Patrick Stewart recalled in his memoir, Making It So, that he had no idea how popular Star Trek: The Next Generation was until he attended his first convention.
David Hyde Pierce initially thought his character Niles was too much like Frasier to work on the show, and he didn't get the dynamic until he saw it himself.
Even though it seems like blatant product placement, the retro McDonald's was written into the Loki season 2 scripts before there was ever an ad deal in place.
The Holodeck episodes are some of the best across the entire Star Trek franchise, and one character that Patrick Stewart got to play is a particular highlight.
The name Alan Smithee has an ignominious significance in Hollywood, though that hasn't stopped the namesake from getting an award for a Twilight Zone episode.
Timothée Chalamet returned to Saturday Night Live, and he brought some returning characters with him, as well as a little bit of controversy in the aftermath.
Tamara Taylor's Camille 'Cam' Saroyan was originally supposed to die partway through Bones season 2, but the show's crew (and fans) just loved her too much.
Star Trek: The Next Generations's Patrick Stewart remembers this episode as the most powerful of the series, and it's easy to see why it felt so personal.
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia is bound to have the cast cracking up, and Carlie Day remembers one character breaking moment that made it into the show.
Brent Spiner had some fun with Patrick Stewart after a publication dubbed the Star Trek: The Next Generation star an 'unknown British Shakespearean actor.'