Alex Kurtzman will serve as executive producer.
He is part of the J.J.Abrams team that brought you Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek into Darkness (2013).
UGH!
You know that this is going to be set in the reboot universe, with all of that nonsense about 'punching it,' Orion girls who act more like air-headed bimbos, Spock/Uhura lover spats and revamped story lines from old Star Trek movies.
Let's not forget that Scotty with no Scottish accent.
I couldn't believe that one!
This show will be offered on CBS Full Access for around five dollars a month, maybe 5.99-I'm not sure.
I got this information from StarTrek.com
From the comments, and there are many of them, most seem none too enthusiastic about this prospect.
Glad I'm not alone on this one.
But, hey…
There's always Star Trek Continues!
And, you know what?
I suspect, that as popular as STC is, this new pseudo Star Trek that Kurtzman is offering will make STC even more popular, as unsatisfied viewers will discover and RUN to the fan produced triumph as their appetite for the real thing heightens.
Just my opinion.
Until next time...
Yeoman Janice Rand finds that there is indeed love after Captain Kirk. It all happens here on this website.
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Monday, November 2, 2015
Oh, Well….
Just read about it on the Deadline website.
There will indeed be a new Star Trek series coming out in January of 2017.
I forgot who will be the executive producer, and I really don't care frankly.
This show, however, will feature a whole new cast of characters. It will not feature the cast of TOS.
I don't know about you all out there, but I think that Star Trek Continues does more than rise to the occasion of bringing the show back to life.
So, if it's all right with you I'm sticking to STC.
Thanks, but no thanks.
There will indeed be a new Star Trek series coming out in January of 2017.
I forgot who will be the executive producer, and I really don't care frankly.
This show, however, will feature a whole new cast of characters. It will not feature the cast of TOS.
I don't know about you all out there, but I think that Star Trek Continues does more than rise to the occasion of bringing the show back to life.
So, if it's all right with you I'm sticking to STC.
Thanks, but no thanks.
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
First Leonard, then Grace, and now Bruce...
While I was surfing through the web to check out the dealings of a Star Trek forum group that I'm no longer a part of, I found out about the tragic news of the death of Professor Bruce Hyde, the actor who played one of my favorite characters on Star Trek, Lt. Kevin Riley. He was 74, and died of throat cancer.
This has, so far, been a very sad year for Star Trek fans of the Original Series.
First, we lost Leonard early this year, then Grace, and now Bruce follows them.
Now, I don't know about you all, but I've always thought that Bruce Hyde as Kevin Riley should have become a regular on the show! I'll never understand just why the decision to keep him on was never made. To be an actor who can play a character- and a good one at that- so well in only two episodes that he leaves such a strong impression is a real testament to that actor.
I really hate to say this, but I would have preferred it if Gene Roddenberry had kept both Rand and Riley, with the original actors reprising their roles, of course-and canning Chekov.
Or, to put it more accurately, to never have added Chekov in the intergalactic roster in the first place.
Bruce Hyde, as Kevin Riley, brought a charm, charisma and humor to his role that was second to none. He was funny, boyish, vulnerable, brave, capable, and loyal. There was also a little bit of an edge to him, however. He did not have the typical bad boy overkill that is all too apparent in too many characters on TV and film these days; it was more subtle, as if a little nudge might get that element of his on its way. He was both soft and cocky, and it was a great combination.
I understand that he was an actor for only six years before leaving the field to explore other options in his life, later to become a college professor teaching communications and the arts. How lucky those students must have been! I frankly can't remember having a really cool college professor, can you?
Well, I am going to close this little tribute by saying that, in writing the Riley character in my story 'Tis Charity To Show, I tried to flesh out the character to the best of my ability and I hope that I truly
did him justice.
I also plan to use Kevin Riley in future stories, without question!
I also plan to use Kevin Riley in future stories, without question!
Rest in peace, Professor Bruce Hyde.
Your presence on Star Trek certainly made my life much richer, and I am quite grateful for that.
Bruce Hyde
1941-2015
Godspeed to you, Sir.
Friday, October 23, 2015
Aren't You All Aglow In Your Thousand Yard Stare Chapter Three part one
Aren’t You All Aglow In Your Thousand Yard Stare
Chapter Three
Part One
Rand is jarred from her sleep by a consuming, deathly
cold. She bolts upright in her bed,
pulling the flimsy covers up around her shoulders. The plexiglass walls were blanketed in frost, obscuring her
view of the rows of cells that held the other cadets. It had only been one goddamn day in this fucking program and
she’d already had enough!
But, she wanted Starfleet, and wanted it badly.
She didn’t go through four years of classes, drills, and
training to stop now. She’d simply
have to get through this. Rand
felt a panic rise in her when she thought about the sheer length of this ordeal-this
program, as they call it.
It was more like Starfleet sanctioned misery.
“Shit. What to
do,” she thought.
She had to calm herself down, clear her head, get herself
together.
Then, it came to her.
Rand promptly threw the sheet off of her body and situated
herself upright, crossing her legs in a lotus position with her hands placed
limply on her lap. She closed her
eyes and elongated her spine. The cold
proved to be a bit too punishing, however, so she leaned over, retrieved the
sheet and shrouded it around her shoulders like a meditation shawl. When Rand was fully covered, she again
closed her eyes.
“This had better work, or those survival classes aren’t
worth a damn,” she thought.
She counted to twenty until her mind and body were still. Then, Rand conjured up an image of a
red, effervescent ball in the middle of her belly and watched it expand and
whip around various parts of her body, bringing rescuing heat with each
diaphragmatic breath. Her corporal
interior radiated warmth outwards onto her skin, the cold no longer a
discomfort.
“I’ve outsmarted you, assholes!” she thought smugly.
Rand sat with glee on her bed, basking in the glow of her
ingenuity.
But then, she began to feel strange.
She felt a heat from outside of herself clashing with the
self-induced heat of her body, making her feel almost like she was being
baked. Rand looked at the walls in
her cell and noticed beads of water swelling and rolling down, and she realized
that the heat had been turned on.
Rand yanked the sheet from her body in disgust and looked up at the
ceiling of her cell in utter desperation.
“Really?!”
A wall of cool air hit Rand like a sledgehammer and she
turned in the direction where it was coming from. An Amazonian sized female guard with short-cropped hair and
severe features had entered her cell.
Rand started to say something, but before she could the guard reached
over and grabbed her unceremoniously by the neckline of her prison garb and
pulled her off the cot and out of her cell like a ragdoll.
“The fuck…?!
Rand was escorted through the black-tinted halls into an
interrogation room with walls and floors painted so white they were almost
blinding, making the waiting room where she was at yesterday seem muted and
pacifying by comparison.
The only furniture in the room were two iron chairs on
either side of an iron table, all three of these items being Spartan in style
and painted in the darkest of black.
For Rand, the whole setting had the effect of seeing stars
after a head injury, or an unfortunate examination by a gynecologist in a big
hurry. The woman guard pulled Rand
into the room and guided her not too gently to the desk and chairs, pulling out
the front chair from under the table.
“Sit,” the guard said.
Rand simply looked at the chair, then turned to the guard.
“What am I, a cockerspaniel?”
With that, the guard tightened her grip on Rand’s forearm
and forced her down on the chair.
Rand struggled, her teeth gritting from the pain of the guard’s fingers
digging into her.
“Jesus Christ, what’s your problem?!”
The guard propped her arm on the table and leaned into Rand
menacingly.
“Listen, you want things hard, I can make them as hard as
you force my hand. Want things easy,
I can do that too.”
Rand looked up at the guard and smirked.
“In what category would you place this treatment thus far?”
asked Rand with sarcasm dripping from her voice.
God, she was tired.
She needed sleep.
And food…
When the hell did they feed you around here? And what did they feed you…
Rand could hear the familiar sound of a sliding door, but it
didn’t come from the same direction where she and the guard had entered. It came from behind the wall a few feet
away from the desk from where she sat, echoes of footsteps getting louder with
each step. Then, a small part of
the wall opened up from the bottom and revealed a very formidable figure; a
Vulcan male dressed in the same style of black fatigues as the female
guard. He was tall, which was a
common trait among Vulcan men. What
really struck Rand about this man was his dark red hair, a trait that was not
only uncommon among Vulcans, it was unheard of. The modern Vulcan was not known to artificially ornament
their physical appearance in any way, unlike their ancient ancestors who donned
themselves with war paint, jewelry, and body mutations like piercings and
tattoos in order to appear warlike to their foes. The Vulcan’s hair was cut in prickly formation at the crown
of his head while the sides were shaved nearly clean off. Rand noted how the green undertone of
his skin, along with the whitewash interior and the harsh fluorescent lighting,
clashed in a most uncomplimentary way to the pigment of his hair. The image that popped into her mind was
that of a Frankenstein monster, replete with narrow slits for eyes, hollow
plains under high cheekbones, a reed-thin mouth and nose shaped like a hawk’s
beak. He is followed by a male
guard who positions himself at the Vulcan’s side, close enough to be of needed assistance
but far enough to avoid being intrusive to the superior’s personal space.
When the Vulcan reaches the desk, he pulls the chair back
from under the table and sits down right across from Rand. He looks squarely at her, in that
unwavering gaze that Vulcans look at people, before addressing her in a deep,
startling voice.
“My name is Commander Glok,” he said.
Rand barely stifled a snicker, but it escaped her.
“Glok?! Talk
about appropriate!” she thought.
Feeling like a target was like a running theme in this fucking program for
her.
The Commander’s gaze sharpened, but only slightly. “Is there anything that you find
particularly amusing, prisoner?” he asked as a document was handed to him by
his male guard.
Rand discreetly positioned her fingers over her mouth and
audibly cleared her throat. She
shook her head for the benefit of the Vulcan.
“That is good.
It is encouraging to know that you are interested in assisting us so
that business can run as smoothly as possible. He paused as a slight smile formed on his lips.
“Easy does it, as they say,” he said seemingly proud of
himself for coming up with such a witty line.
Rand sighed.
There goes that word again.
Easy.
Fuck easy.
“Let’s just get this crap over and done with,” she thought.
Commander Glok positions the document in front of him and
flips it open. He eyes Rand before
lowering his head to read the information before him.
CHAPTER THREE TO BE CONTINUED….
Saturday, August 8, 2015
Aren't You All Aglow In Your Thousand Yard Stare Chapter Two
Aren’t You All Aglow In Your Thousand Yard Stare
Chapter Two
Back in the 21st Century, there was a young man
who had tried to take his own life by placing a shotgun under his chin and
pulling the trigger.
Everything went as planned. The gun went off, the bullet propelled out of the barrel,
and the young man’s head was indeed blown off of its foundation and left
dangling from the back of his neck.
It was like clockwork, as they would say.
However, there was just one tiny little ‘chink in the
armor.’
The poor fucker was still alive.
What made Rand suddenly recall that old news story was
beyond her. Perhaps she felt like
that guy’s head, dangling by the slimmest of threads, ready to fray and tear
off its base. She was kneeling on
the floor, her lungs heaving for air, her body so weak that even being on all
fours proved too much for her scant reserves, so she crumpled to the floor,
resting her hip there.
“Get up, prisoner!”
Rand responded with silence, her breathing displaying the
extreme exhaustion that coursed through her. Her prison garb, a flimsy grey wraparound, is barely
shielding her from the cold, black floor that feels like ice underneath her. The air around her is no better, its
frigidness making her skin rise in clusters of bumps. Rand could see a pair of black boots planted in front of
her.
“Get up, I said!”
In spite of herself, Rand chuckled.
“Why the hell don’t you make like a moth and flutter away
before I swat you. You’re blocking
my glorious light.”
She laughed weakly as she watched the boots step over her
body and out of her view.
Rand felt large hands slicing under her arms and lifting her
up roughly. “Whoopsie Daisy,” she
said in a voice that tried to come out in an acerbic singsong manner, but
instead came out hoarse and threadbare.
She’s thrown back into her cell, a clear-plexiglass room,
which is one in a long row of such cells in this black, lacquered void of a
landscape. She barely misses her
cot and lands on the floor in a loud, hollow thud.
Rand hears the sliding door close behind her as she lies on
her side, staring underneath her cot.
She feels the lids of her eyes grow heavy and is simply too goddamn
tired to try to climb onto her cot.
“Fuck it,” she mutters as she turns on her back and falls
dead asleep within the merciful, enveloping warmth of her cell.
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Aren't You All Aglow In Your Thousand Yard Stare Chapter One
Aren’t You All Aglow In Your Thousand Yard Stare
Chapter One
Janice Rand was being seized by restlessness. The crossing and uncrossing of legs, the
tapping of fingers on the chrome table that sat next to her chair and the
constant rotations of her ankles did absolutely nothing to make her wait time
move any faster. She glanced at
the time board situated over the receptionist’s desk; a full hour had past
since she and the other cadets had entered this room, and she couldn’t
understand, for the life of her, what was taking so long. The paperwork, the oath required by all
cadets taking the program, had already been collected. It had been early in the morning, upon
rising, when Rand was presented with a sealed plain white envelope by a
messenger. She was instructed to
open the envelope promptly, read over its contents, sign her name on the
bottom, place the contents back in the envelope, reseal it, and then hand them
over to the messenger who stood in her quarters by the doors, waiting quietly
and with watchful eyes. This had
been last month, so what was the hold up?
Rand looked around the waiting room and noted the behavior
of the other cadets; some were rolling their eyes, some were constantly folding
and unfolding their arms and legs, while others tapped their feet and clicked
their tongues. There were a few
smart cadets, however, who had either brought a padd to read or a music deck to
listen to. Unfortunately, Rand
wasn’t one of the smart ones as she cursed herself for not bringing one of her
old hardcovers to read.
The waiting room was clinically white and circular, and the
furnishings were simple and sparse.
The chairs were padded, somehow resembling a benign purgatory where
cadets were sent to await a sentence of some kind.
And wait, they did.
Each cadet at one point glanced over at the digital board,
letting out a deep breath of frustration, shaking their heads in utter
annoyance. Rand chuckled to
herself; she could certainly feel their pain, that was for damn sure.
“This is absurd,” she thought.
Rand got up from her seat and walked over to the
Receptionist, who was sitting behind her desk doing work on the desktop
computer.
“Excuse me.”
The Receptionist, a young brunette wearing a bun pulled back
so tightly it made Rand grimace at the sheer sight of it, looked up from her
work.
“I’m sorry to bother you, but can you tell me what’s taking
so long? It’s been about an hour
and no one’s some to orient us yet.
We’ve all signed the Oath of Secrecy. What gives?”
The Receptionist was polite, but in an almost robotic
manner. She answered Rand in a
voice that was both clipped and bird-like, reminiscent of the telephone
operators from Mid-Twentienth Century Earth.
“We do apologize for the wait, but the program coordinators
are setting up as we speak, so it shouldn’t be that much longer.”
“Yeah, but they had a whole month for set up. I’ve never heard of this last minute
stuff at the Academy.”
The Receptionist regarded her rather coolly, and Rand
wondered if she’d put her foot in her mouth. Not that she gave a shit. This waiting was irritating and unprofessional and they
needed to hear it! Her eyes
strayed over to the emblem on the Receptionist’s uniform on the left side just
over her breast. It wasn’t the
usual symbol of an ancient compass inclined over the points of navigation. It was of an upwardly pointed weapon
that tapered down into an oval plate.
A switchblade?
Rand felt her head jerk back ever so slightly, trying very
hard not to look to stunned.
“Again, we do realize that the wait’s been long, but if
you’ll sit down the coordinators will be here shortly to orient you and the
other cadets.”
Rand had been tempted to say something, but the chilly expression
on the Receptionist’s face, along with that switchblade planted on her chest,
prompted Rand to give her a curt little nod and a barely contained smirk before
returning glumly to her seat for yet another possible long wait.
“This is utter bullshit,” she said under her breath.
Rand had hoped she had been loud enough for Little Miss
Efficient to hear her, but looking over at the Receptionist, her eyes
transfixed onto the computer screen, was proof that she had failed in that
objective.
Sitting back down, Rand turned her attention to the small
table where issues of the terminally dull Academy Magazine lay haphazardly
piled onto each other. Corn fed
cadets smiling goofily in stiff, awkward poses in sad attempts at looking
formidable plastered every glossy cover.
Rand rolled her eyes as she picked up a periodical, desperately wishing
that she had brought something of her own to read. She turned to the interactive bulletin board on the other
side of the Receptionist’s desk where she saw two other cadets on either side
tapping their fingers onto its screen, hoping to keep themselves engaged
through this interminable wait.
Rand glumly hoisted herself up from her chair and walked
over to the bulletin board. Maybe
there’d be something interesting, but she highly doubted it.
“Exactly what is this Crossing the Rubicon anyway? What are we being tested on? How long we can stand boredom before we
go completely bonkers? Are we being timed for sleep inducement or something?”
she thought.
At the corner of her eye, Rand could see a young man with
his head inclined back, his mouth open and body slack on the chair. She chuckled, shaking her head.
“Yeah, it’s sleep inducement,” she said to herself.
She raised her hand to the icon on the bulletin board
winking in front of her.
THRUMP…THRUMP…THRUMP.
Rand stopped in mid-gesture and turned to the sound, which
was coming from behind the wall on the far side of the room. But, only after three times it stopped.
She shrugged and returned her attention to the interactive
bulletin board, placing the tip of her finger on the grey screen and tapping
it, activating it to life. Icons
and various fonts flickered and glowed, aligning themselves in orderly geometric
configurations.
“Anything interesting?”
Rand turned to a short, freckled faced, chubby auburn haired
young man. He spoke in a voice
that feigned both distress and boredom as he looked at the screen.
“We’ll see.
Hopefully.”
THRUMP…THRUMP…THRUMP…THRUMP.
The sound returned, coming from the back wall, like
before. And, again, Rand turned
towards the direction of the sound, forgetting about the bulletin board.
“What, are they doing repairs or something?”
“I hope not.
Between the wait and that noise I’d chew my nails down to the cuticle,
for Christ’s Sake!”
“You’ve got a point there, kiddo.”
The sound was dense and unwavering. This knocking went on in a drone-like
manner, slow and plodding, continuous, thick and blunt. As the sound went on, the thick of it
began to hollow out and echo, ringing like a hammer against a steel beam. Other cadets started turning to the
noise as well; some got up from their seats while others stayed seated, leaning
their bodies and craning their necks towards the direction from where the sound
emanated.
The hammering abruptly stopped.
There was a minute of silence…
And then…
TTTTTHHHHHHRRRRRRROOOOOOOOOOOMMMMMMMMMMMBBBBBBBBB!!!!
It was like a headlong fall down a great flight of stairs.
The tumbling began at the far end of the wall, but then it
spread out like a grid, its branches rolling behind the surrounding walls of
the waiting room, and then up in the ceiling.
There was an uneven rhythm to the commotion. It would go fast, stop, then slow. It would bounce, then skid like a
pebble on a body of water.
Rand noticed that the other cadets were out of their seats
now, their faces expressing alarm as they were clearly glued to the racket that
engulfed them.
She turned to where the Receptionist sat, but the desk was
empty.
There was a resonant slam in the overhead, followed by
vehement scrapings crawling their way upward from the walls to the ceiling.
“What the hell…”
Compact oval slots opened up, letting loose grey pipes that
revolved and undulated around each cadet, like tentacles. To Rand, standing face to face to one
of these things, looked like the long slender barrel of an Italian pistol.
“SSSSHHHHHPPPPPUUUUU!!!!!”
A spiral of thin, silvery webbing glued itself onto Rand,
its slick, feathery substance tightening and hardening as she struggled
violently against its grip. She
screamed, stumbling to the floor as she clawed and kicked at the netting. Her ears were assaulted by the screams,
exclamations, and cursing of the other cadets.
Rand felt the brutal pull of the netting as it dragged her
across the floor of the waiting room.
Through this web, she could see officers garbed in black pulling and
yanking at the nets containing squirming cadets while others wielded long ,
black staffs that jabbed into their captives, causing their bodies to flop
heavily like fish being dumped onto a deck.
Rand drew in her breath sharply, as she watched the chaos
with a mixture of fear and rage.
Then, a pair of feet planted themselves firmly in front of her. Rand looked up to see the Receptionist
standing overt her, gripping a staff strategically with both hands, the lit end
of it glowing like a poker as it hovered over Rand’s face.
Rand screamed, fighting through the net as it continued to
tighten around her. The
Receptionist thrust the staff downward until Rand felt the heat press against her
neck, bringing searing currents that coursed through her body until her limbs
tingled, the heat morphing into a numbing iciness that slackened her body, face
and eyes until she lost consciousness.
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Hey Guys, It's Me…
Hey, people!
It's me again.
I writing this post to let you know that Chapter One of my latest story will be on this blog in July-you can take that to the bank.
Writing can be a real struggle, and it's been quite a struggle lately for me.
My life, without going into great detail, has been a bit tumultuous in the past year.
I had lost a loved one almost a year ago, a loved one for whom I was the main caregiver, and another loved one made the big transition to college-to Yale, no less!
I also have another loved one who is in fast decline, and that's a lot to deal with right now.
There have been times when I've been on a roll and was able to write quite a bit, and then there have been times when I would sit with that pad of paper in front of me and nothing would come out-and I mean nothing.
However, I am almost finished with this chapter and it will definitely be here next month.
So, here's to July!
ProvidenceMine.
It's me again.
I writing this post to let you know that Chapter One of my latest story will be on this blog in July-you can take that to the bank.
Writing can be a real struggle, and it's been quite a struggle lately for me.
My life, without going into great detail, has been a bit tumultuous in the past year.
I had lost a loved one almost a year ago, a loved one for whom I was the main caregiver, and another loved one made the big transition to college-to Yale, no less!
I also have another loved one who is in fast decline, and that's a lot to deal with right now.
There have been times when I've been on a roll and was able to write quite a bit, and then there have been times when I would sit with that pad of paper in front of me and nothing would come out-and I mean nothing.
However, I am almost finished with this chapter and it will definitely be here next month.
So, here's to July!
ProvidenceMine.
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