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Star Trek's 50th Anniversary Celebrated at Comic-Con (deadline.com) 106

An anonymous Slashdot reader writes: Leonard Nimoy's 59-year-old son released a trailer for his upcoming documentary, For The Love Of Spock. CBS released a video teaser for their upcoming Star Trek: Discovery series. And Schmaltz brewery released a "Trouble With Tribbles" beer.

It was all part of the festivities celebrating the 50th anniversary of CBS's original Star Trek series at this year's Comic-Con festival in San Diego, which culminated with an all-star panel of actors from previous Star Trek TV series. William Shatner, Michael Dorn, Brent Spiner, Jeri Ryan, and Scott Bakula all reminisced on the phenomenon of the show's fan culture, with Dorn telling the audience that Apple's iPad was inspired by Star Trek technology. And Brent Spiner told the audience, "We're in a time now where identity is under attack... Politicians could learn from Star Trek."

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Star Trek's 50th Anniversary Celebrated at Comic-Con

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  • "This video is not available. Sorry about that." If I'm right, and this is geofencing, WHY?!
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I hopped on to a US server via VPN and had a look. You aren't missing much, it's just the ship launching. The ship looks crap, really low budget CGI and uninteresting design, but it is new and it's not clear what era it's from.

  • As Kirk always said: "live long and prosper!". It sure did.
  • While the copyright holders are shitting on the franchise? An anti-celebration seems like it makes more sense. I'd show up dressed as a Star Wars character.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Not to mention CBS shitting on the fans by restricting the series to CBS All Access in the US and, as an extra slap in the balls, giving it to the rest of the fans worldwide on Netflix. They've made a lot of poor choices lately, like forcing Supergirl to compete in a time slot when other comic book franchises air and then not having it available on common streaming services like Hulu or Netflix. I'm sure that's the main reason the new season will air on the CW going forward.

      P.S. The new ship looks like hot

    • Yeah; what I hear is, this latest Star Trek themed movie isn't even as good as the first two after it became yet another action movie franchise - the effects are impressive (but that is sort of run of the mill nowadays), and the story is non-existent. The original series were usually well-researched, sometimes politically daring and often with some sort of ethical morale - all of which has been replaced with a bunch of chest-beating narcissists. Maybe I'll watch it if it eventually makes it to a free-to-air

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday July 24, 2016 @08:19AM (#52570079)

    A franchise being milked dry by its IP holder, fans being sued for trying to create something, and mostly being sued for creating something that's better and closer to the core idea of the franchise than its IP holder creates...

    What exactly is there to celebrate? Any "real" celebration would probably be snuffed instantly by the IP holders.

    In the eternal words of Bones: "It's dead, Jim."

    • A franchise being milked dry by its IP holder, fans being sued for trying to create something, and mostly being sued for creating something that's better and closer to the core idea of the franchise than its IP holder creates...

      What exactly is there to celebrate? Any "real" celebration would probably be snuffed instantly by the IP holders.

      In the eternal words of Bones: "It's dead, Jim."

      You did see Voyager, right? Because that particular horse has been dead for a while now... OK, Scott Bacula quantum leaped into it for a moment and tried to set things right, but still...

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      A franchise being milked dry by its IP holder, fans being sued for trying to create something, and mostly being sued for creating something that's better and closer to the core idea of the franchise than its IP holder creates...

      What exactly is there to celebrate? Any "real" celebration would probably be snuffed instantly by the IP holders.

      In the eternal words of Bones: "It's dead, Jim."

      Huh, did you sleep a long time or something, because the same comment applies around 20 years ago, too.

      In other words, noth

  • by Anonymous Coward

    This is Slashdot. We will have none of that. This is already obvious after just 12 comments.

  • by ITRambo ( 1467509 ) on Sunday July 24, 2016 @08:36AM (#52570105)
    The summary statement "Politicians could learn from Star Trek" presumes that sociopaths are capable of caring about others. That't not going to happen in the real world.
  • ST is dead.Each series has gotten further and further away from the original core concepts, and New Trek is a pile of flashy, pretty turds. The political correctness got too excruciating back in the days of Voyager. I will not be watching the next series. The franchise needs to be left dead. But as long as there's money to be made, CBS will crank out more crap, and further dilute something that was once the greatest ever.
  • It less silly than Lost In Space or ominus as the Outer Limits. Two years before 2001 Space Odyssey and three years before the Moon landing.
    (The Salt Monster was like 5th filmed including two pilots)
    (One of the 2001 actors was guester star of 2nd pilot)
    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      (One of the 2001 actors was guester star of 2nd pilot)

      That would be Gary Lockwood, who played Mitchell in "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and Frank Poole in "2001".

  • The Enterprise was a military fascist society with a white guy on top. The WAR types would love a government like that. Ironically the Borg were a total democracy in that every Borg had one vote. Something to consider.

    • Ironically the Borg were a total democracy in that every Borg had one vote.

      all Borg are equal, but some Borg are more equal than others? If they're a queen, that is

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Cramming social justice down the throats of Trek fans against the wishes of George Takei is inexcusable. Boycotting the new movies because of it.

    • There are only three scenes with Sulu's "husband" and daughter in the Star Trek Beyond. If I haven't heard about the controversy before seeing the movie, I could have assumed that the "husband" was Sulu's brother and maybe the daughter was his niece. The scenes are quite subtle. No kissing, no glory holes, no rainbow flags.
      • There are only three scenes with Sulu's "husband" and daughter in the Star Trek Beyond. If I haven't heard about the controversy before seeing the movie, I could have assumed that the "husband" was Sulu's brother and maybe the daughter was his niece. The scenes are quite subtle. No kissing, no glory holes, no rainbow flags.

        Why even bother unless it affects the plot in some way? Just to be fucking lame. The problem isn't making him gay. The problem is making him gay for no reason other than to pander.

        • Why even bother unless it affects the plot in some way?

          Because the scene plays off a moment in Generations where an older Kirk is at a crossroad in his life when Chekov introduces Sulu's daughter, which Kirk replied that the last time he saw her was when she was so tall. In the new movie, a young Kirk is at a crossroad in his life when he notices Sulu being greeted by his spouse and little daughter.

          The problem is making him gay for no reason other than to pander.

          Science fiction is a reflection of today's society. ST:TOS made TV history in the 1960's with the first interracial kiss when the civil rights movement was ongoing.

          • Science fiction is a reflection of today's society.

            So why is there so little gay crew?

            ST:TOS made TV history in the 1960's with the first interracial kiss when the civil rights movement was ongoing. I'm sure critics called that pandering as well.

            I'm sure they did. But the difference is that Trek isn't breaking any ground here whatsoever, and they're going against the wishes of both the original, revered creator (who envisioned the character as straight) and the actor who made the role famous. Put it all together, and it spells fail.

            I am not offended by gay characters. I am offended by this senseless pandering. Not because it's gay, but because it's senseless.

            • So why is there so little gay crew?

              Actually do we really know? We have the seven lead characters, one of which we know to be gay (Sulu) and and additional four have been depicted as being in heterosexual relationships in this timeline (Spock, Uhura, Kirk, McCoy). Though we can't rule any of them out as being bisexual.

              So that's five people we know something about their sexuality, out of a crew of 1100 (remember, this Enterprise is much bigger than the one in TOS, which had a crew of around 400). Think about today's society. You probably know

  • While I love ST and have seen all episodes of all the series and movies, I was quite disappointed on this last one. It showed nothing about any of the Values that ST proposes, or anything about how we should all try to get along and resolve our issues. Something that shows the positive side of humans. It was a bad movies with a bad story with many plot holes and very drab settings, A movie about Revenge? really? Why waste all this time and effort and money into making something like that? While I love Simo
    • Captain! Thar be spoilers ahead!

      Beyond boils down to a story about a Captain going mad in space and abandoning Federation ideals and principles. It's not like Star Trek has never [wikia.com] explored [wikia.com] that before [wikia.com]. In this case, he's a soldier unable to exist in the more peaceful world he helped to create. To quote Chancellor Gorkon: "If there is to be a brave new world, our generation is going to have the hardest time living in it."

  • by __aaclcg7560 ( 824291 ) on Sunday July 24, 2016 @11:03AM (#52570621)

    Star Trek Discovery is the new TV show. But STD as an acronym has other meanings.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=264s-sFqvTA [youtube.com]

  • by Anonymous Coward

    All I know at this point is; that new ship is fugly. Seriously, amazingly, massively fugly.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      An insider I know works in the CBS story department and explained the ship design to me and l will try to explain the ship design to you now. It is a Federation saucer attached to a Klingon D5/D6 type secondary hull because internal factionalism has split the Federation and Klingon Unity Alliance and the crew are without a ship but come up with an idea of uniting the Federation and the Klingon disparity and disunity with a symbolic symbol ship. Now as their own ships were partially destroyed in an altercati

  • WTF? Who are the marketing geniuses behind this? "Drink Star Trek Beer, just like the kind you DON'T see on the show."

    The whole point of Star Trek is to determine how humanity can be the best it can be, and instead, the Federation of Beer (Canada, go figure), wants to sell beer to Star Trek fans. "Ha! Take that you know-it-all nit-picking trekkies! Have a beer and kill those brain cells. Star Wars Rulez, eh!

I THINK THEY SHOULD CONTINUE the policy of not giving a Nobel Prize for paneling. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.

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