Robert Picardo 'Thought It Was a Mistake' When He Was Asked to Return to

Robert Picardo reprises his Star Trek: Voyager role as The Doctor in the new live-action Starfleet Academy series

People Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Voyager'Credit: Paramount+

NEED TO KNOW

  • The new series is set 1,000 years after the actor was last part of the franchise

  • Picardo tells PEOPLE that returning to the Star Trek universe was "very unexpected"

Robert Picardo admits that, 25 years after he last played the holographic Doctor onStar Trek: Voyager, he was stunned when he got the call to return to the beloved sci-fi franchise for the new series,Star Trek: Starfleet Academy.

"I would say [it was] very unexpected — I thought it was a mistake!" Picardo tells PEOPLE exclusively.

The 72-year-old reveals that after he reprised his role as The Doctor — in voice only — for a 2024 episode of the animated, kid-skewing seriesStar Trek: Prodigy, his animation agent got word that a different set of producers in the franchise wanted to meet with him. Picardo assumed it was for another voice role or cameo until he learned more about the gig in a follow-up call.

"They called back and said, 'No, it's live-action,'" he recalls. "And then I wasreallyconfused! And then my agent, my theatrical agent, [said], 'Yeah, they want to talk to you about being in the newStar Trekseries.' "

"Those first three or four weeks waiting for that meeting were really the strangest, that part of knowing they're interested but not knowing what it was," he says. "And then they laid out the idea they had for the character and how he would fit in and what he would be doing in the future: teaching cadets at a newly reopened Starfleet Academy."

Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Starfleet Academy'Credit: Paramount+

Picardo had originally played the fan-favorite character — an increasingly self-aware, independent and somewhat egotistical Emergency Medical Hologram who provided a fresh lens on both humanity and technology while snarkily treating the crew of the starshipVoyager— for seven seasons between 1995 and 2001. However, with the new role, he wouldn't just be picking up The Doctor a quarter-century later; he was also thrown an unexpected acting challenge as the 2026 series was set nearly 1,000 years in the future.

"It's mind-blowing," he confesses. "I said to them, 'Wait a minute, you mean I have 800 years of digital memory — perfect clarity — so that an event that happened 792 years and 112 days and this many hours and minutes, that moment was not only recorded in here, but it was as clear as something that happened yesterday?' [They said], 'Yep, that's what it means.' I said, 'Alright, I'll start trying to wrap my mind around that now!' "

What struck him most about taking a quantum leap forward in time was how it would affect The Doctor's worldview. "Working side by side with 32 generations of organic colleagues growing old and dying around you, how does that influence your desire to form personal relationships?" he questions.

"I thought that on the surface, he would seem the same, at the same pace, the same attitude, the same snarkiness when he didn't feel he was being respected, the same 'I like feeling that I'm the smartest intelligence in the room,' all of those things," Picardo tells PEOPLE. "But that, when push came to shove, he wasn't very interested in going deeper with any individual. I wasn't excited to be your pal, you know what I mean? Because what's the end game for me?"

"So there was this kind of push-pull between being like The Doctor once he had grown more human-like, but with the sort of careful delineation of how far he wanted to go beyond cordiality in his relationships," he adds.

Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Voyager'Credit: Paramount+

That emotional distance has been challenged on the new Paramount+ series by young SAM (Kerrice Brooks), another photonic being enrolled in Starfleet Academy, who longs for mentorship from The Doctor, who finally lowers his defenses.

"The Doctor, I think, likes feeling unique, but also a protege who is giving him more attention and interest that he clearly wants to return," Picardo explains. "He's both intrigued and annoyed by her."

AsStarfleet Academyhas been streaming new episodes each week, Picardo has been enjoying watching the always-passionate fanbase debate the various merits of the show — a phenomenon he's been long accustomed to.

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"It takes every newStar Trekshow two years or so to kind of hit its stride," he says. "And until then, people complain about what kind of female Captain Janeway should be. 'Do we really need a female captain in the mid-90s?' I mean, we were 25 years ahead ofDoctor Who,having the first female doctor! 25 years! And of course, Kate [Mulgrew] really won over all of the initial critics to the idea of taking this traditionally male role. And since then, of course, we've had Captain Michael Burnham, we've had Michelle Yeoh's character, [Captain Georgiou] and now Holly Hunter."

"I've been really lucky to be in shows that are led by women —China Beach,even before that, the Vietnam drama I was in where the point of view character was an Army nurse played by Dana Delaney," he adds. "So I feel like I've had this special luck to be on shows where women, female characters, really carried the show or were the dynamos behind the show."

Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Voyager'Credit: Paramount+

Playing the holographic character has also given Picardo a unique perspective on a current, much-buzzed-about topic: AI.

"Obviously, we were ahead of the game onStar Trekwhen we did all of those episodes about core fears of artificial intelligence, when The Doctor's program was hijacked by another entity and his core programming of serving and being a healer was taken over so that he could now be threatening and even lethal," he says. "All of those things that have been very much in the public imagination the last three years, we were dealing with 30 years ago."

Picardo recalls once receiving a call from someone getting a PhD at Harvard, specializing in researching medical applications for AI, wanting to interview him for a book. "I said, 'You know, I'm only an actor,'" he recalls.

But the physician explained that, as a young viewer ofVoyager, he was captivated by the concept of an Emergency Medical Hologram programmed with the entirety of medical knowledge.

"But then he said, 'Watching your journey on the show, I came to realize that the knowledge is not enough. You need the human interface, you need the bedside manner. You need to mediate the information to a patient in order to have that bond and give them, so they have trust in you,'" Picardo says. "It is interesting for me as a bystander, as an actor who played this artificial intelligence physician, to now see so many of these concerns play out now and feel like, if only because of my role, I've been thinking about them for decades."

Robert Picardo in 'Star Trek: Starfleet Academy'Credit: Miller Mobley/Paramount+

He's also been keenly aware of the rate at which technology advances. "Star Trekhas always been in the game of dreaming up something and then science tries to catch up with that dream because of all the young minds that were watching it at the time and because it just seemed impossibly cool if we could do that," he says. "I remember my little computer on my desk in Sickbay when we premiered seemed so impossibly small. And then, within a year and a half of our premiere, it was too big! PowerBooks came out and suddenly it was like, 'No, this looks like a joke.' "

"Star Trekis a great predictor, I think, of technologies, and it also encourages us to want to develop the science and engineering to accomplish them," he says.

As a result, inspired by the originalTrekseries' actress Nichelle Nichols' recruitment of women and minorities into the space program in the '70s and '80s, Picardo has "tried to take on that mantle with my relationship with the Planetary Society for more than 25 years," supporting funding for NASA's space science budget and sitting on its executive board.

It's just one aspect of the way being a part ofStar Trekhas impacted him, he says. "It changes your life in so many other ways through the people you meet who likeStar Trekor have been inspired byStar Trekas young people and grown into these amazing people that you meet and they giveyousome credit!" he tells PEOPLE.

"I mean, to sit on stage with five men who walked on the moon, just to be up there with them because, at least to the audience, we were connected somehow," he marvels. "So that connection between imagining what our future in space is and actually encouraging the work to be done now in order to get there is something that I have treasured in my life."

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Robert Picardo 'Thought It Was a Mistake' When He Was Asked to Return to “Star Trek” Universe“ ”25 Years Later (Exclusive)

Robert Picardo reprises his Star Trek: Voyager role as The Doctor in the new live-action Starfleet Academy series ...
Jimmy Fallon

Jimmy Fallon recently mocked the meeting between Donald Trump and Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos with the help of a skit he shared online. Fallon took the shots after it was recently reported that Sarandos visited the White House to chat with the US President regarding the Netflix-Warner Bros deal. However, a recent report revealed that Netflix has bowed out of the deal.

Jimmy Fallon showcases skit of Donald Trump and Ted Sarandos meetup

Jimmy Fallon recently shared a clip of a skit from his talk show, throwing shade at the meeting between Donald Trump and Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos.

Fallon started by talking about New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani meeting Trump and then shifted to the topic of Sarandos and the President. He stated, "Speaking of visits to Washington, today Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos went to the White House to discuss the streamer's potential deal with Warner Bros."

He added that they managed to get an audio from the meeting and showcased the skit.

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It starts with a voice pretending to be Sarandos saying, "Thank you for agreeing to meet with me, Mr. President." Furthermore, another voice pretending to be Trump replies by asking, "Of course. I love Netflix. You guys make "Is It Cake," right?" referring to the show which features artists making unique cakes in the shape of handbags, machines, and more.

The duo then go back-and-forth in the skit in which Trump keeps asking Sarandos if the items he is listing are cakes or not. Trumo keeps on repeating whether the item he is pointing to is a cake. On the other hand, Sarandos replies to him, stating that the items are not what he assumes them to be.

The clip ends with Sarandos asserting that the item he is pointing out as cake is the Epstein files, to which Trump adds, "I'm gonna eat 'em!" Although Sarandos mentions they are not cake, the President states, "I know! Help me finish them, quick!!"

Originally reported by Ishita Verma onMandatory

The postJimmy Fallon Trolls Donald Trump & Ted Sarandos' Meetup With Skitappeared first onReality Tea.

Jimmy Fallon Trolls Donald Trump & Ted Sarandos’ Meetup With Skit

Jimmy Fallon recently mocked the meeting between Donald Trump and Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos with the help of a skit he shared online. Fallo...
Cindy Crawford Shares JFK Jr.'s Handwritten Note Praising Her Iconic

Cindy Crawford is sharing a sweet social media tribute to the late John F. Kennedy Jr.

People John F. Kennedy Jr.; Cindy CrawfordCredit: Barry King/WireImage; Taylor Hill/FilmMagic

NEED TO KNOW

  • The model, who graced the inaugural cover of his magazine George, said Ryan Murphy's new FX series Love Story brought back the memory

  • "JFK Jr. was visionary—putting Cindy Crawford as George Washington on the launch cover was bold and ahead of its time," one fan said

Cindy Crawfordhas fond memories of working with the lateJohn F. Kennedy, Jr.

On Thursday, Feb. 26, the 60-year-old model and actress reflected on being the first person to grace the cover of Kennedy'sGeorgemagazine, which was in publication from 1995 until 2001.

"Taking a trip down memory lane with@lovestoryfx…," she began in the caption of herInstagram post, referencing the newRyan MurphyFX drama series that chronicles the romance between Kennedy and his late wife,Carolyn Bessette Kennedy.

John F. Kennedy Jr. — press conference in NYC for the launch of the political magazine 'George

"1995 — the inaugural cover of JFK Jr'sGeorge Magazine, shot by the one and only Herb Ritts. Not just politics as usual," Crawford continued, referencing the magazine's iconic tagline.

Her post started with a shot of Kennedy at a press conference forGeorgemagazine, held at Federal Hall in New York City on Sept. 7, 1995.

In addition to his political work, the attorney, publisher and journalist was best known as the son of the 35th U.S. president,John F. Kennedy,and First LadyJacqueline Kennedy.

As Crawford's photo carousel continued, she also shared a shot of herself dressed as a fashionable George Washington — donning butter yellow trousers and a cropped ruffled blouse paired with a frock coat in coordinating colors.

The model pulled her look together with an ash blonde wig reminiscent of the hairpiece worn by the nation's first president.

The carousel also included a photo of Kennedy holding a copy of the inauguralGeorgemagazine, followed by a video of him explaining its concept during a CNN appearance with Larry King.

"We're about the intersection of politics and popular culture," he said at the time. "And we're calledGeorge, and a part of it is, you know, Cindy Crawford is sort of the symbol of American commercialism, in a way, as well as being a very capable businesswoman."

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Kennedy continued, "But if that's the concept that you're about, then that's what we wanted to put on and not really shy away from it, and put an illustration."

Crawford's post ended with a handwritten message to Ritts, praising the photographer for the finished product.

"Herb," Kennedy began. "Here's the cover. It reflects hours of debating over what words and how many words to obscure your beautiful image. We hope you liked it. Talk soon, John K."

FX's Love Story — Season 1, Ep. 4 — Paul Anthony Kelly as JFK Jr., Sarah Pidgeon as Carolyn BessetteCredit: FX

"JFK Jr. was visionary—putting Cindy Crawford as George Washington on the launch cover was bold and ahead of its time. Today's generation would have loved that fusion of pop culture and politics," one person commented.

In Murphy's new series, which sees Paul Anthony Kelly and Sarah Pidgeon star as JFK Jr. and Carolyn, respectively, there is mention ofGeorgemagazine's inception.

However, the show mainly focuses on the whirlwind relationship he has with the former publicist who worked for Calvin Klein before their marriage in 1996.

"I know how special Carolyn is to me and I understand how widely beloved she is, so this role comes with a lot of responsibility,"Pidgeon toldVarietyin July 2025.

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE'sfree daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Pidgeon added, "I mean, not only how she dressed, but the woman who worked at Calvin Klein and the person that JFK Jr. fell in love with. She's a human being beyond just these pictures. She really resonates with a lot of people, and she certainly does with me."

The real JFK Jr. and Bessette died in an aviation accident along with Carolyn's sister, Lauren Bessette, on July 16, 1999, off the coast of Martha's Vineyard.

Love Storyis now streaming on Hulu.

Read the original article onPeople

Cindy Crawford Shares JFK Jr.'s Handwritten Note Praising Her Iconic “George” Cover as a 'Beautiful Image'

Cindy Crawford is sharing a sweet social media tribute to the late John F. Kennedy Jr. NEED TO KNOW The mode...

 

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