I was just looking through the Memory Alpha article of this, and more than a few little remembered facts about this much derided episode amused me. So, I thought I'd share them here too.
* The episode won an Emmy. Yes, really. Albeit one for "best makeup". Probably well deserved, but still, the sentence "The Emmy-award winning Star Trek: Voyager episode 'Threshold'!" just doesn't exactly roll off the tongue easily, does it?
* In addition to this, it was the third highest-rating episode of the entire second season of Voyager. Think about the apparent ramifications of this for a moment. I wonder how many of those viewers never tuned it again?
* The episode was one of the few Voyager episodes to be commemorated with a special release Playmates action figure (an 'evolved' Tom Paris with his Lizard offspring). Surely a 'must buy' for Christmas stockings everywhere.
* Robert Duncan McNeil, bless him, did his very best to try and rationalise the story in his own mind... despite his seemingly being completely baffled by it.
"[Tom] breaks warp ten, starts shedding skin, he kidnaps the captain and then he becomes one with the universe, [he and Janeway] are salamanders, and have a baby [...] "That was a bizarre show, it really was."
* Brannon Braga, despite being contrite and apologetic about how awful the episode turned out to be, later executive-produced a completely unrelated TV show called 'Threshold'. I'm not convinced he wasn't just trolling all of us.
And finally:
* Despite the show's later efforts to decanonize the events of the episode by claiming that no-one's ever broken Warp 10, it's still there on my DVD boxset. So, clearly it still must have happened, dammit.

* The episode won an Emmy. Yes, really. Albeit one for "best makeup". Probably well deserved, but still, the sentence "The Emmy-award winning Star Trek: Voyager episode 'Threshold'!" just doesn't exactly roll off the tongue easily, does it?

* In addition to this, it was the third highest-rating episode of the entire second season of Voyager. Think about the apparent ramifications of this for a moment. I wonder how many of those viewers never tuned it again?

* The episode was one of the few Voyager episodes to be commemorated with a special release Playmates action figure (an 'evolved' Tom Paris with his Lizard offspring). Surely a 'must buy' for Christmas stockings everywhere.

* Robert Duncan McNeil, bless him, did his very best to try and rationalise the story in his own mind... despite his seemingly being completely baffled by it.

* Brannon Braga, despite being contrite and apologetic about how awful the episode turned out to be, later executive-produced a completely unrelated TV show called 'Threshold'. I'm not convinced he wasn't just trolling all of us.


And finally:
* Despite the show's later efforts to decanonize the events of the episode by claiming that no-one's ever broken Warp 10, it's still there on my DVD boxset. So, clearly it still must have happened, dammit.
