Our Sci Fi World

Cavie Jeff & Steph

Couple Jeff & Steph explore Supernatural and Star Trek in a series-exchange response format to watch and rewatch and real time reaction to see and explore the complicated dynamics that makes all of these shows the icons that they are. Episodes released weekly. 

  1. OCT 12

    204 Blobnapped and Uninsultable. Jet Reno is just fire. (DIS204 An Obol for Charon)

    Send us a text Saru’s dying. The ship is collapsing. Tilly’s being blobnapped by a hallucinated fungus named May. But Steph? Steph is not having it. 😠 This week, the drama is high—but the believability is low—as Our Sci Fi World tackles Star Trek: Discovery Season 2, Episode 4: "An Obol for Charon." 📉 From the jump, Steph calls it: Saru’s not going to die, and the episode knows it. So why does it lay the melodrama on thick? She breaks down how stacking three simultaneous crises—Saru’s “terminal” illness, Tilly’s freaky neural invasion, and the ship’s power-failure death spiral—leaves the emotional core untouchable. Jeff agrees: there’s no room to breathe, no narrative trust, and certainly no way to feel it all. 🔍 But the ep isn’t without joy. Enter Jet Reno (🔥 Jet with two T’s), returning like an engineering rockstar with duct tape, sarcasm, and no time for Stamets’ ego. Steph immediately falls in love and crowns Reno the MVP of chaos. She’s unapologetically herself, possibly immortal, and entirely uninsultable. Jeff and Steph dig into her dynamic with Stamets and how their energy instantly clicks into a new version of Trek’s classic “grumpy genius duo.” 🗣️ In the biggest Trek-troversy of the week, Steph learns—on mic—that everyone on Star Trek isn’t actually speaking English. Cue a hilarious conversation about the universal translator, alien earpieces, and whether Pike’s “hillbilly Montana English” is somehow being beamed into fluent Vulcan. (“Wait… are they all just hearing their own language??”) 📚 They also fall face-first into a glorious idiom rabbit hole over the phrase “like it or lump it.” Steph insists it’s a real thing. Jeff has never heard it. They end up Googling etymology and debating what “lump” even means as a verb. (One of them is right. It’s Steph. Again.) 🌌 Amid the chaos, this becomes an unintentional episode about overstuffed storytelling—how too much plot makes everything feel weightless, and how shows like Discovery sometimes sabotage their own emotional arcs by cramming them between high-stakes techno-catastrophes. Saru deserved better.

    1h 27m
  2. AUG 30

    203 Pike is Supposed to Be in This One (DIS203 Point of Light)

    Send us a text Parenting a half-human, half-Vulcan child is never going to be easy. Add a logic-first father, a disappearing son, and a galaxy full of dangerous secrets, and the challenge becomes something else entirely. Point of Light, the third episode of Star Trek: Discovery Season 2, digs into the tension between love and logic, and this episode of Our Sci Fi World rides every beat of that storm. Jeff and Steph track three emotional storylines across three locations, where power, trust, and family are all under pressure. Amanda Grayson boards Discovery to demand Spock’s medical records and refuses to back down. She knows her son better than Starfleet does and she’s done asking politely. Her scenes with Michael Burnham are the emotional heart of the episode, rich with pain and connection, and Jeff and Steph both lock into the tension. They ask: what makes a good parent when your child isn't just a mystery but a cultural contradiction? Steph brings her real-world production lens to bear, unpacking how a script like this balances massive tone shifts and why Amanda’s scenes hold so much weight. Jeff breaks down Amanda’s evolution as a character, from background figure to emotional anchor, and makes the case that Discovery is finally honoring her role in Spock’s life. They both agree: Amanda Grayson may be one of the most underappreciated characters in the Trek canon. Meanwhile, back on Qo’noS, Chancellor L’Rell and Ash Tyler are juggling empire, identity, and an impossible secret. Their child has been hidden away with Klingon monks. Their leadership is under attack. And Mirror Georgiou arrives just in time to complicate everything with a new offer. It’s the start of what will become Section 31, and Michelle Yeoh’s performance is so commanding it nearly resets the tone of the show. Steph talks about what happens on set when a single actor controls the temperature of a scene. Jeff praises the decision to play L’Rell’s grief straight and not cut away. There’s politics. There’s betrayal. There’s a ceremonial knife pulled out of someone’s armpit. And somehow, through all of it, Discovery keeps its narrative threads just barely connected. This episode of the podcast delivers on all fronts. There’s theory, there’s laughter, and there are serious questions about Starfleet’s mental health protocols. Jeff explains why logic alone will never raise a functional Vulcan. Steph wonders what happened to Pike’s storyline. And both hosts hold onto the same insight: Star Trek works best when it asks what love looks like under pressure. If you're watching Discovery for the high-stakes canon-building or just here for a flawless Amanda Grayson monologue, you're in the right place. This is a messy, ambitious, emotionally rich hour of Trek, and this podcast digs all the way in.

    1h 22m
  3. AUG 24

    202 Stamets is Salting the Bones (DIS202 New Eden)

    Send us a text A glowing red signal. A forgotten Earth colony. A captain who jumps on phasers like they’re grenades. In this episode of Our Sci Fi World, Jeff and Steph dive into Star Trek: Discovery Season 2, Episode 2, “New Eden,” and everything it sets in motion. Discovery’s mission brings them to a distant planet where survivors of World War III live without technology, memory of Earth, or even electricity. While Pike and Burnham navigate the rules of General Order One and a faith-based society, Saru manages command on the bridge, and Tilly nearly blows herself up chasing an asteroid shard with a mysterious energy signature. Jeff zeroes in on how Discovery uses mystery and misdirection to shape its serialized arc, including what the show gains and risks by withholding Spock. Stamets confesses he saw Hugh inside the mycelial network, and Jeff wonders aloud if this is Trek’s version of Supernatural’s resurrection rules. Steph, meanwhile, focuses on the real-life dynamics underneath the sci-fi, from actor hierarchy to call times and what happens when a "wheels up" time doesn't match the paper trail. Also in this episode: questions about Vulcan diagnosis protocols, a spirited debate over whether “starship” and “spaceship” are interchangeable, and the birth of what may become a recurring segment—the Glossary Girlies. From faith versus science to union regulations, New Eden sparks the kind of conversation only this show can deliver. Whether you’re in it for Pike, production, or pre-warp protocol, this one’s for you.

    1h 39m
  4. JUL 12

    123 How TV shows are made (Bonus episode with guest Thanh Huang)

    Send us a text This episode is about the people who keep television from falling apart. Who wrangle cast, crew, trucks, fire, rain, egos, call sheets, and whatever other chaos today decides to serve. It’s about the ones who show up first and leave last. The ones you never see on screen — and couldn’t live without. It’s about Assistant Directors. Steph is joined by her longtime friend and fellow AD, Thanh Hoang, for a longform sidebar on what it actually takes to run a set, hold a crew together, and make something worth shooting — even when everything is falling apart behind the scenes. They talk about breakdowns (of scripts, of schedules, and occasionally of people), solving impossible puzzles, leading through noise, and the art of keeping your cool when 100 people are asking 100 different questions and the director is looking at you for the answer. Even if there isn’t one. It’s funny. It’s tender. It’s sometimes a little bit bitter. And it’s all true. They unpack what it means to lead without glory, to keep other departments safe and sane, and how ADs quietly become the backbone of any production. If you’re in the industry, this episode will feel like your life. If you’re not, it’s the clearest window you’ll ever get into how much sweat and heartbreak go into making the stories you love. Plus: bad weather. yelling nicely. call times no one agreed to. and why sometimes the best compliment an AD can get is “you made it feel easy.” This one’s for the crew. Especially the ones who never stop moving.

    2h 54m
  5. JUL 5

    122 You're Not My Real Dad (Supernatural 122) Devil's Trap

    Send us a text What happens when your dad gets possessed, your car gets wrecked, and your last hope is a book guy named Bobby? You get Supernatural season one’s finale. And you get us losing our minds about it. This episode of Our Sci Fi World is part chaos, part therapy, and part salt circle dissertation. As Jeff and Steph wrap their first full season of the pod (milestone alert!), they dive deep into the emotional minefield of Devil’s Trap: Meg’s exorcism, Sam and Dean’s role reversal, Bobby Singer’s iconic entrance, and the literal truck-sized cliffhanger that closes it all. Let’s be real: This one hits HARD. Dean unravels. Sam steps up.John Winchester? Possessed.Meg? Dead? Maybe? (Pour one out for Blonde Meg.)Bobby? Absolutely carrying the research department.But it wouldn’t be Our Sci Fi World without: A hot take on salt circle logic (why do the demons obey them like they’re DMV laws?)Jeff’s now-infamous “Treaty of 1166” theory (demon-human peace accords??)A full breakdown of Dean’s internal collapse: his fear, his protectiveness, his “this isn't Dad” gut check.Steph sob-laughing through a possessed family reunionAnd yes, the Mary Poppins jacket joke finally pays off. That trunk is endless.Whether you’re a lifelong Supernatural fan or watching for the first time with us, this finale is a hinge point. The kind of episode where emotional stakes crash into lore in ways you didn’t see coming (except Steph definitely did and Jeff did not). Inside the episode: Emotional reversals: Sam’s cool vs Dean’s spiralLore logic: Salt, devil’s traps, and why this is the last time demons act this weirdPerformance praise: Jeffrey Dean Morgan does a LOT with demon-dad possessionCinematic quirks: Closet demon logic holes, VFX glows up (and down), the smoke cloud that changed the gameSoundboard-worthy one-liners and quotes for daysPLUS: How to trap a demon in 5 easy chalk circlesWhich lines hit hardest (“You’re so hell bent on sacrificing yourselves… I’m gonna be the one to bury you.”)Why Sam’s “No” to the yellow-eyed demon is one of the best character moments in the whole seasonTHE BIG VIBES: Brotherhood > bloodline. Salt > science. Trust your gut, even when your dad’s voice is saying otherwise. We’re ending this season with our hearts wrecked, our notes highlighted, and our trunk… probably ruined forever. So bring snacks. Bring salt. And bring a Kleenex if you loved Meg even half as much as Steph did. This is the Our Sci Fi World season one capstone. And it’s a banger. 🪞Your move, Star Trek.

    1h 21m
  6. JUN 28

    121 Dad’s Plan Sucks (SPN121) Salvation

    Send us a text Jeff and Steph, joined by special guests Jay and Kristy, tackle Supernatural Season 1, Episode 21: “Salvation.” This penultimate episode of the season marks a turning point for the Winchester family, as Sam’s psychic visions take center stage and the hunt for the Yellow-Eyed Demon becomes terrifyingly personal. The team dives deep into how the episode blends horror, action, and raw emotional drama to create one of the most memorable hours of Supernatural’s first season. Jeff and Steph break down the complex family dynamics that fuel this chapter of the Winchester saga. John Winchester’s obsession with revenge pushes him into risky decisions that test the family’s bond. Sam struggles under the weight of his visions, grappling with guilt and the desperate need to stop another family from suffering as his did. Meanwhile, Dean once again plays the role of peacekeeper, trying to hold his fractured family together as the stakes spiral out of control. With Jay and Kristy bringing fresh perspective and fandom insight, the conversation explores how Salvation represents everything that makes Supernatural endure: flawed heroes, impossible choices, and the heartbreaking cost of the family business. Throughout the discussion, Jeff, Steph, Jay, and Kristy highlight how this episode balances its monster-hunting action with meaningful character development. They reflect on key moments from the chilling pre-credits sequence that sets the emotional tone to the powerful closing scenes that propel the series into its season finale. The group also unpacks the broader themes of grief, legacy, and sacrifice that give “Salvation” its lasting impact. With plenty of behind-the-scenes insight and production reflections drawn from Steph’s industry experience, plus Jeff’s marketing and fandom angle, this is a rich, multi-layered conversation for any Supernatural fan. Expect passionate commentary on Sam’s escalating powers, John’s morally gray decisions, and the Yellow-Eyed Demon’s looming threat. The team also touches on how early 2000s television shaped Supernatural’s storytelling style, gritty, emotional, and unafraid to push its characters to the edge. This episode of Our Sci Fi World blends thoughtful analysis with humor, personal stories, and deep love for the genre, making it perfect for longtime Supernatural fans and newcomers alike. Join Jeff, Steph, Jay, and Kristy as they navigate the heartbreak, tension, and mythology of “Salvation.” From the cost of vengeance to the strength of family, this is the episode that defines why Supernatural is more than just a monster-hunting show. It is a story about the choices that shape us, the people who stand by us, and the battles that change us forever.

    1h 30m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Couple Jeff & Steph explore Supernatural and Star Trek in a series-exchange response format to watch and rewatch and real time reaction to see and explore the complicated dynamics that makes all of these shows the icons that they are. Episodes released weekly.