Galileo's Odyssey: The Untold Star Trek Prop Saga 🚀
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- Опубліковано 14 лип 2024
- 🚀🛰️ Embark on an enthralling journey through the untold saga of the Galileo Shuttlecraft, a beacon of Star Trek history! Dive with us into the captivating story of this iconic Star Trek prop, witnessing its remarkable evolution from a studio model to a beloved piece of sci-fi memorabilia. In "Galileo's Odyssey: The Untold Star Trek Prop Saga," we unravel the mystery of its survival against all odds, delve into the rich history behind its creation, and celebrate the dedicated fans and experts who preserved its legacy. 🌌
Join us, fellow sci-fi enthusiasts, as we uncover behind-the-scenes secrets, explore urban legends, and marvel at the craftsmanship that brought the Galileo to life. This video is a treasure trove for anyone passionate about Star Trek memorabilia, the artistry of prop making, and the stories that bind us to the stars. 🖖
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#GalileoShuttlecraft #StarTrekHistory #SciFiJourney #BehindTheScenes #TrekkieCommunity #IconicProps #SpaceAdventure #UnveilingSecrets #SciFiEnthusiasts #TrekWorldExploration
#OriginalStarTrek #StarTrekSeries #StarTrekDocumentaries #IconicProps #StarTrekUniverse
⏱️⏱️VIDEO CHAPTERS⏱️⏱️:
00:00:00 - Introduction to the Galileo Shuttlecraft Restoration
00:04:50 - Design and Construction of the Galileo Shuttlecraft
00:09:21 - Challenges and Modifications Over the Years
00:13:15 - The Galileo Shuttlecraft in Star Trek Conventions
00:17:50 - Ownership Changes and Restoration Efforts
00:21:54 - Public Appearances and Museum Exhibits
00:26:10 - The Galileo Shuttlecraft's Journey Through Auctions
00:30:02 - Final Restoration and Current Status - Розваги
6.3k subs but a 222k video. Congrats man. That's the power of the algorithm paired with a really amazing video! I'm only a passing trek-fan but I loved every minute of this. I'm definitely going to have to check out the rest of your channel.
Hi Richard, thanks for the kind words. You are right, I seemed to have wandered into a sweet spot with UA-cam
Now it’s 247k! (7-1-22)
Nice!
My understanding is that The Galileo is now finally resting at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Glad to see the old girl finally made it. Now all can benefit. For the three years I had the pleasure of housing her I did my best at keeping her fresh in the 102 degree heat during the Coachella Valley summers. She was displayed to the public at the opening of Star Trek four at the Century theater in Palm Desert, California. Many people enjoyed it. It was covered by KESQ TV. She's preserved now for everyone to see. Godspeed Galileo! :)
Hi Carlos! I would love to chat with you about the Galileo. Please drop me a line at my email address JIM@WEIRDNASHVILLE.COM and I will email and explain.
Thanks for dropping in!
The Galileo is currently at the Intrepid Museum in New York City next to the Shuttle Enterprise.
Yes, sadly the Galileo is no longer here in Houston at JSC.
I was unaware it had been moved. At least it's in a place where it can be appreciated. Has anyone pictured her kn it's new place?
I'm from NYC. Where is the Shuttle Enterprise and her displayed? Only place big enough would be near JFK Airport.
It's just jaw dropping that with the fan base ST has that the Galileo has come this close to being scrap through the years. So good to know that she's safe and sound now. Thanks to all those that helped along the way.
I'm so glad she finally has a place where she can rest, be adored, watched over, be appreciated, and taken care of. The Galileo has earned it, and to all the people who helped her to get to this point by keeping her here, when she could have been scrapped many many years ago, do deserve our thanks. They might not have been able to restore her, but they kept her from complete destruction, till she could be fully restored.
The previous owners are very gun-shy of the internet now. Which is a tragedy, because there is so much they could tell us about their time with the Galileo. I have spoken to the last owner, and Carlos Rivera has comment on this video; but other than that I have not been able to chat with them.
If I get the chance, I would love to do a video of the events from their point of view.
I turned a 1997 Ford Aerostar Cargo Van into a good drive able likeness of the Galileo 7. Took me 5 years to get the front,rear and the drive pods right. I drove it for a few years. It was sold to a Trekkie collector, who still owns it and does drive it. The Aerostar normal front end was pretty close to the studio model to begin with. Using a neon light kit underneath, you had to look close to see any tires, when driving it in the dark. It looked like it was hovering just above the road. The Kentucky State Police stopped me many times, not believing what they were seeing. (BTW, The Aerostar van had the 4.0 V-6 with the odd all wheel drive those vans had and a 5 speed automatic Transmission, and could run on pure ethanol, E85 or normal 87 Octane gasoline.)
Neat! Got any pictures of it on a site?
@@davidb6576 it would be cool to see those images if they exist somewhere , , , ,I often thought a 1990s era minivan such as an Oldsmobile or a Toyota might be ripe to convert into a shuttlecraft from the Enterprise D TNG version, also on occasion Data used what's called a shuttlepod and the traffic cop vehicle called a Cushman would be prime cannidate to make into a SHUTTLEPOD , , ,🖖👽🖖
Totally awesome!!!
Any photos???
I would love to see photos of that.Do you have any?
Thanx! I loved the Galileo. 20 years ago I had a Ford Escort painted to look like the Galileo. I used 'Surak' for the name and called it a land shuttle. Markings and paint scheme were from Star Trek episodes.
Would love to see pic of that car
You could have also refered to it as an Escort Shuttle.
I bet it was a real chick magnet.
Time for electric car knock-off don't you think?
Please post a link to a picture!
Thank you so much for doing this great documentary about the Galileo. I am honored that you used my photos of the shuttlecraft from 1975, and very glad that I had my little Instamatic 126 with me that day to do so. I was on leave from the Air Force, and was visiting my friend Phil Broad, who I had gone to high school with. He told me about the Galileo at his friend's house, and asked if I'd like to go check it out. Duh! We jumped in my little green Datsun 1200 and headed down to Palos Verdes. One nice thing when I was there is that he did open it up so Phil and I could see inside. Unfortunately, I didn't have a flash cube, so taking a photo of the interior was not possible. However, it should be noted that he had also acquired one of the seats that was used in the Galileo, and his hope had been to reproduce those, and do the entire interior restoration. Of course that never happened, but it's nice to dream. In his backyard we also saw the Lost in Space B-9 robot that day, but I have no idea whatever happened to that. I've seen many reproduction of the B-9 over the years, but never again the original.
Hi Michelle! I am so glad you liked the video. I’ve seen quite a bit of Phil’s stuff in my research. I am humbled that you let me use your photos. I really do think they are far more important than any of the photos that were taken afterward. There is just so little documented. As I worked on this, I got to speak to a few people who were key players. And I really think that I may come back and revisit this same topic again in the not too distant future. I would love to do a small series of videos where each video just simply shared the story of the person who had ownership from their point of view. I mean, if you look at everything that’s been done (and I mean everything), it is absolutely crazy that no one has talked with Lynn, Adam, Steve, or Roger (I understand that Roger has transitioned) and simply wanted to tell *their* story and not the story of the shuttle. Unfortunately, so many of them have been mistreated by a small, but rabid, set of trek fans who really do need to take Shatner’s advice and “Get a Life”. Adam was concerned that the players be shown in a positive manner. And I was totally in agreement. I haven’t actually had my one on one with him just yet. But I am looking forward to it. If I actually believe I can get some traction, I may reach out to you to get whatever the last known contact info for some of them.
I don’t know…. I would love to see that next step. But it may or may not be the right time for everyone involved.
Anyhow - once again, Thank You for sharing your story and photos with me. I will never forget it. And if there is anything I may be able to help with in the future; please do not hesitate to reach out.
@@TREK-WORLD You are most welcome, Jim. Just so glad that I was able to contribute in a small way, to what is a really great project that you have done. That includes not just this Galileo video, but all the videos you have done with regard to tracking down the various models. Your research has been exemplary, and I can't wait to see what you come up with next. I love the idea of reaching out to the various people involved, and telling their stories. I'd be glad to help in any way that I can, but I haven't seen Roger since the 1970s, and I am not sure of her new name. I was a good friend of Phil for many decades, but several years ago he simply dropped off the map and doesn't respond to communication any more. The last time I saw him was at an event I worked on for the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences for 2001: A Space Odyssey several years ago. As for me, if there's anything you ever want to know about the X-15 research aircraft, let me know. :-)
Will do Michelle. Thanks again!
I wonder what happened to the space pod from lost in space?
@@stevebishop9468 It was lost in space
The Galileo 7 was one of my favourite episodes. It showed Spock's resilency as a great leader even when confronting a potential mutany. Im glad its reached an institution that will care for it as well allow public viewings. If a museum had bought it in first place it wouldn't have to endure the abuse it took. Great story. Thanks.
Mine too. It's a brilliant story, well told.
You misspelled ‘mutiny’.
@@brianmatthews2503 It's "mutony".
Wow. I had no idea she was still around, so thank you for producing this video and THANK YOU to all the fans over the years who kept her and looked after her as best they could.
Maybe one day I'll be able to visit from England and see her in person.
Wow that was a great story. Thank you for taking the time to put this up on UA-cam. As a kid I grew up watching Star Trek the original television series. Until this very day I still watch the original series. Star Trek was a great achievement. For Gene Roddenberry. He started a new generation ensure that prejudism is wrong. And that all people can get along with one another no matter of their nationality are beliefs. And gave us a new generation science fiction enthusiasts. Astronauts. And open up a career in movies and television shows. A opportunity of new actors in new jobs. Keep up the good work and thank you. Live long and prosper.
Thank you for the kind words. I am so happy you enjoyed it. I have found that working on research material associated to the original series has really taken me back to when this was all new.
A lot of people don't like all of the shows; I get that. But I can tell you that if Gene could see today the extent of the diversity of the shows, he would be proud.
Thank you, for this. The Galileo, should be kept safe, and many thanks to all who helped her survive the decades.
Clap clap clap clap. I didn’t expect to be rooting for the little guy by the end. Loved it. Totally worth every minute to watch.
GREAT video. 1 correction however, whoever you mention that wanted to buy the Lost in Space Robot did not buy it. There were 2 robots in the show. A "hero" that the actor wore which was heavily altered for another TV show in the 70's, and a fiberglass shell "long-distance" robot for far shots. Both have been "restored" today, but were never sold to private individuals at that time.
My favorite childhood memories are of My dad and I watching the original run of Star Treck. Sure, we had a Galileo. It was made out of an old refrigerator box; my brother and I went where no man had gone before many times (in our minds). It's good to see the original shuttle in ship shape.
I remember my older brother getting the Galileo model as a Christmas present when he was ten and I was eight. It didn't turn out too well; we were using that "kid safe" fruit-smelling styrene cement in those days, and it didn't bond well and caused sinks and spots. His model got left behind in a move and today it's worth more than a TV set.
Yep, liberals need to be stopped before they destroy the world.
I cannot understand the logic of making something your not meant to sniff pleasent to smell !!!.
@@CrusaderSports250 … because that Revell ‘Kid-Safe’ glue did NOT contain any noxious ingredients…the solvent was not considered ‘noxious’, but it was also very bad at welding plastic.
The ‘fruit-smell’ was the result of that solvent.
I was involved with the search for the Gailao 7. I live in Ohio and was interested in the Galileo and found that after being purchased by a woman who was storing the 7 in a scrap yard in Northern Ohio and people were asking for a visual confirmation that the 7 was still there. It disappeared from Google maps. She had moved it just prior to the sale to the group that bought it and restored it.
Actually, the amount of time and effort you guys spent just trying to keep tabs on it was phenomenal! For a long while there it really looked like we would never see her again.
Northern Ohio? It didn't end up in Wally soplata's yard with all the old warbirds he saved over the years did it?
Fletcher
You have any social media or FB? From one Ohioan to another?
I fell in love with the Galileo the moment I saw it in that episode "The Galileo Seven". Great that the prop still exist!
I had a Star Trek Shuttle Craft in my basement in 1976. I made it out of a Refrigerator box and spray painted it grey. I flew that thing everywhere in the galaxy until Star Wars came out.
What a fun video on this classic prop! I was at the Creation 20th Anniversary Convention when I was 12 and got a couple of photos next to it. I didn't know the history at the time and just knew that was in the middle of a restoration. It still looked impressive to me back then! I'm glad to see it finally was completed and found a home that's not exposed to the elements.
Very cool! If you still have those photos, I would love some copies. I'm thinking of doing a different video that tells the stories of fans who came in contact with her while she was still "in the wild".
I remember how painstakingly I applied the decals to my shuttlecraft. I used to love building models. I had all the ships hanging from my ceiling.
Thank you for the positive mention of those individuals who at least had put in some of their own blood sweat and tears along the corse of time. Any single one of them not stepping up to the plate.... she'd be doomed and gone!
So before i watch this video I have my own experience with the Galileo. When I was a kid back in the early 80s, I had to be between the age 9-11, I was with the friends of my parents (i guess they were baby sitting me) and so we went out to some junk yard, somewhere in Southern California, probably around LA., or Long Beach. My adult friends were interested in something else there, probably a car, which I found boring. So I started to wonder around the lot (it was not very large lot) and ! SAW the Galileo next to a few junk cars. I knew what it was, but it was before I ever became a Star Trek fan. I was able to walk around it and peek inside the entrance door, but I didn't go inside. It was outside in the open, it wasn't in great shape but it was recognizable even to a kid who wasn't a fan of Star Trek (yet). That was a good 40 years ago, my memories of that are very fleeting. Hopefully this video will help me remember more.
Most things make me hate the internet. This, this makes me love it. Great work.
I had no idea AMT was involved in building the set prop. Neat little tidbit of info.
I've also never seen pictures of the original design of the TOS Shuttlecraft. I will always love the one they went with but that original certainly would have been something. Very interesting design. Matt Jefferies was a legend.
Memories of my childhood now restored and looking great!
Excellent documentary of one of the most storied TV props! In November of 2013, some friends and I visited the Johnson Space Center in Houston ,Texas to see the Galileo up close. Five of us originally planned to meet at NASA but one of the guys had a family emergency and returned home. We belonged to an online SciFi model forum called Trek Works where the host had a UA-cam channel by the same name. Our forum lasted for a few years with thousands of photos and build logs of mostly Star Trek models. Our host (Boyd Crompton) made a short video log while we were there and took a limited amount of photos.
It was awesome to see this famous prop and share our fondest memories with each other and friends. With the exception of myself, the four other friends had never visited this NASA facility and the ones that stayed took a tour of the grounds. I had been to the Johnson dozens of times and the last I saw of the Galileo was maybe 8 years ago. It was moved from the main lobby of the visitor's center to the food court. Since then, we talk to one another from time to time about looking at the Galileo that day, all those years ago!
I regret that I never had the chance to see her. I hope to do a followup one day from the points of view of the various folks that owned her over the years.
@@TREK-WORLD We look forward to seeing an update video about that. It'll be worth the wait! In the mean time, I have an update about the Galileo's location. I saw a tweet from this month that it's still in the food court at the Johnson Space Center 's visitor's center. When you get to chance, we welcome you to Southeast Texas to see the grand shuttle for yourself. I think you'll be delighted in how well she was restored. Until then, happy trails and good travels!
I am SO happy that she is back on display again. Thanks for the update.
Also, I've seen the Trek Works channel; I've always been in awe of the skills of you and your fellow model builders. I couldn't possibly build a Lego kit correctly, let alone some of the amazing work I've seen on that channel.
@@TREK-WORLD Thanks! Boyd had come a long way in the world of scale modeling. We don't have the old forum anymore but he still maintains his Trek Works channel. The original members still post on the web from time to time.
Great video!
As a footnote, surprised that you mentioned hurricane Camille. As a small boy, I too rode out the storm in Gulfport, Mississippi in 1969.
At over 200 MPH winds, she was the benchmark of hurricanes.
I was living in Niceville, FL (almost right next to Eglin AFB, Florida) during hurricane Camille. I remember it well.
Yep, I remember that one, was in Pensacola at 6 yrs old. Talk about scary!!
Thank you for a wonderful piece of ST history. I have been a lifelong fan of the show since it first broadcast on the BBC in the UK. But I did not know that August 66 when it was built was the same month my Daughter was born we lost her at age fifty two but the shuttle sail's on. I see it in a different light now, it has more significance for me now.
Wow. This may be your best video yet, and that’s saying a lot. Given the amount of restoration involved I’ve always regarded the Galileo as a modern-day “Ship of Theseus,” with so much of it having been replaced over the years that it’s arguable as to whether it’s really the same prop at all. Still - what an amazing story!
Thanks! That's actually a really good question that I wish I had asked when doing my research. Drat. I know that the metal skeleton is completely original. And the strut is. But I don't know if any of the original fiberglass-covered masonite is left at all. To be honest, I would be shocked if there was. Lynn's restoration identified that they still had original masonite in some places. But that was literally 30+ years ago.
@@TREK-WORLD That was a really nice rendering of Matt Jeffries’ original shuttle concept, btw. Where did you find it, if I may ask?
Amazing how these designs are still living on a half-century later. I just saw the trailer for “Strange New Worlds” and the shuttle that flies over the horseback-riding Pike definitely has some touches of the Galileo.
The rendering of Matt's concept came from the Eaglemoss website. They did a small model of the shuttle for their StarShip collection. I was very happy to see it as all the other renderings I saw really looked more like concepts rather than like a physical object.
Exactly....this is true.
"Fascinating" or "Aye, she's held up well captain" or " Captain, I've tried hailing the previous owner, but no response" 😀
At least there's a happy ending here. The loss of many such sets and props from the great era of sci-fi is incalculable. For example, the loss of the full-scale exterior Millennium Falcon set that had been built for The Empire Strikes Back is just mind boggling. That George Lucas would throw such a thing away rather than keep it in storage, it was designed to be taken down into sections and stored in hermetically sealed containers, and then donate it to a museum or just take it on tours around the country while keeping it maintained is just unbelievable.
I was amazed by the Millenium Falcon's fate as well. Especially since Lucas had the marketing machine going full tilt by that point. So he had to know it had honest to God hard cash value.
unbeleivable...
Amazing story of the Galileo and it’s journey over the years. I had both models of the Enterprise with lights, and the shuttle. Life happened and of course I no longer have the models from that time of my life. I am still curious about the life size Jupiter 2 though. I remember the episode.of the ship traveling back in time to 1947, as I recall. There was as it appeared a full scale spaceship sitting in, as it appeared, a studio backlot, with the crew leaving on the landing support stairwell and going back up entering the ship. I have long wondered if the ship was left outside in the weather, or it was safely stored inside somewhere.
@@TREK-WORLD He had to know he'd need it for Return of the Jedi, but instead they used mostly a painting.
02:59 As for the estimated cost of the "Galileo Seven" model, $24,000 in 1966 is equivalent to $216,236.73 today.
I lived in the San Fernando Valley from 66-80 and I was in a full size model, it was empty with some old chairs. I sat in it, and wish cameras were as common then as they are today. I am 65 now
Back in the early 1990's I was contacted by Lynn Miller via my old BBS I used to run (the Metal Cloud BBS) for assistance in fund raising. I had hosted some Star Trek message boards. She was looking for assistance in fund raising for the restoration and sent some photos. I still have my BBS archived and my be able to find those photos, though it would be a while before I could go digging.
You've done a great job with this video; thanks so much for your in depth research and collections with this and your other videos!
As I continued watching I see that you have far more and better photos than I do!
Thanks for stopping in! Lynn definitely tried her very best with the Galileo. There's been a lot of back and forth amongst the fans with some supporting her and others criticizing her. But in the end, she made a tremendous investment that didn't pay off. So I kind of feel sorry for her.
Chip, can you drop me a line at jim@weirdnashville? I'ld like to chat with you on this.
Great research and video; thank you for taking the time to make it!
Glad you enjoyed it!
With my being a natural-born Trekker, I’m SO proud that I got to see the Enterprise’s ‘baby sibling’ the Galileo at the Houston Air/Space museum. AWESOME SAUCE
I'm envious! Hopefully, one day I will be able to see her in person as well.
Excellent video! I saw the Galileo in a hangar at the Akron/Canton airport in the late 90's while doing maintenance on the hangar.
You missed one fun fact. The Galileo (or the lack there of) was responsible for the birth of the transporter. Originally Enterprise shore missions were to be done using the shuttlecraft. The mockup wasn't ready for the early episodes so some way had to be invented to get the crew to the planet. So, the transporter was invented.
Paul Harvey would be proud. Well done
and now i know way more than i wanted too about the Galileo.. good video.
Great video! Thanks for doing all the research and putting it together. We stumbled upon Galileo near the food court at Nasa Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas and my wife was kind enough to take pictures of me next to it as I regressed into my 12-year-old self smiling.
That’s soo cool! I’ve never had the chance to see her myself. I would love to include your photo and story in a Galileo video coming up. I have done 3 out the 5 which tell the journey of the Galileo as it was seen through the eyes of fans who encountered it in it’s travels. You can drop the photo(s) at submit.trek-world.com or via email to jim@trek-world.com.
Fantastic video! Very well researched and presented. I’m impressed! Thank you for presenting the history and its multiple efforts at restoration.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you for an outstandingly fantastic video! The pictures and other research materials here are to coin a phrase " fascinating "! As fans we are fortunate to still have the Galileo and the storyline of her history is really a testament to how much the original Star Trek has meant to so many of us over the years.
Your series of videos are truly a treasure of history for original trek!🖖llap!
Thanks Bob! It's always good to hear from you. I hope to come back to the Galileo again in the future. There's a whole bunch of human interest stories there. Each owner's life was impacted by the Galileo while they owned her. There's so much written about the work. But next to nothing has every been written about the people. Hopefully, I may be able to change that in time.
This personal interaction between fans is really heart warming. It is 2022 and the Pop Culture fandoms of Star Trek, Star Wars and Doctor Who have been under attack for over a decade if not more! Most of the loyal fans that supported these franchises have been told to go away by the current copyright owners as they move to squeeze every drop of blood possible out of them while trying to rewrite history to fit a new "narrative"! We salute you!
I remember seeing the Galileo in the front yard of the home in Palos Verde, a Los Angeles suburb. If memory serves I heard about it from an article in TV Guide magazine. The next I new of it was the final restoration in New Jersey. This video filled in a bunch of gaps, and I’m happy to know Galileo is safe and whole!
@Bob Bova _"The pictures and other research materials here are to coin a phrase 'fascinating'"_ . Indeed! 'fascinating' is a far more appropriate term than merely _"interesting"_ .
Ricardo, I most certainly agree with you. I have rediscovered "fandom" through this channel. I had not "talked" with Star Trek fans about our shared passion since I attended conventions in the 1980s.
I had thought that part of my life was over. But you guys gave me such a gift when the comments started flooding in.
In addition to thqt, I've also had the pleasure of talk to actual Star Trek professionals associated with the various Star Trek TV shows and even the fan productions.
So yes, this fan to fan interaction is amazing to watch.
Thank you for showing that I lived through Sandy and it was really brutal and some of the places I used to go to as a child are now gone. I am glad the Galileo is not.
Fabulous! Great information and great narration. Plus a very respectful attitude to all the owners of the prop. I congratulate you on a very well done presentation.
I saw one for sale that i nearly bought just because of what it looked like about 20 years ago cheap. It's basically sheets of foam insulation sanded to a shape and hit with fibreglass. You could make one over a weekend with the proper stereo system blasting out the shop tunes. You know you could. You know you will, maybe perhaps or if not, perhaps maybe.
If laid down right will be too heavy weight, #7000 glass
I am thinking towable RV .
Half scale?
@@ytSuns26 as a float in a parade for LGBT, or something unrelated to specific naughty themes where you only sleep in it because of it being an rv as you said.
Very well done documentary video! Thank you for all your hard work researching this and putting it all together.
Thanks for watching!
In the late '80's (88 or 89) I met Carlos Rivera and had a chance to see the Galileo when it was in open storage near Indio California. It was in poor condition. I took pictures of it but unfortunately they have been lost over time.
Awesome that some collectors were able to restore the Galileo. Great show. btw, when I was a kid in the early seventies my family was on vacation in Wildwood where we had to evacuate our camp and wait out a hurricane in a school.
It must have been something about Wildwood, huh? 😀
Glad you and your family made it through that alright. And thanks for watching!
First of all, you did an awesome video! The research materials and photographs in your video is truly amazing.
I been collecting STAR TREK TOS items like toys, props, books, art, original autographs of the cast and other merchandise for 35+ years. I am truly grateful that someone like yourself took the time to complete the mystery of ….
“ What ever happened to the Galileo? “
This old man (Trekkie) really appreciates what you did and for passing this information on not just to us fans now but possibly to future Star Trek fans to come. As my favorite Vulcan would say many times in the original series…
May You Live Long And Prosper 🖖!
G-MAN
Hi there! Thank you for the kind words. My hope with this channel is to document as best I can the various items that came out of the original 1960's Trek. Once that's done; then I'll move to the next decade (and so on).
I've been blessed by very kind people in these comments who reach out with additional information; or just enough information to start my searching.
Like you, I'm a long time fan. And I have to admit that these videos have awakened the "little boy" in my again. And that's something I thought would never happen again.
As an IATSE stagehand, having sets brought in from scenic houses and assembled on stage is commonplace. No infraction of rules there. Most scenic shops are IATSE anyway.
Hi there! I would love it if you could drop me a line at jim@weirdnashville.com.
I’m doing research on a situation with the original series and would love to chat with someone at least familiar with the relationship between the union and it’s members.
Wow, that was a Warren Commission quality documentary of the life of the Galileo. Thanks for your hard work and dedication.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Saw the Galileo at Space Center Houston while it was there (I live about a one hour drive from SCH). Was hoping they'll keep her there permanently, but that wasn't the case. Nice video and history lesson on this amazing star of Star Trek!
Sound like SCH museum actually owns the Galileo. But for a small fee, loans the display to others
Actually, the Galileo is on permanent loan from Adam Schneider. They have loaned her out to other museums and exhibits over the past few years. But if she were to ever leave SCH, she would revert back to Adam. This is standard with museum donations.
"Star Trek Continues" was such a great series. Thanks for the historical info because I was one of those that thought it was found and restored just once.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you from a trek fan. Great story, narration and photos.
Thanks for the kind words Catherine. Keep an eye out, I will be doing another Galileo video during the summer. So many people have reached out to me with their stories of how the found and interacted with it that I simply feel I need to do the second video from the point of view of the those fans. They've helped identify people in photos, they've provide new photos and videos. The list goes on and on. This little video touched a lot more hearts than I expected.
Which is why I am so proud to be a Star Trek fan after all these years. Because the things that bind us together are far stronger than the things that push us apart.
Wow - Star Trek's influence on astrology should never be questioned - Galileo's mammie and pappie named him after one of their episodes! Shatner must be proud ....
I have not only 12 of the Constitution Class starships (The Original 12 Connies in Starfleet) but I have 3 of the Shuttlecraft AMT kits (2 are unopened, 1 is in my bedroom with custom LED lighting installed.) Also have 2 Romulan Warbirds and 5 of the D7 Klingon ships (All are on display and again with custom lighting done by me.)
Wow! Very cool!
When I saw the Left For Dead title, I thought it was an easter egg in the Left For Dead video game. But I don't regret watching this as it was very informative and interesting
Amazing Star Trek Video!!! Truly an impressive Trek documentary which every fan of TOS will love! Keep up the great work! The Galileo represents the very moment when Spock discovered the difference between logic and leadership and in which Dr. McCoy's feelings for Spock blossom into a deep respect. Almost all future TOS and especially the TOS movies depend upon Spock's leadership and McCoy's love and respect for Spock.
Wow, thanks! You're right about that dynamic between Spock and Bones. That episode also foreshadows the conversation they have together in ST IV when Spock confides in McCoy that he is unsure of the variables involved in beaming the whales aboard.
This was really comprehensive, thanks for bringing it all together
Hi Matt! Thanks for checking us out!
Very well done! Thank you for posting!
I wish I could say this is a rare occurrence. Unfortunately, props, set peices, and wardrobe often are neglected, even when the studios or creators have control of them once the show/movie is wraped (finished). People store things with little care. They allow their kids to play with them and we all know how careful kids are with things. Rarely do these things wind up in a collectors hands to be well cared for and treasured. Even some collectors are guilty of neglect at times.
If those people had not bought and used it the way they did it would very likely not be here anymore, gone because no one wanted it, however they used it it kept it around for us to see today, its just a pity more props are not valued after the series ends.
There should be a museum dedicated to Star Trek and have memorabilia from every Star Trek series and movie I hate to think all the set pieces was destroyed or torn apart and recycled into parts for other sets
Fantastic presentation! Thanks for keeping the facts and history moving at a nice pace.
OMG!
growing up I wasn't really a fan of Star Trek. I am partially sighted and went to Foundation for the Jr. Blind (now called Wayfinder) in Los Angeles. Watching this video jarred my memory of playing in the Galileo as a kid.
Hi Joel. Can you drop me a line at jim@weirdnashville.com? I would love to have you tell me what you remember. Things like was the single seat still in it when it was at the Foundation?
I have another viewer who actually worked there and remembers the day that they used a crane to unload it for the school.
Wow! - really enjoying these videos - thanks for making and posting them.
BTW, James Van Hise also has a book out on the Galileo, it's "Files Magazine Focus on Galileo"
I'll see if I can find it, thanks!
I've bought maybe a dozen or so of his books in the past 6 weeks or so. He really had a knack for collecting the small detail stuff. But it seems he stopped his Star Trek stuff in the mid-90s or so. I know that he sells his photos (or his kids do) on eBay. But other than that, I haven't seen anything new. But I'm glad you mentioned this one.
Awesome video. Thanks for this. Hope you do more in depth Trek videos. Especially from the TOS.
Hi there! I am definitely not done yet with TOS. LOL. I suspect I'm not even half way through. And the more I dig into things.... the more I learn. Thanks for the kind words.
Wow! What a story! May it forever be preserved and not lost to time again.
As I remember, the shuttle craft construction was way behind schedule and too late for the start of show filming. We have that fact to thank for the invention of the transporter beam as they still needed a method to get to planet surfaces within the show.
Hi there! They actually created the transporter because they couldn’t afford to do a landing sequence in every episode. They had an idea for a shuttle, but they didn’t have a budget to pay for anything. That’s why in The Enemy Within Sulu and the others were trapped on the planet’s surface. If they had expected to have a shuttle, then they would have had to explain why they couldn’t use it. They were extremely lucky when AMT stepped in during season 2.
Amazing story! Thank you!
Incredible. A TV show that barely lasted a season or so, 3 actually, with some of the most rinky dink sets and props sparked the imagination of people around the world. I watched it as a kid and thought this is the coolest thing ever. Even more incredible is that a single prop made for a handful of scenes in that TV show would survive and change hands and end up on the opposite coast of the continental United States... All without ever being actually able to fly let alone into space! If only humans could put this kind of dedication into fixing this world.
It was not rinky dink for the time….. the effort made by those involved were herculean….
Amazing assembly of research and information. Very interesting! 👍
Very well done!
At the end, when you said, "And now you know, as they say, the rest of the story." My mind substituted Paul Harvey's voice, and ended with, "Good day."
Mission accomplished! I was deliberately channeling Paul Harvey with that. But very few actually caught on to that.
Now I have to find a way to work in "News from Lake Wobegon".
I'm such a nerd! 😀😀😀
Thanks for sharing WN. I am enjoying your TOS series very much.
Thanks for the kind words! I’ve been having a ball doing these. The more I research, the more I stumble on things I didn’t know. Or thought I knew.
That was GREAT! Thank you for the excellent documentary.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I have just finished a trip to Ticonderoga, NY visiting the Star Trek The Original Series Set Tour. They now have the Galileo in storage and will be putting it on display sometime in 2024.
About Half way thru, I began to cry! I did cry for the poor memory of my Star Trek Shuttle Craft!!! I am glad it is well for now! I hope & pray it will never again be disrespected as it was when it was being shuttled around with no place to call home!!! thank you for the story, and survival of the Galileo - 1701 / 7.
IF I COULD, I WOULD GOLD PLATE IT FOR GOOD!!! :D
This is very cool, finally...😎!!!
What a crazy trip to the finish line......
Great video. A few years ago I was working in Houston and planning to visit the Space Center. I was excited to hear the Galileo was displayed there. But unfortunately, when I got there, they told me it was on loan to a museum on the East Coast. Still hoping to see it one day.
Hi Michael Richartz, welcome to our community! Thank you for sharing your experience. It's too bad that you missed the Galileo exhibit, but hopefully you'll get a chance to see it in the future. It's a remarkable piece of history.
Very respectful of you to include serious hurricane stuff
The shot at 16:56 of the people in front of the shuttlecraft has me with Jim Kirk, Steve Stockbarger and Greg Turnbow (upper left picture). I'm the one in the blue uniform. This was taken in 1974. I took other pictures and loaned them to Franz Joseph when he was making the Tech Manual.
Hi Greg! Nice to see you here. You and I traded messages on Facebook after this video was made. In the meantime since then; I've done several followup videos on the Galileo. One of them covered the Roger Hiseman years exclusively. And in that video I identify everyone on that photo based on your message. *_However_* I would love to chat with you about Franz Joseph. I have a video coming on the 1970s reference books; and of course, that was one of the best well known.
@@TREK-WORLD No prob;em
Thanks for this video!!!!! It helped me solve a problem I was having with a ST Fan Fiction story with a shuttle in it, I am writing!
10:25
I think the single piece, dark plexiglass front bulkhead of Galileo looks good, nonetheless.
🌌🔭
I rode out Hurricane Camile in Tylertown Mississippi, and rmember going to Kessler AFB in Biloxi MS to pick up my father on his return from Vietnam. The ships up 30 miles inland, the planes flipped on thier backs...
...Once again, Jim, you've made a great Trek video that not only for fans, but for Science fiction history books. I say Thanks for those who have had custody of the shuttle over the years. You can tell they did it not for money, but for love of Star Trek.
...I look forward to watching more of your Trek videos.
So true. These people actually paid a price far more substantial than money. But in almost every case they were hounded and mistreated by fans almost continually.
Which is a shame. I would love nothing more than to talk to them as their stories are even more compelling than the Galileo. But they are so gun-shy after being treated so bad; I doubt I'll get chance to ever talk to them.
@@TREK-WORLD I pray for posterity they open up to you in time. For all who gave them grief, there are many, many more of us fans who are grateful indeed and would love to know the full history involved.
I actually had the original model of the "Enterprise" the big one with lights in the primary hull, their models are worth a fortune if in their orginal unassembled box's today. Also had the shuttle.
Lmao
I too have that kit from my early days of model building.
It is broken into pieces due to mishaps over the decades but I will not part with it. Partly due to nostalgia and party because I stubbornly hold to the idea that I will restore it when I find some free time.
Yeah, I built every single one. Wish I would have been able to set back an unopened model of each. But who knew back then
@@Manco65 I suppose it would be nice and pragmatic to buy a thing & just have it collect dust and one day sell it because it appreciated in value.
However, I think it is much better for the soul, as well as being more fun, to take the thing out of the box, assemble it and play. The purpose for which it was created, the exercise of imagination.
You know what they say, "A loved toy is a played with toy".
The reason we don't have those things with us today is because we were too busy "loving" those items.
Incredible Story.
It's amazing that the Roddenberrys were never interested
Glad to see she resides in my home state of Texas. I live in Lubbock Texas like 15 hours away so I may have to make a Trek that way before I die. This was so much an informative ant thorough video. I never wondered what happened to it. I assumed she got scrapped years ago. Live long and prosper
I saw it when it was down here at JSC. I had to stop myself from crossing the ropes to go hug it.
Great video and your research is on point great job 👏🏼
Thank you so much 😀
Great Work!
Thank you! Cheers!
Excellent documentary...nice job!
Glad you enjoyed it! There will be a second one which tells the stories of fans that crossed paths with the Galileo while it was on it's journey.
The story of these fans is actually more interesting than the story of the restorations!
If you love Star Trek....and I do, THIS IS GREAT!!! THANKS!!!!
Very well done enjoyed it immensely
Thanks !
The TV and film business is still one of the most wasteful. Even now with the interest of collectors of props and costumes so much is still thrown away or left to rot. Thanks to fans, pieces like the Galileo can be saved and restored.
…there have been movie directors / movie creators who stipulate in their contracts that “all sets/props/costumes are to be destroyed at the end of shooting”.
Excellent video, well done.
Glad you enjoyed it!
That's an amazing story. I'm glad she's alive and well.
I lived through Hurricane Camille when I was 3 years old and living in central Virginia. Here we had entire communities wiped off the map and the course of a river changed. Being young as I was, I don't remember much, but two things stand out in my memory; Watching as a +250 year old tree was uprooted by the storm and the next day finding a manhole cover nowhere near a manhole in my grandmother's back yard.
Thanks to Steve for designing a beautiful shuttle/utility vehicle instead of those terrible flash Gordon style craft.