Star Trek TOS (The Original Series) has 80 episodes in all.
I was jut watching South Park when the subject came up they had it at 72. I know for a fact that it is 79 original episodes of Star Trek over a stretch of 3 seasons :-)
It was likely "Star Trek: The Next Generation" as this tends to be the most widely syndicated series and was extremely popular during its run. The lowest rated was "Star Trek: Enterprise" which was canceled after merely four seasons.
The BBC was the first network to run Star Trek starting July 12, 1969 until Dec. 15, 1971.
Star Trek Deep Space 9 was run in syndication. I NY-metro Area it was on WPIX11. I believe in Philadelphia it was run on FOX29 but that's from Memory not fact. Star Trek Voyager and Enterprise were not. They were on UPN network. If you are asking if DS9 was repeated in Syndication, I have personally watched on cable at some point.
The Original Series September 8, 1966 - June 3, 1969 The Next Generation September 28, 1987 - May 23, 1994 Deep Space Nine January 3, 1993 - June 2, 1999 Voyager January 16, 1995 - May 23, 2001 Enterprise September 26, 2001 - May 13, 2005 Animated Series September 8, 1973 - October 12, 1974
Download the 1.1 patch and run the EXE. It's available from Filefront or Bcfiles.com. Some copies of Bridge Commander have the 1.1 patch pre-installed - check your CD.
three years NBC tried to cancel the show after two years, but so many people wrote to NBC in support of the show that they made one more year of it.
Nothing, but there are some things that resemble things in Star Trek. The thing that is important to remember is Star Trek is fiction and the technologies we use are fact. One thing that many people claim was inspired by Star Trek is the cell phone. But that is totally wrong as Bell Labs came up with the idea back in 1947, nineteen years before Star Trek appeared on TV in 1966! But Bell Labs put the project on hold after a few years of work as the vacuum tube technology of the time could not support the requirements of such a system. When the first handheld cell phone was built by Motorola in 1971 it bore no resemblance to anything in Star Trek as it was about the size and weight of a brick and could only run about 1 hour on a battery charge.
It was likely "Star Trek: The Next Generation" as this tends to be the most widely syndicated series and was extremely popular during its run. The lowest rated was "Star Trek: Enterprise" which was canceled after merely four seasons.
The BBC was the first network to run Star Trek starting July 12, 1969 until Dec. 15, 1971.
Star Trek Deep Space 9 was run in syndication. I NY-metro Area it was on WPIX11. I believe in Philadelphia it was run on FOX29 but that's from Memory not fact. Star Trek Voyager and Enterprise were not. They were on UPN network. If you are asking if DS9 was repeated in Syndication, I have personally watched on cable at some point.
* Doctor Who * Star Trek * Babylon 5 * Star Gate * Total Recall * Logan's Run * Robocop the series * Andromeda * *
It typically takes around 10 billion years for a star like the sun to consume all its hydrogen fuel and enter a different phase of its life cycle. The exact duration can vary depending on the size and type of the star.
Harve Bennett has: Played Flight Recorder in "Star Trek III: The Search for Spock" in 1984. Played Himself - Producer in "Biography" in 1987. Played Starfleet Chief of Staff in "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier" in 1989. Played himself in "Star Trek 25th Anniversary Special" in 1991. Performed in "Time Trax" in 1993. Played President McAllister in "Invasion America" in 1998. Played himself in "Sciography" in 2000. Played Himself - Producer in "Star Trek: Three Picture Saga" in 2009. Played Aurora Computer in "Final Run" in 2010.
It depends, but don't worry. Our Sun wont run out in billions of years.
"The Simpsons," television's longest-running primetime scripted comedy series, has won 31 Primetime Emmy Awards. During its two decades on the air, "The Simpsons" has received 15 Emmys for voice-over performances, 10 for Outstanding Animated Program, two for Outstanding Music and Lyrics and four for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation.
Apparently it has been argued for years that William Shatner had spoken the phrase, Beam Me Up Scotty during Star Trek,s three year series run(1966-1969). i read/heard that Shatner said that he never said that phrase.
The Original Series September 8, 1966 - June 3, 1969 The Next Generation September 28, 1987 - May 23, 1994 Deep Space Nine January 3, 1993 - June 2, 1999 Voyager January 16, 1995 - May 23, 2001 Enterprise September 26, 2001 - May 13, 2005 Animated Series September 8, 1973 - October 12, 1974