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Trekkie

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The Original Series Trekkies at BayCon 2003

A Trekkie (or Trekker) is a fan of all or part of the Star Trek fictional universe.[1]

Origins

In 1967, science fiction editor Arthur W. Saha applied the term "trekkies" when he saw a few fans of the first season of Star Trek wearing pointy ears at the 25th World Science Fiction Convention, on the day Gene Roddenberry showed a print of "Amok Time" to the convention. Saha used the term in an interview with Pete Hamill that Hamill was conducting for TV Guide concerning the phenomenon of science fiction.[2]

The Trekkie phenomenon did not catch on with general public consciousness until years after the show was cancelled in 1969. The show began syndication in reruns during the early 1970s and the first fan convention devoted to Star Trek opened in 1972 in New York.

Trekkie vs. Trekker

Some Star Trek enthusiasts prefer the term "Trekkie", while some others self-identify as "Trekker". Self-identification as a "Trekkie" became even less popular after a famous national television parody in 1986 (see In Popular Culture below); several self-described "Trekkers" were quoted as saying they "had a life" (contrasting themselves from "Trekkies").

In the 1991 TV show Star Trek: 25th Anniversary Special, Leonard Nimoy attempted to settle the issue by stating that the term 'Trekker' is the correct one.

In the documentary Trekkies, Kate Mulgrew stated that Trekkers are the ones "walking with us" while the Trekkies are the ones content to simply sit and watch Star Trek.

The issue is also shown in the film Trekkies 2, in which a Star Trek fan recounts a supposed incident during a Star Trek convention where Gene Roddenberry used the term "trekkies" to describe fans of the show, only to be corrected by a fan that stood up and yelled "Trekkers!" Gene Roddenberry allegedly responded with "No, it's 'Trekkies.' I should know — I invented the thing." Generally, fans of film and television franchises make up their own nicknames, as with the "Browncoats" who are fans of the Firefly television series.

Other names

Star Trek fans who believe Star Trek: Deep Space Nine is the best series of the franchise adopted the title of Niner following the episode "Take Me Out to the Holosuite", in which Captain Benjamin Sisko formed a baseball team "The Niners".[citation needed]

Activities

The logo of STARFLEET International, the largest Star Trek Fan Club

There are many Star Trek fan clubs, among the largest currently being STARFLEET International and the International Federation of Trekkers. Some Trekkies regularly attend Star Trek conventions (called "cons"). In 2003, STARFLEET was the world's largest Star Trek fan club;[3] as of January 1, 2011, it claimed to have 4,145 members in 228 chapters around the world.[4] Seventeen people have served as president of the association since 1975. Upon election, the president is promoted to the fictional rank of Fleet Admiral and is referred to as the "Commander, Starfleet". Since 2004, the president has served a term of three years. David Blaser became the association's president on January 1, 2011.

There is a persistent stereotype that amongst Trekkies there are many speakers of the constructed Klingon language. The reality is less clear-cut, as some of its most fluent speakers are more language aficionados than people obsessed with Star Trek. Most Trekkies have no more than a basic vocabulary of Klingon, perhaps consisting of a few common words heard innumerable times over the series, while not having much knowledge of Klingon's syntax or precise phonetics.[5]

Another fan activity is filking, that is playing or writing music about Star Trek.

Trekkie in the news

During the 1996 Whitewater controversy, a bookbindery employee named Barbara Adams served as an alternate juror. During the trial Adams wore a Star Trek: The Next Generation-style Starfleet Command division uniform, including a commbadge, a phaser, and a tricorder.[6]

Adams was dismissed from the trial for conducting a sidewalk interview with the television program American Journal.[6] The major news media[who?] reported (wrongfully) that she was dropped for wearing her Star Trek uniform to the trial. Adams noted she was dropped because she talked to a reporter of America Journal about her Trek uniform and not anything about the trial.[7] Although nothing was deemed as a trial enclosure violation, the rule was clearly stated: no juror was to communicate with the press in any manner.

Adams stated the judge at the trial was supportive of her. She said she believed in the principles expressed in Star Trek and found it an alternative to "mindless television" because it promotes tolerance, peace, and faith in mankind.[6]

She subsequently appeared in the documentaries Trekkies and Trekkies 2.

In 1986, William Shatner performed in a famous sketch on Saturday Night Live. He played himself at a Star Trek convention at which he told the Trekkies to "get a life". "For crying out loud," Shatner elaborated, "it was just a TV show!"[8] At one point, he asked Jon Lovitz' Trekker character, whom he assumed to be almost 30 years old, if he had ever kissed a girl, at which the character sadly hung his head.

Trekkies have been parodied in several films, notably Galaxy Quest, a science fiction comedy very obviously modeled on the Star Trek franchise. The main character Jason Nesmith, representing William Shatner, repeats Shatner's 1986 statement when an avid fan asks him about the operation of the fictional vessel.

One episode of Futurama called "Where No Fan Has Gone Before" was dedicated to parodying Trekkies. It included a history whereby Star Trek's fandom had grown into a religion. Eventually the Church of Star Trek had grown so strong that it needed to be abolished from the Galaxy and the words "Star Trek" were even outlawed.

The 1999 film Free Enterprise chronicled the lives of two men who grew up worshipping Star Trek and emulating Captain Kirk. Most of the movie centers on William Shatner, playing a parody of himself, and how the characters wrestle with their relationships to Star Trek.

The Broadway musical Avenue Q partially parodies Trekkies through the inclusion of a character named Trekkie Monster. This character is not a Trekkie, however, and is addicted to internet pornography.

A Trekkie featured in one episode of the television show The West Wing, during which Josh Lyman confronts the temporary employee over her display of a Star Trek pin in the White House.

The 2009 film Fanboys makes frequent references to Star Trek and the rivalry between Trekkies and Star Wars fans. William Shatner makes a cameo appearance in the film.

The Family Guy episode "Not All Dogs Go to Heaven" features a Star Trek convention and many Trekkies. One Trekkie comes to the convention with the mumps, and upon Peter Griffin seeing him, he impulsively pushes his daughter Meg into the Trekkie and forces her to take her picture with him (believing him to be in costume as an alien from Star Trek). Seeing as how Meg was not immunised, she catches the mumps from the Trekkie and ends up bedresting.

On the CBS-TV sitcom The Big Bang Theory, the four main male characters are shown to be Trekkies, playing the game of "Klingon Boggle" and resolving disputes using the game of "rock-paper-scissors-lizard-spock." Wil Wheaton of Star Trek: The Next Generation fame has made multiple guest appearances playing himself.

Fans

Notable individual trekkies/trekkers/Trek fans:

Actors/Comedians

Hollywood movie and TV directors and producers

Musicians

  • Mick Fleetwood, member of rock group Fleetwood Mac, made a cameo appearance in the Next Generation episode "Manhunt"
  • Welsh rock group Lostprophets are fans of the show.[25] Mike Lewis is said to own a Star Trek uniform.
  • Tom Morello, Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave guitarist. He appeared in the Star Trek: Voyager episode "Good Shepherd".
  • Mike Oldfield, musician.[26]
  • Brad Paisley, country singer. When a fan won a contest to spend the day with him in Las Vegas, one location Paisley took the fan was the Las Vegas Hilton's Star Trek: The Experience. As seen in a TV show documenting this contest, Brad proudly sat in the exhibit's captain's chair on the bridge of Enterprise-D. William Shatner, who played Captain Kirk, has appeared in several of Paisley's music videos, including 2007's "On-Line"; this song includes the line "I'm a Sci-Fi fanatic" and, in the video, Jason Alexander (playing the title character) is seen wearing Vulcan Ears and a "Beam Me Up" T-shirt while chatting on-line. Paisley also wrote and performed vocals for "Real", the closing song from Shatner's 2004 album Has Been.
  • Frank Sinatra "never missed" The Next Generation.[16] Brent Spiner, the actor who played Data on the series, returned the favor by recording a tribute album called Ol' Yellow Eyes Is Back.
  • Pharrell Williams, music producer, song-writer, hip-hop artist, and frontman for the rock band N.E.R.D is a life long fan, as seen in his consistent use of the Vulcan Salute. Pharrell's also named his music label, Star Trak Entertainment, in homage to the series.
  • D'arcy Wretzky, former bassist of The Smashing Pumpkins, said she was "a big 'Star Trek' fan, but I'm not into the conventions or the ears or anything like that."[27]

Politicians and world leaders

Science fiction writers

  • Isaac Asimov, a close personal friend of Gene Roddenberry. He attended the first public screening of "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and attended numerous conventions during the 1970s.[38]
  • Bjo Trimble, who helped spearhead the letter writing campaign that convinced NBC to continue Star Trek for a third season.

Scientists, engineers and inventors

  • Stephen Hawking, who played himself (as a computer reconstruction) on the Next Generation episode "Descent". While on the set he wanted to see the Enterprise's warp engine room set. After seeing it he commented, "I am working on that."
  • Dr. Daniel J. Levitin, a professor of cognitive neuroscience, popular author and musician, has been known to use clips from TNG in his university lectures, and his book The World in Six Songs features transliterated Klingon dialect.
  • Randy Pausch, late Carnegie Mellon professor who gave the Last Lecture has a cameo in the 2009 Star Trek film.

Sports people

Others

References and footnotes

  1. ^ The word trekkie is found in the Concise Oxford Dictionary.
  2. ^ Urban Dictionary
  3. ^ Guinness World Records 2004, Bantam Books, 2003, p. 167, ISBN 9780553587128
  4. ^ Starfleet Database, CompOps, Fleet Strength
  5. ^ There's No Klingon Word for Hello, Slate Magazine, May 7, 2009. Retrieved May 8, 2009
  6. ^ a b c "Judge Beams Trekkie Juror from Whitewater case", a CNN story from March 14, 1996
  7. ^ Interview with Mike Jerrick on Sci-Fi Channel's information fandom news series Sci-Fi Buzz
  8. ^ Zoglin, Richard. "Trekking Onward", Time, Nov 28, 1994.
  9. ^ [1]
  10. ^ Duck, Siobhan (2007-06-13). "Who's a bad speller, that's who!". Herald Sun.
  11. ^ Bill Bailey interview | The List
  12. ^ Michael Hinman (2007-01-06). "Forget Matt Damon, Daniel Craig Wants To Be Kirk". Airlock Alpha. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  13. ^ a b Neumaier, Joe (2009-05-04). "Barack Obama, Angelina Jolie, Tom Hanks and more famous Trekkies". Daily News. New York.
  14. ^ a b [2]
  15. ^ Special Features. Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2 DVD Boxset.
  16. ^ a b Appleyard, Bryan. "Patrick Stewart: Keep on trekkin'." The Times: 2007/11/04.
  17. ^ Pascale, Anthony. "Grunberg: ‘Amazing Actors’ Want To Be In Star Trek XI", TrekMovie.com, August 23, 2006
  18. ^ Nimoy, Leonard. I Am Spock. 1995 mass market paperback edition: pp 257-258.
  19. ^ Anthony Pascale (2008-08-16). "Stiller Puts Some Star Trek In Tropic Thunder". TrekMovie. Retrieved 2008-08-17.
  20. ^ Ben Stiller (Actor, Director, Producer, Writer) (2001-09-28). Zoolander (DVD). Paramount Pictures. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  21. ^ Ben Stiller (1996-06-14). "Cable Guy, The - Star Trek Knights". YouTube. Retrieved 2010-02-19.
  22. ^ Eric Goldman (2008-01-09). "Karl Urban: From Comanche Moon to Star Trek". IGN. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
  23. ^ "Star Trek: The Next Generation - Angel One", review on TVSquad by Wil Wheaton, 28 March 2008
  24. ^ Pollock, Dale. Skywalking: the Life and Films of George Lucas. ISBN 0-306-80904-4
  25. ^ Interview - Planet Verge 2002
  26. ^ "The 5-minute Interview: Mike Oldfield, Musician". London: The Independent. 2008-04-07. Retrieved 2008-07-13.
  27. ^ "Raves: D'arcy of the Smashing Pumpkins. Rolling Stone Magazine, 1996/03/07. Available at http://www.starla.org/articles/rave.htm Retrieved on 2007/09/23
  28. ^ Gail Collins (2000-08-18). "Public Interests; Al Gore as Fall Programming". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-11-06.
  29. ^ Pallasch, Abdon (2004-10-10). "Despite His National Reputation, Keyes Struggles to Find His Niche". Chicago Sun-Times. p. 28.
  30. ^ As trial begins, Cheney's ex-aide is still a puzzle - International Herald Tribune
  31. ^ John McCormick (2008-03-07). "Obama a little confused about today's state". The Swamp. Tribune Company. Retrieved 2008-11-06.
  32. ^ Matt Blum (2008-11-06). "5 Signs President-Elect Obama Is a Geek". Wired. Retrieved 2008-11-06.
  33. ^ Patrick Gavin (2009-05-09). "Trekkie in chief wants screening". Politico. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  34. ^ http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/224011/april-07-2009/better-know-a-district---new-york-s-25th---dan-maffei
  35. ^ Larry Nemecek, Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion, 1993, ISBN ISBN 0-671-79460-4
  36. ^ "Remembering Reagan: The Klingon Connection". Official site. 2008-11-06.
  37. ^ "David Wu (D-Oregon) - "Klingons in the White House" 10 January 2007
  38. ^ Dillard, J.M. (1994). Star Trek: "Where No Man Has Gone Before" — A History in Pictures. Pocket Books. pp. 22, 50. ISBN 0-671-51149-1.
  39. ^ [3]
  40. ^ Nichelle Nichols, Beyond Uhura: Star Trek and Other Memories, G.P. Putnam & Sons, New York, 1994. pp.164-65