"The defining factor of Roddenberry's vision is the optimistic view of the future... Once you lose that, you lose the essence of what Star Trek is. [The question] is how do you preserve and protect what Starfleet is in the weight of a challenge like war and the things that have to be done in war?"
—Executive producer Alex Kurtzman on the balance between the ideals of the Star Trek franchise and the darker tone of Discovery[102]
The series' writers room is based at Kurtzman's Secret Hideout offices in Santa Monica.[103] The titular ship was named after Discovery One from 2001: A Space Odyssey, NASA's Space Shuttle Discovery, and "the sense of discovery... what [that] means to Star Trek audiences who have been promised a future by Gene Roddenberry where we come together as a planet and seek new worlds and new alien races to explore and understand".[104]
Fuller wanted to differentiate Discovery from previous Star Trek series by taking advantage of the streaming format of All Access and telling a single serialized story across the entire first season,[66] inspired by the general change in television to tell those kinds of stories rather than the "new destination-based adventure each week" format mostly used in previous Star Trek series. Fuller had been one of several writers during the 1990s pushing for Deep Space Nine and Voyager to move towards this style.[105] The producers wanted to build towards Roddenberry's Star Trek ideals and show that "you can't simply be accepting and tolerant without working for it",[106] and chose to ignore Roddenberry's longstanding rule that Starfleet crew members not have significant conflict with one another.[105]
Fuller saw the series as a bridge between Star Trek: Enterprise and The Original Series—which are set over a century apart—but set much closer to the latter to allow Discovery to use the latter's iconic designs and costumes;[107] the series ultimately moved away from those designs after Fuller's departure.[65] The first season tells the story of the Federation-Klingon cold war that had been mentioned in Star Trek before but not depicted on screen.[108] The season finishes with the end of the war, which allowed the writers to move beyond Fuller's established storyline.[109] The second season has a more episodic structure than the first, though it still tells a single serialized story,[110] and it introduces more elements from The Original Series including the USS Enterprise and its crew.[37] A goal of the showrunners for the season was to "cement Discovery firmly in the timeline" by reconciling some of the apparent continuity errors from the first season, such as why Discovery's characters and more advanced technology are not mentioned in The Original Series or other previous Star Trek media.[6] They achieved this by having Discovery and its crew travel over 900 years into the future at the end of the season which Kurtzman compared to the new timeline created for the film Star Trek to avoid established continuity.[111]
Kurtzman felt the jump to the future had opened up new variables and storytelling opportunities that were preventing the series from feeling stale[94] and confirmed that the series would remain in the 32nd century for the rest of its run.[112] Discussing what makes Discovery unique among Star Trek series, Paradise said it was the mixture of serialized storytelling and a focus on action, adventure, and visual effects. She noted that Discovery could feel separate from the rest of the franchise following the time jump to the future but explained that the writers were always looking for ways to connect the series back to past Star Trek media to prevent this.[113] Beginning with the third season, astrophysicist Erin Macdonald joined the series and wider Star Trek franchise as a science advisor.[114] Macdonald said each series was on a "spectrum of science to fiction" and Discovery was "way more on the science side", so to ensure scientific accuracy Macdonald became involved in all aspects of the series from developing plots with the writers room to reviewing that graphics and visual effects were correct in post-production.[115]
Casting
By June 2016, Fuller had met with several actors and said the series would "carry on what Star Trek does best" by hiring a progressive, diverse cast,[66] with Kadin confirming that the series would feature minority, female, and LGBTQ characters.[116] In August, Fuller said the series would star a lieutenant commander, to be played by a non-white actress, rather than a captain like previous Star Trek series. He also said Discovery would include more alien characters than other Star Trek series, and would feature at least one openly gay character. Fuller, who is gay himself, had been determined to see this happen since receiving hate mail while working on Voyager when a character on that show was rumored to be coming out as gay.[1] Fuller discussed the series' casting with Mae Jemison, the first black woman in space who made a cameo appearance in an episode of The Next Generation.[1][117] He anticipated casting announcements in October,[67] but none had been made by the end of that month. The majority of the series main characters were believed to have been cast by then, but no actress had been cast for the series' lead role. This was a source of "internal stress" at CBS.[71] Several African American and Latina actresses were being looked at for the role, with CBS preferring a "fresh face" over an established star.[118] The cast was believed to include a female admiral, a male Klingon captain, a male admiral, a male adviser, and a British male doctor, with one of those male leads played by an openly gay actor.[119]
Sonequa Martin-Green portrays Michael Burnham, the lead character and eventual captain of the USS Discovery
Doug Jones and Anthony Rapp were revealed to have been cast in November 2016, respectively as science officers Saru and Stamets.[11] Saru is a Kelpien, an alien race created for the series,[13] while Stamets is the first Star Trek character to be conceived and announced as gay.[11]Sonequa Martin-Green was cast in the lead role in December,[120] when Shazad Latif was cast as the Klingon Kol.[121] In March 2017, Jason Isaacs was cast as Captain Lorca of the USS Discovery,[29] and Mary Wiseman joined as Tilly, a cadet.[24] In April, Martin-Green's casting was officially confirmed and her character's name was revealed to be Michael Burnham.[122] At the end of that month, Latif was recast to the role of Starfleet Lieutenant Tyler.[123] The series reveals that Tyler is the undercover persona of the Klingon Voq, who is initially credited as being portrayed by the invented actor Javid Iqbal to hide the fact that Latif portrays both Voq and Tyler.[16]
Rapp revealed in July 2017 that Wilson Cruz, whom Rapp had previously worked with on the musical Rent, would portray Stamets' love interest Hugh Culber.[32] The character is killed off during the first season, which was criticized by some as following the "bury your gays" trope, but the executive producers immediately released a statement with Cruz and LGBTQ media monitoring organization GLAAD saying the relationship between Culber and Stamets would continue to be explored.[124] Cruz was subsequently promoted from his recurring guest role to the series' main cast for the second season, in which Culber is brought back to life.[34] After the first season concluded with the Discovery receiving a distress call from the USS Enterprise, specifically from Captain Christopher Pike, Harberts expressed interest in exploring that character;[5]Anson Mount was cast in the role in April 2018,[125] and stars for the second season.[36][126]
Casting had begun by June 2019 for the new role of Adira, a non-binary character described as "incredibly intelligent and self-confident" with the potential to become a recurring guest throughout the third season.[127] The next month, David Ajala joined the cast as new series regular Cleveland "Book" Booker for the third season.[38] Rachael Ancheril is also credited as starring for her appearances in the season, reprising her recurring guest role as Nhan from the second season.[128] She is written out of the series in the third season's fifth episode.[44] In September 2020, non-binary newcomer Blu del Barrio was revealed to be portraying Adira, the first explicitly non-binary character within the Star Trek franchise.[45] They were promoted to the series' main cast in the fourth season along with recurring guest star Tig Notaro as Jett Reno.[46][49]Callum Keith Rennie joined the fifth season as Rayner, a war-time Starfleet captain.[53]
Design
Fuller wanted to take advantage of modern effects, production design, and makeup to establish a new look for the series and franchise that previous Star Trek media was unable to achieve.[1] Mark Worthington and Todd Cherniawsky served as initial production designers for the series,[129] and Suttirat Anne Larlarb was hired as costume designer.[130]Glenn Hetrick and Neville Page of Alchemy Studios provided prosthetics and armor,[131][132] with Page having previously designed for the rebooted Star Trek films.[133] Mario Moreira served as prop master for the series,[134] with seven art directors, over nine illustrators, more than thirty-five set designers, and over four hundred and fifty painters, carpenters, sculptors, model makers, welders, set dressers, and prop builders all hired for the first season.[135] The designers consulted with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for scientific accuracy.[134] Tamara Deverell took over as production designer during production on the first season,[136] but left after the second.[137] She was replaced by Phillip Barker, who was able to approach the third season as a fresh start due to the new time period. Barker helped develop the new 32nd century technology as part of his design process.[138] Doug McCullough took over as production designer for the fourth season.[139]
Fuller had wanted the series' uniforms to reflect the primary colors of The Original Series, but this was discarded after his departure,[65] when Larlarb also left the series. Gersha Phillips took over as costume designer.[130] Fabric for the series' Starfleet uniforms was custom-dyed in Switzerland, and was a navy blue specifically mixed for the production. Gold or silver embellishments denoted divisions, while medical officers wear a "hospital white" variant of the uniform. The captain's uniform is the standard navy blue but with additional gold piping on the shoulders.[140] Phillips attempted to create costumes with no seams using "No Sew" bonding techniques such as glue and tape, but the producers rejected this because they wanted to see more details in the costumes.[40] Starfleet insignia badges were molded from silicon bronze, and then polished and plated by a jeweler to create custom colors for the series: gold for command, silver for sciences and medical, and copper for operations.[140] Phillips was able to revisit the colorful uniforms from The Original Series with the introduction of the USS Enterprise in the second season, applying the colors of those original costumes to the design of Discovery's uniforms.[130] She was also able to revisit her "No Sew" approach for the future Starfleet uniforms in the third season. These are mostly gray, with divisions represented by a colored stripe,[141] but once the crew of Discovery started wearing these costumes the producers realised that they clashed with the Discovery's existing gray hallway sets. Phillips designed new uniforms for the fourth season that use the same primary colors as The Next Generation, with red for command, gold for operations, and blue for science. Medical officers still wear white uniforms.[142]
Veteran Star Trek designer John Eaves designed starships for the series with Scott Schneider,[143][135] and based the USS Discovery on an unused Ralph McQuarrie design for the Enterprise from the unproduced film Star Trek: Planet of the Titans.[69] Fuller compared McQuarrie's design to 1970s Lamborghinis and cars from the James Bond franchise.[144] Sets for the Discovery's interiors were described as a "tangle of corridors and rooms",[82] and were designed to look like they could believably fit inside the ship. The graphics used for the Starfleet computer systems were designed to be believably more advanced than modern technology, but to also honor the look and feel of the designs used in previous series.[135] These were updated for the third season to reflect the more advanced future technology, when programmable matter was integrated into the Discovery design.[145][146]
The opening title sequence was created by Prologue using 2D motion graphics. The sequence depicts elements from throughout the history of Star Trek—such as phasers, communicators, and the Vulcan salute—and deconstructs them.[147] Prologue creative director Ana Criado said the producers wanted the sequence to be unlike any previous Star Trek titles sequences. A blueprint theme was decided to acknowledge that the series is a prequel, "literally deconstructing Trek iconography". The sequence was originally in black-and-white, but Criado said this was too "cold" and was replaced with a Renaissance-inspired sepia look "to make it look like we are designing everything from scratch". The sequence was updated for each season.[148] The third season introduces a new logo for the series to reflect its move to the far future and move away from the Klingon-inspired initial logo.[149]
Filming
Star Trek: Discovery is filmed at Pinewood Toronto Studios,[150] taking advantage of multiple soundstages at the studio including the largest one in North America.[82] Filming for the series also takes place on location around Ontario, Canada, including at the Aga Khan Museum in Toronto to portray the Vulcan Science Academy,[151] the Hilton Falls and Kelso Conservation Areas,[152] the Scarborough Bluffs,[153] the Stelco steel plant in Hamilton,[138] and the disused Kingston Penitentiary.[154] The series spent more than CA$257 million (US$202 million) in Ontario, and created more than 4,000 jobs for local crew, in just its first two seasons.[155] Location filming for the series also took place outside of North America, with some filming in Jordan for the series premiere,[156] and in Iceland for the first two episodes of the third season.[157]
Kurtzman felt the visual style of the series had to "justify being on a premium cable service",[158] and the producers worked closely with first episode director David Semel to make the series look as cinematic as possible.[102] They took inspiration from the wide scope of Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979), including using a 2:1 aspect ratio, as well as from the modern Star Trek films directed by J. J. Abrams.[159] The cinematographers wanted to emphasize on-set lighting sources to create a more realistic look and distance the series from the "stage" feel of The Original Series.[160] The lighting on set could be controlled, including changing their color for when the ship goes into alert mode.[135] Harberts said that the cinematographers wanted the series to have a "Rembrandt texture".[160] For the second season, Kurtzman chose to use anamorphic lenses with a 2.39:1 aspect ratio to "immediately [convey] a sense of scope and scale". He hoped that if the series was projected in a theater it would appear indistinguishable from a feature film.[161] Frequent Star Trek director Jonathan Frakes said the series' producing director, Olatunde Osunsanmi, encouraged all of the directors to "express ourselves visually in as exciting a way as possible",[162] with Frakes describing the series' directing style as "shoot to thrill".[157]
Paramount+ constructed a video wall to allow for virtual production on the fourth season as well as the spin-off series Star Trek: Strange New Worlds,[112][163] utilizing technology similar to the StageCraft system that was developed for the Disney+ series The Mandalorian.[164] The new virtual set was built in Toronto by visual effects company Pixomondo, and features a 270-degree, 70 feet (21m) by 30 feet (9.1m) horseshoe-shaped LED volume with additional LED panels in the ceiling to aid with lighting. The technology uses the game engine software Unreal Engine to display computer-generated backgrounds on the LED screens in real-time during filming.[163] Visual effects supervisor Jason Zimmerman noted that this was especially useful for creating the planets that are visited in the series since location shooting was limited on the fourth season by the COVID-19 pandemic.[163][112]
Visual effects
Visual effects producers were hired to begin work on the series during the initial writing period, with Fuller explaining that they wanted to develop distinct looks for classic Star Trek effects such as digitally-augmented alien species and transporter beams.[66]Pixomondo is the primary visual effects vendor for the series,[165] with other vendors including Spin VFX,[166] Ghost VFX, Mackevision, Crafty Apes, DNEG, The Mill, and FX3X, as well as visual effects supervisor Jason Zimmerman's in-house team at CBS Studios.[167] Visual effects shots for each episode on Discovery typically take eight-to-ten months to complete,[112] and include fully digital environments such as the shuttle bay of Discovery,[102][168] digital extensions of sets,[167] shots of the Discovery and other starships,[145] digital creatures,[169] holograms,[167] and 32nd century technology such as programmable matter.[145][146]
Music
Several composers auditioned for the series, including Charles Henri Avelange,[170] and Fil Eisler whose audition music was used for the series' first teaser.[116]Cliff Eidelman and Austin Wintory were also considered for the role,[171][172] before Jeff Russo was announced as composer for the series in July 2017.[4] Russo wanted the show's main theme to embody the ideals of Star Trek and "a commonality in people" by only using chords that have a common note, with a melody then added over the top. The theme is bookended by elements of the original Star Trek theme by Alexander Courage.[173] Russo acknowledged that not all existing Star Trek fans were going to appreciate the new theme, but felt that regardless of how it compared to previous themes in the franchise it still accurately represented this series.[174] Russo recorded the series' score with a 60-piece orchestra,[158] initially at the Eastwood Scoring Stage at Warner Bros. Studios in California.[175] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, musicians for the third season were recorded individually and their performances combined.[176]
The first episode of Star Trek: Discovery aired in a "preview broadcast" on CBS in the United States and was made available with the second episode on CBS All Access. The rest of the series' episodes for the first three seasons were released weekly on All Access.[79]CBS Studios International licensed the series to Bell Media for broadcast in Canada, and to Netflix for another 188 countries.[61] In Canada, the premiere was simulcast with CBS on both the CTV Television Network and on the specialty channel CTV Sci-Fi Channel before being streamed on Crave; it was also broadcast in French on the specialty channel Z.[61] Subsequent episodes were released through CTV Sci-Fi, Z, and Crave,[61] with CTV Sci-Fi airing each episode 30 minutes before it streamed on All Access.[192][193] In the other countries, Netflix released each episode of the first three seasons for streaming within 24 hours of its U.S. debut.[61] This agreement also saw Bell Media and Netflix acquire all previous Star Trek series to stream and broadcast at the time.[61]
In September 2020, ViacomCBS announced that CBS All Access would be expanded and rebranded as Paramount+ in March 2021.[194] Existing episodes of Discovery's first three seasons remained on Paramount+ along with future seasons of the series.[195] On November 2, 2021, a home media box set collecting the first three seasons was released, with more than eight hours of special features including behind-the-scenes featurettes, deleted and extended scenes, audio commentaries, and gag reels.[196] On November 17, two days before the fourth season's international debut, ViacomCBS announced that it had bought back the international streaming rights to Discovery from Netflix effective immediately. The deal was for an undisclosed amount of money that was reported to be in the six-figure range, and meant that Netflix would no longer contribute to the series' budget as it had been doing since the original international licensing deal in July 2016. Because of the new deal, the fourth season was set be streamed in countries outside of North America on Paramount+ once the service was available there some time in 2022.[197] Following backlash from international fans, ViacomCBS made the season available internationally through several avenues.[198][199] In August 2023, Star Trek content was removed from Crave and Discovery began streaming on Paramount+ in Canada. The series would continue to be broadcast on CTV Sci-Fi and be available on CTV.ca and the CTV app.[200][201]
Reception
Viewership
According to Nielsen Media Research, the CBS broadcast of the first episode was watched by a "decent" audience of 9.5 million viewers.[202][203] The premiere of the series led to record subscriptions for CBS All Access, with the service having its biggest day of signups, as well as its biggest week and month of signups thanks to the series.[204] According to "app analytics specialist" App Annie, the premiere of the series also caused the number of downloads of the All Access mobile app to more than double, with revenue from the app for CBS doubling compared to the average in-app revenue during the previous 30 days.[205] Increased subscribers for All Access was given as one of the reasons behind the series' second and third season renewals.[84][90] Audience demand analytics company Parrot Analytics estimates streaming viewership based on global "demand expressions", with the "desire, engagement, and viewership weighted by importance". In the company's list of the top 20 most in-demand streaming series of 2020, Discovery was ranked 12th and was the highest ranked All Access series for the year.[206]
In the first week of Paramount+'s launch in March 2021, JustWatch, a guide to streaming content with access to data from more than 20 million users around the world, estimated that Star Trek: Discovery was the most in-demand series on the new service.[207] In December 2021, Paramount+ revealed that Discovery was the most watched series on the streaming service for its inaugural year.[208] Parrot Analytics listed the series as the 15th most in-demand streaming series of 2021, the only Paramount+ series in their top 20 list for the year.[209]
Star Trek: Discovery has an 85% approval rating on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes,[218] while Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, has assigned a score of 73 out of 100 based on reviews from 41 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[219]
For the first season, Rotten Tomatoes reported an 83% approval score with an average rating of 7.05/10 based on 374 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "Although it takes an episode to achieve liftoff, Star Trek: Discovery delivers a solid franchise installment for the next generation—boldly led by the charismatic Sonequa Martin-Green."[210] Metacritic assigned a score of 72 out of 100 based on reviews from 20 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[211]
Rotten Tomatoes reported an 81% approval score for the second season, with an average rating of 7.35/10 based on 209 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "The second season of Discovery successfully—if stubbornly—cleans up the problematic storylines of Trek past while still effectively dramatizing new takes on the lore."[212] Metacritic assigned a score of 72 out of 100 based on reviews from 10 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[213]
Rotten Tomatoes reported a 91% approval score for the third season, with an average rating of 7.7/10 based on 35 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "With less canonical baggage and a welcome dose of character development, Discovery continues to forge its own path and is narratively all the better for it."[214] Metacritic assigned a score of 75 out of 100 based on reviews from 8 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[215]
For the fourth season, Rotten Tomatoes reported an 88% approval score with an average rating of 8.1/10 based on 17 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "Michael Burnham finally comes into her own—and so does Discovery—in a confident fourth season that embraces the series' more heartfelt take on the Star Trek mythos."[216]
For the fifth season, Rotten Tomatoes reported an 80% approval score with an average rating of 6.7/10 based on 20 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "Lightening up just in time for one last voyage, Star Trek: Discovery concludes with a quest that sends this particular crew off in rousing fashion."[217]
Accolades
In June 2020, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar named Star Trek: Discovery as one of the six best "morale-boosting TV dramas for people of color" for being the most consciously diverse Star Trek series and for featuring people of color as role models.[220] The second, third, and fourth seasons all received the ReFrame Stamp, which is awarded by the gender equity coalition ReFrame as a "mark of distinction" for film and television projects that are proven to have gender-balanced hiring, with stamps being awarded to projects that hire female-identifying people, especially those of color, in four out of eight critical areas of their production.[221][222][223]
Matthew E. Taylor, Tim Farrell, Harry Cohen, Michael Schapiro, Clay Weber, Darrin Mann, Alyson Dee Moore and Chris Moriana (for "That Hope Is You, Part 1")
Matthew E. Taylor, Tim Farrell, Harry Cohen, Michael Schapiro, Darrin Mann, Clay Weber, Moira Marquis, Alyson Dee Moore, Chris Moriana (for "That Hope Is You, Part 1")
Jason Michael Zimmerman, Ante Dekovic, Aleksandra Kochoska, Charles Collyer, Alexander Wood, Ivan Kondrup Jensen, Kristen Prahl, Toni Pykalaniemi, Leslie Chung (for "Su'Kal")
In August 2018, video game developer Anas Abdin announced that he would sue CBS for allegedly copying elements of his unreleased video game Tardigrades,[268] including large tardigrades that help humans travel through the universe instantly, and similar characters. The lawsuit was dismissed by Judge Lorna G. Schofield in September 2019, finding that the series and video game were not "substantially similar as a matter of law", and that the only similarities were the space setting and the use of alien tardigrades.[269] Abdin appealed this dismissal, but the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld Schofield's decision in August 2020.[270]
Tie-in media
Publishing
In September 2016, Discovery writer Kirsten Beyer announced that CBS was working with IDW Publishing and Simon & Schuster to produce more content revolving around the setting of the series, starting with at least one novel and a comic book. Beyer, the writer of many Star Trek: Voyager novels, explained that she would work with fellow Star Trek novelist David Mack and Star Trek comic writer Mike Johnson to ensure that all media "are coming from the same place". The release of the books and comics was set to coincide with the series' premiere.[271] Mack described writing around the continuity of Discovery as "tricky to get right", as the time period is "light on detail and almost unique within the Star Trek continuity. That made it a challenge to represent that era faithfully while also staying true to the new elements being introduced" in the series.[272] Beyer explained in August 2017 that the novels and comics would tell stories that the series did not have time to address but that enhanced the overall story for fans, though they would not be required reading to understand the series. She said the writers of the tie-in works and the series' writers room would work together to not contradict each other, but if an idea was developed for the series that did not work with something established in a tie-in then the series would take priority.[273]
Set one year before Discovery and follows Burnham aboard the USS Shenzhou. Fuller specifically asked that a book be written based on this premise.[273]
This novel is set during the year that Burnham spends with Book in the 32nd century before Discovery and the rest of the crew arrive from the past.[280]
This novel is set after the Discovery crew solves the mystery of the Burn, but before the emergence of the DMA, and has the Discovery encounter the Xahean people.[281]
Again written by Beyer and Johnson, Star Trek: Discovery Annual focuses on Stamets' mycelial network research,[283] while Succession expands on the first season's Mirror Universe story arc.[284]
A one-shot issue explores Saru as acting captain on a one-time mission,[285] and Aftermath covers the time after the Discovery travels to the future at the end of the second season and before Spock goes back to duty aboard the Enterprise.[286]
Written by Mike Johnson and Kirsten Beyer, with art by Angel Hernandez, Adventures in the 32nd Century focuses on a myriad of characters, including Grudge, Ensign Adira Tal, Lieutenant Keyla Detmer, and Science Officer Linus.[287]
By August 2017, hours of Discovery-based content was set to be added to the video game Star Trek Timelines, including introducing Michael Burnham and Saru as new crew members for the game and new ships from the show, Federation and otherwise. A month-long "Mega-Event" based on the series was run in the game to coincide with the series' premiere.[288] In July 2018, a tie-in for the game Star Trek Online was announced titled Age of Discovery. Set during the first season of the series, the event introduces a story set on the USS Glenn and includes the character Sylvia Tilly. Wiseman returned to voice the character. Other elements inspired by the series included new starship and Klingon designs.[289] In January 2020, Martin-Green was set to voice Burnham for Star Trek Online's "Legacy" expansion celebrating 10 years of the game.[290]
CBS announced an official aftershow series for Discovery in 2017. Titled After Trek, it is similar to AMC's Talking Dead, a companion to The Walking Dead, and was hosted by Matt Mira. The series aired after each episode of Discovery, and featured a rotating panel of guests including cast and crew members from Discovery, former Star Trek actors, and celebrity Trekkies.[291] It was produced by Embassy Row and Roddenberry Entertainment.[292]
CBS announced in June 2018 that After Trek would be re-imagined for the second season of Discovery.[293] It was replaced with a new interview-style aftershow named The Ready Room, hosted by Naomi Kyle, which streamed weekly on Facebook Live.[294][295]Star Trek: The Next Generation actor Wil Wheaton took over as host of The Ready Room for Discovery with its third season.[296]
Promotional logo for the Star Trek Universe on Paramount+
In June 2018, after becoming sole showrunner of Discovery, Kurtzman signed a five-year overall deal with CBS Television Studios to expand the Star Trek franchise beyond Discovery to several new series, miniseries, and animated series.[297] Kurtzman wanted to "open this world up" and create multiple series set in the same universe but with their own distinct identities, an approach that he compared to the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). He added that he would "weigh in meaningfully and significantly at all the critical junctures" for each new series.[298] CBS and Kurtzman began referring to the expanded franchise as the "Star Trek Universe" at the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con,[299] and monthly meetings with the showrunners of each new series were being held by April 2021 to allow coordination between the different series and ensure that "they're not stepping on each other's toes", according to Kurtzman.[300]
Kurtzman announced in July 2018 that a companion series of shorts would be released between the seasons of Discovery to "deliver closed-ended stories while revealing clues about what's to come in future Star Trek: Discovery episodes. They'll also introduce audiences to new characters who may inhabit the larger world of Star Trek."[88][301]
After Mount left Discovery following the second-season finale, fans began calling for him to reprise his role of Christopher Pike in a spin-off set on the USS Enterprise, alongside Rebecca Romijn as Number One and Ethan Peck as Spock.[302][303] Kurtzman confirmed that development on such a series had begun in January 2020,[304] and Paramount+ ordered the spin-off, titled Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, in May 2020.[305]
By November 2018, Michelle Yeoh was in talks with CBS to star in a spin-off series as her character Philippa Georgiou which would feature the secretive organization Section 31.[306] In April 2023, Paramount+ announced that the project was moving forward as a streaming "event film". Yeoh was reprising her role in the film, which was written by Craig Sweeny and directed by Olatunde Osunsanmi.[307]
References
1 2 3 4 5 Hibberd, James (August 10, 2016). "Star Trek: Major details revealed about new TV show". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on August 12, 2016. Retrieved August 11, 2016. Star Trek: Discovery will be set in the 'Prime Universe' (so in the timeline of the original shows, not the J.J. Abrams reboot films), about a decade before Captain Kirk's five-year mission.
↑ Doug, McCullough. "Doug McCullough - CV". Doug McCullough - Production Designer. Archived from the original on February 13, 2022. Retrieved February 13, 2022.
↑ Adams, Cassius (September 18, 2017). "Star Trek: Discovery to Air Weekly on Cable TV in Canada". ncc-1031.com. Archived from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved September 25, 2017. Star Trek: Discovery will air weekly at 8:00pm Eastern / 5pm Pacific every Sunday
↑ "Star Trek: Discovery". CBS.com. September 24, 2017. Archived from the original on October 2, 2017. Retrieved September 25, 2017. New Episodes Sundays 8:30pm ET / 5:30pm PT
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