Introduction:

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Sev Trek: A History
Early in my cartooning career, I had a notebook where I'd doodle any weird
idea that came in my head. Once while watching Star Trek: The Next
Generation, I drew a cartoon spoofing the idealistic, utopian world that
takes itself just a little too seriously. At the beginning I did it mostly
for my own enjoyment - there was no practical way I could publish Star Trek
parody. At the time my cartoons were only being published in newspapers and
Sev Trek was a little too special interest to be used by them. Back then
when the Internet was still young, I was only published in print newspapers.
After I created my cartoon website, I thought it would be a good opportunity
to publish some of my other cartoons so I drew that initial idea - a story
called Pus in Boots where Commander Piker is afflicted with a sentient
pimple. It quickly became the most popular cartoon on my website with online
Trekkies (or is it Trekkers) coming out of the woodworks in droves. I began
to think maybe I should draw more of this Sev Trek stuff.
After Pus in Boots, I began the Sev Trek caption contest. I'd draw a single
panel cartoon with the final speech bubble missing its punchline. Readers
would submit punchlines and at the end of the week, a winner would be chosen
and placed into the cartoon. We still run the same weekly contest, with over
a decade's worth of weekly contests now archived on the website. Once the
Sev Trek comic strip got started, I opened it up for use on other people's
web sites (a way to spread the cartoon on the web). That was when Sev Trek
really exploded - the Sev Trek equivalent of Zefram Cochrane inventing the
warp drive. Suddenly a lot more people were visiting the site and a
community began to build around the website.
After several years of Sev Trek, I was contacted by Wally Fields, comedian
and voice impersonator. He suggested we combine forces to produce a sci-fi
spoof animation. While I liked the idea, I had no experience in animation so
we asked online for animators. 3D animator Andrew Simpson joined the
project. After a few short animations, we decided to try something a little
more ambitious - a longer animation based on the original Pus in Boots
storyline. Over the course of production, we recruited crew members from all
over the world including USA, Australia and Brazil. Ultimately, the project
took 2 years to produce a 41 minute film now released on video and DVD.
Currently, Sev Trek continues to thrive online as well as being published in
newspapers throughout Australia (and one paper in Fiji).