Warp Five 34: Always Know Where Your Steppenwolf Disc Is / by Trek fm

The NX Program.

Although Enterprise falls earlier on the timeline, it owes much of its premise to The Next Generation. Specifically, its central non-living character—the Warp Five engine—was born of the film First Contact and the work of Zefram Cochrane. Captain Archer's father, Henry, worked with Dr. Cochrane, and this would shape much of Jonathan's view of space exploration and the Vulcans. After two decades of development on the engine itself, the NX Program—which would marry the engine with a starship—began in the early 2140s. A decade later, the Enterprise was launched.

In this episode of Warp Five, we're joined by Earl Grey's Daniel Proulx to discuss the role Archer played in the development of the NX-01, the parallels between the NX Program and 1960s NASA, the role of the Vulcans, and how TNG and the Phoenix laid the foundation for the events we see in "First Flight" and for the Enterprise itself.

wf-034-th-widescreen.jpg

Running Time: 1 hour 8 minutes 47 seconds


Host

Christopher Jones

 

Guest

Daniel Proulx

 

Chapters

Building Upon First Contact
The NX Program
The Earth Cargo Service
Who's In Charge Here?
NASA Parallels
NX Ships and Design


Sponsor

Audible is the premiere source for audiobooks with more than 150,000 titles to choose from, and new titles coming every week. From classics to current bestsellers, and even some of the most famous Star Trek books like Prime Directive, Federation, and Spock’s World, Audible has something for everyone.

As a Trek.fm listener you can get a free audiobook of your choice along with a 30-day trial to see just how great Audible is. So give it a try today, catch up on all those classic Star Trek books you’ve yet to read or that latest novel from you favorite author and support the network and our programming at the same time!


More recent episodes of Warp Five…

Warp Five
Warp Five 251: Proof of Concept
Warp Five 250: Popsicle Drones
Warp Five 249: Linguistic Games
Warp Five 248: Bad Blood