• 207 Logic Not Found (DIS212)
    May 2 2026

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    Jeff and Steph jump ahead to 212 of Star Trek Discovery, and while the episode is moving fast, Steph keeps getting stuck on one thing.

    The logic.

    Big decisions are happening quickly. Plans come together almost instantly. And the more certain the characters seem, the less convinced she is that any of it actually tracks.

    Jeff can see what the episode is trying to do. Pike’s story lands for him. The stakes feel real. There is something meaningful underneath it all.

    Steph is not arguing the meaning. She is questioning how the characters get there.

    That turns into a deeper conversation about Burnham, about emotion versus logic, and about whether intelligence on paper actually shows up in action. It also opens the door to something they do not usually get into this early, which is how much writing and editing shape what ends up feeling believable on screen.

    Somewhere between time crystals, future visions, and rapidly decided plans, the conversation shifts from what happened in the episode to whether it ever really made sense in the first place.

    Pike may understand his future.

    Steph is still trying to understand the steps that got him there.

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • 206 Sharp Mind, Blind Spot (DIS208)
    Apr 25 2026

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    Steph is not having it.

    This week on Our Sci Fi World, we’re in Star Trek Discovery 208, and what should have been a meaningful Spock backstory turns into a full blown debate about one thing

    what if someone is smart… but still completely missing it

    Jeff’s tracking the logic. The canon. The intent.
    Steph’s stuck on something else entirely

    this does not feel as deep as the show thinks it is

    And once that door opens, it does not close.

    So now we’re talking about
    why that emotional reveal felt weak
    why “I was protecting you” might be the most overused trope in existence
    and whether being intelligent actually means you understand people at all

    Meanwhile Hugh is back and clearly not okay, which somehow leads to the question
    does fighting someone fix anything or are we all just pretending it does

    Also
    Spock politely dismantling people like a professional
    Giorgio saying do not contact Discovery and then immediately contacting Discovery
    and one completely unhinged comparison to Air Bud that somehow makes too much sense

    At some point this stops being about Star Trek

    and turns into a very real argument about how people think, how people heal, and how easy it is to believe you understand something when you really do not

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • 205 May Is the Worst (DIS205)
    Apr 18 2026

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    Jeff and Steph are back in the weird with Star Trek: Discovery. And this one goes sideways fast.

    What starts as a straightforward mission turns into a full-blown moral debate when May makes a call that nobody can quite agree on. Tilly’s caught in the middle, Hugh’s presence raises more questions than answers, and suddenly “doing the right thing” isn’t so clear anymore.

    This episode spirals into intention vs outcome, control vs survival, and that familiar space where everyone thinks they’re the hero of the story.

    Also:

    • someone gets defended way more than they should
    • someone else gets judged way too quickly
    • and yes… it escalates

    🧠 Insight / Takeaway

    The episode quietly asks a brutal question:

    If your intentions are good, does it matter if your actions aren’t?

    Trek frames it as a philosophical dilemma.

    Supernatural would frame it as a consequence you have to live with.

    This is the overlap. This is the show.

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    1 hr and 24 mins
  • 204 Blobnapped and Uninsultable. Jet Reno is just fire. (DIS204 An Obol for Charon)
    Oct 12 2025

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    Saru’s dying. The ship is collapsing. Tilly’s being blobnapped by a hallucinated fungus named May. But Steph? Steph is not having it. 😠 This week, the drama is high—but the believability is low—as Our Sci Fi World tackles Star Trek: Discovery Season 2, Episode 4: "An Obol for Charon."

    📉 From the jump, Steph calls it: Saru’s not going to die, and the episode knows it. So why does it lay the melodrama on thick? She breaks down how stacking three simultaneous crises—Saru’s “terminal” illness, Tilly’s freaky neural invasion, and the ship’s power-failure death spiral—leaves the emotional core untouchable. Jeff agrees: there’s no room to breathe, no narrative trust, and certainly no way to feel it all.

    🔍 But the ep isn’t without joy. Enter Jet Reno (🔥 Jet with two T’s), returning like an engineering rockstar with duct tape, sarcasm, and no time for Stamets’ ego. Steph immediately falls in love and crowns Reno the MVP of chaos. She’s unapologetically herself, possibly immortal, and entirely uninsultable. Jeff and Steph dig into her dynamic with Stamets and how their energy instantly clicks into a new version of Trek’s classic “grumpy genius duo.”

    🗣️ In the biggest Trek-troversy of the week, Steph learns—on mic—that everyone on Star Trek isn’t actually speaking English. Cue a hilarious conversation about the universal translator, alien earpieces, and whether Pike’s “hillbilly Montana English” is somehow being beamed into fluent Vulcan. (“Wait… are they all just hearing their own language??”)

    📚 They also fall face-first into a glorious idiom rabbit hole over the phrase “like it or lump it.” Steph insists it’s a real thing. Jeff has never heard it. They end up Googling etymology and debating what “lump” even means as a verb. (One of them is right. It’s Steph. Again.)

    🌌 Amid the chaos, this becomes an unintentional episode about overstuffed storytelling—how too much plot makes everything feel weightless, and how shows like Discovery sometimes sabotage their own emotional arcs by cramming them between high-stakes techno-catastrophes. Saru deserved better.

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    1 hr and 27 mins
  • 203 Pike is Supposed to Be in This One (DIS203 Point of Light)
    Aug 30 2025

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    Parenting a half-human, half-Vulcan child is never going to be easy. Add a logic-first father, a disappearing son, and a galaxy full of dangerous secrets, and the challenge becomes something else entirely. Point of Light, the third episode of Star Trek: Discovery Season 2, digs into the tension between love and logic, and this episode of Our Sci Fi World rides every beat of that storm.

    Jeff and Steph track three emotional storylines across three locations, where power, trust, and family are all under pressure. Amanda Grayson boards Discovery to demand Spock’s medical records and refuses to back down. She knows her son better than Starfleet does and she’s done asking politely. Her scenes with Michael Burnham are the emotional heart of the episode, rich with pain and connection, and Jeff and Steph both lock into the tension. They ask: what makes a good parent when your child isn't just a mystery but a cultural contradiction?

    Steph brings her real-world production lens to bear, unpacking how a script like this balances massive tone shifts and why Amanda’s scenes hold so much weight. Jeff breaks down Amanda’s evolution as a character, from background figure to emotional anchor, and makes the case that Discovery is finally honoring her role in Spock’s life. They both agree: Amanda Grayson may be one of the most underappreciated characters in the Trek canon.

    Meanwhile, back on Qo’noS, Chancellor L’Rell and Ash Tyler are juggling empire, identity, and an impossible secret. Their child has been hidden away with Klingon monks. Their leadership is under attack. And Mirror Georgiou arrives just in time to complicate everything with a new offer. It’s the start of what will become Section 31, and Michelle Yeoh’s performance is so commanding it nearly resets the tone of the show. Steph talks about what happens on set when a single actor controls the temperature of a scene. Jeff praises the decision to play L’Rell’s grief straight and not cut away.

    There’s politics. There’s betrayal. There’s a ceremonial knife pulled out of someone’s armpit. And somehow, through all of it, Discovery keeps its narrative threads just barely connected.

    This episode of the podcast delivers on all fronts. There’s theory, there’s laughter, and there are serious questions about Starfleet’s mental health protocols. Jeff explains why logic alone will never raise a functional Vulcan. Steph wonders what happened to Pike’s storyline. And both hosts hold onto the same insight: Star Trek works best when it asks what love looks like under pressure.

    If you're watching Discovery for the high-stakes canon-building or just here for a flawless Amanda Grayson monologue, you're in the right place. This is a messy, ambitious, emotionally rich hour of Trek, and this podcast digs all the way in.

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    1 hr and 22 mins
  • 202 Stamets is Salting the Bones (DIS202 New Eden)
    Aug 24 2025

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    A glowing red signal. A forgotten Earth colony. A captain who jumps on phasers like they’re grenades. In this episode of Our Sci Fi World, Jeff and Steph dive into Star Trek: Discovery Season 2, Episode 2, “New Eden,” and everything it sets in motion.

    Discovery’s mission brings them to a distant planet where survivors of World War III live without technology, memory of Earth, or even electricity. While Pike and Burnham navigate the rules of General Order One and a faith-based society, Saru manages command on the bridge, and Tilly nearly blows herself up chasing an asteroid shard with a mysterious energy signature.

    Jeff zeroes in on how Discovery uses mystery and misdirection to shape its serialized arc, including what the show gains and risks by withholding Spock. Stamets confesses he saw Hugh inside the mycelial network, and Jeff wonders aloud if this is Trek’s version of Supernatural’s resurrection rules. Steph, meanwhile, focuses on the real-life dynamics underneath the sci-fi, from actor hierarchy to call times and what happens when a "wheels up" time doesn't match the paper trail.

    Also in this episode: questions about Vulcan diagnosis protocols, a spirited debate over whether “starship” and “spaceship” are interchangeable, and the birth of what may become a recurring segment—the Glossary Girlies. From faith versus science to union regulations, New Eden sparks the kind of conversation only this show can deliver.

    Whether you’re in it for Pike, production, or pre-warp protocol, this one’s for you.

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    1 hr and 39 mins
  • 201 Driver Picks the Starship (DIS201 Brother)
    Aug 2 2025

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    🛸 This episode kicks off the Trek half of Our Sci Fi World with Discovery S2E1, “Brother.” The ship’s in trouble. The captain’s new. The crew watches him closely.

    Steph asks questions about Federation command structure. Jeff grins like a kid watching Saturday morning sci-fi. Together, they lock into Burnham’s emotional architecture, Pike’s confidence, and the grief hiding in the corners of the ship.

    They break down the shuttle escape, the production design shift, and the command style that Anson Mount walks in wearing. Steph calls it aesthetic trust. Jeff calls it earned presence.

    Family tension threads through everything. Burnham carries the past in silence. Spock stays gone. Saru tries to steady the room. Tilly softens the edges. Stamets wants to leave the story altogether.

    Jeff compares Pike to past captains and future ghosts. Steph clocks how Discovery holds emotion in framing and tone. They both pause on the final image of Burnham’s grief wrapped in a new mystery.

    This episode of Our Sci Fi World doesn’t just start a new season. It rewires the show.

    #DriverPicksTheStarship #RedBurstWatch #SiblingTensionInSpace #PikeSeasonBegins #OurSciFiWorld

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    1 hr and 40 mins
  • 124 Where No Ghost Has Gone Before (sidebar)
    Jul 19 2025

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    Twenty-three episodes. One car. So many ghosts.

    And now...space.

    In this chaotic, heartfelt Sidebar, Jeff & Steph slam the Impala’s trunk shut on their Supernatural arc and set course for Strange New Worlds. A rewatch adventure with Captain Pike, proto-Spock, and a starship full of gorgeous people and moral quandaries.

    This is the big genre swap episode: goodbye to EMF meters and tragic Americana, hello to phasers, hopepunk, and sleek jumpsuits. But first? We get nostalgic. Really nostalgic.

    Inside this episode:

    • Favorite Supernatural memories, monster logic debates, and ghost goofs
    • Honest talk about what worked, and what broke them, in Season 1
    • How watching SPN as a couple changed how they see the show (and each other)
    • Giddy hype for Strange New Worlds including Anson Mount hair theories, early Trek anxiety, and podcast pacing dreams for space

    This one’s a little emotional, a little unhinged, and fully ready to warp.

    Whether you're a Supernatural diehard or a Trek-first listener, this is your onboarding episode to Our Sci Fi World’s next chapter. Saddle up. We're about to meet Pike.

    Keywords: supernatural podcast, strange new worlds rewatch, sci fi podcast couple, supernatural season 1 finale, supernatural to star trek, captain pike podcast, trek rewatch, podcast emotional transition, nerd couple podcast, supernatural recap, strange new worlds episode guide, pike and spock podcast

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    1 hr and 37 mins