May 31, 2018
Starfleet and the US Space Agency.
When The Original Series debuted in 1966, the Apollo program was in
full swing, although it wasn’t until after the show’s final episode
aired three years later that humans landed on the moon. In the
succeeding years, NASA and Star Trek became increasingly
interdependent. Real-world space history and technology was
referenced on screen, and an army of Trek fans gradually scored
jobs at the space agency. When the time came to name the first
space shuttle, the relationship came full circle as President Ford
bowed to public pressure and christened the orbiter Enterprise.
In this episode of Primitive Culture, hosts Duncan Barrett and Clara Cook trace the complex and sometimes fraught relationship between NASA and Star Trek over the course of half a century. We consider Constance Penley’s controversial book NASA/Trek, which argues that the space agency fed off the more popular television franchise as a way of bolstering its own waning popularity, and discuss the role of disaster management and public relations in NASA’s history—both real and imagined. We also look at the shift in Star Trek’s handling of NASA from the 1990s onwards, and the importance of “futuristic nostalgia” from First Contact to Enterprise.
Chapters
Intro (00:00:00)
TOS and the Apollo Program (00:12:15)
Ground Control to Major Tom Paris (00:21:00)
The Motion Picture Era and Murderous Space Probes (00:29:27)
NASA/Trek and disaster management (00:49:16)
1990s Trek and futuristic nostalgia (01:09:10)
Enterprise (01:21:10)
Discovery (01:34:13)
Final Thoughts (01:42:54)
Hosts
Duncan Barrett and Clara Cook
Production
Clara Cook (Editor) Duncan Barrett (Producer) C Bryan Jones
(Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer) Ken Tripp
(Executive Producer) Norman C. Lao (Associate Producer) [name]
(Associate Producer) Tony Black (Associate Producer) Richard
Marquez (Production Manager) Brandon-Shea Mutala (Patreon
Manager)