matter and the ending, it is seen as a controversial episode critically and by audience response. Although "Dear Doctor" received the same audience share as the previous episode, there was a 6.6% drop in viewers to 5.7 million viewers for its first broadcast.

Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1 Episode 13

Ep 13. Dear Doctor

  • January 23, 2002
  • 8.0   (2,043)

In Star Trek: Enterprise season 1 episode 13, entitled "Dear Doctor," the Enterprise crew ventures to a planet inhabited by two intelligent species, the Valakians and the Menk. The Valakians are suffering from a deadly plague that is wiping out their population, and Dr. Phlox is tasked with finding a cure.

As the crew investigates the planet and works to find a cure, they discover that the Menk are a far less advanced species and serve as servants to the Valakians. The Valakians have been relying on the Menk to perform all of their manual labor for centuries, and as a result, the Menk have not evolved as quickly as the Valakians.

While on the planet, Dr. Phlox begins to realize that finding a cure for the plague may not be as straightforward as he originally thought. He discovers that the Valakians' genetic code is deteriorating and that their population is not sustainable in the long term. This leads to a moral dilemma for Dr. Phlox, who must decide whether to help the Valakians and potentially allow them to pass on their genetic deficiency to future generations or to let nature take its course.

Meanwhile, Captain Archer becomes emotionally invested in the plight of the Valakians and is determined to do everything he can to help them. However, T'Pol reminds him that interfering in the natural evolution of a species is a violation of the Prime Directive, which prohibits Starfleet from interfering with the internal development of alien civilizations.

As the crew struggles to reconcile their desire to help the Valakians with their obligations to the Prime Directive, they also face a growing rift between the Valakians and the Menk. The Menk begin to question their subservient role and demand more rights and freedoms, further complicating the situation.

Ultimately, Dr. Phlox must make a difficult decision that will have lasting consequences for both the Valakians and the Menk. The episode raises thought-provoking questions about the ethical dilemmas inherent in space exploration and the obligations of advanced civilizations to help less developed ones.

star trek enterprise season 1 episode 13

  • Genres Science Fiction
  • Cast Scott Bakula John Billingsley Jolene Blalock Kellie Waymire David A. Kimball
  • Channel UPN
  • First Aired January 23, 2002
  • Content Rating TV-PG
  • Runtime 44 min
  • Language English
  • IMDB Rating 8.0   (2,043)

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Captain Jonathan Archer, son of the warp engine pioneer Henry, assembles a crew and takes the new starship Enterprise out into the heavens.

20 Episodes

S1 e1 - broken bow, s1 e2 - fight or flight, s1 e3 - fight or flight, s1 e4 - strange new world, s1 e5 - unexpected, s1 e6 - terra nova, s1 e7 - the andorian incident, s1 e8 - breaking the ice, s1 e9 - civilization, s1 e10 - fortunate son, s1 e11 - cold front, s1 e12 - silent enemy, s1 e13 - dear doctor, s1 e14 - sleeping dogs, s1 e15 - shadows of p'jem, s1 e16 - shuttlepod one, s1 e17 - fusion, s1 e18 - rogue planet, s1 e19 - acquisition, s1 e20 - oasis, where does star trek: enterprise rank today the justwatch daily streaming charts are calculated by user activity within the last 24 hours. this includes clicking on a streaming offer, adding a title to a watchlist, and marking a title as 'seen'. this includes data from ~1.3 million movie & tv show fans per day..

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Star Trek: Enterprise

SEASON 1 • EPISODE 13

Star trek: enterprise, "dear doctor".

Date Aired: Jan 23, 2002 (United States)

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Season 1 – Star Trek: Enterprise

Where to watch, star trek: enterprise — season 1.

Watch Star Trek: Enterprise — Season 1 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV.

What to Know

While some may find Star Trek: Enterprise a welcome return to a familiar universe, it's equally as likely to repel those uninterested in mining stories from the franchise's past.

Critics Reviews

Audience reviews, cast & crew.

Scott Bakula

Capt. Jonathan Archer

Connor Trinneer

Cmdr. Charles "Trip" Tucker III

Jolene Blalock

Subcommander T'Pol

Dominic Keating

Lt. Malcolm Reed

Anthony Montgomery

Ensign Travis Mayweather

Ensign Hoshi Sato

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Star Trek: Enterprise - Episode Guide - Season 1

Though noted elsewhere on Star Trek Guide, this bears mentioning again in order to properly understand just what in the name of Cochrane happened with this season- and this show in general: What ultimately saw production as the premiere episode “Broken Bow” was originally conceived to be played out over an entire season. This could also explain the ridiculous reticence on the studio’s part not to include “Star Trek” in the title of the series, as the crew wasn’t supposed to be, well, star trekking in season 1.

Instead, Enterprise season 1 ends up as a run of padded episodes bogged down with intensely slow pacing. Pressed for ideas in a hurry, Braga & Berman plus a handful of writers could not spontaneously produce the scripts of, likesay, season 4, but instead result in the derivative and (let’s face it) boring stuff cluttering this inaugural run of episodes.

1-2. Broken Bow – It starts so strong … The Enterprise series-opener ends up one of its very best. Amid a complex story (guess that’s what happens when a story arc meant to span 25 episodes or so is compressed into a 90 minutes of screen time. And underneath the hints of the Time War, a handful of Klingons and the Enterprise’s initial launch, “Broken Bow”, like DS9’s “Emissary”, sneaks in a wonderful story about a boy and his father. ****

3. Fight or Flight – Perhaps the most common Enterprise trope (seriously, half the first two seasons are about this one) gets introduced very early in the series: Sato and Reed are dispatched to an Empty Alien Ship. In this case, the entire crew has been wiped out and others ships soon arrive to hash things out. Toss on the other classic trope of the Improperly Outfitted Starship and you’ve got some standard Enterprise stuff. ***

4. Strange New World – Literal head trip for Tucker, T’Pol, Mayweather and two near-Red Shirts. This away team investigates a planet whereupon the dominant life form is a flowering plant which dispenses hallucinogens into the air. We learn that endless tripping sequences cannot substitute for plot. **

5. Unexpected – So … this is Enterprise’s version of Junior? The accent is on the humorous as Tucker’s seemingly innocuous visit to an alien ship has somehow left him pregnant. T’Pol’s “Three days” line is easily the best in all of Enterprise season one. ***

6. Terra Nova – The Enterprise is sent to investigate the site of Terra Nova, an Earth colony established some 79 years previously. While the colonists’ descendants have survived, they eke out an existence in caves underground. ***

7. The Andorian Incident – Remember the Andorians, rarely seen outside of cameos and crowd shots since TOS? They return in this episode, spearheaded by Tholos, who proved popular enough to become a recurring character on the show. ***

8. Breaking the Ice – Subplots of Reed and Mayweather investigating a comet and Vulcans who may or may be spying on the Enterprise are intertwined in this one. Minus points for Archer’s ridiculous staring contest with the Vulcans while his crewmembers’ lives are in peril. **

9. Civilization – An interesting pre-Prime Directive story in which Archer, Tucker, Sato and T’Pol disguise themselves to investigate a high-tech power source within a pre-industrial society, only to find a second alien culture also undercover and surveying the local inhabitants. ***

10. Fortunate Son – The Enterprise encounters a freighter which has been attacked by Nausicaan pirates … but their crew appears to be keeping secrets … **

11. Cold Front – The Suliban, mysterious aliens of “Broken Bow”, are back in an attempt to destroy the Enterprise. Luckily, Daniels, a Federation time agent from the 31st century (still the furthest that the ST franchise has reached into the future), is on hand to help – and enigmatically drop hints about the Time War, which won’t see final resolution until season 4. ****

12. Silent Enemy – While on a technical mission involving the deployment of communications equipment, the Enterprise is attacked a few times by an alien starship about which little is learned except for how to disable its warp drive. **

13. Dear Doctor – Phlox takes center stage in a well-written tale of two sentient races sharing a planet, but not the destructive genetic disease that is slowly exterminating one of them. ****

14. Sleeping Dogs – A Klingon ship whose crew has been nearly completely wiped out is trapped within the orbit of a gas giant. Archer decides that the Enterprise will assist, whether the Klingons want it or not. ***

15. Shadows of P'Jem – Archer and T’Pol are abducted by Andorians, who seemingly are just plain really into abductions. Tucker and Reed, together with a separate group of Andorians led by Tholos, go on a rescue mission to save the pair. ***

16. Shuttlepod One – Whilst on a shuttlecraft, Tucker and Reed rather spuriously deduce that the Enterprise has been destroyed. They’re left with 10 days of air, which Malcolm happily starts using up by recording messages to his so-called friends. *

17. Fusion – A classic “Vulcans Are Weird” episode of Enterprise; this one has the crew meeting a group known as “Vulcans without logic.” T’Pol is affected by her comrades psychologically, but shockingly little actually happens in this episode. **

18. Rogue Planet – Archer, T’Pol, Sato and Reed end up smack in the middle of an interplanetary “hunt” involving one sporting race of aliens hunting difficult-to-track beings known as “wraiths.” ***

19. Acquisition – Ferengi in Enterprise? Apparently so, despite the fact that about 200 years later Captain Picard notes that the Ferengi had never established visual contact with the Federation. (Okay, so technically he’s correct because the Federation doesn’t yet exist in the time of Archer et al, but come on.) In a welcome retcon, here the Ferengi are portrayed as pirate types in similar fashion to their introduction in “The Last Outpost.” Essentially, they’re tougher to beat as mega-capitalists… ***

20. Oasis – An away team finds survivors still aboard a transport ship that crash-landed some 22 years previously. Naturally, the leader of the group and the situation itself is not as it seems – but is incredibly predictable. **

21. Detained – Head trip for Archer and Mayweather: The latter finally gets his chance to be abducted with the captain. The two wake up in prison. The plucky Enterprise crew then devises an escape plan, as by this point they’re all really quite good at them. **

22. Vox Sola – A rather straightforward episode about an alien creature slowly taking over the Enterprise is enlivened by the linguistic machinations and philosophy from the highly underrated and underemployed Hoshi Sato. ***

23. Fallen Hero – The Enterprise is tasked with transporting a Vulcan ambassador from her planet of assignment to a Vulcan cruiser ship. Along the way, they are attacked by aliens with a grudge against her. ***

24. Desert Crossing – The Enterprise answers a distress call and then before you can say “here comes the abduction”, Archer and Tucker are falling for the old “come visit my home planet” routine by a dude who seeks to recruit these two humans into his terrorist organization. ***

15. Two Days and Two Nights – Risa! Whoo hooo! While on shore leave, Sato enjoys a positive relationship, Archer not so much, and those wacky dudes Tucker and Reed are liberated from their major possessions. Meanwhile, Dr. Phlox is awakened from his necessary six-day hibernation to address an emergency, with effective if bizarre results. ***

26. Shockwave, Part I – After an accident apparently caused by an Enterprise shuttlecraft results in the deaths of 3,600 colonists, the ship is recalled to Earth. However, Daniels returns to war of a Suliban plot. Getting to work in clearing their names results in a direct confrontation with the Suliban. However, at a decisive moment, Archer is whisked away to the future – a future which has paradoxically advanced without time travel thanks to the very rescue of Archer in the first place… ***

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Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1 Episodes

  • 66   Metascore
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The adventures of Earth's first interstellar spaceship are chronicled in this 'Star Trek' spin-off, which takes place in 2151 (a century before Captain Kirk). It follows Captain Jonathan Archer and his crew as they explore the galaxy and, later, pursue aliens who launched a devastating attack on Earth.

Season 1 Episode Guide

26 Episodes 2001 - 2002

In the first series of this prequel set 100 years before the original "Star Trek" series, follow the adventures of Captain Jonathan Archer and his crew as they explore unknown parts of the galaxy. Series 1 sees the introduction of the Klingons, the exploration of Earth's first colonization attempt outside the solar system, the infiltration of an enemy into the Enterprise and much more.

Broken Bow, Part 1

Wed, Sep 26, 2001 60 mins

In part 1 of a two-part episode, Capt. Archer (Scott Bakula) takes command of Earth's first warp-speed space vessel and volunteers to return an injured alien to his home planet over the objections of Earth's Vulcan allies, who do not believe the humans are ready for interstellar travel. Zefram Cochrane: James Cromwell. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Tucker: Connor Trinneer. Reed: Dominic Keating. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Hoshi: Linda Park. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 1 image

Broken Bow (Pilot)

In the conclusion of a two-part episode,Capt. Archer (Scott Bakula) takes command of Earth's first warp-speed space vessel and volunteers to return an injured alien to his home planet over the objections of Earth's Vulcan allies, who do not believe the humans are ready for interstellar travel. Zefram Cochrane: James Cromwell. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Tucker: Connor Trinneer. Reed: Dominic Keating. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Hoshi: Linda Park. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 2 image

Fight or Flight

Wed, Oct 3, 2001 60 mins

The crew is restless after two weeks without contact with sentient life, but an encounter with an alien vessel soon alleviates the boredom as the away team discovers the ship is littered with corpses. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Reed: Dominic Keating. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 3 image

Strange New World

Wed, Oct 10, 2001 60 mins

The discovery of an Earthlike world proves irresistible to Trip, who persuades Archer to allow his survey team to camp on the planet's surface---unaware of a gathering storm. After relocating into nearby caves, members of the crew become convinced they are being watched. Trip: Connor Trinneer. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery. Reed: Dominic Keating. Hoshi: Linda Park. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 4 image

Wed, Oct 17, 2001 60 mins

After discovering the presence of a damaged alien vessel, Archer dispatches Trip to its aid, but the engineer's encounter with a Xyrillian female has an unexpected side effect. Ah'Len: Julianne Christie. Trena'L: Randy Oglesby. Klingon Captain: Christopher Darga. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 5 image

Wed, Oct 24, 2001 60 mins

Archer's determination to solve the mystery of Terra Nova, a legendary lost deep-space colony, leads to a tense encounter with a tribe of human-hating cave-dwellers. Jamin: Erick Avari. Nadet: Mary Carver. Athan: Brian Jacobs. Akary: Greville Henwood. Reed: Dominic Keating. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 6 image

The Andorian Incident

Wed, Oct 31, 2001 60 mins

Archer's curiosity about an ancient monastery unwittingly places his crew in the midst of a long-standing interstellar conflict between the Vulcans and their arch rivals, the Andorians. Shran: Jeffrey Combs. Vulcan Elder: Bruce French. Tholos: Steven Dennis. Keval: Jeff Ricketts. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Tucker: Connor Trinneer. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 7 image

Breaking the Ice

Wed, Nov 7, 2001 60 mins

Archer's probe of an unusual comet is disrupted by the sudden appearance of a Vulcan starship. The vessel is receiving coded messages from a guarded T'Pol (Jolene Blalock), who reluctantly takes Trip into her confidence after he learns the content of her communiqués. Vanik: William Utay. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery. Reed: Dominic Keating. Hoshi: Linda Park. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 8 image

Civilization

Wed, Nov 14, 2001 60 mins

Disguised as locals, Archer and his expedition explore a civilization bedeviled by a virulent ailment possibly linked to a covert---and anomalous---nuclear reactor. Determined to find the truth, the captain teams up with a local apothecary (Diane DiLascio), leading to a close encounter between the two. Garos: Wade Andrew Williams. Hoshi: Linda Park. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 9 image

Fortunate Son

Wed, Nov 21, 2001 60 mins

Enterprise answers a distress signal from a damaged Earth freighter whose acting commander thirsts for revenge against the Nausicaan pirates who attacked his ship and wounded the captain. Directed by LeVar Burton ("Star Trek: Next Generation"). Ryan: Lawrence Monoson. Shaw: Kieran Mulroney. Nausicaan Capt.: Danny Goldring. Keene: Charles Lucia. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery. Hoshi: Linda Park. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 10 image

Wed, Nov 28, 2001 60 mins

Archer invites a group of alien stargazers to witness a stellar event aboard Enterprise, not realizing the Suliban agent Silik (John Fleck) is among the guests. Robert Duncan McNeill ("Star Trek: Voyager") directed the episode. Daniels: Matt Winston. Fraddock: Michael O'Hagan. Prah Mantoos: Joseph Hindy. Sonsorra: Leonard Kelly-Young. Trip: Connor Trinneer. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Archer: Scott Bakula. Hoshi: Linda Park.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 11 image

Silent Enemy

Wed, Jan 16, 2002 60 mins

The ship is attacked by an unidentified vessel. In other events, Archer (Scott Bakula) wants to give Reed (Dominic Keating) a personalized birthday present. Mary Reed: Jane Carr. Stuart Reed: Guy Siner. Madeline Reed: Paula Malcomson. Mark Latrelle: John Rosenfeld.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 12 image

Dear Doctor

Wed, Jan 23, 2002 60 mins

The fascination with human behavior and culture expressed by Dr. Phlox in his letter to a peer is contrasted by his dissenting view of the crew's treatment of a dying alien race. Cutler: Kellie Waymire. Esaak: David A. Kimball. Alien Astronaut: Chris Rydell. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Larr: Karl Wiedergott. Menk Man: Alex Nevil. Archer: Scott Bakula. Trip: Connor Trinneer. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Reed: Dominic Keating. Hoshi: Linda Park.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 13 image

Sleeping Dogs

Wed, Jan 30, 2002 60 mins

Archer dispatches a shuttle to the aid of a disabled Klingon vessel, whose leader orchestrates an ambush that leaves Reed, T'Pol and Hoshi stranded aboard the aliens' unstable ship. Bu'Kah: Michelle C. Bonilla. Klingon Captain: Stephen Lee. Reed: Dominic Keating. Hoshi: Linda Park. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 14 image

Shadows of P'Jem

Wed, Feb 6, 2002 60 mins

T'Pol's sudden transfer from the Enterprise startles Archer, who can't tell if he is more upset with the order or by her indifferent attitude about the reassignment. The captain's frustrations are soon multiplied when both he and T'Pol are taken captive by militant Andorians. Shran: Jeffrey Combs. Sopek: Gregory Itzin. Tholos: Steven Dennis. Forrest: Vaughn Armstrong. Traeg: Jeff Kober. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Archer: Scott Bakula. Trip: Connor Trinneer.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 15 image

Shuttlepod One

Wed, Feb 13, 2002 60 mins

Trip and Reed are dispatched on a shuttle mission to investigate an asteroid field and are cut off from Enterprise, thereby becoming convinced the starship has been destroyed and that their days are numbered. This episode was penned by series creators Brannon Braga and Rick Berman. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Reed: Dominic Keating. Hoshi: Linda Park. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Mayweather: Anthony Montgomery. T'Pol: Jolene Blalock. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 16 image

Wed, Feb 27, 2002 60 mins

En route to the eye-catching Arachnid Nebula, the crew encounters an obsolete Vulcan vessel manned by the Vahklas, a Vulcan sect that embraces emotional impulses. Despite her misgivings, T'Pol (Jolene Blalock) allows her curiosity about their lifestyle to get the best of her. Tolaris: Enrique Murciano. Tavin: Robert Pine. Admiral Forrest: Vaughn Armstrong. Kov: John Harrington Bland. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Hoshi: Linda Park. Dr. Phlox: John Billingsley. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 17 image

Rogue Planet

Wed, Mar 20, 2002 60 mins

The crew explores a jungle planet that's been turned into a hunting ground by a race of stalkers called the Eska. There, a shadowy woman makes contact with Archer. Reed: Dominic Keating. Hoshi: Linda Park. Trip: Connor Trinneer. Archer: Scott Bakula.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 18 image

Acquisition

Wed, Mar 27, 2002 60 mins

The Enterprise is invaded by Ferengi marauders, who knock out the crew with sleeping gas and pillage the ship for gold, equipment and slaves.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 19 image

Wed, Apr 3, 2002 60 mins

After hearing of a supposedly haunted alien ship, Archer decides to cannibalise the ship's husk to replenish Enterprise's supplies and discovers the vessel is inhabited after all.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 20 image

Wed, Apr 24, 2002 60 mins

Archer and Mayweather are held in a Tandaran prison alongside detained Sulibans, leading to a clash of wills between Archer and the commandant.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 21 image

Wed, May 1, 2002 60 mins

Following a series of misunderstandings that sent a group of visiting aliens off the Enterprise in a huff, an unidentifiable alien parasite boards the ship to feed off the crew's bodies. It falls to insecure Hoshi to save her comrades by communicating with the creature.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 22 image

Fallen Hero

Wed, May 8, 2002 60 mins

Duty interferes with the crew's first shore leave when the Enterprise is sent to the planet Mazar to fetch a distinguished Vulcan ambassador accused of criminal misconduct. The mission disturbs T'Pol, who's a great admirer of the diplomat.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 23 image

Desert Crossing

When Archer and Trip repair a vessel belonging to an alien leader, the Earthmen are repaid with an invitation to their new friend's volatile world.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 24 image

Two Days and Two Nights

Wed, May 15, 2002 60 mins

T'Pol talks Archer into joining the shore-leave party on the planet Risa, where he encounters a troubled alien beauty; Hoshi learns a new language from a local man; a pair of aliens take advantage of Trip and Reed; Dr Phlox's hibernation is disrupted by Mayweather's injury.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 25 image

Wed, May 22, 2002 60 mins

Archer blames himself when the destruction of an alien colony prompts Starfleet to recall the Enterprise to Earth.

Star Trek: Enterprise, Season 1 Episode 26 image

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Everything Must Go In Final Master Replicas Sale Of Eaglemoss Star Trek Ship Models

star trek enterprise season 1 episode 13

| June 13, 2024 | By: TrekMovie.com Staff 20 comments so far

Last year Master Replicas began selling the remaining stock the Eagelmoss Hero Collector Star Trek ship models, picking up after Eaglemoss went out of business in 2022. But Master Replicas only had a license to sell the Star Trek ship models until this year and that all comes to an end on Tuesday, June 18th. Master Replicas is launching a brand new sale for their final weekend of Star Trek ship models.

Everything must go!

Despite their financial problems, the extensive Eaglemoss Hero Collector line of die-cast Star Trek ship was very popular, and for years they were the most prolific Star Trek licensee, releasing new ships every month. Master Replicas still holds much of what’s left of their stock. And starting today (Thursday, June 13) at 8 PM BST (3 pm ET, noon PT) MasterReplicas.com launches their “End Of An Era” sale. The more you buy, the more you save, up to 60%. Here is how it works…

  • Spend $100 save 20%
  • Spend $150 save 30%
  • Spend $200 save 40%
  • Spend $500 save 50%
  • Spend $1,000 save 60%

The sale will run until their license runs out at 9 am on Tuesday morning UK time (4 am ET, 1 am PT).

star trek enterprise season 1 episode 13

There are hundreds of different die-cast ship models still available from all across the franchise from the classic TV shows, the movies, and the new Paramount+ shows as well. This includes a few dozen different XL-sized ship types, but stock is dwindling fast.

This clearance only applies to the Eaglemoss products at Master Replicas. They will still be offering other Star Trek products. The recently released (and quickly sold out) a Lower Decks Moopsy plush and they are promising more fun releases to come.

TrekMovie is giving away a golden Enterprise

One of the ship models still available is the Gold USS Enterprise-D (which sells for $66). We will reveal how you can win this special ship during our weekly All Access Star Trek podcast , which arrives on Friday morning. This week our special guest is Laurence Luckinbill (Sybok), just in time for the 35th anniversary of Star Trek V: The Final Frontier .

star trek enterprise season 1 episode 13

Golden Enterprise-D

To learn more and take advantage of the final sale of Star Trek ship models, visit masterreplicas.com .

Find more news and reviews of  Star Trek merchandise .

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So, what’s on everybody’s wish list?

I would love to get the Defiant, original Jeffries Enterprise, TMP Enterprise, and the Enterprise E. And maybe a D-7 or Romulan Bird of Prey.

OK WHO BOUGHT ALL THE D-7 BATTLECRUSIERS?!?

No K’tingas either…. I fear Qo’nos is preparing for war.

Reminds me of when there were cute rubbery-plastic Micromachine replicas to collect back in the day.

I have a box of those! Borg cube, Romulan warbird (TOS and TNG), Klingon BoP, D7, Excelsior, Enterprise TOS,

The fat ones? Nobody wants those.

Ha! Good one.

If they want to shift this junk, they need to lower the prices. Apparently, there was a glut of unsold DSC ships.

Definitely! Otherwise they’ll turn into dust

Who can tell what any of the other ships on Discovery look like! All the space scenes are muddy, overly contrasty and blurry. There’s almost no starship p0rn on that series.

agree! so disappointing!

For real, that show is an absolute joke when it comes to space VFX. Can’t see or appreciate anything happening with these ships, so it’s not wonder at all that Disco models didn’t sell (which I knew when they made them larger and at a higher price point than the standard ships).

I have what I need.🙂 https://photos.app.goo.gl/r91gALT6Z3nQApH68

No F? No NX? Still it looks great.

Thank you..

Master Replicas lost me when they introduced the Collectors Club, which only benefitted the price gougers on eBay and made the really desirable ships harder to get hold of.

this did not apply to the trek ships that were on the site before. their rules applied to only new products to the site. wasnt member, but almost got everything i wanted. Anyway this was a good exercise in scalping. if youre fast enough, buy two of what you wanted. UK is outside EUs customs zone and not everyone in the EU wanted the hassle. I often scored two of the XLs i liked and sell one of it at inflated prices on ebay to a market that doesnt know or care about masterreplicas, covering my costs (price + customs/taxes + delivery) or even turning a profit. I had lots, sold a B XL, C XL, D XL, E XL, F Fed Livery, even bought Voyager-Js on a drop they werent listed out of spite because what i wanted was gone in seconds, bought two of them and sold both.And i always stayed under the insane prices of the commercial sellers who tried to sell a voyager xl at up to 400 Euros. I sold at 200. So only half insane. Dont get mad, theres surely some Rule of Aquisition covering that so its fine.

Also got me some BSG Vipers (Mk I,II,III) on a discount, but they seem more plastic-cheap than trek. Was a fun year.

Glad this is happening, I have over 60 of these little things and there are still more that I wanted, namely the shuttles and the XL versions. I just spent 400 bucks 😰 but I saved 400 bucks too, honestly can’t believe I got this stuff for so cheap. I’m gonna have the entire damn Starfleet on my bookshelf (or in boxes if I can’t find the room)

star trek enterprise season 1 episode 13

Is season three of Star Trek: Enterprise really 9/11 in space?

Warning: this contains a brief spoiler for the series finale of star trek: discovery, life, itself..

T he end of Star Trek: Discovery gave a little throwback to Star Trek: Enterprise with Kovich revealing that he was Agent Daniels. Fans of Enterprise will remember Agent Daniels for his part in the Temporal Cold War. Lina Morgan from Bells of Souls made some excellent points as to why Discovery fans should watch Enterprise following that reveleation. It really was a neat, unexpected tie-in, and I'm on board with Morgan recommending a watch with caveats.

One interesting point of view Morgan made was that the season three of Enterprise "is basically just 9/11 in space." I've never heard it phrased that way, and there's no indication that the writers had this intention. However, Enterprise debuted on September 26, 2001, just fifteen days after 9/11. Many television shows during that time did, at some point in the future, reference the tragedy. The West Wing, Law and Order, NYPD Blue, Homeland, and even the sci-fi series, Fringe, had episodes that either directly referenced 9/11 or focused on other terrorist attacks. So it certainly wouldn't be out of the question for the Xindi storyline to have come about because of 9/11.

Season two of Enterprise concluded on May 21, 2003, and the third season focused on the aftermath of the Xindi's attack on Earth with Captain Archer and the Enterprise crew trying to track down the aliens and destroy the weapon they'd used before it could be utilized again. Adding the weapon to the season kept the series from focusing on revenge. As it turns out, though, the Xindi attacked Earth because of false information that humans would destroy their world in 400 years.

I can certainly see Morgan's point of view and why others could believe that Enterprise had created its own version of 9/11. Some would say, though, that the decision to move in this direction affected Enterprise negatively along with it debuting so soon after the horrific events of 9/11. Season three was definitely much darker than the previous two seasons and took the crew members down a more painful path. Perhaps that was a reminder that viewers just didn't want at the time or they simply preferred their television watching experience to be about entertainment and escapism not the reality of the devastating attack that took place on 9/11.

This article was originally published on redshirtsalwaysdie.com as Is season three of Star Trek: Enterprise really 9/11 in space? .

Is season three of Star Trek: Enterprise really 9/11 in space?

How Long It Would Take To Watch All of Star Trek (Yes, ALL of It)

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Over the five decades since its inception, the Star Trek universe continues to inspire new generations of Trekkies. The original series that began in the mid-1960s has spawned countless spinoffs in television shows, as well as animation and feature films, some of which are still under production.

Someone new to this massive franchise may be wondering just how long it will take to watch all of Star Trek. With so many series and films in the catalog, catching up on everything may seem like a daunting task. Even some diehard fans have no idea just how many episodes of Star Trek there are. This list will divide the franchise into different categories to show just how long it takes to watch them. This way, consuming the entire Star Trek saga won't seem so intimidating after all.

Updated by Robert Vaux on June 8, 2024: Star Trek stands at something of a crossroads with Discovery finishing its five-season run and Lower Decks preparing for its fifth and final season. Despite that, the franchise has a very bright future, with Star Trek: Strange New Worlds carrying the banner forward and projects like Star Trek: Section 31 in active production. The article has been updated to include information on ongoing Star Trek series, as well as new details on all of the entries in the franchise.

13 The Original Series Introduces Viewers to the Cast and Universe of Star Trek

Every star trek role played by clint howard, from tos to discovery.

Although Clint Howard has played four different roles across four eras of Star Trek, he's also the only actor to be on both TOS and Discovery to date.

For a series with so much significance in television and pop culture history, it's surprising to find out that Star Trek: The Original Series lasted for just 79 episodes over three seasons. Ironically, that's shorter than the "five-year mission" it touts in its opening credits. That was enough for it to enter syndication, however, which is where the bulk of its fans first discovered it.

Each TOS episode lasts around 50 minutes for a total of 3,950 minutes, meaning it will take just under 66 hours to watch them all uninterrupted. In other words, The Original Series can be finished in less than a week with constant binging. Even those who don't have that much time can finish watching the show in under a month by screening 2–3 episodes an evening. Unlike most subsequent Star Trek series, TOS episodes are designed to be interchangeable, so switching the viewing order won't disrupt any larger plot threads.

Star Trek: The Original Series

In the 23rd Century, Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise explore the galaxy and defend the United Federation of Planets.

12 The Next Generation Found an Audience Starved for Science Fiction

Star Trek: The Next Generation was so successful during its seven-season run that it's arguably more popular today than The Original Series . It successfully released the series from covering the exploits of just one crew, and cemented the formula that every Star Trek series since then has followed. The Next Generation 's episode count topped its predecessor by almost a hundred for a total of 178 episodes, each with an approximately 44-minute runtime.

That adds up to a series total of 7,832 minutes or 130.5 hours — just under five and half days . If the viewer is free from work for about two weeks, The Next Generation series can be completed with ease. While it adopts a more formal structure than TOS -- with the characters advancing in age and experience from season to season -- most of its episodes are either stand-alone, or one of a two-part arc, making them very easy to enjoy in small 1-2 episode doses.

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Set almost 100 years after Captain Kirk's 5-year mission, a new generation of Starfleet officers sets off in the U.S.S. Enterprise-D on its own mission to go where no one has gone before.

11 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Proved There Was Room for Multiple Star Trek Series

How star trek: discovery's trill story connects to dax on deep space nine.

Star Trek: Discovery returned to the Trill home world in Season 5 for a mission with a symbiont host that connects to Jadzia Dax on Deep Space Nine.

Near the end of Star Trek: The Next Generation 's run, Paramount created another series that could run alongside it. The new series broke from Star Trek tradition by being set on a space station, Deep Space 9, that connected the Federation to the Milky Way galaxy. It explored the darker side of the Final Frontier, culminating in the terrible threat of the Dominion War that forced the entire Alpha Quadrant to stand together.

Another breakout success, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine ran for another seven seasons from 1993 to 1999. Those seven seasons, comprise 176 episodes, each running an average 45 minutes. That's a grand total of 7920 minutes or exactly 132 hours. People willing to watch five episodes a night could likely finish it within a month's time. Deep Space Nine was the first Star Trek series to embrace longer and more complicated plot arcs. Viewers should be prepared for longer binges, or else break big story lines down into multiple viewing sessions.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

In the vicinity of the liberated planet of Bajor, the Federation space station Deep Space Nine guards the opening of a stable wormhole to the far side of the galaxy.

10 Star Trek Voyager Continued To Break From Traditions

Star Trek: Voyager took over after Star Trek: The Next Generation ended, ensuring there were still two Star Trek series on the air. The series went back to setting the series on the starship Voyager. T he Voyager is run by Captain Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew,) the franchise's first female lead , who aims to get her people home after being stranded. It took big risks on wild story lines, resulting in some of the saga's best episodes as well as its most bizarre.

Star Trek Voyager was another success for Paramount and their new network UPN, running for seven seasons. Like the prior show, each episode ran 45 minutes. At 172 episodes, that places the full series runtime at 7,740 minutes or 129 hours. This is another series that would require roughly a month of binging to get through. Its format is reasonably loose, however, and individual episodes can be readily watched without having to commit to anything more in a single viewing.

Star Trek Voyager

Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.

9 Star Trek: Enterprise Is Star Trek's Last TV Series for Over a Decade

After running multiple Star Trek television series throughout the '90s, the franchise was gradually beginning to cool off. Finally, Paramount launched one more series, Star Trek: Enterprise . Unlike the others, Enterprise was intended as a prequel even to the original series. It followed Earth's first attempt at trying to make First Contact with other alien races. Led by Scott Bakula's Captain Archer, the first U.S.S. Enterprise paved the way for the founding of the United Federation of Planets.

Star Trek: Enterprise didn't quite have the same popularity that the other series did, and was hobbled by behind-the-scenes developments that had little to do with the show itself. Instead, it ran for four seasons and only 98 episodes. At 42 minutes an episode, that adds up to 4116 minutes, or 68.6 hours. That means it can be viewed in less time than the previous three Star Trek series, though it makes use of longer plot threads, and fans may need to plan for longer binges to get through them.

Star Trek: Enterprise

A century before Captain Kirk's five-year mission, Jonathan Archer captains the United Earth ship Enterprise during the early years of Starfleet, leading up to the Earth-Romulan War and the formation of the Federation.

8 Short Treks Offers Mini Side Stories

Some stories within the Star Trek universe don't need a full forty or fifty minutes to reach a satisfying conclusion. With that in mind, Bryan Fuller and Alex Kurtzman launched Star Trek: Short Treks . Running alongside Star Trek: Discovery , Short Treks gives viewers a chance for smaller stories to check out.

The project began back in 2018 with a season of four episodes, while a second season launched a year later with six episodes. The shows run from 8 to 18 minutes, and with only ten episodes, there are only 150 minutes so far . Fans can check that out in a single weekend. They're designed for easy single viewing sessions as well, and can even be added as riders to episodes of Discovery .

7 Star Trek: Picard Revisits Many of the Ideas From TNG

After years of fans watching stories about new characters, the new era of Star Trek finally decided to revisit an older era. In 2020, Star Trek: Picard decided to tell the first new story with Admiral Jean-Luc Picard since the Star Trek: The Next Generation films. Initially, Picard worked with a new cast that wasn't connected to the original series, but across the show, more of the classic characters were gradually added back in.

Star Trek: Picard ran for three seasons from 2020 to 2023, with ten episodes in each season for a total of thirty episodes. Episode lengths varied wildly since the series was on CBS All Access and could go from 39 minutes to 62 minutes. The full minute count, though, is 1350 minutes, or 22.5 hours. That's basically one solid weekend of marathoning or a week of leisurely watching episodes. Like Star Trek: Discovery , each season of Picard is based around a single large story line: allowing for single-season binges of about 10 hours apiece.

Star Trek: Picard

Follow-up series to Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987) and Star Trek: Nemesis (2002) that centers on Jean-Luc Picard in the next chapter of his life.

6 Animated Star Trek Series Have Become an Important Part of Star Trek

'hopefully we find a new home': jack quaid reacts to star trek: lower decks ending at paramount+.

Star Trek: Lower Decks' Jack Quaid laments the show ending while deeming himself "unbelievably grateful" for the chance to star in this world.

Star Trek: The Animated Series only lasted for two seasons in the early 1970s, releasing 22 episodes that were each 24 minutes long. Franchise creator Gene Roddenberry initially disowned the series -- making it hard to find for many years -- though it has since rejoined canon and now serves as the de facto fourth and fifth years of the original Enterprise's five-year mission. The Animated Series is only 528 minutes long or just under 9 hours. The whole series can be watched in just a single day, and individual episodes can be viewed as riders alongside TOS episodes.

Star Trek: Lower Decks premiered its first season in 2020 with 10 episodes. Each episode is 25 minutes long, totaling 250 minutes, meaning that the entire first season can be watched in just over four hours. Seasons 2 through 4 of Lower Decks also have 10 episodes each, making the total runtime around 1000 minutes. A final fifth season is planned, which will likely bring the total runtime up to around 1250 minutes or so. In addition, Very Short Treks is the most recent animated Star Trek series with five episodes, each running about 10-15 minutes long. All three animated series combined would take just under 1600 minutes or just under 27 hours.

Star Trek: Lower Decks

The support crew serving on one of Starfleet's least important ships, the U.S.S. Cerritos, have to keep up with their duties, often while the ship is being rocked by a multitude of sci-fi anomalies.

5 Currently Active Star Trek Series Continue To Expand Star Trek's Universe

At present, there are only three Star Trek series that are still running: Star Trek: Discovery , Star Trek: Prodigy , and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds . The first season of Prodigy is already out: 20 episodes amounting to a total of 480 minutes or 8 hours. A second (and presumably final) season is due in the summer of 2024, with another 20 episodes and another 480 minutes assumed in totem. That will boost the screening time for the entire series to 16 hours, or a single long day of binging.

Star Trek: Discovery has just completed its fifth and final season, leaving 65 episodes in its count with a total running time of 3,138 minutes or 52.3 hours . Episode lengths vary widely, as is typical in the streaming era, but average about 45 minutes apiece. Discovery uses season-long plot arcs the same way Picard does (it was originally conceived as an anthology series), and viewers who wish can comfortably binge a single season in a single day's viewing without trouble.

Finally, Strange New Worlds has two seasons with ten episodes in each, running a total of 1,082 minutes or a touch over 18 hours . That's short enough for a single-day binge. (A third season is on the way, which will add about another 9 hours to the total running time once complete.) Strange New Worlds emphasizes stand-alone episodes, making it very good for short viewing sessions of one or two episodes apiece.

Star Trek: Discovery

4 star trek: tos films gave the original series cast a comeback.

Ten years following the end of The Original Series , the adventures of Captain Kirk continued on the big screen. The TOS movies proved to be vital parts of the franchise, including such key moments as the death (and resurrection) of Mr. Spock and the original cast's formal good-bye at the end of the six-movie run.

Running times reflect the theatrical release of each movie, and may extend slightly, depending on whether any extended or alternate cuts are being viewed. Star Trek: The Motion Picture has a run time of 132 minutes. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan , universally considered the best film in the franchise, is 113 minutes long. The Leonard Nimoy-directed Star Trek III: The Search for Spock is 105 minutes, and Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home is 122 minutes. William Shatner's Star Trek V: The Final Frontier is 106 minutes, and Nicholas Meyer's The Undiscovered Country has a 110-minute running time. Overall, the original film series clocks in at a total of 688 minutes, which equals 11 hours and 28 minutes.

3 Star Trek: TNG Movies Offer a Sense of Scale to the New Era

The Next Generation did not have the same big-screen success as the original series but made four films following the end of the show. The first film, Star Trek Generations , featured both Picard and Kirk and is 118 minutes long. The best-reviewed of the films, Star Trek: First Contact , clocks in at 111 minutes, Star Trek: Insurrection is shorter at 103 minutes, and the last film, Star Trek: Nemesis , is 116 minutes long.

The four Next Generation films combined run at a total of 448 minutes, equaling 7 hours and 28 minutes. Binging all four movies can be done within the span of a single day, though their varying quality may induce some viewers to break them down into shorter viewing periods.

2 The Kelvin Timeline Movie Series Press the Reset Button on the Series

Star trek is getting a kelvinverse origin, but why are fans skeptical.

Star Wars veteran Simon Kinberg has been added to an upcoming origin movie for Star Trek and the Kelvin Timeline universe, but fans aren't pleased.

The most recent movie series, known as The Kelvin Timeline films, takes place in an alternate reality featuring the crew from The Original Series. It was created when Spock attempted to stop the Romulan sun from going supernova and exists in a parallel-but-separate timeline from the rest of the series. It's credited with keeping the franchise going during the extended gap in TV series between the end of Star Trek: Enterprise and the beginning of Star Trek: Discovery .

The Kelvin movie franchise consists of three films, with each film varying in length. 2009's Star Trek runs 127 minutes, the 2013 sequel Star Trek Into Darkness is just five minutes longer at 132, and the latest film, Star Trek Beyond , is actually the shortest at 122 minutes. The film trilogy totals 381 minutes, or 6 hours and 21 minutes. New Trekkies can finish this trilogy very quickly.

1 How Many Hours of Star Trek Are There?

Did gene roddenberry try to have a gay character on the original star trek.

In the latest TV Legends Revealed, learn what Gene Roddenberry's plans were on having LGBTQ+ characters on the original Star Trek series

All 13 Star Trek films have a combined total of 25 hours and 28 minutes, or just over a full day. Every single television series, both currently airing and retired, totals up to around 48,700 minutes, which is approximately 812 hours or 33.8 days. Every series and movie combined totals 837.5 hours, meaning it will take 34.9 days to watch them all uninterrupted.

Obviously, watching them all consecutively is impossible, but realistically, watching everything in the Star Trek franchise could take less than half a year. This doesn't even include upcoming movies like Star Trek 4 and new seasons for existing series. For those who believe this beloved universe is worth investing over 50,200 minutes, it's time to boldly go where only die-hard Trekkies have gone before.

The Star Trek universe encompasses multiple series, each offering a unique lens through which to experience the wonders and perils of space travel. Join Captain Kirk and his crew on the Original Series' voyages of discovery, encounter the utopian vision of the Federation in The Next Generation, or delve into the darker corners of galactic politics in Deep Space Nine. No matter your preference, there's a Star Trek adventure waiting to ignite your imagination.

Star Trek

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NBC Mockumentary ‘St. Denis Medical’ Gets Season 1 Extended to 18 Episodes

By Selome Hailu

Selome Hailu

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ST. DENIS MEDICAL

NBC has given a five-episode back order to the upcoming hospital mockumentary “ St. Denis Medical ,” bringing its first season to a total of 18 episodes.

Per the official logline, the single-cam comedy series is “about an underfunded, understaffed Oregon hospital where the dedicated doctors and nurses try their best to treat patients while maintaining their own sanity.”

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NBC gave “St. Denis Medical” a pilot order in February of 2023 after a production commitment issued in August 2022. The series was greenlit in June 2023. At upfronts in May, NBC announced that “St. Denis Medical” would air on Tuesdays at 8 p.m., though a premiere date has not yet been set.

Spitzer is best known for creating the NBC comedies “Superstore,” which ran for six seasons from 2015 to 2021, and “American Auto,” which ran for two seasons from 2021 to 2023. Ledgin wrote on both series while he and Heuer both executive produced. Spitzer and Ledgin are both under overall deals at Universal Television.

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  • Cast & crew
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Broken Bow, Part 1

  • Episode aired Sep 26, 2001

Star Trek: Enterprise (2001)

In the mid-22nd century, the Earth ship Enterprise is launched under the command of Captain Jonathan Archer. When the crew rescues an alien from a crashed spaceship, Earth gets its first loo... Read all In the mid-22nd century, the Earth ship Enterprise is launched under the command of Captain Jonathan Archer. When the crew rescues an alien from a crashed spaceship, Earth gets its first look at the alien's race - the Klingons. Archer and his crew must walk a fine line as they at... Read all In the mid-22nd century, the Earth ship Enterprise is launched under the command of Captain Jonathan Archer. When the crew rescues an alien from a crashed spaceship, Earth gets its first look at the alien's race - the Klingons. Archer and his crew must walk a fine line as they attempt to communicate with the Klingon pilot, whose language is completely unknown, and who... Read all

  • James L. Conway
  • Gene Roddenberry
  • Rick Berman
  • Brannon Braga
  • Scott Bakula
  • John Billingsley
  • Jolene Blalock
  • 56 User reviews
  • 8 Critic reviews

Star Trek: Enterprise (2001)

  • Capt. Jonathan Archer

John Billingsley

  • Sub-Cmdr. T'Pol

Dominic Keating

  • Lt. Malcolm Reed

Anthony Montgomery

  • Ensign Travis Mayweather

Linda Park

  • Ensign Hoshi Sato

Connor Trinneer

  • Cmdr. Charles 'Trip' Tucker III

John Fleck

  • Suliban Sarin

Tom Lister Jr.

  • (as Tommy 'Tiny' Lister Jr.)

Vaughn Armstrong

  • Adm. Maxwell Forrest

Jim Beaver

  • Adm. Daniel Leonard

Mark Moses

  • Henry Archer

Gary Graham

  • Ambassador Soval

Byron Thames

  • Vulcan Attaché Tos

Peter Henry Schroeder

  • Klingon Chancellor

Jim Fitzpatrick

  • Cmdr. Williams
  • Brannon Braga (showrunner)
  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

Did you know

  • Trivia Hoshi's insult to T'Pol, "Ponfo mirann", loosely translates to "Go to hell".
  • Goofs When Captain Archer travels to Brazil, Hoshi Sato is teaching a class in another language. The closed captions state it is Klingon, however, since Earth hasn't had any contact with Quon'os before, it is highly unlikely they would know how to speak it, Hoshi tried to use the universal translator when Klaang is in sickbay. Since she wasn't familiar with any Klingon dialects, with the small sample the Vulcans donated, the language she was teaching was another species, possibly insectoid.

Dr. Zefram Cochrane : On this site, a powerful engine will be built - an engine that will someday help us to travel a hundred times faster than we can today. Imagine it: thousands of inhabited planets at our fingertips. And we'll be able to explore those strange new worlds, and seek out new life, and new civilizations. This engine will let us go boldly, where no man has gone before.

  • Connections Edited into Star Trek: Enterprise: The Expanse (2003)
  • Soundtracks Where My Heart Will Take Me (instrumental) (uncredited) Written by Diane Warren Performed by Russell Watson

User reviews 56

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  • Mar 15, 2015
  • HOW CAN I WATCH -STAR TREK ENTERPRISE-ON TELEVISION..
  • September 26, 2001 (United States)
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  • Bakersfield, California, USA (Broken Bow, Oklahoma)
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  • Runtime 45 minutes
  • Dolby Digital

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Get a Closer Look at the Star Trek Enterprise Model

The starship model used in filming underwent an extensive conservation

Starship Enterprise

On  Star Trek,  a TV series that aired in the late 1960s, more than 400 crew members explored the galaxy aboard the USS  Enterprise,  which had a length of 947 feet and weighed 190,000 tons. In actuality, the starship was an 11-foot-long model made of poplar wood and vacu-formed plastic.

None

Film of the model appeared in all 79 episode of the original series (broadcast from 1966–69), and the model was donated to the National Air and Space Museum by Paramount Studios in 1974.  Forty years later, the Museum undertook a two-year project to restore the  Enterprise  to how it looked during the filming of the 1967 episode "The Trouble with Tribbles"—the last known modification of the ship during the show's production. Today the Enterprise is displayed in the Museum's location in DC.

Let's take a closer look at the model.

None

During filming, the model balanced on a single-point stand attached to a geared head made to hold heavy cameras—insufficient support for such a large model. Today, the model rests upon two stanchions built by Museum staff. 

Learn more about this artifact on the  Star Trek  starship  Enterprise  Studio Model Conservation page . 

This article is from the Spring 2024 issue of  Air & Space Quarterly , the National Air and Space Museum's signature magazine that explores topics in aviation and space, from the earliest moments of flight to today.  Explore the full issue.

Want to receive ad-free hard-copies of  Air & Space Quarterly ?  Join the Museum's National Air and Space Society to subscribe.

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Paramount global general counsel christa d’alimonte to exit at end of june, breaking news.

Paul Giamatti Boards ‘Star Trek: Starfleet Academy’

By Rosy Cordero

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Associate Editor, TV

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Paul Giamatti

Paul Giamatti has joined the cast of the upcoming Paramount+ original series Star Trek: Starfleet Academy in a recurring role. He will play the Season 1 villain, a man with an ominous past connected to one of our cadets.

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He joins previously announced Holly Hunter, who will star in the series as the captain and chancellor of Starfleet Academy. The series will begin production later this summer.

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy follows a young group of cadets who come together to pursue a common dream of hope and optimism. Under the watchful and demanding eyes of their instructors, they discover what it takes to become Starfleet officers as they navigate blossoming friendships, explosive rivalries, first loves and a new enemy that threatens both the Academy and the Federation itself.

Alex Kurtzman and Noga Landau serve as co-showrunners and executive producers of the series alongside executive producers Gaia Violo, Aaron Baiers, Olatunde Osunsanmi, Jenny Lumet, Rod Roddenberry, Trevor Roth, Frank Siracusa and John Weber. The series premiere episode is written by Gaia Violo.

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy is produced by CBS Studios in association with Secret Hideout and Roddenberry Entertainment and is distributed by Paramount Global Content Distribution.

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COMMENTS

  1. Dear Doctor

    Dear Doctor. " Dear Doctor " is the thirteenth episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise, and originally aired on January 23, 2002, on UPN. The episode was written by Maria and Andre Jacquemetton, and was directed by James A. Contner . Set in the 22nd century, the series follows the ...

  2. "Star Trek: Enterprise" Dear Doctor (TV Episode 2002)

    Dear Doctor: Directed by James A. Contner. With Scott Bakula, John Billingsley, Jolene Blalock, Dominic Keating. Phlox is asked to save the Valakians from annihilation by disease. However, he discovers something unusual about the Menk, another humanoid race on the planet.

  3. Star Trek: Enterprise: Season 1, Episode 13

    Watch Star Trek: Enterprise — Season 1, Episode 13 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video. The crew encounters an alien race in desperate need of medical ...

  4. Star Trek: Enterprise (TV Series 2001-2005)

    S1.E1 ∙ Broken Bow, Part 1. Wed, Sep 26, 2001. In the mid-22nd century, the Earth ship Enterprise is launched under the command of Captain Jonathan Archer. When the crew rescues an alien from a crashed spaceship, Earth gets its first look at the alien's race - the Klingons. Archer and his crew must walk a fine line as they attempt to ...

  5. Dear Doctor (episode)

    Enterprise assists a culture that has been stricken by a planet-wide plague. In the Enterprise NX-01 sickbay, Doctor Phlox enters in the morning to take care of the various creatures he keeps in the med lab, amusing himself by talking to them. Oddly, he sometimes eats the same food as a snack. Hoshi Sato enters bearing a letter from Phlox's exchange doctor, Jeremy Lucas, who is a Human serving ...

  6. Watch Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1 Episode 13: Enterprise

    Set in the mid-22nd century, over 100 years before James T. Kirk helmed the famous vessel, this installment of the "Star Trek" franchise is set on the Enterprise NX-01 -- the first Earth starship capable of warp 5 -- and explores the history of the interplanetary upheaval that eventually leads to the formation of the Federation.

  7. Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1 Episode 13 Recap

    Watch Star Trek: Enterprise season 1 episode 13 Online Dear Doctor : The crew discovers a new planet with two races, one in desperate need of medical and scientific assistance. In the course of trying to help, Dr. Phlox recalls his own Denobulan past to address the ethical dilemmas that arise in the present.

  8. Star Trek: Enterprise (Season 1, Episode 13)

    MLS Season Pass; Search Sign In Star Trek: Enterprise Dear Doctor Sci-Fi Jan 23, 2002 42 min Paramount+ Available on Paramount+, Prime Video S1 E13: Dr. Phlox faces a serious dilemma as a dying race begs for help from Enterprise. Sci-Fi Jan 23, 2002 42 min Paramount+ TV-PG ...

  9. Dear Doctor

    The episode was written by Maria and Andre Jacquemetton, and was directed by James A. Contner. "Dear Doctor" is the thirteenth episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise, and originally aired on January 23, 2002, on UPN.

  10. Watch Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1 Episode 13

    In Star Trek: Enterprise season 1 episode 13, entitled "Dear Doctor," the Enterprise crew ventures to a planet inhabited by two intelligent species, the Valakians and the Menk. The Valakians are suffering from a deadly plague that is wiping out their population, and Dr. Phlox is tasked with finding a cure. ...

  11. Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1

    1810. ALF: The Animated Series (Season 1) +205. Show all seasons in the JustWatch Streaming Charts. Streaming charts last updated: 1:14:03 PM, 06/14/2024. Star Trek: Enterprise is 1806 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The TV show has moved up the charts by 119 places since yesterday. In the United States, it is currently more ...

  12. Star Trek: Enterprise

    Mark Episode As Watched SEASON 1 • EPISODE 13 Star Trek: Enterprise "Dear Doctor" Date Aired: Jan 23, 2002 (United States) Avg Rating (0) Your Rating. Phlox is asked to save the Valakians from annihilation by disease. While there, he discovers something about another humanoid race on the planet.

  13. Star Trek: Enterprise season 1

    The first season of Star Trek: Enterprise (then titled simply Enterprise ), an American television series, began airing on September 26, 2001, on UPN. The season concluded after 26 episodes on May 22, 2002. The series was developed by Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, who also served as executive producers. Season one regular cast members include ...

  14. List of Star Trek: Enterprise episodes

    Star Trek: Enterprise is an American science fiction television series that originally aired on the UPN network from September 26, 2001 to May 13, 2005. [1] Until the episode "Extinction" towards the start of the third season, the series was called simply Enterprise without the Star Trek prefix. [2] The series aired for 97 (DVD and original ...

  15. "Star Trek: Enterprise" Proving Ground (TV Episode 2004)

    Proving Ground: Directed by David Livingston. With Scott Bakula, John Billingsley, Jolene Blalock, Dominic Keating. Enterprise has found the location of the testing site of the Xindi weapon and gets some rather unexpected help.

  16. Star Trek: Enterprise: Season 1

    Details Episode 13 Aired Jan 23, 2002 Dear Doctor The crew encounters an alien race in desperate need of medical assistance, ... View All Star Trek: Enterprise — Season 1 photos.

  17. Weekly Episode Discussion: ENT 1x13: "Dear Doctor"

    Trip having issues with the Lorillian mother weaning her child off methyl oxide in Episode 1, Trip going bananas over the Vissian Cogenitor's rights, and etc. ... I can't believe I'm writing this about an episode of Enterprise but, this is one of the finest examples of Star Trek ever conceived and it exemplifies the promise of Sci-Fi.

  18. Star Trek: Enterprise

    26. Shockwave, Part I - After an accident apparently caused by an Enterprise shuttlecraft results in the deaths of 3,600 colonists, the ship is recalled to Earth. However, Daniels returns to war of a Suliban plot. Getting to work in clearing their names results in a direct confrontation with the Suliban.

  19. Prime Video: Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1

    S1 E12 - Shadows of P'jem. February 5, 2002. 44min. TV-PG. When T'Pol is ordered by her superiors to leave Enterprise, she goes on one last away mission with Archer to planet Coridan, where they are taken captive by a militant faction and once again encounter the volatile Andorians. Free trial of Paramount+ or buy.

  20. Watch Star Trek: Enterprise Online

    Breaking the Ice. Wed, Nov 7, 2001 60 mins. Archer's probe of an unusual comet is disrupted by the sudden appearance of a Vulcan starship. The vessel is receiving coded messages from a guarded T ...

  21. Star Trek: Enterprise

    Star Trek: Enterprise focuses on the first long-term manned Starfleet expedition and follows the adventures of Captain Jonathan Archer and his crew in the years preceding the birth of the United Federation of Planets. 4 seasons • 96 episodes • 2001-2005 . Cast of Characters ... Star Trek: Discovery The Final Season Arrives August 27 on DVD ...

  22. "Star Trek: Enterprise" Dear Doctor (TV Episode 2002)

    "Star Trek: Enterprise" Dear Doctor (TV Episode 2002) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. ... Top 25 Star Trek: Enterprise Episodes a list of 24 titles created 20 Apr 2017 Year by year: 2002 a list of 33 titles ...

  23. Everything Must Go In Final Master Replicas Sale Of Eaglemoss Star Trek

    TOS Remastered Episode Guide - Season 1; TOS Remastered Episode Guide - Season 2 ... June 13, 2024 | 'Star Trek: ... original Jeffries Enterprise, TMP Enterprise, and the Enterprise E. ...

  24. Is season three of Star Trek: Enterprise really 9/11 in space?

    Warning: This contains a brief spoiler for the series finale of Star Trek: Discovery, Life, Itself. The end of Star Trek: Discovery gave a little throwback to Star Trek: Enterprise with Kovich ...

  25. Star Trek Watch Order

    Star Trek: The Next Generation was so successful during its seven-season run that it's arguably more popular today than The Original Series.It successfully released the series from covering the exploits of just one crew, and cemented the formula that every Star Trek series since then has followed.The Next Generation's episode count topped its predecessor by almost a hundred for a total of 178 ...

  26. 'St. Denis Medical' Gets Season 1 Extension to 18 Episodes on NBC

    NBC has given a five-episode back order to the upcoming hospital mockumentary "St. Denis Medical," bringing its first season to a total of 18 episodes. Per the official logline, the single-cam ...

  27. "Star Trek: Enterprise" Broken Bow, Part 1 (TV Episode 2001)

    Broken Bow, Part 1: Directed by James L. Conway. With Scott Bakula, John Billingsley, Jolene Blalock, Dominic Keating. In the mid-22nd century, the Earth ship Enterprise is launched under the command of Captain Jonathan Archer. When the crew rescues an alien from a crashed spaceship, Earth gets its first look at the alien's race - the Klingons.

  28. Get a Closer Look at the Star Trek Enterprise Model

    On Star Trek, a TV series that aired in the late 1960s, more than 400 crew members explored the galaxy aboard the USS Enterprise, which had a length of 947 feet and weighed 190,000 tons. In ...

  29. Paul Giamatti Boards 'Star Trek: Starfleet Academy'

    Paul Giamatti has joined the cast of the upcoming Paramount+ original series Star Trek: Starfleet Academy in a recurring role. He will play the Season 1 villain, a man with an ominous past ...