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Star Trek: Voyager - Episode Guide - Season 2

A handful of episodes originally slated to conclude Star Trek: Voyager season 1 instead lead off season 2 in rather ho-hum fashion, excepting maybe “The 37s” which too was marred by the awful characterization of Fred Noonan. Star Trek noobs and hardcore fans alike could have some difficultly trawling through the episodes of season 2, as the low-stakes stories and muted character interrelations of this series continue.

In lieu of proper baddies such as Klingons, Romulans and Borg (and how much better does Voyager get when the Borg enter the scene?), season 2 appears to be an attempt to sell viewers on the badassness of the Kazon. How the Borg have failed to conquer these relative wusses’ space is beyond Star Trek Guide’s comprehension.

And along the way to descending into soap operatics to finally crash and burn in a pretty lame cliffhanger, we’re served up two of the most hideously awful episodes ever in “Tuvix” and “Threshold.”

So, yeah, not one of the better ST seasons.

1. The 37s – The Voyager crew discovers not only an Earth-like colony on a planet where it sure shouldn’t be, but also a handful of individuals from 1937, including Amelia Earhart and obnoxiously-portrayed navigator Fred Noonan. ***

2. Initiations – Chakotay takes a shuttlecraft to perform a ritual (don’t ask) and is attacked by a zealous Kazon youth whose own coming-of-age rite calls on him to kill a stranger. Spirit animal, my people, etc. *

3. Projections – Head trip for The Doctor! (Of course; it’s directed by Johnathan Frakes.) The Doctor comes online to find the Enterprise (nearly) empty of personnel and is then told that it is he who is real and the Voyager is in fact- a holodeck hologram! The first of many episodes is which Robert Picardo gets to shine. ****

4. Elogium – As Voyager passes through a cloud of interesting space cicadas (or something like that), Kes goes though the Elogium, kinda like Pon Farr for her race and … well, just imagine watching a lot of Neelix ruminating over whether he wants to be a father. Yeah. **

5. Non-Sequitur – Head trip for Harry Kim, who wakes up in San Francisco, living an everyday life and having never boarded Voyager. ***

6. Twisted – Time and space are distorting Voyager like Escher in 4D; various pairs and trios attempt to maneuver their way through an ever-changing ship. Pretty good stuff, but we’re denied a potential awesome wideshot of a twisted Voyager and/or the bridge crew running about the ship as though in an Escher illustration. ***

7. Parturition – Neelix reaches an apex of annoying usefulness, as he spends most of this episode arguing with Paris over the affections of Kes. In the end, the boys essentially agree that Kes is already more or less Neelix’s possession. Is this even Star Trek? 0

8. Persistence of Vision – Head trip for everyone … literally! Hallucinations and catatonia for everyone except for the show’s stars, then pretty much everyone. ***

9. Tattoo – When Chakotay encounters aliens with identical tattoos, he thinks he’s found an essential part of his ancestry … or something. **

10. Cold Fire – The Voyager crew discovers a second “Caretaker”; this particular caretaker has been taking care of some Ocampas for about 300 years. Kes attempts to act as go-between for Voyager, who reckon this Caretaker might send them home; unfortunately, she’s not as sympathetic as the original … ***

11. Maneuvers – A group of Kazon board the Enterprise, steal transporter technology and kidnap Chakotay, all in an effort to unite the various Kazon factions. And Seska returns to torment Chakotay and bump the soapiness of her sub-plotline up a notch. ***

12. Resistance – On an away mission, Tuvok and B’Elanna are captured while Janeway is injured. She is nursed back to health by an aged member of the resistance who believes the captain to be his daughter. He is not as he seems, etc. **

13. Prototype – Voyager retrieves a robot adrift in space and Torres revives it. The robot rewards her by abducting her (that’s three episodes in a row with at least one kidnapping; quite a common theme on Voyager, eh?) and forcing her to assist in building new robots. Some interesting – and chilling – plot twists in this one. ***

14. Alliances – In the first of many bad-idea alliances, Janeway reckons that allying the Voyager with one or more Kazon groups might help them more easily transverse the damn Delta Quadrant. Fortunately, she realizes the idea went to hell quickly enough… **

15. Threshold – Often cited as the worst episode of Star Trek ever, the “plot” goes something like this: Paris exceeds warp 10 in a shuttlecraft thanks to new experimental technology. He passes through every point in the Universe, evolves into a giant worm-like thing and impregnates the now worm-like Janeway. Must be seen to be believed. 0

16. Meld – How dark does Voyager get? Well, the story arc of Lon Suder doesn’t get much darker. This psychotically straight-up murders a comrade, then begins a therapeutic process with Tuvok. ***

17. Dreadnought – An episode which answers the question, “Is that an AI missile from Cardassia in your tractor beam or are you just happy to see me?” Trust STG here: That joke was undeniably more fun to compose than sitting through this snooze fest. *

18. Death Wish – Two Q, one the familiar trickster played by John DeLancie and the other a rather bubbly would-be suicide. The two try to hash out the issue of upper-dimensional euthanasia in classic style before bringing Janeway and others to the Q’s Beckettesque homeland. ****

19. Lifesigns – To save a Vidiian woman’s life from the Phage, The Doctor downloads her mental processes into a hologram- soon enough, she proclaims she’d rather not go back to her old body. ***

20. Investigations – A neat bit of espionage engineered by Janeway and Tuvok and involving Paris is nearly blown to smithereens when Neelix decides to start producing a daily television news ‘n’ gossip roundup show. (Why would a group of 150 living in a very small space need a news show about the community, anyway…?) Thank the gods that these cutesy nonsense episodes are soon forgotten. **

21. Deadlock – Ah, good old-fashioned temporal paradoxes! A second, alternate-unvierse Voyager is called into existence and one must be sacrificed to Vidiians for the sake of the other. A surprising twist at the end caps a suspenseful episode. ****

22. Innocence – Tuvok and a Red Shirt crash land on an uninhabited moon. Tuvok finds three children who were also aboard a crash-landed ship. Naturally, the children aren’t simple children … ***

23. The Thaw – The Voyager crew finds a handful of aliens kept in stasis (and a mental hell) by a being of their own creation. Why would they willingly create a creepy clown? Well… **

24. Tuvix – A transporter accident (wow, did Voyager have problems with those transporters) results in a highly stupid physical merger of Tvok and Neelix. We mean *really* stupid. Like “Faces”-level stupid. 0

25. Resolutions – Janeway and Chakotay contract a disease which apparently has no effect if they stay on a given planet. They do so and live together for a couple months before Captain Tuvok returns with the ship and everything’s hunky-dory again. **

26. Basics, Part I – And here the soap opera utterly takes over. Seska has a baby that she claims in Chakotay’s – not made the ordinary way, mind you, but by taking some sample of his DNA – and, after a vision in which his father demands that this baby is one of Their People and he must take it away, Janeway agrees to go out of the way to confront the Kazon she’s hanging with. Naturally – and every viewer surely guessed – that Seska was in league with the Kazon. They easily take Voyager and leave the entire crew on a pretty useless planet with a Stone Age population. **

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voyager episodes season 2

8 Alpha Quadrant Things Star Trek: Voyager Found In Delta Quadrant

  • Star Trek: Voyager finds familiar things from the Alpha Quadrant in the Delta Quadrant, sparking important questions and connections.
  • Encounter with Ferengi negotiators leads Voyager crew to stop their interference in a pre-warp civilization for profits.
  • Janeway and crew discover humans abducted by aliens in the 1930s living in the Delta Quadrant, including Amelia Earhart.

For a show with the conceit of being so far from home, Star Trek: Voyager found a surprising number of things in the Delta Quadrant that originated in the Alpha Quadrant, including several from Earth itself. The USS Voyager, commanded by Captain Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew), and Commander Chakotay's (Robert Beltran) Maquis raider Val Jean were both brought to the Delta Quadrant in 2371 by the Caretaker (Basil Langton). After Janeway destroyed the Caretaker's array to save the Ocampa , Voyager and the Val Jean were left without a ticket back to the Alpha Quadrant, and banded together to make the long journey.

Finding something familiar in an otherwise totally alien corner of the galaxy brought a sense of familiarity to the USS Voyager crew and viewers at home alike, but the presence of something from the Alpha Quadrant in the Delta Quadrant inevitably raised important questions , like how familiar people and objects traveled 70,000 light years from home in the first place, and whether the find could lead Captain Kathryn Janeway towards a quicker path home to Earth.

Star Trek: Voyagers 20 Best Episodes Ranked

A pair of ferengi negotiators, arridor and kol, star trek: voyager season 3, episode 5 "false profits".

The USS Voyager encounters a pair of Ferengi negotiators, Arridor (Dan Shor) and Kol (Leslie Jordan), who claim to be the prophesied Great Sages of the Takarians, a society with Bronze Age level technology. The Ferengi have no Prime Directive to deter them from interfering with the Takarians' development , so they're performing "miracles" with a standard replicator to reap the monetary benefits of the Takarians' worship. Voyager's crew know the Ferengi reputation well enough to know they're no Sages, so they must figure out how to put a stop to Arridor and Kol's grift.

"False Profits" serves as a Star Trek sequel episode to Star Trek: The Next Generation season 3, episode 8 "The Price", as Voyager catches up with Arridor and Kol (formerly played by J. R. Quinonez) seven years after their Delta Quadrant arrival. The Ferengi took a test flight through the supposedly stable wormhole near Barzan II, which was supposed to emerge in the Gamma Quadrant, but instead stranded the Ferengi in the Delta Quadrant, where they made the best of their situation as only Ferengi can.

Star Trek: Voyager Season 3, Episode 23 "Distant Origin"

"Distant Origin" opens on Forra Gegen (Henry Woronicz), a scientist who discovers that his people, the Voth, share certain genetic similarities with the humans aboard the USS Voyager. While this confirms Gegen's theory that the Voth are the descendants of a species brought to their homeworld millions of years ago , religious leader Minister Odala (Concetta Tomei) refuses to accept the truth. Even with Commander Chakotay present as a living specimen of humanity, Odala pushes Gegen to recant, because Gegen's theory goes against the Voth Doctrine that keeps Odala in power.

After meeting Gegen's assistant, Tova Veer (Christopher Liam Moore), Janeway and the Doctor use the holodeck as a research guide to extrapolate how hadrosaurs might look in the 24th century if they'd been able to evolve into a humanoid form with comparable intelligence. The result resembles Veer, so Janeway and the Doctor conclude, like Gegen, that the Voth evolved from hadrosaurs into a highly advanced species on Earth , then fled to the Delta Quadrant in spacefaring vessels instead of being wiped out with the other dinosaurs.

The Friendship One Probe

Star trek: voyager season 7, episode 21 "friendship one".

By Star Trek: Voyager season 7 , the USS Voyager is in regular contact with Starfleet Command, and Starfleet gives Voyager a mission to retrieve a 21st-century Earth probe, Friendship One . The probe proves difficult to find, but once discovered on an alien planet suffering devastating climate collapse, the implications of Friendship One's launch become clear. Besides the irreversible damage to the planet's climate, the inhabitants are all suffering from radiation sickness, and bear understandable hostility towards Earth, because the aliens believe humans orchestrated their destruction with the Friendship One probe.

The United Earth Space Probe Agency was one of the early names for the organization the USS Enterprise belongs to in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode, "Charlie X".

Friendship One was launched in 2067 by the United Earth Space Probe Agency with the intention of making friends with whomever found it, as the name implies. Although Friendship One, the 400-year-old Earth probe, traveled for centuries carrying messages of peace, musical recordings, and ways to translate languages, the people who discovered Friendship One in the Delta Quadrant took a greater interest in the antimatter it used to travel across space. Without the proper knowledge of its use, antimatter proved devastating to the planet and its people, resulting in death and disease for generations.

Dreadnought, a Cardassian Missile

Star trek: voyager season 2, episode 17 "dreadnought".

The USS Voyager discovers a dangerously powerful, self-guided Cardassian missile in the Delta Quadrant, which Lt. B'Elanna Torres (Roxann Dawson) recognizes as one nicknamed "Dreadnought" . When B'Elanna was with the Maquis, Torres had actually reprogrammed the missile herself, with the intention of turning the Cardassians' own weapon against them. Without a Cardassian target in sight, the artificially intelligent Cardassian Dreadnought targets a heavily-populated Class-M planet , Rakosa V. B'Elanna determines she must be the one to keep Dreadnought from hurting anyone else, and boards the missile to convince it to stand down.

While no concrete reason is given for exactly how the Dreadnought wound up in the Delta Quadrant, its last known location in the Alpha Quadrant was the Badlands, the same rough patch of space where Voyager and the Val Jean, Chakotay's Maquis raider, fatefully met. Because of this, Torres theorizes that Dreadnought arrived in the Delta Quadrant the same way that Voyager and the Val Jean did , courtesy of the Caretaker.

Star Trek: Voyagers BElanna Is More Klingon Than TNGs Worf Ever Was

A klingon d-7 class cruiser, complete with klingons, star trek: voyager, season 7, episode 14 "prophecy".

The USS Voyager certainly never expected to find a Klingon ship in the Delta Quadrant, but more surprising is the fact that the crew of the Klingon D-7 Class Cruiser believes their savior, the prophesied kuvah'magh, is aboard Voyager . Janeway assures the Klingon captain, Kohlar (Wren T. Brown), that the Federation and Klingon Empire have been allies for the past 80 years, and offers Voyager's own half-Klingon, Lt. B'Elanna Torres, as proof their societies are working together now. The kuvah'magh is Torres' unborn daughter, who does save the Klingons, but not the way they expected.

Centuries ago, Kohlar's great-grandfather set off on a quest to find the kuvah'magh, and the Klingon D-7 Cruiser became a generation ship that is now crewed by the descendants of its original crew . The quest begun by Kohlar's great-grandfather brought Kohlar and his crew to the Delta Quadrant after four generations of searching. Whether B'Elanna's child is actually the kuvah'magh or not, Kohlar desperately wants the baby to be their savior, so that his people may finally rest.

Amelia Earhart

Star trek: voyager season 2, episode 1 "the 37s".

The discovery of a 1936 Ford truck, seemingly disconnected from any parent vehicle, leads the USS Voyager to a nearby Class-L planet, where they find eight humans who have been in cryo-stasis since they were abducted by aliens in the 1930s. Among them are one of Janeway's personal heroes, legendary American aviator Amelia Earhart (Sharon Lawrence) , who disappeared without a trace while attempting to fly around the world, and Earhart's navigator, Fred Noonan (David Graf). Earhart and the other preserved humans are known by the planet's inhabitants as "The 37s", and revered as sacred.

Originally thought to be aliens, the natives of the unnamed planet are the descendants of humans. A species called the Briori abducted the natives' ancestors, along with Earhart and the other 37s, from Earth centuries earlier , and took them to the Delta Quadrant. Once held as slaves, the humans who weren't in stasis revolted to free themselves from the Briori, and developed a thriving, Earth-like civilization in the Delta Quadrant. Voyager's crew consider staying with the humans in their little slice of home, while Janeway also offers a ride back to Earth to anyone who wants it, including Amelia Earhart.

The USS Equinox

Star trek: voyager season 5, episode 26 & season 6, episode 1 "equinox".

The crew of the USS Voyager believe they're the only Starfleet vessel in the Delta Quadrant until they find the USS Equinox, five years into their journey home. Captain Rudolph Ransom (John Savage) and the Equinox crew have had a harder time in the Delta Quadrant than Voyager, with more damage, fewer starting resources, and fewer opportunities to make friends along the way. Ransom's survival tactics include sacrificing innocent nucleogenic life forms for a more efficient form of fuel, which Janeway finds hard to stomach, and decides that Ransom needs to be held accountable for defying Federation ideals, regardless of how badly the Equinox is damaged.

Although Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) suggests that the Equinox might be in the Delta Quadrant on a rescue mission to find Voyager, the USS Equinox's specs don't fit the profile of a starship that would be assigned to a long-range mission. The explanation of how the Equinox arrived in the Delta Quadrant in the first place seems fairly simple, because Captain Ransom tells Janeway that the Equinox was also abducted by the Caretaker , just like Voyager, but the Equinox has only been in the Delta Quadrant for 2 years, and Janeway destroyed the Caretaker's array 5 years earlier.

Seven of Nine

Debuts in star trek: voyager season 4, episode 1 "scorpion, part 2".

When Captain Kathryn Janeway allies with the Borg in order to secure safe passage across Borg space, Janeway refuses the cursory assimilation that the Borg want to use to communicate with Janeway and Voyager's crew, and instead requests a speaker for the Borg, citing the existence of Locutus (Patrick Stewart) as precedent. Seven of Nine , Tertiary Adjunct of Unimatrix 01, is selected as the Borg drone to act as liaison between the Collective and Voyager, likely because Seven of Nine had once been a member of Species 5168, like most of Voyager's crew -- in other words, human.

Voyager season 5, episodes 15 & 16, "Dark Frontier" provides even more detail of the Hansens' fateful journey.

After Seven's link with the Collective is severed, more information about Seven's human origin comes to light. In Voyager season 4, episode 6 "The Raven", when Voyager nears the Hansens' ship, the USS Raven, memories of Seven's early life surface, revealing that Seven had been six-year-old human Annika Hansen , the daughter of Magnus Hansen (Kirk Baily) and Erin Hansen (Laura Stepp), Federation scientists who were studying the Borg when they were assimilated. Voyager season 5, episodes 15 & 16, "Dark Frontier" provides even more detail of the Hansens' fateful journey, showing the Raven arriving in the Delta Quadrant by following a Borg Cube through a transwarp conduit.

10 Ways USS Voyager Changed In Star Treks Delta Quadrant

Star Trek: Voyager links back to the greater Star Trek universe with people and starships from the Alpha Quadrant. Connections to the familiar were especially important early on, because Voyager 's place in the Star Trek franchise was established and aided by the legitimacy these finds offered. Later, when the USS Voyager used the Hirogen communications array to communicate with Starfleet Command, links back to the Alpha Quadrant were plentiful again, not only to prove that the USS Voyager was closer to home, but to help Star Trek: Voyager maintain connections to Star Trek and carry the franchise in its final years.

Star Trek: Voyager is available to stream on Paramount+.

VOY Season 2

  • View history
  • 3 Background information
  • 4.1 Starring
  • 4.2 Also starring
  • 4.3 Guest and co-stars
  • 4.4.1 Uncredited
  • 5 Media releases
  • 6 External links

Episodes [ ]

Summary [ ].

Recurrent themes of tension and mistrust between the Starfleet and Maquis crews , although largely resolved in the season one episode " Learning Curve ", once again resurface in " Maneuvers " and " Meld ". Inter-crew relations are brought to a head while under intense, continuous attack by the Kazon in " Alliances ", and when Janeway is cajoled into initiating a Maquis-led idea of a deal between the USS Voyager and the warring Kazon factions, narrowly averted disaster is enough to quell the two crews into a marriage of Starfleet ideals and ethics. Indeed, increased and more dramatic conflict between Voyager and the Kazon is the main feature of the second season, aided and abetted as the Kazon are by the vengefully villainous and by now, more Cardassian -looking Seska . Her vendetta against Janeway brings Voyager to the brink of destruction more than once during the season in " Maneuvers ", " Alliances ", and " Investigations ", and culminates in the season finale " Basics, Part I " when Voyager 's crew is marooned by Seska and Culluh of the Kazon-Nistrim on a world inhabited by creatures and prehistoric humanoids.

Alongside the Seska/Kazon story arc of the second season sits another spy in Voyager 's ranks. Michael Jonas , a disillusioned former Maquis crewmember assigned to engineering , is revealed to have been secretly communicating with Seska as she attempts to seize control of Voyager . Events leading up to the exposure of Jonas traverse the entire middle of the season, as does Tom Paris ' apparent malcontent and ultimate decision to leave Voyager (revealed in " Investigations " as an attempt by Tuvok and Janeway to ascertain who the spy is).

With Seska and the conflict with the Kazon as central themes, the rest of the season continues to develop the main characters, and more particularly their relationships with each other. Of singular note is the birth (in " Deadlock ") of Ensign Samantha Wildman 's baby, Naomi , but firm bonds and friendships develop between individual crew members as the series continues to evolve and find its feet. A connection between Paris and B'Elanna Torres is hinted at as she confides past mistakes to him and communicates concern at his increasingly errant behavior in " Dreadnought ". Paris also finally makes peace with Neelix when forced to work with him to ensure their survival in " Parturition ". Kes and The Doctor 's relationship solidifies in " Elogium " and " Lifesigns ", and Kes's trust in Tuvok is pivotal when dealing with her burgeoning and uncontrollable mental abilities in " Cold Fire ". Tuvok and Neelix continue to make the perfect "odd couple", but their pairing takes on special significance when a transporter accident fuses them into a single being in " Tuvix ". Finally and conclusively, Janeway and Chakotay find a common understanding, and any allusion to a romantic interest between the two is finally laid to rest in " Resolutions ".

A few of these relationships, though in their infancy in season two, would go on to become increasingly important as the series moved on.

Background information [ ]

  • This season was broadcast concurrently with Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Season 4 .
  • Four episodes – " Projections ", " Elogium ", " Twisted ", and " The 37's " – were filmed as part of the first season , but were held over to air during this season. In the UK, these four episodes were originally screened and released on video as part of season 1, with " Initiations " and " Non Sequitur " beginning season 2.
  • Discounting the episodes that were moved from the first season to this season, filming on this season began on 11 July 1995 . ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 8 )
  • Four episodes produced during this season were intentionally kept back for the third season . ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 169) These episodes were " Sacred Ground ", " False Profits ", " Flashback " and " Basics, Part II ". ( Star Trek: Communicator  issue 108 , p. 19)
  • Characters which ' crossover ' from other incarnations of Star Trek : William T. Riker and Q in " Death Wish ".

Credits [ ]

VOY Season 2 cast

Season 2 cast

Starring [ ]

  • Kate Mulgrew as Captain Kathryn Janeway

Also starring [ ]

  • Robert Beltran as Commander Chakotay
  • Roxann Biggs-Dawson as Lieutenant B'Elanna Torres
  • Jennifer Lien as Kes
  • Robert Duncan McNeill as Lieutenant Tom Paris
  • Ethan Phillips as Neelix
  • Robert Picardo as The Doctor
  • Tim Russ as Lieutenant Tuvok
  • Garrett Wang as Ensign Harry Kim

Guest and co-stars [ ]

  • VOY Season 2 performers
  • Gene Roddenberry
  • Rick Berman
  • Michael Piller
  • Jeri Taylor
  • Jerry Goldsmith
  • Brad Yacobian ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Kenneth Biller ("Dreadnought” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Wendy Neuss ("Projections” – “The 37's")
  • Brannon Braga ("Projections” – “The 37's")
  • Merri Howard (credited as Merri D. Howard beginning with "Deadlock")
  • Peter Lauritson ("Projections” – “The 37's")
  • Wendy Neuss ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")
  • David Livingston ("Projections” – “The 37's")
  • Peter Lauritson ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Brannon Braga ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Kenneth Biller ("Projections” – “Meld")
  • Paul Baillargeon ("Lifesigns")
  • David Bell ("Projections", "Persistence of Vision", "Meld", "The Thaw")
  • Jay Chattaway ("Twisted", "Non Sequitur", "Maneuvers", "Death Wish", "Threshold", "Investigations", "Innocence", "Tuvix")
  • Dennis McCarthy ("Elogium", "The 37's", "Initiations", "Parturition", "Tattoo", "Cold Fire", "Resistance", "Prototype", "Alliances", "Dreadnought", "Deadlock", "Resolutions", "Basics, Part I")

Director of Photography

  • Marvin V. Rush , ASC ("Projections” – “Deadlock", "Tuvix” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Douglas H. Knapp ("Innocence” – “The Thaw")

Production Designer

  • Richard D. James
  • Daryl Baskin (every third episode after and including "Twisted")
  • Tom Benko , ACE (every third episode after and including "Elogium")
  • Robert Lederman (every third episode after and including "Projections")

Unit Production Manager

  • Brad Yacobian

First Assistant Directors

  • Jerry Fleck (even-numbered episodes from "Elogium" through "Innocence")
  • Arlene Fukai ("Tuvix")
  • Louis Race ("Basics, Part I")
  • Adele Simmons (odd-numbered episodes)

Second Assistant Directors

  • Michael DeMeritt ("The Thaw", "Tuvix")
  • Arlene Fukai ("Projections” – “Innocence", "Resolutions", "Basics, Part I")
  • Junie Lowry-Johnson , CSA

Original Casting

  • Nan Dutton , CSA

Casting Executive

  • Helen Mossler , CSA

Costume Designer

  • Robert Blackman

Set Decorators

  • Leslie Frankenheimer ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Jim Mees ("Projections” – “The 37's")

Visual Effects Producer

Visual Effects Supervisors

  • Joe Bauer ("Resolutions")
  • Ronald B. Moore (even-numbered episodes)
  • David Stipes (odd-numbered episodes from "Projections" through "Deadlock")
  • Edward L. Williams ("The Thaw")

Post Production Supervisor

  • Dawn Velazquez

Supervising Editor

  • J.P. Farrell

Scenic Art Supervisor/Technical Consultant

  • Michael Okuda ("Projections” – “Deadlock")

Scenic Art Consultant

  • Michael Okuda ("Innocence” – “Basics, Part I")

Senior Illustrator/Technical Consultant

  • Rick Sternbach

Make-Up Designed and Supervised by

  • Michael Westmore

Art Director

  • Michael L. Mayer

Set Designer

  • Louise Dorton

Assistant Editors

  • Lisa De Moraes ("Tuvix")
  • James A. Garrett ("The Thaw", "Basics, Part I")
  • Eugene Wood ("Resolutions")

Visual Effects Coordinators

  • Michael Backauskas ("Elogium", "The 37's")
  • Joe Bauer (odd-numbered episodes except "Resolutions")
  • Arthur J. Codron (even-numbered episodes from "Non Sequitur" through "Basics, Part I")
  • Ziad Seirafi ("Resolutions")

Visual Effects Series Coordinator

  • Edward L. Williams (all episodes except "The Thaw")

Visual Effects Associates

  • Arthur J. Codron ("Projections” – “The 37's")
  • Cheryl Gluckstern ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")

Script Supervisor

  • Cosmo Genovese

Special Effects

  • Dick Brownfield

Property Master

Construction Coordinator

Scenic Artists

  • Wendy Drapanas (even-numbered episodes)
  • Jim Magdaleno (even-numbered episodes from "Projections" through "Maneuvers"; "The Thaw")

Junior Illustrator

  • Jim Magdaleno (even-numbered episodes from "Prototype" through "Resolutions", except for "The Thaw")

Video Coordinator

  • Denise Okuda

Hair Designers

  • Suzan Bagdadi ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Josée Normand ("Projections” – “The 37's")

Make-Up Artists

  • Tina Hoffman ("Elogium” – “The 37's", "Non Sequitur” – “Persistence of Vision", "Cold Fire” – “Resistance", "Death Wish” – “Threshold", "Dreadnought” – “Lifesigns", "Innocence", "The Thaw", "Basics, Part I")
  • Gil Mosko ("Innocence” – “Tuvix")
  • Greg Nelson ("Projections", "Twisted” – “Initiations", "Parturition” – “Tattoo", "Maneuvers” – “Prototype", "Alliances” – “Meld", "Investigations” – “Deadlock", "The Thaw” – “Resolutions")
  • Mark Shostrom ("Projections", "Elogium", "The 37's” – “Non Sequitur", "Persistence of Vision” – “Cold Fire", "Resistance” – “Death Wish", "Threshold” – “Dreadnought", "Lifesigns", "Deadlock", "Tuvix” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Scott Wheeler ("Projections” – “Twisted", "Initiations” – “Parturition", "Tattoo” – “Maneuvers", "Prototype” – “Alliances", "Meld” – “Investigations", "Deadlock", "Innocence", "Resolutions", "Basics, Part I")

Hair Stylists

  • Karen Asano-Myers ("Projections", "Twisted", "Initiations” – “Parturition", odd-numbered episodes from "Tattoo" through "Resolutions")
  • Laura Connolly (even-numbered episodes from "Persistence of Vision" through "Basics, Part I")
  • Shawn McKay ("Elogium", "The 37's")
  • Patricia Miller ("Projections” – “The 37's")
  • Barbara Minster ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")

Wardrobe Supervisors

  • Camille Argus ("Projections", "Twisted", even-numbered episodes from "Non Sequitur'" through "Basics, Part I")
  • Carol Kunz ("Elogium", "The 37's", odd-numbered episodes from "Initiations" through "Resolutions")

Sound Mixer

  • Alan Bernard , CAS

Camera Operators

  • Joe Chess , SOC ("Projections” – “The 37's")
  • Doug Knapp , SOC ("Initiations” – “Deadlock", "Tuvix” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Ron E. High , SOC ("Innocence", "The Thaw")

Chief Lighting Technician

First Company Grips

  • Randy Burgess ("Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")
  • Bob Sordal ("Projections” – “The 37's")

Key Costumers

  • Matt Hoffman ("Elogium", "The 37's", odd-numbered episodes from "Initiations" through "Resolutions")
  • Kimberley Shull ("Projections", "Twisted", even-numbered episodes from "Persistence of Vision" through "Basics, Part I")
  • Jamie Thomas ("Projections", "Twisted", even-numbered episodes from "Non Sequitur" through "Basics, Part I")
  • Tom Siegel ("Elogium", "The 37's", "Initiations” – “Parturition", odd-numbered episodes from "Tattoo" through "Resolutions")

Music Editor

  • Gerry Sackman

Supervising Sound Editor

  • Bill Wistrom

Supervising Sound Effects Editor

  • Jim Wolvington

Sound Editors

  • Miguel Rivera
  • Masanobu Tomita
  • Ruth Adelman

Post Production Sound by

  • Modern Sound

Visual Effects Assistant Editor

  • Elizabeth Castro ("The Thaw" – "Basics, Part I")

Production Coordinator

  • Diane Overdiek

Post Production Coordinators

  • Cara Colombini ("Initiations" – "Death Wish")
  • Cheryl Gluckstern ("Projections" – "The 37's")
  • April Rossi ("Alliances" – "Basics, Part I")

Production Associates

  • Kristine Fernandes ("Projections" – "The 37's")
  • Zayra Cabot ("Projections" – "The Thaw")
  • David Rossi
  • Sandra Sena
  • Eric A. Stillwell ("Basics, Part I")

Pre-Production Coordinator

  • Lolita Fatjo

Stunt Coordinator

  • Dennis Madalone ("Projections", "Elogium", "The 37's” – “Persistence of Vision", "Cold Fire” – “Resistance", "Alliances", "Threshold", "Investigations", "Deadlock", "The Thaw", "Basics, Part I")

Location Manager

  • Lisa White ("The 37's", "Initiations", "Tattoo", "Death Wish", "Resolutions", "Basics, Part I")

Science Consultant

  • Andre Bormanis

Main Title Design by

  • Santa Barbara Studios

Colorization

  • CST Entertainment, Inc. ("Cold Fire")

Filmed with

  • Panavision Cameras and Lenses

Motion Control Photography

Digital Optical Effects

  • Pacific Ocean Post ("Projections", "Elogium", "The 37's")
  • Digital Magic ("Twisted", "Initiations” – “Basics, Part I")

Special Video Compositing

  • CIS, Hollywood

Computer Generated Imagery

  • Pacific Ocean Post ("Threshold")

Computer Animation

  • Amblin Imaging ("Threshold")
  • Santa Barbara Studios ("Elogium", "The 37's", "Cold Fire", "Death Wish", "Lifesigns")
  • VisionArt Design & Animation ("Non Sequitur", "Persistence of Vision", "Cold Fire", "Dreadnought")

Editing Facilities

  • Unitel Video

Computer Generated Effects

  • Amblin Imaging ("Twisted", "Parturition", "Prototype", "Investigations")
  • Digital Muse ("Deadlock", "Innocence", "Basics, Part I")
  • Foundation Imaging ("Basics, Part I")
  • VisionArt Design & Animation ("Basics, Part I")

Uncredited [ ]

  • John Agalsoff – Boom Operator/Sound Cable Person ("Resistance")
  • Gail Arias – Choreographer ("Lifesigns")
  • Jamie Arias – Choreographer ("Lifesigns")
  • Karen Asano-Myers – Hair Stylist ("Resistance")
  • John Baldwin – Animal Trainer: Critters of the Cinema ("Elogium")
  • David Bernard – Sound Cable Person ("Resistance")
  • Ben Betts – Video Playback Operator ("Resistance")
  • T. Blue – Second Unit Sound Cable Person ("Resistance")
  • Roger Bourse – Lamp Operator ("Resistance")
  • Sal Butera – Pool Technical Adviser ("Twisted", "Non Sequitur", "Meld", "Lifesigns", "Tuvix")
  • Ron Calvaruzo – Extra Grip/Second Unit Second Grip ("Resistance")
  • Ian Christenberry – Lamp Operator ("Resistance")
  • Richard Chronister – Special Effects Artist ("Resistance")
  • Brian Cooper – Lamp Operator ("Resistance")
  • Dick D'Angelo – Swing Gang ("Resistance")
  • Michael DeMeritt – Second Assistant Director ("Resistance")
  • Jay Devlin – Extra Grip/Second Unit Crab Dolly Grip ("Resistance")
  • Jon Djanrelian – Craft Service ("Resistance")
  • Doug Drexler – Model Maker ("Lifesigns")
  • Kathryn S. Eisenstein – Original Casting
  • Robert Eyslee – Lamp Operator/Assistant Chief Lighting Technician ("Resistance")
  • Danny Feld – Still Photographer ("Resistance")
  • Anthony Fredrickson – Model Maker ("Lifesigns")
  • Tom J. Furginson – Swing Gnag ("Resistance")
  • Peter Hapke – Camera Operator/Extra Camera Operator ("Resistance")
  • Herrera – Set Security ("Resistance")
  • Rick Hester – Special Effects Laborer ("Resistance")
  • Ron E. High – Camera Operator/Extra Camera Operator ("Resistance")
  • Matt Hoffman – Set Costumer ("Resistance")
  • Nancy J. Hvasta Leonardi – Makeup Artist ("Tuvix", "Resolutions", "Basics, Part I")
  • Chris Ishii – First Assistant Camera Operator ("Resistance")
  • Amanda Karnes – Special Effects Artist ("Resistance")
  • C. Lee – Hair Stylist ("Resistance")
  • Dinah LeHoven – Second Assistant Director ("Resistance")
  • David Lombardi – Extra Costumer ("Resistance")
  • Scott McKnight – Assistant Chief Lighting Technician/Second Unit Chief Lighting Technician ("Resistance")
  • Scott Middleton – Second Assistant Camera Operator ("Resistance")
  • Miller – Sound Cable Person/Boom Operator ("Resistance")
  • Tom Moore – Extra Grip/Second Grip ("Resistance")
  • Gil Mosko – Lab Tech Makeup Artist ("Resistance")
  • John Nesterowicz – Set Assistant Property Person/Second Unit Property Master ("Resistance")
  • Frank O'Hea – Painter ("Resistance")
  • Dave Quashnick – Makeup Artist ("Resistance")
  • Erin Regan – Extra Costumer/Second Unit Costumer ("Resistance")
  • Greg Renta – Property Lead Person ("Resistance")
  • Charlie Russo – Set Property Person ("Resistance")
  • George Santo Pietro – Crab Dolly Grip ("Resistance")
  • Stu Satterfield – Transportation Captain ("Resistance")
  • Fernando Sepulveda – Property Lead Person ("Resistance")
  • David Sireika – Second Grip/Second Unit Key Grip ("Resistance")
  • Mark Stimson – Special Effects Artist ("Resistance")
  • Phil Stirling – Sound Cable Person ("Resistance")
  • Michael Stradling – Extra Camera Assistant/Second Unit First Assistant Camera Operator ("Resistance")
  • Thomas E. Surprenant – Makeup Artist ("Resistance")
  • Ken Suzuki – Lamp Operator ("Resistance")
  • Karen Thomas-Kolakowski – Animal Trainer: Critters of the Cinema ("Elogium")
  • Wil Thoms – Special Effects Artist ("Resistance")
  • Ira Toles – Second Unit Video Playback Operator ("Resistance")
  • Pat Vitolla – Extra Grip ("Resistance")
  • Lazard Ward – Set Security ("Resistance")
  • R. Stephen Weber – Makeup Artist ("Resistance")
  • Scott Wheeler – Makeup Artist ("Resistance")
  • Wainani Young-Tomich – DGA Trainee ("Resistance")

Media releases [ ]

  • VOY Season 2 UK VHS
  • VOY Season 2 US VHS
  • VOY Season 2 DVD

External links [ ]

  • Star Trek: Voyager season 2 at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • Star Trek: Voyager Season Two Credits at StarTrek.com
  • Star Trek Voyager Season 2 episode reviews  at Ex Astris Scientia

JustWatch

Star Trek: Voyager - Season 2

Paramount Plus

Streaming in:

Paramount Plus Apple TV Channel

We checked for updates on 246 streaming services on April 27, 2024 at 6:20:50 AM. Something wrong? Let us know!

Streaming, rent, or buy Star Trek: Voyager – Season 2:

Currently you are able to watch "Star Trek: Voyager - Season 2" streaming on Paramount Plus, Paramount Plus Apple TV Channel , Paramount+ Amazon Channel, Paramount+ Roku Premium Channel or buy it as download on Apple TV, Vudu, Amazon Video, Google Play Movies.

Capt. Janeway and her crew encounter the Kazon and other new Delta Quadrant enemies as they continue the long, perilous journey back to Earth.

20 Episodes

S2 e1 - season 2, s2 e2 - initiations, s2 e3 - projections, s2 e4 - elogium, s2 e5 - non sequitur, s2 e6 - twisted, s2 e7 - parturition, s2 e8 - persistence of vision, s2 e9 - tattoo, s2 e10 - cold fire, s2 e11 - maneuvers, s2 e12 - resistance, s2 e13 - prototype, s2 e14 - alliances, s2 e15 - threshold, s2 e16 - meld, s2 e17 - dreadnought, s2 e18 - death wish, s2 e19 - lifesigns, s2 e20 - investigations, where does star trek: voyager rank today the justwatch daily streaming charts are calculated by user activity within the last 24 hours. this includes clicking on a streaming offer, adding a title to a watchlist, and marking a title as 'seen'. this includes data from ~1.3 million movie & tv show fans per day..

Streaming charts last updated: 5:19:39 AM, 04/27/2024

Star Trek: Voyager is 4277 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The TV show has moved up the charts by 914 places since yesterday. In the United States, it is currently more popular than Troy: Fall of a City but less popular than Cruise Ship Killers.

Streaming Charts The JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts are calculated by user activity within the last 24 hours. This includes clicking on a streaming offer, adding a title to a watchlist, and marking a title as 'seen'. This includes data from ~1.3 million movie & TV show fans per day.

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voyager episodes season 2

Star Trek: Voyager

voyager episodes season 2

Take Plex everywhere

NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft finally phones home after 5 months of no contact

On Saturday, April 5, Voyager 1 finally "phoned home" and updated its NASA operating team about its health.

An illustration of a spacecraft with a white disk in space.

NASA's interstellar explorer Voyager 1 is finally communicating with ground control in an understandable way again. On Saturday (April 20), Voyager 1 updated ground control about its health status for the first time in 5 months. While the Voyager 1 spacecraft still isn't sending valid science data back to Earth, it is now returning usable information about the health and operating status of its onboard engineering systems. 

Thirty-five years after its launch in 1977, Voyager 1 became the first human-made object to leave the solar system and enter interstellar space . It was followed out of our cosmic quarters by its space-faring sibling, Voyager 2 , six years later in 2018. Voyager 2, thankfully, is still operational and communicating well with Earth. 

The two spacecraft remain the only human-made objects exploring space beyond the influence of the sun. However, on Nov. 14, 2023, after 11 years of exploring interstellar space and while sitting a staggering 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometers) from Earth, Voyager 1's binary code — computer language composed of 0s and 1s that it uses to communicate with its flight team at NASA — stopped making sense.

Related: We finally know why NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft stopped communicating — scientists are working on a fix

In March, NASA's Voyager 1 operating team sent a digital "poke" to the spacecraft, prompting its flight data subsystem (FDS) to send a full memory readout back home.

This memory dump revealed to scientists and engineers that the "glitch" is the result of a corrupted code contained on a single chip representing around 3% of the FDS memory. The loss of this code rendered Voyager 1's science and engineering data unusable.

People, many of whom are wearing matching blue shirts, celebrating at a conference table.

The NASA team can't physically repair or replace this chip, of course, but what they can do is remotely place the affected code elsewhere in the FDS memory. Though no single section of the memory is large enough to hold this code entirely, the team can slice it into sections and store these chunks separately. To do this, they will also have to adjust the relevant storage sections to ensure the addition of this corrupted code won't cause those areas to stop operating individually, or working together as a whole. In addition to this, NASA staff will also have to ensure any references to the corrupted code's location are updated.

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—  Voyager 2: An iconic spacecraft that's still exploring 45 years on

—  NASA's interstellar Voyager probes get software updates beamed from 12 billion miles away

—  NASA Voyager 2 spacecraft extends its interstellar science mission for 3 more years

On April 18, 2024, the team began sending the code to its new location in the FDS memory. This was a painstaking process, as a radio signal takes 22.5 hours to traverse the distance between Earth and Voyager 1, and it then takes another 22.5 hours to get a signal back from the craft. 

By Saturday (April 20), however, the team confirmed their modification had worked. For the first time in five months, the scientists were able to communicate with Voyager 1 and check its health. Over the next few weeks, the team will work on adjusting the rest of the FDS software and aim to recover the regions of the system that are responsible for packaging and returning vital science data from beyond the limits of the solar system.

Join our Space Forums to keep talking space on the latest missions, night sky and more! And if you have a news tip, correction or comment, let us know at: [email protected].

Robert Lea

Robert Lea is a science journalist in the U.K. whose articles have been published in Physics World, New Scientist, Astronomy Magazine, All About Space, Newsweek and ZME Science. He also writes about science communication for Elsevier and the European Journal of Physics. Rob holds a bachelor of science degree in physics and astronomy from the U.K.’s Open University. Follow him on Twitter @sciencef1rst.

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  • Robb62 'V'ger must contact the creator. Reply
  • Holy HannaH! Couldn't help but think that "repair" sounded extremely similar to the mechanics of DNA and the evolution of life. Reply
  • Torbjorn Larsson *Applause* indeed, thanks to the Voyager teams for the hard work! Reply
  • SpaceSpinner I notice that the article says that it has been in space for 35 years. Either I have gone back in time 10 years, or their AI is off by 10 years. V-*ger has been captured! Reply
Admin said: On Saturday, April 5, Voyager 1 finally "phoned home" and updated its NASA operating team about its health. The interstellar explorer is back in touch after five months of sending back nonsense data. NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft finally phones home after 5 months of no contact : Read more
evw said: I'm incredibly grateful for the persistence and dedication of the Voyagers' teams and for the amazing accomplishments that have kept these two spacecrafts operational so many years beyond their expected lifetimes. V-1 was launched when I was 25 years young; I was nearly delirious with joy. Exploring the physical universe captivated my attention while I was in elementary school and has kept me mesmerized since. I'm very emotional writing this note, thinking about what amounts to a miracle of technology and longevity in my eyes. BRAVO!!! THANK YOU EVERYONE PAST & PRESENT!!!
  • EBairead I presume it's Fortran. Well done all. Reply
SpaceSpinner said: I notice that the article says that it has been in space for 35 years. Either I have gone back in time 10 years, or their AI is off by 10 years. V-*ger has been captured!
EBairead said: I presume it's Fortran. Well done all.
  • View All 11 Comments

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voyager episodes season 2

Screen Rant

Resident alien season 4 already set up the show's next best sci-fi guest star.

Resident Alien has already had several sci-fi stars appear in guest roles, but the show's next big cameo could come from an unexpected place.

  • Resident Alien season 4 may feature a cameo from one of the show's key figures, tying in with the Resident Alien 's history of sci-fi stars.
  • The involvement of Star Trek veteran Robert Duncan McNeill could add more depth and excitement to Resident Alien .
  • McNeill's career trend of directing and appearing in other projects makes him a strong candidate for a memorable Resident Alien cameo.

Resident Alien has already starred several sci-fi icons, but Resident Alien season 4 could feature a cameo from a key figure who has been working on the Syfy show all along. Resident Alien 's cameos from sci-fi stars range from cult heroes to figures from smash-hit blockbusters. The irreverent Alan Tudyk-led comedy-drama uses the exciting additions to the Resident Alien cast in various ways, with some becoming mainstays on the show while others only have brief appearances. The acting history of a key member of the Resident Alien team would make him perfect to star in a scene or two.

Resident Alien season 4 hasn't yet been confirmed to be on the way, but should the story of Harry Vanderspeigle continue, it would be reasonable to assume that the show would carry on its trend of featuring guest actors with ties to big sci-fi franchises. If so, the stars in question could come from a variety of places. However, Resident Alien season 4 could mark the debut of a behind-the-scenes figure whose career trajectory has shifted slightly since his biggest role.

Resident Alien Season 3 Ending Explained: What Happened To Harry?

Star trek actor robert duncan mcneill is involved with resident alien season 4, ncneill has worked behind the scenes of resident alien since the show began.

Robert Duncan McNeill's most famous role was Lt. Tom Paris in all seven seasons of Star Trek: Voyager . While he doesn't star in Resident Alien , McNeill is an executive producer, director, and has earned his first career writing credit with the show. Paris was Voyager 's charismatic helmsman whose story featured a heartwarming redemption arc. While he wasn't one of the most iconic Star Trek characters, he played a huge role in the ensemble that was Star Trek: Voyager 's cast . As such, McNeill's status in the Star Trek fandom would make him a great choice for a Resident Alien cameo .

Resident Alien Season 3's Genius Star Wars Reference Has Huge Implications For Season 4

McNeill wouldn't be the first Star Trek actor to appear in Resident Alien , with George Takei making a voice cameo in three episodes of Resident Alien season 2. With McNeill's main career focus now taking place behind the camera, his most recent role was also a voice cameo - in Star Trek: Lower Decks . Before then, his last live-action acting role came in 2012, when he appeared in a single episode of Chuck .

McNeill has a second character in the Star Trek universe called Nicholas "Nick" Locarno. The shared face of both characters is referenced heavily in Star Trek: Lower Decks .

McNeill's Resident Alien Cameo Would Follow The Actor's Career Trend

The voyager star has appeared in other projects he's directed.

While McNeill isn't currently a member of the Resident Alien cast, his cameo appearances in other projects are a promising sign. For example, he directed four episodes of Star Trek: Voyager - which he also starred in. In addition, he also directed 21 episodes of Chuck , one of which he made an appearance in as an operative. So, McNeill's talents both behind and in front of the camera, paired with his strong association with one of the biggest sci-fi franchises of all time, make him a viable candidate for the next big cameo in Resident Alien .

Resident Alien seasons 1-3 are available to stream on Peacock. Star Trek: Voyager seasons 1-7 are on Paramount+.

Resident Alien

*Availability in US

Not available

A television adaptation of the comic book series, Resident Alien is a sci-fi comedy that stars Alan Tudyk as an alien who crashes on Earth with one mission - destroy humanity to save the planet. When Tudyk's character takes the identity of a doctor, he arrives at a small town and begins to act the role preparing his plan. As time passes, he develops human emotions against his will - but his plans are further complicated when he meets the son of the mayor - who can see his actual appearance.

  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews

Initiations

  • Episode aired Sep 4, 1995

Robert Beltran and Patrick Kilpatrick in Star Trek: Voyager (1995)

Chakotay is captured by a young Kazon who is undergoing a manhood ritual. Chakotay is captured by a young Kazon who is undergoing a manhood ritual. Chakotay is captured by a young Kazon who is undergoing a manhood ritual.

  • Winrich Kolbe
  • Gene Roddenberry
  • Rick Berman
  • Michael Piller
  • Kate Mulgrew
  • Robert Beltran
  • Roxann Dawson
  • 15 User reviews
  • 5 Critic reviews

Jennifer Lien, Kate Mulgrew, Tarik Ergin, and Tim Russ in Star Trek: Voyager (1995)

  • Capt. Kathryn Janeway

Robert Beltran

  • Cmdr. Chakotay

Roxann Dawson

  • Lt. B'Elanna Torres
  • (as Roxann Biggs-Dawson)

Jennifer Lien

  • Lt. Tom Paris

Ethan Phillips

  • Ensign Harry Kim

Aron Eisenberg

  • (as Tim de Zarn)

Majel Barrett

  • Voyager Computer

Tarik Ergin

  • (uncredited)
  • Command Officer
  • Voyager Ops Lt. j.g.
  • Ensign Culhane
  • Voyager Ops Officer
  • Michael Piller (showrunner)
  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

Did you know

  • Trivia The episode was partly written as an attempt to remedy the fact that Voyager's producers felt Chakotay had been underused in the first season.
  • Goofs Chakotay does not have his medicine bag on him when he is beamed back to Voyager. It was either on the Kazon ship or in the shuttle that exploded, yet he uses it when he is back on Voyager.

Kar : I know that you're in my territory. And if you want to live to become that wrinkled old man, you're going to have to do what *I* say.

Chakotay : Well, it looks like you just saved my life. Twice more and we'll be even.

  • Soundtracks Star Trek: Voyager - Main Title Written by Jerry Goldsmith Performed by Jay Chattaway

User reviews 15

  • makiefer-87128
  • Mar 18, 2024
  • September 4, 1995 (United States)
  • United States
  • Official Site
  • Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park - 10700 W. Escondido Canyon Rd., Agua Dulce, California, USA
  • Paramount Television
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro

Technical specs

  • Runtime 46 minutes
  • Dolby Digital

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Star Trek: Voyager – Season 2, Episode 2

Initiations, where to watch, star trek: voyager — season 2, episode 2.

Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 2, Episode 2 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV.

More Like This

Cast & crew.

Kate Mulgrew

Capt. Kathryn Janeway

Robert Beltran

Roxann Dawson

B'Elanna Torres

Robert Duncan McNeill

Jennifer Lien

Ethan Phillips

Episode Info

IMAGES

  1. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 2 Episode 18: Death Wish

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  4. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 2 Episode 8: Persistence Of Vision

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  5. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 2 Episode 15: Threshold

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  6. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 2 Episode 21: Deadlock

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VIDEO

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  6. 3 MINUTES AGO: Voyager 2 Recorded an Unknown Force In Deep Space

COMMENTS

  1. Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995-2001)

    S2.E7 ∙ Parturition. Mon, Oct 16, 1995. After a disagreement over Kes, Neelix and Tom Paris are trapped together on an alien planet and must work together so that they and their alien baby ward can survive. 6.4/10 (1.9K) Rate. Watch options.

  2. List of Star Trek: Voyager episodes

    This is an episode list for the science-fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager, which aired on UPN from January 1995 through May 2001. This is the fifth television program in the Star Trek franchise, and comprises a total of 168 (DVD and original broadcast) or 172 (syndicated) episodes over the show's seven seasons. Four episodes of Voyager ("Caretaker", "Dark Frontier", "Flesh and Blood ...

  3. Star Trek: Voyager

    A handful of episodes originally slated to conclude Star Trek: Voyager season 1 instead lead off season 2 in rather ho-hum fashion, excepting maybe "The 37s" which too was marred by the awful characterization of Fred Noonan. ... Star Trek noobs and hardcore fans alike could have some difficultly trawling through the episodes of season 2, as ...

  4. Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995-2001)

    Mon, Feb 6, 1995. Searching to replenish their dilithium supplies, Voyager encounters the Vidiians who assault other races for their organs. Neelix is attacked and his lungs taken. Now it's a race against time to retrieve the stolen lungs and save his life. 7.1/10 (2.2K)

  5. Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995-2001)

    Wed, Feb 17, 1999. Aboard the Delta Flyer, Janeway leads Tuvok, Paris and the Doctor on a rescue mission to retrieve Seven from the Borg Queen. whose treatment of Seven is markedly atypical. 8.5/10 (2.2K) Rate.

  6. Initiations (Star Trek: Voyager)

    Star Trek: Voyager. ) " Initiations " is the second episode of the second season, and eighteenth episode overall of the American science fiction television program Star Trek: Voyager. The episode originally aired on September 4, 1995, and tells the story of Commander Chakotay 's capture at the hands of a young Kazon.

  7. Star Trek: Voyager Season 2 Episodes

    S2 E26. May 20, 1996. Seska lures Chakotay and Voyager to her, claiming that Maj Cullah is going to kill the baby she created using Chakotay's DNA, once he learns that it isn't his. Chakotay feels compelled to rescue his child, while all the time, he fears it could be a trap. Every available episode for Season 2 of Star Trek: Voyager on Paramount+.

  8. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 2

    Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 2 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV. Kathryn Janeway is the captain of a starship that is lost in space ...

  9. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 2

    46min. TV-G. After contracting a deadly virus, Janeway and Chakotay are forced into exile on a planet that shields the effects of the fatal disease. Free trial of Paramount+ or buy. Show all 26 episodes. In Season 2, the crew suffers from hallucinations and ferrets out a traitor on board.

  10. 8 Alpha Quadrant Things Star Trek: Voyager Found In Delta Quadrant

    Star Trek: Voyager Season 2, Episode 1 "The 37s" The discovery of a 1936 Ford truck, seemingly disconnected from any parent vehicle, leads the USS Voyager to a nearby Class-L planet, where they ...

  11. VOY Season 2

    Recurrent themes of tension and mistrust between the Starfleet and Maquis crews, although largely resolved in the season one episode "Learning Curve", once again resurface in "Maneuvers" and "Meld". Inter-crew relations are brought to a head while under intense, continuous attack by the Kazon in "Alliances", and when Janeway is cajoled into initiating a Maquis-led idea of a deal between the ...

  12. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 2 Episode 1: Star Trek: Voyager

    After discovering a 1936 Ford truck floating in space, Voyager follows an AM-band SOS call to a nearby planet. Watch Full Episodes . Full Episodes. Season 2. Season 1 ; Season 2 ; Season 3 ; Season 4 ; Season 5 ; Season 6 ; Season 7 ; SUBSCRIBE . S2 E1 ...

  13. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 2 Episode 4: Star Trek: Voyager

    Elogium. Help. S2 E4 46M TV-PG. When the crew of Voyager investigate a cluster of space-borne life forms, Kes prematurely enters a stage in her life known as the "Elogium." This is the only time in her life when she can conceive a child.

  14. Star Trek: Voyager Season 2

    Streaming, rent, or buy Star Trek: Voyager - Season 2: Currently you are able to watch "Star Trek: Voyager - Season 2" streaming on Paramount Plus, Paramount Plus Apple TV Channel , Paramount+ Amazon Channel, Paramount+ Roku Premium Channel or buy it as download on Apple TV, Vudu, Amazon Video, Google Play Movies.

  15. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 2, Episode 1

    Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 2, Episode 1 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV. The Voyager lands on a planet where an old Earth aircraft ...

  16. Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995-2001)

    Star Trek: Voyager: Created by Rick Berman, Michael Piller, Jeri Taylor. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill. Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.

  17. Persistence of Vision (Star Trek: Voyager)

    "Persistence of Vision" is the 24th episode of Star Trek: Voyager, the eighth episode in the second season. This science fiction television episode, part of the Star Trek franchise, is several hundred years in the future in Earth's galaxy.A Federation starship is stranded on the other side of the Galaxy, and its warp drive will take decades to return.

  18. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 2, Episode 9

    Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 2, Episode 9 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV. An away team's encounter with hostile natives reminds ...

  19. Watch Star Trek: Voyager · Season 2 Full Episodes Online

    Where to watch Star Trek: Voyager · Season 2 starring Kate Mulgrew, Robert Picardo, Roxann Dawson.

  20. Parturition (Star Trek: Voyager)

    "Parturition" is the 23rd episode of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager, airing on the UPN network. It is the seventh episode of the second season and is the second of three Voyager episodes directed by Star Trek: The Next Generation castmember Jonathan Frakes (William Riker).. The series follows the adventures of the Federation starship Voyager during its ...

  21. NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft finally phones home after 5 months of no

    Voyager 2, thankfully, is still operational and communicating well with Earth. ... 'Star Trek: Discovery' season 5 episode 5 'Mirrors' is a quality installment, but weighed down by another anchor ...

  22. Resident Alien Season 4 Already Set Up The Show's Next Best Sci-Fi

    McNeill wouldn't be the first Star Trek actor to appear in Resident Alien, with George Takei making a voice cameo in three episodes of Resident Alien season 2. With McNeill's main career focus now taking place behind the camera, his most recent role was also a voice cameo - in Star Trek: Lower Decks.Before then, his last live-action acting role came in 2012, when he appeared in a single ...

  23. "Star Trek: Voyager" Initiations (TV Episode 1995)

    Initiations: Directed by Winrich Kolbe. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Jennifer Lien. Chakotay is captured by a young Kazon who is undergoing a manhood ritual.

  24. Deadlock (Star Trek: Voyager)

    "Deadlock" is the 37th episode of Star Trek: Voyager, the 21st episode of the second season. In this television show, part of the Star Trek franchise, a Federation ship is stranded on the opposite side of the Galaxy as Earth in the late 2300s.On its way home the starship encounters many species of aliens and outer space phenomenon.

  25. When is 'Yellowstone' Season 5, Part 2 coming out?

    In June 2023, Sheridan commented on Costner's ultimate departure from the show during an interview with The Hollywood Reporter. "I'm disappointed," he said. "It truncates the closure of ...

  26. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 2, Episode 2

    Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 2, Episode 2 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV. Chakotay's shuttlecraft drifts into enemy territory and ...

  27. Watch CBS Evening News Season 2024 Episode 109: 4/23: CBS Evening News

    20min TV-PG. Former National Enquirer publisher details alleged "catch and kill" scheme in Trump trial; Scientists repair NASA's Voyager 1 from billions of miles away Air Date: Apr 23, 2024 ... Scientists repair NASA's Voyager 1 from billions of miles away Air Date: Apr 23, 2024 Weeknights on CBS . Full Episodes. 04/23/24 . 4/23: CBS Evening ...

  28. Alliances (Star Trek: Voyager)

    Star Trek: Voyager. ) " Alliances " is the 30th episode of American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager airing on the UPN network, the 14th episode in the second season . The series follows the adventures of the Federation starship Voyager during its journey home to Earth, having been stranded tens of thousands of light-years away.