theLogBook.com is a chronicle of how we used to imagine the future – an ever-expanding
logbook of what our entertainment, our culture, and even our brightest minds thought would happen.
It’s nostalgia – and some real history – that gives factual context to the fiction, cultural
context to the factual, and always looks to the future.

You can manually look up any date or any year, or go through the whole timeline.
Scroll down for today’s events in history.

The ongoing remodel of the site, the ongoing video series, and more are powered by your support!
Join our Patreon, get access to our Discord, and help the site grow!

Follow our socials or contact us:

Facebook     Instagram     Threads     BlueSky     Mastodon     YouTube     YouTube

Support us or buy stuff:

Patreon     PayPal     TeePublic     Amazon Wish List

Featured Articles

Explore theLogBook

It happened on this dateโ€ฆ

(You can also manually look up any other date, browse a year, or go through the whole timeline.)

Published On: June 6, 2020

RetrogramtheLogBook.com releases the 17th episode of the Retrogram podcast, hosted by Earl Green, covering the following shows from the week of November 25, 1973:

  • Robert’s Robots: A Spanner In The Works
  • Super Friends: The Mysterious Moles
  • The Starlost: The Astro-Medics
  • Star Trek: The Animated Series: The Ambergris Element
  • Orson Welles’ Great Mysteries: For Sale – Silence

More about the Retrogram podcast here

Published On: June 6, 2018

The ExpanseThe 32nd episode of the science fiction series The Expanse, based on the series of novels by James S.A. Corey (a pseudonym for writers Ty Franck and Daniel Abraham), is broadcast on cable channel Syfy.

Published On: June 6, 1985

Soyuz T-13The Soviet Union launches Soyuz T-13 on a mission to salvage space station Salyut 7, which has gone unoccupied for more than half a year and has lost power and attitude control. Cosmonauts Vladimir Dzhanibekov and Viktor Savinykh find the station dead in space, tumbling slowly, forcing them to use their Soyuz vehicle’s thrusters to match the station’s erratic motion to allow a manual docking. Inside the station, the crew finds frigid but breathable air, and again the Soyuz engines are fired to orient the station so its solar panels catch enough sunlight to charge its batteries. After a week of work carried out in bulky clothing befitting a Russian winter, the cosmonauts reactivate the station fully, scoring a major space first – the first-ever docking with, and repair of, a fully deactivated space station. For the first time, a Salyut crew spends some overlap time with the next long-term crew, a step toward the uninterrupted occupancy that will become commonplace aboard Mir, Salyut’s successor. Savinykh remains aboard Salyut 7 for 168 days, overlapping into the next long-term station crew, while Dzhanibekov departs 110 days into his stay. Hear about it on the Sci-Fi 5 podcast

Published On: June 6, 1980

BOOOOOOOOOMIn the journal Science, in an article titled “Extraterrestrial Cause for the Cretaceous-Tertiary Extinction”, Nobel-Prize-winning physicist Luis Alvarez and his son, geologist Walter Alvarez, propose their theory that the 110-mile-wide Chicxulub Crater discovered in the past few decades on the northern tip of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico is evidence of a large asteroid collision with Earth, resulting in the widespread death of the dinosaurs 65 million years before the modern day. A contentious peer review of the published theory follows, with many opposing theories proposed, though the Chicxulub hypothesis is eventually accepted as the “smoking gun” that killed the dinosaurs (the theory of an asteroid collision with Earth causing the extinction had been in circulation since the 1950s; the Alvarez theory is the first to point to a specific geological feature as evidence).

Published On: June 6, 1979

Salyut 6The Soviet Union launches a redesigned vehicle, Soyuz 34, with no crew aboard. Under automated control, Soyuz 34 docks with space station Salyut 6, where it provides cosmonauts Vladimir Lyakhov and Valery Ryumin with a more reliable return capsule. Their original vehicle Soyuz 32 capsule is loaded with material to be returned to Earth, and it lands – unoccupied and without incident – on June 13th, and the station crew returns to Earth aboard Soyuz 34 in August.

Published On: June 6, 1977

Fantastic JourneyThe tenth and final episode of the short-lived NBC series The Fantastic Journey premieres, airing in a time slot intended to burn off the remaining episode outside of any crucial ratings periods. Cheryl Ladd and Gerald McRaney guest star. Read more

Published On: June 6, 1958

Jefferson DrumThe seventh episode of the NBC western series Jefferson Drum is broadcast in the United States, starring Jeff Richards and Cyril Delevanti. Karen Steele guest stars. This episode is written by future Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry. Hear more about it on the Gene-ology podcast

Published On: June 6, 1952

Tales Of TomorrowThe 36th episode of ABC’s science fiction anthology series, Tales Of Tomorrow, airs on ABC, with each episode’s opening titles proclaiming that the series is produced “in cooperation with the Science-Fiction League of America”, a collective of sci-fi writers including Isaac Asimov and Theodore Sturgeon among its members. This episode is no longer in the archives and may be lost.

This series is not yet chronicled in the LogBook. You could join theLogBook team and write this guide or support the webmaster’s efforts to expand the site.

Absolutely no generative AI was used in the creation of the content on this website.
It’s mostly just some guy named Earl.

EG