
The Fifty-Year Mission: The Next 25 Years: From the Next Generation to J. J. Abrams
The Complete, Uncensored, and Unauthorized Oral History of Star Trek
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About this listen
This is the true story behind the making of a television legend.
There have been many books written about Star Trek but never with the unprecedented access, insight, and candor of authors Mark A. Altman and Edward Gross. Having covered the franchise for over three decades, they've assembled the ultimate guide to a television classic.
The Fifty-Year Mission: The Next 25 Years: From the Next Generation to J. J. Abrams is an incisive, no-holds-barred oral history telling the story of post-Original Series Star Trek, told exclusively by the people who were there, in their own words - sharing the inside scoops they've never told before, unveiling the oftentimes shocking true story of the history of Star Trek, and chronicling the trials, tribulations, and tribbles that have remained deeply buried secrets until now.
The Fifty-Year Mission: The Next 25 Years includes the voices of hundreds television and film executives, programmers, writers, creators, and cast who span from the beloved The Next Generation and subsequent films through its spin-offs: Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and Enterprise as well J. J. Abrams' reimagined film series.
The full list of narrators includes: Aaron Landon, Alex Hyde-White, David Stifel, Eric Martin, James Cronin, Jason Olazabal, John Rocha, Julie McKay, Martin Hillier, Nate Aldrich, Steve Marvel, and Susan Hanfield.
Narrated by:
Aaron Landon
Alex Hyde-White
David Stifel
Eric Martin
James Cronin
Jason Olazabal
John Rocha
Julie McKay
Martin Hillier
As for the production of this book, I appreciate the amount of research likely needed to compile all these quotes and attribute them correctly, but they really needed a director at the time of recording, preferably one that's actually watched Star Trek before. So many cringe mispronunciations. "EN-SIGN" instead of "EN-SUN", "Be-TAZED" instead of "BETA-ZED". I could go on. It doesn't ruin the book, but it's a shame.
This isn't a narrative book as much as it is a collection of quotes. There's an attempt to give it some natural progress through time, but if you're looking for a book that explains the process and what Star Trek is etc, this isn't it. Buy this book if you want to hear directly from the mouths of the people it involved, in front and behind the camera.
Edit: Upon getting to the "Voyager" section... the accents are atrocious, borderline offensive. I'm not personally offended, but I can imagine some people being taken aback by how daft it is. Unnecessary. Just read the text.
Informative but not well directed
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I enjoyed the listen to both this and the first book. They are very long, but cover each film or t.v. programme in depth. Die-hard fans will enjoy!
interesting listen.
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Gloriously detailed and essential for every ST fan
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Excellent insight
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a little hard to follow sometimes as it moves though the cast very quickly however you get used to it and I have looked forward to every chapter
Trek explained
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The narrators do a great job of switching between the cast and the writers interviewed and the format in which they do this is very easy to follow.
A must for any Star Trek fan
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And if you are too far gone into the Star Trek Fandom scheme, watch out! This book will stuff your head in the head and give it a good cold washing.
SHOCKING!
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Warts and Glory: Part II
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Some of the stories I'd heard before, many of them I had not. Some of them make for uncomfortable listening when it becomes pretty clear that people you'd admired and/or defended aren't quite so great after all.
A few things that did start to bother me, however, particularly in the second half of the book:
- One of the performers sounds very bored when it's his turn to read, which I suppose is understandable after such a long book but it comes across in the reading.
- Some of them start to do 'accents' for people they're representing, which are distracting as those accents weren't done earlier in the book (particularly the guy born in Germany who apparently speaks with a strange Chinese/French accent!).
- There are some awkward pronunciations of character and place names, especially during the DS9 section. Admittedly this will probably only irritate Star Trek obsessives like me ... but surely they could have had somebody to guide them during the recording?
Overall - it can be quite a dry book that casual listeners might struggle to get through. But for a Star Trek fan who loves behind the scenes gossip and information, especially hearing about what might have been ... it's an essential purchase.
Fascinating insight, with some frustrations
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Good story, poor narration.
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