{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/691ce533b958098159e19a66/6930c8b0d6bc23eda27ccaf9?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Geekstorians Episode 4: The Golden Age of Geek TV","description":"<p>Television didn’t always remember. For decades, episodes reset like clockwork, characters lived in cheerful time loops, and anything resembling continuity was considered a liability. Then came a wave of rebellious creators, strange experiments, and a generation of fans armed with VCRs — and everything changed.</p><p>In this episode of Geekstorians, Dave rewinds to the era when TV grew up. From <em>Hill Street Blues</em> quietly teaching networks how to tell long-form stories, to <em>Star Trek: The Next Generation</em> bending the rules, to <em>Twin Peaks</em> turning mystery into obsession, and <em>The X-Files</em> training audiences to become detectives, this was the decade television learned to think in arcs.</p><p>We dive into J. Michael Straczynski’s audacious five-year blueprint for <em>Babylon 5</em>, and how it helped invent the modern showrunner/fandom feedback loop. Then it’s on to <em>Buffy the Vampire Slayer</em> — the series that rewrote the emotional architecture of genre TV and launched a writer’s room that would shape the next twenty years of storytelling.</p><p>After that comes the rise of cable: <em>Angel</em>, <em>Stargate SG-1</em>, <em>Carnivàle</em>, and the 2005 <em>Doctor Who</em> revival becoming proof that genre could be ambitious, sincere, and mainstream. And finally, the 2000s network scramble — the adrenaline of <em>24</em>, the puzzle-box frenzy of <em>Lost</em>, the heartbreak of <em>Firefly</em>, the ambition of <em>Battlestar Galactica</em>, and the improbable triumph of <em>Fringe</em>.</p><p>All of it leads to the blueprint that streaming would later inherit — and occasionally break — as binge culture transformed how we watched, talked, and obsessed.</p><p>This is the story of how geek TV conquered the schedule, reshaped fandom, and taught the world that continuity isn’t a burden… it’s a promise.</p><p><a href=\"https://www.geektown.co.uk/category/geekstorians/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\"><strong>Geekstorians</strong></a> is written and hosted by Dave from Geektown. For more TV, film and gaming news, visit <a href=\"https://www.geektown.co.uk/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\"><strong>Geektown.co.uk</strong></a>, or listen to our sister show <a href=\"https://www.geektown.co.uk/category/geektown-podcast/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\"><strong>Geektown Radio</strong></a>.</p>","author_name":"David Elliott"}