“A man’s work is nothing but this slow trek to rediscover, through the detours of art, those two or three great and simple images in whose presence his heart first opened.”
-Albert Camus
Although some Sudbury UMC folks do know this particular fact about me, it may not be evident during, say, your average Sunday worship service at Sudbury UMC.
The only moment at which it might be on display comes at the end of every Friday “Choir Director Check-In” video I do for the church Facebook page, just as my face is fading away and my eMail address is coming onto the screen.
Hi. My name is Rob, and I like Star Trek.
From the late 1960s through probably the mid-2000s I think … this was not necessarily a characteristic that a lot of similarly-inclined people shouted from the rooftops.
But long before Star Trek somehow stopped being referred to by pop-culture writers as “a cult classic”, and began to be seen as a little more retro-hip — or at least, not so much something that drew instant snickering — various commonly-used phrases from within that TV program had already made it into the popular lexicon.
“Live long and prosper.” “Warp speed.” “Beam me up, Scotty” (a line of dialogue which, fun fact, was never spoken in exactly that way by any character).
It was only a matter of time before the general public caught on; but to a lot of us it seemed like a really long matter-of-time.
So, for years and years, “Trekkie” was more of an epithet than a simple descriptive noun.
But if there’s one thing that us “Trekkies” are good at … it’s bearing those gentle slings and arrows, and maintaining our reputation for being one of the most positive and supportive fan bases in American entertainment.
(In this age of social media, with its ability to nurture the worst instincts of online flame-throwing commenters — who can throw their flame from the safety of relative anonymity — there are of course people who claim to be Star Trek fans, but don’t exactly rise to the noble ideal. They’re more “my way or the highway” people — if I don’t like something that Star Trek did, then it’s worthless!! And the rest of us Trekkies look over at them and think, did you learn nothing from Mr. Spock’s philosophy, appreciation for “infinite diversity in infinite combinations”? As actor William Shatner once cracked, “–get a life!”)
“‘Star Trek’ was an attempt to say humanity will reach maturity and wisdom on the day that it begins not just to tolerate, but take a special delight in, differences in ideas and differences in lifeforms.”
-Gene Roddenberry (Star Trek creator)
Straight from the beginning, Trek has been: lots of different-looking people working together for the common good – on a spaceship with lots of fun blinky lights.
And in their best moments, the various Trek spinoff series have done what great science fiction should do: tell thinly-veiled stories about current controversial issues, and slide some social commentary in, right under the noses of whatever TV network executives were distributing them.
“I’d argue that in the last few decades in America, when people are asked what they hope the future will look like, they still turn to ‘Star Trek.’ They hope we put aside our differences and come together as humanity, that we rise above war, poverty, racism, and other problems that have beset us.”
-Ronald D. Moore (Star Trek: The Next Generation writer and script editor)
Lately, I’ve had a grand time reading and hearing accounts of the fun that was had during the making of the first sequel-series, Star Trek: The Next Generation. On a recent episode of a podcast called “TrekCulture”, actor Wil Wheaton recounted the immediate friendly connection amongst his colleagues from the Next Generation cast; and expressed appreciation for the decades-long continuation of the genuine affection that they all hold for one another. It’s reportedly not just a public-facing act. And it’s consistently on display — and lights up the room! — whether they’re reunited on a podcast, or at a restaurant, or at a science-fiction convention.
Which brings me to the main thrust of today’s symposium: for about the last fifty years, Trekkies have been venturing out into the world, and finding each other — the better to compare notes about their favorite TV show, and to work out new ways to bring its overarching message of hope for humanity.
Finding each other has taken the form of Star Trek conventions. In the mid-1970s, the first few of these gatherings seemed to be for the purpose of creating a “safe space” to appreciate a favorite TV show. Nowadays, they are that, but they’re also huge commercial ventures.
But the original spirit of the “cons” does live on, expressed outwardly by the many people who “cosplay” – who dress up as their favorite characters, human or alien. Sometimes the costumes are basic; other times, they are elaborate. Either way, at heart, they’re expressions of affection.
To be clear: I watch Trek, I read books about it, I gleefully discuss it with old friends and new … but I don’t wear it. (Well, except for the time when somehow, in a moment of either inattention or understanding, my mother let me wear a yellow Captain Kirk uniform shirt on school-picture day. Cut me a break — I was in the fourth grade.)
I’ve only ever been to one Star Trek convention. It was held in a large hotel in Cambridge, in spring of 1992. My inspiration for going: the keynote speaker was going to be none other than Sir Patrick Stewart — the Next Generation’s starship captain, Jean-Luc Picard, his very own self.
Yeah, I’ll pay money to go listen to that.
So I boarded an MBTA train at Riverside station, and got ready to take that Green Line in to Boston, change to a Red Line train headed back out in the general direction of Harvard University (“out there… thataway!”), and attend my first Con.
Not that I was going to advertise this to anyone on the train. Oh my no. It was still 1992, after all.
One stop after I changed to that Red Line train, it was confirmed for me that I had in fact taken the correct connecting train.
A family of four — Mom, Dad, sister, brother — boarded the train and sat down in seats across from me. We all faced in toward the middle of the train. And I knew, deep in my heart, that we were all headed to the same destination.
It wasn’t their aura of good cheer, though they did seem cheery enough — arguably far too cheery for that early on a Saturday morning. It was, instead, the fact that they were each of them dressed in full and painstakingly authentic Star Trek: The Next Generation uniforms. Maroon-and-black jumpsuits, with rank-insignia pips at the top of the collars, and the famous delta-shaped USS Enterprise logo over their hearts.
A tiny psychic ripple did go through the MBTA train, as various passengers took silent note of the outfits. And I’m sure that the unvoiced thoughts ranged from “uhh… okay…” to “…nerds…”. It was still 1992, after all.
And even nowadays, any time a family of four boards a train looking like Captain Picard, Doctor Crusher, the android Data, and Counselor Troi, it’s still not the usual occurrence, so it’ll get a certain amount of notice.
That family clearly knew what they looked like. They didn’t exude a sense of “yeah, I’m dressed like this, and what are you gonna do about it?” defiance. They instead looked, for all the world, like they wore that stuff all the time, wherever they went. It was impressive in that way — like the Monty Python actors walking around in the middle of town dressed up as English housewives, or as English clerics, or as medieval knights, as if it were perfectly normal.
(Nerds, you will understand me when I say that I felt for a moment as if I were in that scene from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home when Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock and the rest of the Original Series crew board a trolley in San Francisco, after having time-traveled back to 1986 Earth, and everybody on board looks at them funny.)
And that family seemed not to be worried about gentle slings and arrows that might come their way. They were comfortable in their own skins — and in their own absolutely authentic-looking (while clearly homemade) starship uniforms.
Happily, neither slings nor arrows were sent their way, at least nothing you could see or hear. Which was impressive.
I’d love to say that I gave them a cheerful thumbs up, smiled widely, asked them which episode was their favorite, and now we’re lifelong friends.
Didn’t happen. I did glance up, smile quietly — yeah, I get the joke and I’m laughing WITH it, not AT it — and look back down my folded hands.
But the experience suggested to me that I — still, then, a Shy Person in word and deed — might one day consider coming closer to wearing my heart on my sleeve. To demonstrate my appreciation for a science-fiction franchise, my opinions about current events, even perhaps my love of God (well, let’s not push this too far ;) ). To carry my light into the world.
Hey, if the Hendersons can march right out into a world that still saw Star Trek as a cult classic, with everything the word “cult” implies … then, maybe this Shy Person can attempt similar things. Maybe even discover other people who have similar interests, or takes on life, or feelings about the Spirit.
Mind. Blown.
P.S.: Yes, Sir Patrick Stewart did speak to a packed convention hall (full of people who had dressed the part!) for better than an hour, that afternoon … and he was, quite simply, as advertised.
-Rob Hammerton