I love it when people ask shit like “Which world would you rather live in? Star Trek or Star Wars?” When like, Star Trek takes place in a world where mankind has erradicated diseases and war and explore space to make contact with new civilizations, and in Star Wars everything is old and dusty and every 20 years a new angry white man murders half the galaxy.
Tag: star trek
From my chat with a journalist: part 1
Dee interview transcript, Jan. 24, 2018
[What is your very first memory of Star Trek? Was it love at first sight, or did it take you some time to get “into” it?]
I started out in science fiction, before Star Trek was ever on the air. And in 1966, I was living in Oregon and was part of a women’s writing group, a women’s science fiction group. We were all writing, wanting to write. Some of the members of our group had written professionally, and some were trying to get scripts into Hollywood and so on, but we were all focused on writing. Science fiction in the 1960s was not considered the purview of women.
When Star Trek came out, I imagine [my science fiction club] was how I first heard about it, because I didn’t watch a lot of TV. I had this little black-and-white, eight-inch screen with the bunny ears.
I don’t know why the first episode that aired [The Man Trap] is so disliked, because my memory of it was of just being fascinated. Science fiction … on TV was considered for children. And this was not for children. These were well-developed characters, real plots that you could get into, you could imagine their plight, Bones had a love interest. And there was this Vulcan, who was just a member of this rest of the crew. It was startling, and I was absolutely riveted from that very first day. I had my science fiction club where we would go and talk about it.
[Did your sci-fi group watch?]
We all watched it; we were all excited that something was coming out on TV. Everyone was married, had kids, it was hard to get away to meet, so we would get on the phone and one person would call another and they would call another and this phone chain would go around talking about the episode. I wouldn’t say it totally evolved into a Star Trek fanclub, but pretty close, and we were all fascinated by The Vulcan, by the fact that there was this character that was an alien but serving with a human crew. It almost turned into a Vulcan appreciation sci-fi group, and speculating about what would an alien species be like, working with humans, is what caught our attention.
And by the second year, one member got a color TV and — oh it was a very big deal. In the beginning, we didn’t know that the crew had different colored shirts, or that shirts were related to what job they had on the ship. I remember an early story I wrote where all their shirts were green.
So she had a color TV and we started all watching at her house. And there were a lot of machinations that had to happen because everyone had families, everyone had kids. So one week we’d start planning for the next week. Who’s going take care of the kids, we need a babysitter. We need to collect money to pay the babysitter, and what are we going to do with our husbands? And we didn’t have access to our own money. We couldn’t get money out of our bank accounts without our husbands’ permission, so I remember looking under cushions to get change so that we could send our husbands out to go bowling or something so we could watch and not be disturbed.
It was so exciting. And to see the episodes where Kirk says “She’s a crewman” and where Uhura is working in “Who Mourns for Adonis?” under her communications panel and the way Spock talks to her [“I can think no one better equipped to handle it, Miss Uhura.”]. I can’t tell you. We were just electrified, because that was not the world we were living in, and that was the world we wanted to live in.
every single Q episode
Picard: Q why are you here
Q: to be with you
Picard: i don’t understand, what do you mean
Q: i love you
Picard: can you just be more clear
Q: i want to spend eternity with you
Picard: what are you saying
Q: you’re the best person i ever met
Picard: i wish you would just be less cryptic
Riker: A A A A A A A A A A A
So we got an Amazon Echo and we changed the wake word to “Computer” and now I feel like I’m on the Enterprise all the time. Additionally, whenever I watch Star Trek, she only responds to “computer” when Data says it and it’s kind of adorable. Not Picard, not La Forge, not Troi, not Dr. Crusher, not Riker. Not anyone but Data. The other night Data asked his Computer what the time was and my Computer told him it was 10:47. Watching Star Trek is even more fun now
Hey guys remember when James Tiberius Kirk, hero of the 23rd century, legendary decorated starfleet officer, jaywalked and then yelled “double dumbass on you” at the driver who had the right of way
Because I do
I like the idea that there’s a telepathic dimension to Vulcan flirting (actually it’s probably mostly telepathic?), just little pings of affection that are as subconscious and subtle as human body language, and if you’re Vulcan you don’t know you’re doing it and if you’re human you don’t even know what’s happening, it’s just like inexplicable shivers or static shocks that leave you feeling kind of high. To the point that Kirk starts asking if anyone else has noticed this and has Scotty check the wiring on the bridge and in the turbolifts. And then halfway through “Journey to Babel” Amanda notices that Kirk keeps getting those “someone walked over my grave” shivers right after he does something cute and she’s literally the only person in the universe equipped to take him aside and tell him what that means.
drst:
what she says: im fine
what she means: the beastie boys band canonically exists in the star trek reboot universe and jim kirk canonically enjoys the song “sabotage” (if nothing else from their discography). however, theres a conflict here since the song “intergalactic” (by the same band) references star trek and more specifically spock not once, but twice, with the lyrics “like a pinch on the neck of mr spock” and “super educated im smarter than spock”. if the beastie boys exist in the rebootverse, does “intergalactic” exist also? and if so, are the aforementioned lyrics simply omitted or transformed into a seperate in-universe scifi reference to maintain the song’s theme?
Alternately, since in the same movie Spock time travels, there is a possibility that Spock went back in time met The Beastie Boys, and they just happened to think he was amazing.
#also#let’s not forget the voyage home#where mr. spock does use the nerve pinch#on a punk on a bus#and kirk is using his name all over the place#perhaps spock becomes an urban legend of folk justice (via @flange5)
holy shit
worf:
Commander Worf directing an episode of Star Trek
wow meta
It’s the shark print shirt that takes it to new levels of weirdness.
Star Trek’s DeForest Kelley wanted to be
a doctor in real life, but he couldn’t
afford medical school. Later on, some of
his proudest moments as an actor were
the number of people who told him his
portrayal of Dr. McCoy inspired them to
become doctors. “You can win awards
and that sort of thing, but to influence
the youth of the country … is an award
that is not handed out by the industry.”