{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/1d61e16a-746d-42b7-9023-4e9ae8777d73/6a0899fd3fd6979bfcd15c09?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Geekstorians: Controlled Chaos | Star Trek, Cancellation and the Franchise That Refused To Die","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/611eaee406c05e664ef40c33/1778948501629-16fb523f-9686-4606-82cf-6c4bbe7a9de9.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>This week on <strong>Geekstorians</strong>, we’re boldly going into one of the strangest survival stories in geek culture: <strong>Star Trek</strong>, the franchise that has been cancelled, revived, mismanaged, overextended, rebooted, and pushed through nearly every major shift in modern entertainment.</p><p>Born in 1966, cancelled in 1969, and kept alive by fans who refused to accept that decision, Star Trek became something far bigger than a struggling network sci-fi show. It became a constituency. A culture. A future people wanted to believe in.</p><p>Dave traces the franchise from NBC’s infamous letter-writing campaign and the death-slot third season, through Lucille Ball’s unexpected role in getting the original series made, the rise of conventions and syndication, the expensive chaos of <strong>Star Trek: The Motion Picture</strong>, and the leaner, sharper rescue mission of <strong>The Wrath of Khan</strong>.</p><p>Then it’s into <strong>The Next Generation</strong>, first-run syndication, Roddenberry’s complicated legacy, the rocky early years, the franchise boom of <strong>Deep Space Nine</strong>, <strong>Voyager</strong> and <strong>Enterprise</strong>, the Kelvin timeline films, and the streaming era of <strong>Discovery</strong>, <strong>Picard</strong>, <strong>Lower Decks</strong>, <strong>Prodigy</strong> and <strong>Strange New Worlds</strong>.</p><p>Because Star Trek doesn’t survive because it is well run.</p><p>It survives because the idea underneath it is too good to kill.</p><p><strong>Geekstorians</strong> is the Webby-nominated documentary-style podcast from Geektown, exploring the strange, messy, brilliant history of geek culture.</p>","author_name":"David Elliott"}