When I was a kid, Starlog was my connection to the world of geek media. The internet as we know it was still many years away, so there were no pirated videos being sent all over the world, and no ...
In the early summer of 1979, science fiction fans were about to have their minds totally blown, and they didn’t even know why. Two years after 20th Century Fox had a hit with Star Wars, the studio was ...
In 1986, Mark A. Altman was a young Trekkie serving as the editor of his college newspaper. Seemingly out of nowhere, he was invited to the set of Star Trek: The Next Generation. The invitation put ...
After 33 years, the Science Fiction magazine giant Starlog will cease publication, moving from a print format to an online one due to the stresses of the economy. However, in the announcement of this ...
The magazine Starlog came along when fans of sci-fi movies and TV shows were split into two camps: those still trying to figure out whether or not Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey was actually ...
“Good science fiction movies have been around almost as long as movies have,” wrote Starlog’s editor-in-chief David Houston in the first ever issue of Starlog. “But only in recent years – perhaps ...
It’s still one of the greatest magazines about science fiction of all time, and you can read Starlog for free over at the Internet Archive. The first issue includes a great look at Star Trek from the ...