A resident of Los Angeles, California, Dean Zanetos is an accomplished film and television producer and director. Drawing on his multiple decades of experience in Hollywood, Dean Zanetos currently serves as a founder and CEO of MobilFlix, a premium streaming services provider for mobile devices utilizing a patented technology for glasses-free 3D viewing. His production credits include the sci-fi/fantasy TV series, Voyagers!.
Voyagers! premiered on NBC in October 1982. It consisted of 20 hour-long episodes and followed the adventures of Phineas Bogg, a time traveler, played by Jon-Erik Hexum, and Jeffrey Jones, an 11-year-old orphan, and history buff, in the role, Meeno Peluce. In the pilot, the two encounter after a malfunction of Omni, Bogg’s time-traveling device resembling a giant pocket-watch. When Omni blinks red, it’s a sign for Bogg, later together with Jones, to go and correct history, so it happens the way we know it. The duo takes the audience on a historical roller-coaster from Ancient Egypt and Moses to World War I to the Wright Brothers and the testing of their airplane.
Although the TV series aired for only one season, many viewers harbor fond memories and rewatch it with their children more than thirty years later. Furthermore, the show inspired other time-traveling-themed productions, including NBC’s Quantum Leap.
Voyagers! premiered on NBC in October 1982. It consisted of 20 hour-long episodes and followed the adventures of Phineas Bogg, a time traveler, played by Jon-Erik Hexum, and Jeffrey Jones, an 11-year-old orphan, and history buff, in the role, Meeno Peluce. In the pilot, the two encounter after a malfunction of Omni, Bogg’s time-traveling device resembling a giant pocket-watch. When Omni blinks red, it’s a sign for Bogg, later together with Jones, to go and correct history, so it happens the way we know it. The duo takes the audience on a historical roller-coaster from Ancient Egypt and Moses to World War I to the Wright Brothers and the testing of their airplane.
Although the TV series aired for only one season, many viewers harbor fond memories and rewatch it with their children more than thirty years later. Furthermore, the show inspired other time-traveling-themed productions, including NBC’s Quantum Leap.