Starlog Numbers 241 to 250 Magazine Back Issues01-10 | 11-20 | 21-30 | 31-40 | 41-50 | 51-60 | 61-70 | 71-80 | 81-90 | 91-100 | 101-110 | 111-120 | 121-130 | 131-140 | 141-150 | 151-160 | 161-170 | 171-180 | 181-190 | 191-200 | 201-210 | 211-220 | 221-230 | 231-240 | 241-250 | 251-260 | 261-270 | 271-280 | 281-290 | 291-300 | 301-310 | 311-320 | 321-330 | 331-340 | 341-350
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Starlog # 241
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Starlog # 241 Features 21 Years Exploring Science Fiction Bearing Arms Against Illegal Aliens! Contact Jodie Foster's Alien Encounter Plus: Lost World Event Horizon Batman & Robin Disney's Hercules
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Starlog # 242
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Starlog # 242 Features Shaquille O' Neal: Words Of Steel 21 Years Exploring Science Fiction Event Horizon Telling A Science - Fiction Ghost Story Spawn Hellish Adventure Kull The Conqueror Swords VS. Sorcery
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Starlog # 243
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Starlog # 243 Features Xena & Hercules: The Sound Of Adventure 21 Years Exploring Science Fiction How To Pick Up Aliens: Men In Black Contact V Nightman New From Battlestar Galactica's Glen Larson
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Starlog # 244
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Starlog # 244 Features Men In Black Now, They're Animated! 21 Years Exploring Science Fiction Patrick Stewart His Dark Side X-Files The Man Who Gave Scully Cancer
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Starlog # 245
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Starlog # 245 Features X-Files Alien Bounty Hunter Wants You 21 Years Exploring Science Fiction Starship Troopers Epic Bug Hunt Paul Verhoeven Speaks!
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Starlog # 246
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Starlog # 246 Features Starship Troopers Tomorrow Never Dies: 007 On The Set 21 Years Exploring Science Fiction Ripley's Back & Out For Blood The Postman Post - Apocalyptic Tales
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Starlog # 247
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Starlog # 247 Features Special SF All - Stars Issue! 21 Years Exploring Science Fiction Exclusive Interviews! Those Alien Women Agent 007 Returns! Pierce Brosnan Reports! SF & Fantasy All-Stars
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Starlog # 249
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Starlog # 249 Features 21 Years Exploring Science Fiction Exclusive Interviews Voyager's Jeri Ryan Babylon 5's Tracy Scoggins Sphere Michael Crichton's Underwater Adventure Live The Star Trek Experience! Plus: Star Trek Stargate SGI
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Starlog # 250
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Starlog # 250 Features Tom Hanks From The Earth To The Moon America's Spectacular Race To The Stars Tarzan & The Lost City New Ape Man Epic Danger! Will Robinson! It's Movie Adventure! Gary (Dr. Smith) Oldman Confesses
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Starlog was a monthly science fiction magazine that was created in 1976 and focused primarily on Star Trek at its inception. Kerry O’Quinn and Norman Jacobs were its creators and it was published by Starlog Group, Inc. in August 1976. Starlog was one of the first publications to report on the development of the first Star Wars movie, and it followed the development of what was to eventually become Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979).
Starlog was born out of the Star Trek fandom craze, but also was inspired by the success of the magazine Cinefantastique which was the model of Star Trek and Star Wars coverage. Starlog, though it called itself a science fiction magazine, actually contained no fiction. The primary focus of the magazine, besides the fact that it was mostly based on Star Trek fandom, was the making of science fiction media - books, films, and television series - and the work that went into these creations. The magazine examined the form of science fiction and used interviews and features with artists and writers as its foundation.
Science fiction fans, such as those who follow the television channel SyFy, have voiced that Starlog is the science fiction magazine most responsible for cultivating and exhibiting fanboy culture in America during the magazine’s heyday in the 1970s through the early 1990s. Not only did the magazine cover media, the way it was created, and by whom, but they also attended conventions such as the “Ultimate Fantasy” convention in Houston, Texas in 1982 (which was a legendary flop) and kept fans updated on the current events in their respective sci-fi fandoms. Starlog itself followed the marketing strategy of labeling it “the most popular science fiction magazine in publishing history” which allowed the creators to home in on their fanboy market and use that advertisement strategy to their advantage. In later years many of its long-time contributors had moved on. Nonetheless, it continued to boast genre journalists such as Jean-Marc Lofficier, Will Murray, and Tom Weaver.
Starlog ended its run as a digital magazine published by The Brooklyn Company, run by longtime Fangoria President Thomas DeFeo. In April 2009, Starlog officially ended its time in print, with 33 years of material (374 issues).
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