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{{realworld}}
 
{{realworld}}
 
{{Pop culture}}
 
{{Pop culture}}
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{{split}}
 
The following are [[Star Trek parodies and pop culture references|''Star Trek'' parodies and references]] in literature and comics.
 
The following are [[Star Trek parodies and pop culture references|''Star Trek'' parodies and references]] in literature and comics.
   
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== ''Animorphs'' ==
 
== ''Animorphs'' ==
 
The sci-fi children's book series ''{{w|Animorphs}}'' features many references from ''Star Trek'', like a character called the Ellimist, who is based off [[Q]] and the novel ''{{w|Flatland}}'', an alien race called the Hawjabrans, who have freighters that look a little like the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701-D|-D}}, and the females of an alien race called the Ongachic, who look like [[Worf]]. Additionally, several of the characters in the series are fans of ''Star Trek'' and make comparative references, such as Dracon beams being comparable to [[phaser]]s and the Andalite law of "Seerow's Kindness" as being a version of the [[Prime Directive]].
 
The sci-fi children's book series ''{{w|Animorphs}}'' features many references from ''Star Trek'', like a character called the Ellimist, who is based off [[Q]] and the novel ''{{w|Flatland}}'', an alien race called the Hawjabrans, who have freighters that look a little like the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701-D|-D}}, and the females of an alien race called the Ongachic, who look like [[Worf]]. Additionally, several of the characters in the series are fans of ''Star Trek'' and make comparative references, such as Dracon beams being comparable to [[phaser]]s and the Andalite law of "Seerow's Kindness" as being a version of the [[Prime Directive]].
  +
  +
== ''A Thing of Beauty'' ==
  +
(Written by Lisa Samson) The father of main character Fiona Hume is mentioned to have starred in a sci-fi parody movie called ''Galaxy Goons'' in which he played a character named "Captain Quirk". [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/21561584-a-thing-of-beauty?ac=1]
   
 
== ''The Beach'' ==
 
== ''The Beach'' ==
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Some of the gang frequently played ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'', with Cutter John as [[James T. Kirk]], Opus (and Steve Dallas briefly) as [[Spock]], Portnoy as [[Montgomery Scott]], and Hodge-Podge as [[Hikaru Sulu]].
 
Some of the gang frequently played ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'', with Cutter John as [[James T. Kirk]], Opus (and Steve Dallas briefly) as [[Spock]], Portnoy as [[Montgomery Scott]], and Hodge-Podge as [[Hikaru Sulu]].
   
  +
== ''Chief O'Brien at Work'' ==
==Cryptonomicon==
 
  +
A ''Star Trek'' inspired webcomic primarily focusing on the presumed loneliness of [[transporter chief]] [[Miles O'Brien]] during his tenure on the ''Enterprise''-D.
  +
 
==''Cryptonomicon''==
 
The character Avi Halaby mentions the {{w|Sulu Sea}}, "no relation to the token Asian on ''Star Trek''". (In reality, [[Hikaru Sulu]] ''was'' indeed named after the sea).
 
The character Avi Halaby mentions the {{w|Sulu Sea}}, "no relation to the token Asian on ''Star Trek''". (In reality, [[Hikaru Sulu]] ''was'' indeed named after the sea).
   
 
Later in the book, Randy Waterhouse worriedly compares having explained the strategy of his dotcom bubble company to a person he perceived to be a hick to a Federation scientist beaming down to a primitive planet and thoughtlessly teaching the locals how to build a phaser cannon. It's also remarked that while Waterhouse hates ''Star Trek'' and also people who don't hate it, he has seen every episode.
 
Later in the book, Randy Waterhouse worriedly compares having explained the strategy of his dotcom bubble company to a person he perceived to be a hick to a Federation scientist beaming down to a primitive planet and thoughtlessly teaching the locals how to build a phaser cannon. It's also remarked that while Waterhouse hates ''Star Trek'' and also people who don't hate it, he has seen every episode.
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  +
A few hundred pages later, Randy muses that it's hard for him to engage Goto Dengo, a captain of industry and personal friend of general Douglas McArthur, in chitchat, because you can hardly just ask if he has seen the latest episode of ''Star Trek: More Time-Space Anomalies''.
  +
  +
Near the climax of the book a number of characters venture into a Phillipines jungle, the cannopy of which is said to emmit "a phantastic whistling noise, like a [[phaser]] on overload".
   
 
== DC Comics ==
 
== DC Comics ==
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The comic for August 21, 1993 mentions the [[Vulcan death grip]]. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1993-08-21/]
 
The comic for August 21, 1993 mentions the [[Vulcan death grip]]. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1993-08-21/]
   
The comic for December 13, 1993 has a customer asking if a product will be capable of detecting [[Tachyon field]] emmisions. Dilbert notes that he's confusing the company with ''Star Trek'' again, but when a salesperson promises to include it in the next update, Dilbert thinks "Beam me up, [[Spock]], ther's no life on this planet. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1993-12-13/]
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The comic for December 13, 1993 has a customer asking if a product will be capable of detecting [[tachyon field]] emissions. Dilbert notes that he's confusing the company with ''Star Trek'' again, but when a salesperson promises to include it in the next update, Dilbert thinks "''Beam me up, [[Spock]], there's no life on this planet''". [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1993-12-13/]
   
The comic for July 25, 1994 has Dilbert remarking that it seems unnatural for him to have an actual girlfriend, because when the captain on ''Star Trek'' falls in love, the women always dies in an unlikely accident.[http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1994-07-25/]
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The comic for July 25, 1994 has Dilbert remarking that it seems unnatural for him to have an actual girlfriend, because when the captain on ''Star Trek'' falls in love, the women always dies in an unlikely accident. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1994-07-25/]
   
The comic for October 14, 1994 has Dogbert predicting that [[Holodeck]]s will doom society. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1994-10-14/]
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The comic for October 14, 1994 has Dogbert predicting that [[holodeck]]s will doom society. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1994-10-14/]
   
The comic for March 3, 1996 has Dilbert interviewing a potential new employee. When she looks right through his attempt to portray company culture in a positive light, he panics, his inner thoughts being "My shields are down... A hull breach is imminent". Later Wally also independently identifies Dilber's state as a hull breach.[http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1996-03-03/]
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The comic for March 3, 1996 has Dilbert interviewing a potential new employee. When she looks right through his attempt to portray company culture in a positive light, he panics, his inner thoughts being "''My shields are down... a hull breach is imminent''". Later Wally also independently identifies Dilbert's state as a hull breach. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1996-03-03/]
   
The comic for March 20, 1996 has Alice ordering Asok into what she claims is a [[Jefferies tube]], where he gets stuck. She explains he is about to learn that life is not like ''Star Trek'' [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1996-03-20/]
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The comic for March 20, 1996 has Alice ordering Asok into what she claims is a [[Jefferies tube]], where he gets stuck. She explains he is about to learn that life is not like ''Star Trek''. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1996-03-20/]
   
The comic for October 9, 1996 has Dilbert saying "Resistance if futile. You will be assimilated."[http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1996-10-09/]
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The comic for October 9, 1996 has Dilbert saying "''Resistance if futile. You will be assimilated.''" [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1996-10-09/]
   
The comic for January 15, 1997 sees {{w|Bill Gates' house}} comming to Dilbert's house yelling "prepare for assimilation" after he accidently agrees to be Bill Gates' towel boy by not reading a software licence. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1997-01-15/]
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The comic for January 15, 1997 sees {{w|Bill Gates' house}} coming to Dilbert's house yelling "prepare for assimilation" after he accidentally agrees to be Bill Gates' towel boy by not reading a software license. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1997-01-15/]
   
The comic for November 15, 1997 has Dogbert recalling a story in which Dilbert yelled "I'm an engineer, not a diamond cutter, dang it!". [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1997-11-15/]
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The comic for November 15, 1997 has Dogbert recalling a story in which Dilbert yelled "''I'm an engineer, not a diamond cutter, dang it!''". [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1997-11-15/]
   
 
The comic for July 7, 2003 has Carol sarcastically responding to the request that she print out the company website and put it into a binder for easy reference that she will also translate it in Klingon to make it even easier. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2003-07-07/]
 
The comic for July 7, 2003 has Carol sarcastically responding to the request that she print out the company website and put it into a binder for easy reference that she will also translate it in Klingon to make it even easier. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2003-07-07/]
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The comic for November 19, 2009 has Dilbert describing a consultant with pointed ears as a "Spock-eared sociopath". [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2009-11-19/]
 
The comic for November 19, 2009 has Dilbert describing a consultant with pointed ears as a "Spock-eared sociopath". [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2009-11-19/]
   
The comic for January 12, 2011 mentions [[Pon farr]], which Dilbert claims affects Vulcans and engineers. Dilbert and Alice are both seen to experience it. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2011-01-12/]
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The comic for January 12, 2011 mentions ''[[pon farr]]'', which Dilbert claims affects Vulcans and engineers. Dilbert and Alice are both seen to experience it. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2011-01-12/]
   
The comic for January 13, 2011 again mentions Dilbert and his college Alice being on the same [[Pon farr]] cycle. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2011-01-13/]
+
The comic for January 13, 2011 again mentions Dilbert and his college Alice being on the same ''pon farr'' cycle. [http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2011-01-13/]
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  +
== ''Dirkjan'' ==
  +
Dirkjan is a popular Dutch short gag series. The eight album, simply called "DirkJan 8", contains a sizable selection of science fiction themed gags, the majority referencing the original ''Star Trek''. Several characters are translated into original series crewmembers, and gags include feature Klingons, cloaking devices (in the form of hiding your ship behind bushes), borg (who have developed peculiar speech patterns after assimilating a smurf) transporter accidents, the series writer appearing as a Q like entity, and more.
   
 
== ''The Dresden Files'' ==
 
== ''The Dresden Files'' ==
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== Donald Duck ==
 
== Donald Duck ==
The Donald Duck story "Beam Me Up, Mr. Fargone" ([http://coa.inducks.org/s.php?c=D+97619 D 97619]), written by Kari Korhonen and drawn by {{w|Vicar (comics)|Vicar}}) is a spoof of ''Star Trek'', particularly the fandom, conventions and merchandise. The story is set in a science fiction convention. Some of the items sold at the convention include a wooden log labeled "Captain's Log" and a Vulcan ear labeled "Final Front Ear". The creator of the series lives in seclusion, and in a video shown in the convention, tells the interviewers to [[Saturday Night Live#"Get a Life!" Sketch|get a life]].
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The Donald Duck story "Beam Me Up, Mr. Fargone", ([http://coa.inducks.org/s.php?c=D+97619 D 97619]) written by Kari Korhonen and drawn by {{w|Vicar (comics)|Vicar}}, is a spoof of ''Star Trek'', particularly the fandom, conventions and merchandise. The story is set in a science fiction convention. Some of the items sold at the convention include a wooden log labeled "Captain's Log" and a Vulcan ear labeled "Final Front Ear". The creator of the series lives in seclusion, and in a video shown in the convention, tells the interviewers to [[Saturday Night Live#"Get a Life!" Sketch|get a life]].
   
 
==''Double Dexter'' by Jeff Lindsay==
 
==''Double Dexter'' by Jeff Lindsay==
 
Dexter comments that he has to be "[[Spock|Mr. Spock]]-[[Logic|logical]]" at one point, and then observes that public relations work is as alien to his stepsister Deb as a [[Klingon]] [[Mating ritual|mating dance]].
 
Dexter comments that he has to be "[[Spock|Mr. Spock]]-[[Logic|logical]]" at one point, and then observes that public relations work is as alien to his stepsister Deb as a [[Klingon]] [[Mating ritual|mating dance]].
  +
  +
== ''Ensign Sue Must Die!'' ==
  +
A ''Star Trek'' inspired webcomic that draws primarily from the events of the [[alternate reality]] movies. Basic premise is that a Mary Sue character who has newly transferred causes mayhem for the crew of the ''Enterprise''. This cartoon has several crossovers with characters from various other films, shows and books, including those portrayed by Star Trek actors.
   
 
== ''Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said'' ==
 
== ''Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said'' ==
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[http://www.cowlark.com/parodies.dat/hitchhiker.txt ''The Hitchhiker's Guide to Star Trek, the Next Generation''] is an Internet cross of ''Star Trek'' and ''{{w|The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy}}''. It was written by David T. Lu and Mickey McCarter. An [http://www.shlomifish.org/humour/by-others/hitchhiker-guide-to-star-trek-tng-htmlised.html HTML version] of it was made available in 2011.
 
[http://www.cowlark.com/parodies.dat/hitchhiker.txt ''The Hitchhiker's Guide to Star Trek, the Next Generation''] is an Internet cross of ''Star Trek'' and ''{{w|The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy}}''. It was written by David T. Lu and Mickey McCarter. An [http://www.shlomifish.org/humour/by-others/hitchhiker-guide-to-star-trek-tng-htmlised.html HTML version] of it was made available in 2011.
   
==The House of Night (Marked)==
+
==''The House of Night'' (Marked)==
 
Zoey, one of the main characters, admits to being a ''Star Trek'' fan, and had a ''[[Borg Invasion 4D]]'' hoodie.
 
Zoey, one of the main characters, admits to being a Star Trek fan, and had a [[Borg Invasion 4D]] hoodie.
 
   
 
==''I Love You, Beth Cooper''==
 
==''I Love You, Beth Cooper''==
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== ''Kretén'' ==
 
== ''Kretén'' ==
 
The now-defunct Hungarian version of ''Mad Magazine'' featured a three-issue parody of ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'', entitled ''Star Tok'', in 1999. [http://wiki.kepregeny.net/index.php/Kreten#Kret.C3.A9n_.2336-40_2]
 
The now-defunct Hungarian version of ''Mad Magazine'' featured a three-issue parody of ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'', entitled ''Star Tok'', in 1999. [http://wiki.kepregeny.net/index.php/Kreten#Kret.C3.A9n_.2336-40_2]
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== ''Les Naufragés d'Ythaq'' ==
  +
In the twelfth album of this French science fiction comic, "Les Clefs du Néant", a spaceship is commanded by a captain that looks like a slightly gritty version of [[Spock]].
   
 
== ''Least I Could Do'' ==
 
== ''Least I Could Do'' ==
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*[http://megatokyo.com/strip/1337 AN ARMY 0F PH33R]
 
*[http://megatokyo.com/strip/1337 AN ARMY 0F PH33R]
   
  +
==''Mother Goose and Grimm''==
== ''My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic (IDW Comics)'' ==
 
  +
This comic has several references to ''Star Trek'', including Spock summoning McCoy to the bridge because Kirk had knocked himself silly after setting the laser printer on stun.
  +
 
== ''My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic'' (IDW Comics) ==
 
In Issue #2, Pinkie Pie finds a pony skull in the Appleloosan Mountains and it names it "Mr. Bones", due to the skull having [[Leonard McCoy]]'s hair style.
 
In Issue #2, Pinkie Pie finds a pony skull in the Appleloosan Mountains and it names it "Mr. Bones", due to the skull having [[Leonard McCoy]]'s hair style.
   
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In Issue #9, Princess Luna's shapeshifting t-shirt gains an Starfleet emblem during the race event with Big Macintosh.
 
In Issue #9, Princess Luna's shapeshifting t-shirt gains an Starfleet emblem during the race event with Big Macintosh.
   
In Issue #10, there are some ponies that resemble [[James T. Kirk]] and [[Spock]], a gray pony that resembles [[Bilar]] tells them, "Joy to you friends! Come for the festival are ya?", this is a reference to the episode: {{e|The Return of the Archons}}.
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In Issue #10, there are some ponies that resemble [[James T. Kirk]] and [[Spock]], a gray pony that resembles [[Bilar]] tells them, "''Joy to you friends! Come for the festival are ya?''"; this is a reference to the episode {{e|The Return of the Archons}}.
   
In Issue #11, in the basement were Shining Armor plays a game similar to Dungeons & Dragons with his friends, there is a poster that has [[Constitution class]] refit, possible the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}} and the tittle is "Star Trot II" this is an obviously reference to {{film|2}}.
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In Issue #11, in the basement were Shining Armor plays a game similar to ''Dungeons & Dragons'' with his friends, there is a poster that has a {{class|Constitution}} refit, possible the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}} and the title is "Star Trot II", an obviously reference to {{film|2}}.
   
In Issue # 16, Rainbow Dash's imagination drops them straight onto the pony version of Star Trek: The Original Series. Naturally, she's Kirk, Twilight Sparkle is Spock, and Rarity is Uhura. There's also a pony version of Yeoman Rand in the background of one shot.
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In Issue # 16, Rainbow Dash's imagination drops them straight onto the pony version of ''Star Trek: The Original Series''. Naturally, she's Kirk, Twilight Sparkle is Spock, and Rarity is Uhura. There's also a pony version of Yeoman Rand in the background of one shot.
   
In Issue # 25, when Rainbow Dash asks Twilight Sparkle why Spike isn't carrying Rarity's bags, she tells her that he is currently at a Pony Trek convention.
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In Issue # 25, when Rainbow Dash asks Twilight Sparkle why Spike isn't carrying Rarity's bags, she tells her that he is currently at a ''Pony Trek'' convention.
   
In the Micro-Series #10, there are several references in the next order: Princess Luna's pet opossum is named Tiberius, a possible reference to [[James T. Kirk]], during the conference, an earth pony has a cutie mark with the starfleet emblem and at the fair page, there is an airship with the number "1701", referencing the registry number of the USS ''Enterprise''.
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In the Micro-Series #10, there are several references in the next order: Princess Luna's pet opossum is named Tiberius, a possible reference to [[James T. Kirk]], during the conference, an Earth pony has a cutie mark with the Starfleet emblem, and at the fair page, there is an airship with the number "1701", referencing the registry number of the USS ''Enterprise''.
   
In ''Friends Forever'' Issue #2, among the various scenarios that Discord puts the CMC through includes a full-on take of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
+
In ''Friends Forever'' Issue #2, among the various scenarios that Discord puts the CMC through includes a full-on take of ''Star Trek: The Next Generation''.
   
It has the Cutie Mark Crusaders (Scootaloo, Apple Bloom and Sweetie Belle) dressed up as Riker, Geordi and Picard respectively and seen on the bridge of the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701-D}}. Rarity's cat, Opal, is dressed up as a TNG-era [[Romulan]]. When she attacks, Scootaloo shouts that they should "[[Saucer separation|Split the ship in half]]". Discord is seen at the end of that portion, dressed in [[Q]]'s judge outfit from {{e|Encounter at Farpoint}}, musing where he had seen this before.
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It has the Cutie Mark Crusaders (Scootaloo, Apple Bloom, and Sweetie Belle) dressed up as Riker, La Forge, and Picard respectively and seen on the bridge of the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701-D}}. Rarity's cat, Opal, is dressed up as a TNG-era [[Romulan]]. When she attacks, Scootaloo shouts that they should "[[Saucer separation|Split the ship in half]]". Discord is seen at the end of that portion, dressed in [[Q]]'s judge outfit from {{e|Encounter at Farpoint}}, musing where he had seen this before.
   
 
== ''Night of the Living Trekkies'' ==
 
== ''Night of the Living Trekkies'' ==
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Adapted into a TV movie starring [[Avery Brooks]] (who reprises his role Hawk from the TV show ''Spenser: For Hire'' with [[Carolyn McCormick]]) and [[Barbara Williams]].
 
Adapted into a TV movie starring [[Avery Brooks]] (who reprises his role Hawk from the TV show ''Spenser: For Hire'' with [[Carolyn McCormick]]) and [[Barbara Williams]].
   
When Felipe Esteva asks Spenser "Do you know who I am?" Spenser replies "[[Ricardo Montalban]]. I loved you in {{film|2}}."
+
When Felipe Esteva asks Spenser "''Do you know who I am?''", Spenser replies "''[[Ricardo Montalban]]. I loved you in {{film|2}}.''"
   
 
== ''Penny Arcade'' ==
 
== ''Penny Arcade'' ==
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==''Redshirts''==
 
==''Redshirts''==
  +
:''See ''[[Redshirts]]''
''Redshirts'' is satire of pretty much every single [[Star Trek: The Original Series|TOS]] episode, with [[Wil Wheaton]] mentioned in the dedication epigraph and narrating its audiobook.
+
''Redshirts'' is satire of most very [[Star Trek: The Original Series|TOS]] episode, with [[Wil Wheaton]] mentioned in the dedication epigraph and narrating its audiobook.
   
 
The Universal Union, Space Fleet, [[Captain]] Lucius Abernathy, Q'eeng, Anatoly Kerensky, [[Chief Medical Officer]] Hanson, and [[Chief Engineer]] West are all parallels of the [[United Federation of Planets]], [[Starfleet]], [[James T. Kirk]], [[Spock]], [[Pavel Chekov]], [[Leonard McCoy]] and [[Montgomery Scott]]. When explaining why their lives are so dangerous, Jenkins puts up a picture of the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)|''Enterprise'']] and says that they're living in a poorly-written TOS knockoff. Upon [[time-travel]]ing back to 2012 Los Angeles, Brian Abnett says to Duvall that somebody has to be the [[redshirt]].
 
The Universal Union, Space Fleet, [[Captain]] Lucius Abernathy, Q'eeng, Anatoly Kerensky, [[Chief Medical Officer]] Hanson, and [[Chief Engineer]] West are all parallels of the [[United Federation of Planets]], [[Starfleet]], [[James T. Kirk]], [[Spock]], [[Pavel Chekov]], [[Leonard McCoy]] and [[Montgomery Scott]]. When explaining why their lives are so dangerous, Jenkins puts up a picture of the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)|''Enterprise'']] and says that they're living in a poorly-written TOS knockoff. Upon [[time-travel]]ing back to 2012 Los Angeles, Brian Abnett says to Duvall that somebody has to be the [[redshirt]].
   
 
During a book signing at the [[Burbank]] Public Library, the author and Wil acted out a sketch in which Wil is a labor lawyer with the firm of [[Walter Koenig|Koenig]], [[Nichelle Nichols|Nichols]], and [[Ricardo Montalban|Montalban]] suing the Universal Union over all the redshirt deaths, including how [[Jean-Luc Picard|a deliberately unidentified captain]] was allowing [[Wesley Crusher|a child]] to [[Helmsman|fly the ship]].
 
During a book signing at the [[Burbank]] Public Library, the author and Wil acted out a sketch in which Wil is a labor lawyer with the firm of [[Walter Koenig|Koenig]], [[Nichelle Nichols|Nichols]], and [[Ricardo Montalban|Montalban]] suing the Universal Union over all the redshirt deaths, including how [[Jean-Luc Picard|a deliberately unidentified captain]] was allowing [[Wesley Crusher|a child]] to [[Helmsman|fly the ship]].
  +
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==''Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal''==
  +
This popular webcomic has referenced ''Star Trek'' several times.
  +
  +
In one 2011 comic ([http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=2280]), the bonus joke accessed by the red button has a geek inneptly trying to difuse an awkward situation arising from having different favorite ''Star Wars'' movies by mentioning "because all of ''Star Trek'' is great".
  +
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In a 2014 comic ([http://www.smbc-comics.com/?id=3262#comic]), two kids explore the ethical questions arising from using the transporter, based on the assumption that a transported being would be killed and a clone created elsewhere. (this is generally a characteristic of real ideas on how a transporter might conceivably work, but is not the case with ''star trek'' transporters, as explained for example in the [[Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual]]). They ponder a number of scenarios, and then conclude that while they don't have answers now, "this is the kind of stuff you get all figured out by the time you're a grownup".
   
 
==''Serge A. Storms'' novels of Tim Dorsey==
 
==''Serge A. Storms'' novels of Tim Dorsey==
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Serge mentions that movie conversations get steered towards subjects like {{e|The Trouble with Tribbles}}. Jim Davenport is also compared to [[Spock]].
 
Serge mentions that movie conversations get steered towards subjects like {{e|The Trouble with Tribbles}}. Jim Davenport is also compared to [[Spock]].
   
== Sev Trek ==
+
== ''Sev Trek'' ==
[http://cartoons.sev.com.au/Sev-Space/Sev-Trek/ ''Sev Trek''] by John Cook, is a web comic parody of ''Star Trek'' (as well as many other popular sci-fi shows) from ''The Original Series'' to ''Enterprise''. It even spawned a computer animated "episode" of Sev Trek: [[TNG]].
+
[http://cartoons.sev.com.au/Sev-Space/Sev-Trek/ ''Sev Trek''] by John Cook, is a web comic parody of ''Star Trek'' (as well as many other popular sci-fi shows) from ''The Original Series'' to ''Enterprise''. It even spawned a computer animated "episode" of ''Sev Trek'': [[TNG]].
   
 
== ''Shatnerquake'' ==
 
== ''Shatnerquake'' ==
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==''The Short-Timers'' by Gustav Hasford==
 
==''The Short-Timers'' by Gustav Hasford==
 
When Joker and Rafter Man first meet the Lusthog Squad, they're at a movie theater watching [[George Takei]]'s movie ''The Green Berets'', where George is described as "[[Hikaru Sulu|Mr. Sulu]]."
 
When Joker and Rafter Man first meet the Lusthog Squad, they're at a movie theater watching [[George Takei]]'s movie ''The Green Berets'', where George is described as "[[Hikaru Sulu|Mr. Sulu]]."
  +
  +
==''Snippers'' ==
  +
Snippers (meaning snippets) is a comic that appears daily in the Dutch newspaper Metro. In one comic, included in the fifth collection album, two people find a toy robot dropped in a park and contemplate the child that is crying at this very moment. In the next panel, a huge geek is seen crying in a room filled with various science fiction merchandise, including what appears to be a ''Star Trek'' poster.
   
 
==''Snow Crash'' by Neal Stephenson==
 
==''Snow Crash'' by Neal Stephenson==
 
It is said one can't [[Transporter|beam]] into the Metaverse like [[James T. Kirk]], and later Hiro notes that most hackers have pictures of the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)|starship ''Enterprise'']] on their walls. Also, L. Bob Rife purchased the [[USS Enterprise (CVN-65)|aircraft carrier ''Enterprise'']] from the [[United States Navy]] and made it his own personal yacht.
 
It is said one can't [[Transporter|beam]] into the Metaverse like [[James T. Kirk]], and later Hiro notes that most hackers have pictures of the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)|starship ''Enterprise'']] on their walls. Also, L. Bob Rife purchased the [[USS Enterprise (CVN-65)|aircraft carrier ''Enterprise'']] from the [[United States Navy]] and made it his own personal yacht.
   
== Sonic the Hedgehog Comic Book Series ==
+
== Sonic the Hedgehog comic book series ==
In the Knuckles the Echidna and Sonic the Hedgehog comic book series' produced by Archie Comics, the Echidna character Moonwatcher can be seen wearing a uniform that closely resembles the operations division [[Starfleet uniform (2350s-2370s)|TNG Starfleet uniforms]]. Furthermore, with the [[VISOR]]-like device over his eyes, he is quite similar in appearance to [[Geordi La Forge]]. A later issue introduced the "Battle Cruiser", a massive flying ship used by the Echidna group the Dark Legion. It's designs mimic those of the [[Klingon Bird-of-Prey]], [[D'deridex class]] and [[Galaxy class]] ships.
+
In the Knuckles the Echidna and Sonic the Hedgehog comic book series' produced by Archie Comics, the Echidna character Moonwatcher can be seen wearing a uniform that closely resembles the operations division [[Starfleet uniform (2350s-2370s)|TNG Starfleet uniforms]]. Furthermore, with the [[VISOR]]-like device over his eyes, he is quite similar in appearance to [[Geordi La Forge]]. A later issue introduced the "Battle Cruiser", a massive flying ship used by the Echidna group the Dark Legion. It's designs mimic those of the [[Klingon Bird-of-Prey]], {{class|D'deridex}} and {{class|Galaxy}} ships.
   
 
It should be noted that both instances were created by [[Ken Penders]], who worked on ''Star Trek'' comics in the past.
 
It should be noted that both instances were created by [[Ken Penders]], who worked on ''Star Trek'' comics in the past.
  +
  +
== ''Suske en Wiske'' ==
  +
This is a long-running and very popular Belgian comic book series, of which a handful of albums have been translated under various titles in English (though none of the ones mentioned below).
  +
  +
In the album "De Verradelijke Vinson", a dog which has infiltrated the underground base of a mad scientist thinks that it looks like a space base, something he has seen on tv on something called "Stardrek" (which translates to something like star muck.)
  +
  +
The album "De tikkende Tinkan" shows at one point various spaceships crashing down all over the world. One frame shows a ship very similar to the original ''Enterprise'' crashed into the [[Eiffel Tower]].
   
 
==''Star Wars''==
 
==''Star Wars''==
Line 273: Line 313:
 
*''Star Wreck 6: Geek Space Nine'' (1994)
 
*''Star Wreck 6: Geek Space Nine'' (1994)
 
*''Star Wreck 7: Space the Fido Frontier'' (1994)
 
*''Star Wreck 7: Space the Fido Frontier'' (1994)
  +
  +
== ''Tales From Salonbay: Adventures in Xenocosmetology'' ==
  +
A ''Star Trek'' inspired webcomic. The main character, Moxie Magnus, is a hairstylist and makeup artist on the ''Enterprise''. Most of the comics feature her offering beauty tips to the various aliens the crew encounters.
   
 
== The Technopriests ==
 
== The Technopriests ==
Line 307: Line 350:
 
"Interstellar Memes" [http://www.xkcd.com/1212/] charts how far certain memes would have traveled given "speed-of-light delay". According to the comic, "Live long and prosper" might have made it to {{w|HD 211415}} by now, while "Resistance is futile" would have reached [[Vega]].
 
"Interstellar Memes" [http://www.xkcd.com/1212/] charts how far certain memes would have traveled given "speed-of-light delay". According to the comic, "Live long and prosper" might have made it to {{w|HD 211415}} by now, while "Resistance is futile" would have reached [[Vega]].
   
"Questions" [htts://www.xkcd.com/1256/] shows questions found using Google autocomplete. One of them is "Why are there two Spocks?", seemingly referencing the [[alternate reality]].
+
"Questions" [https://xkcd.com/1256/] shows questions found using Google autocomplete. One of them is "Why are there two Spocks?", seemingly referencing the [[alternate reality]].
   
"Data" has a character proclaim that after Kirk and Picard, the most popular ''Star Trek'' character ''are'' Data to annoy a grammar pedant.
+
"Data" [https://xkcd.com/1429/] has a character proclaim that after Kirk and Picard, the most popular ''Star Trek'' character ''are'' Data to annoy a grammar pedant.
   
 
"Santa" [http://xkcd.com/1464/] has a character using the phrase "the needs of the many..."
 
"Santa" [http://xkcd.com/1464/] has a character using the phrase "the needs of the many..."
  +
  +
"Bracket" [https://xkcd.com/1529/] mentions mister spock (as well as in an unrelated section Chris Pine).
   
 
== Y The Last Man ==
 
== Y The Last Man ==

Revision as of 18:26, 27 June 2015

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Star Trek and pop culture
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The following are Star Trek parodies and references in literature and comics.

3001: The Final Odyssey

In the fourth (and final) part of Arthur C. Clarke's Space Odyssey saga, Dr. Frank Poole (played by Gary Lockwood in the film version of 2001: A Space Odyssey) is revealed to be a Star Trek fan, having asked autographs from Leonard Nimoy and Patrick Stewart as a teenager. When choosing 20th century television programs for him, 31st century scientists selected episodes from "all the four Star Trek series" (the novel was published in 1997, long before the debut of Star Trek: Enterprise).

The 4400

In The 4400 tie-in novel Wet Work by frequent Star Trek authors Dayton Ward and Kevin Dilmore, a character notes he is a fan of pulp-science fiction magazines like Incredible Tales of Scientific Wonder.

Angels & Demons

In Dan Brown's predecessor to The Da Vinci Code, Robert Langdon comments that he has "sort of" heard of antimatter, to which Vitoria Vetra responds, "you watch Star Trek?" Langdon agrees and asks "isn't antimatter what powers the starship Enterprise?" Langdon later holds back from asking about "Captain Kirk using Photon torpedoes against the Klingons."

Animorphs

The sci-fi children's book series Animorphs features many references from Star Trek, like a character called the Ellimist, who is based off Q and the novel Flatland, an alien race called the Hawjabrans, who have freighters that look a little like the USS Enterprise-D, and the females of an alien race called the Ongachic, who look like Worf. Additionally, several of the characters in the series are fans of Star Trek and make comparative references, such as Dracon beams being comparable to phasers and the Andalite law of "Seerow's Kindness" as being a version of the Prime Directive.

A Thing of Beauty

(Written by Lisa Samson) The father of main character Fiona Hume is mentioned to have starred in a sci-fi parody movie called Galaxy Goons in which he played a character named "Captain Quirk". [1]

The Beach

An early chapter is called "It's life Jim, but not as we know it" (from the well-known parody song "Star Trekkin'"). It involves the narrator playing pretend that his train sleeping bunk is a spaceship while waiting for sleep, though no further specific references are made in the chapter.

Bloom County

Some of the gang frequently played Star Trek: The Original Series, with Cutter John as James T. Kirk, Opus (and Steve Dallas briefly) as Spock, Portnoy as Montgomery Scott, and Hodge-Podge as Hikaru Sulu.

Chief O'Brien at Work

A Star Trek inspired webcomic primarily focusing on the presumed loneliness of transporter chief Miles O'Brien during his tenure on the Enterprise-D.

Cryptonomicon

The character Avi Halaby mentions the Sulu Sea, "no relation to the token Asian on Star Trek". (In reality, Hikaru Sulu was indeed named after the sea).

Later in the book, Randy Waterhouse worriedly compares having explained the strategy of his dotcom bubble company to a person he perceived to be a hick to a Federation scientist beaming down to a primitive planet and thoughtlessly teaching the locals how to build a phaser cannon. It's also remarked that while Waterhouse hates Star Trek and also people who don't hate it, he has seen every episode.

A few hundred pages later, Randy muses that it's hard for him to engage Goto Dengo, a captain of industry and personal friend of general Douglas McArthur, in chitchat, because you can hardly just ask if he has seen the latest episode of Star Trek: More Time-Space Anomalies.

Near the climax of the book a number of characters venture into a Phillipines jungle, the cannopy of which is said to emmit "a phantastic whistling noise, like a phaser on overload".

DC Comics

Over the years, DC comics artist have included multiple visual homages to Star Trek in their art. In the 1970s, one member of the Green Lantern Corps was recognizable as being a Vulcan. [2] In the 1990s, backgrounds in both "Legion of Super Heroes" and "Legionnaires" included recognizably Star Trek-inspired ships.

Dilbert

Dilbert is a popular newspaper comic featuring an engineer called Dilbert and satirizing corporate and office culture. There is also an animated series, which also features a number of Star Trek references. (documented here)

The comic for August 19, 1993 has a mind-reading Dogbert discovering that all the company employees care for are romance, ski trips and Star Trek. [3]

The comic for August 21, 1993 mentions the Vulcan death grip. [4]

The comic for December 13, 1993 has a customer asking if a product will be capable of detecting tachyon field emissions. Dilbert notes that he's confusing the company with Star Trek again, but when a salesperson promises to include it in the next update, Dilbert thinks "Beam me up, Spock, there's no life on this planet". [5]

The comic for July 25, 1994 has Dilbert remarking that it seems unnatural for him to have an actual girlfriend, because when the captain on Star Trek falls in love, the women always dies in an unlikely accident. [6]

The comic for October 14, 1994 has Dogbert predicting that holodecks will doom society. [7]

The comic for March 3, 1996 has Dilbert interviewing a potential new employee. When she looks right through his attempt to portray company culture in a positive light, he panics, his inner thoughts being "My shields are down... a hull breach is imminent". Later Wally also independently identifies Dilbert's state as a hull breach. [8]

The comic for March 20, 1996 has Alice ordering Asok into what she claims is a Jefferies tube, where he gets stuck. She explains he is about to learn that life is not like Star Trek. [9]

The comic for October 9, 1996 has Dilbert saying "Resistance if futile. You will be assimilated." [10]

The comic for January 15, 1997 sees Bill Gates' house coming to Dilbert's house yelling "prepare for assimilation" after he accidentally agrees to be Bill Gates' towel boy by not reading a software license. [11]

The comic for November 15, 1997 has Dogbert recalling a story in which Dilbert yelled "I'm an engineer, not a diamond cutter, dang it!". [12]

The comic for July 7, 2003 has Carol sarcastically responding to the request that she print out the company website and put it into a binder for easy reference that she will also translate it in Klingon to make it even easier. [13]

The comic for May 3, 2005 has a character asking Dilbert which of the Star Trek seasons he liked best. [14]

The comic for November 19, 2009 has Dilbert describing a consultant with pointed ears as a "Spock-eared sociopath". [15]

The comic for January 12, 2011 mentions pon farr, which Dilbert claims affects Vulcans and engineers. Dilbert and Alice are both seen to experience it. [16]

The comic for January 13, 2011 again mentions Dilbert and his college Alice being on the same pon farr cycle. [17]

Dirkjan

Dirkjan is a popular Dutch short gag series. The eight album, simply called "DirkJan 8", contains a sizable selection of science fiction themed gags, the majority referencing the original Star Trek. Several characters are translated into original series crewmembers, and gags include feature Klingons, cloaking devices (in the form of hiding your ship behind bushes), borg (who have developed peculiar speech patterns after assimilating a smurf) transporter accidents, the series writer appearing as a Q like entity, and more.

The Dresden Files

The novel series written by Jim Butcher contain several references to and about Star Trek.

Donald Duck

The Donald Duck story "Beam Me Up, Mr. Fargone", (D 97619) written by Kari Korhonen and drawn by Vicar, is a spoof of Star Trek, particularly the fandom, conventions and merchandise. The story is set in a science fiction convention. Some of the items sold at the convention include a wooden log labeled "Captain's Log" and a Vulcan ear labeled "Final Front Ear". The creator of the series lives in seclusion, and in a video shown in the convention, tells the interviewers to get a life.

Double Dexter by Jeff Lindsay

Dexter comments that he has to be "Mr. Spock-logical" at one point, and then observes that public relations work is as alien to his stepsister Deb as a Klingon mating dance.

Ensign Sue Must Die!

A Star Trek inspired webcomic that draws primarily from the events of the alternate reality movies. Basic premise is that a Mary Sue character who has newly transferred causes mayhem for the crew of the Enterprise. This cartoon has several crossovers with characters from various other films, shows and books, including those portrayed by Star Trek actors.

Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said

In the dystopian future of this 1974 novel by Philip K. Dick, superhero-action space pulp fiction works are called "Captain Kirks".

Foxtrot

The comic Foxtrot has made fun of Star Trek numerous times and the youngest member of the family, Jason, is an avid Trek fan.

General Protection Fault (GPF)

The comic General Protection Fault contains various references to Star Trek and Trekkies, among them to "In a Mirror, Darkly". [18]

The Girl who played with Fire

Lisbeth Salander is called mister Spock.

Gutters

A web comic that pocks fun at the comic industry, Gutters has made a joke or two based on the Star Trek line of comics:

The Hardy Boys

Star Trek has been referenced numerous times in The Hardy Boys novel series, published by Simon & Schuster, the company behind the Star Trek novels. Most recently in The Hardy Boys Undercover Brothers #25 Double Trouble, where Joe Hardy sarcastically compares his older brother, Frank, to "Mr. Spock", and most notable in The Hardy Boys #172 Trouble in Warp Space, in which the Joe's girlfriend gets a walk-on part in a new TV series called Warp Space, an obvious reference to Star Trek: Enterprise.

The Hitchhiker's Guide to Star Trek, the Next Generation

The Hitchhiker's Guide to Star Trek, the Next Generation is an Internet cross of Star Trek and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. It was written by David T. Lu and Mickey McCarter. An HTML version of it was made available in 2011.

The House of Night (Marked)

Zoey, one of the main characters, admits to being a Star Trek fan, and had a Borg Invasion 4D hoodie.

I Love You, Beth Cooper

Denis (whose father is played by Alan Ruck in the movie version) calls his medical skeleton "Doctor McCoy."

Jump Leads

The webcomic Jump Leads has referenced Star Trek several times, from mention of a hypothetical "goatee-toutin' doppelgänger" in the first issue, "Training Day", to characters and locations named after actors involved with the production of the various shows, right up to the tenth issue, entitled "The Voyage Home", which features cover art that pays homage to the poster for the movie.

The Book of Bunny Suicides

This book is a collection of cartoons about suicidal rabbits, includes one cartoon in which a bunny places itself on a transporter next to what appears to be Kirk and Spock, but positions itself half inside and half outside the beam so that when the transporter energizes, only half of it is transported.

The Jungle: A Novel of the Oregon Files by Clive Cussler

MacD says that the Oregon's op center is reminiscent of the Enterprise and that Juan's chair in the middle of it (which Juan referred to as the "Kirk Chair") is where Chris Pine sat, prompting Juan to realize he was too out-of-touch to know there'd been a new Trek movie.

The Killing Star

In The Killing Star by Charles R. Pellegrino, the invaders use Star Trek as an example of why humans are dangerous (due to the show being human-centered).

Kretén

The now-defunct Hungarian version of Mad Magazine featured a three-issue parody of Star Trek: The Next Generation, entitled Star Tok, in 1999. [19]

Les Naufragés d'Ythaq

In the twelfth album of this French science fiction comic, "Les Clefs du Néant", a spaceship is commanded by a captain that looks like a slightly gritty version of Spock.

Least I Could Do

The web comic "Least I Could Do" makes various references to Star Trek, and all other manner of science fiction, throughout the series. These can be seen at their website or in the book collections.

Leverage tie-in novels

Keith R.A. DeCandido authored one.

The Con Job by Matt Forbeck

The cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation has a reception at the San Diego Comic-Con, where Marina Sirtis has to explain to two attendees why Patrick Stewart can't officiate their Wedding.

The Bestseller Job by Greg Cox

Hardison observes that concocting a sequel to Gavin Lee's book is as a much of a tease as the idea of new episodes of Mad Magazine (#115, Decem. At the end, he tells Parker that the place where the Star Trek: The Original Series cast had put their hands in the concrete of Grauman's Chinese Theater in Hollywood is sacred ground.

Mad Magazine

Mad Magazine (#115, December 1967) had a parody of Star Trek called "Star Blecch!". [20] The title alteration followed two parodies of the films and spin-off series. [21] The October 1976 issue (#186) featured a musical parody called "Keep On Trekkin'", with Kirk, Spock and Alfred E. Neuman dancing on the cover [22]; thirty-five years later, in June 2011 (#509), that image would appear at the end of Dancing With The Star Wars (a Dancing with the Stars satire using Star Wars characters) advertising a similar Trek treatment the next week - but Kirk and Spock now have the faces of Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto, to which a senile-looking William Shatner, sitting in a motorized scooter onstage, takes great offense. Kirk appeared again, "green woman" in tow, in the very next issue (#510), one of many well-known "captains" (including Morgan, Sparrow, Kangaroo, Sullenberger and Ahab) to whom upcoming film subject Captain America is compared unfavorably; the character's likeness is once again that of TOS-era Shatner. The magazine will frequently insert Trek references into stories with Trek actors: for example, the beginning of the Samantha Who? parody in the May 2008 issue showed Tim Russ's character with Vulcan ears and a Starfleet combadge on his jacket (a later scene showed two Trekkies ogling the main character, played by Christina Applegate), while in a June 2003 parody of the X-Men film X2, Professor X (Patrick Stewart), asked how he could stand to be around so many "mutants", replies that, after enough Star Trek conventions, it was easy - or other science-fiction franchises: Worf, Quark, Odo and Morn could be seen in the background in various parts of a May 1995 X-Files parody, while the beginning of an April 1998 spoof of Alien Resurrection showed a group of famous sci-fi aliens concealed in pods behind the main characters: one of them is Spock, clearly looking in the direction of his mother. Mad has recognized Trek's contributions - on the cover of the November 2002 issue, celebrating the magazine's 50th Anniversary, the fifty different images used to create "5" and "0" include Alfred E. Neuman as a Vulcan (from the "Keep On Trekkin'" cover) and a Ferengi.

The Star Trek: Deep Space Nine characters appeared on the cover of issue 115 in September 1993. [23]

Marvel Comics

X-Men

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Marvel included Star Trek-inspired characters and artwork depicting members of the Shi Ar Empire, most notably "Captain K'rrk", commander of a multi-species crewed Shi Ar vessel. Their uniforms were depicted in the Trek service division (Command, Science, Operations)colors, using the original lime/olive green for Command. K'rrk, like his Trek inspiration, was promoted to admiral later in his career.

In the late 90s-early 2000s, another Shi Ar Captain was introduced as Captain P'crrd. In keeping with his namesake, he was bald.

After their introduction to the Shi Ar, the X-Men incorporated "hard light" technology into their Danger Room training environment, rendering it functionally equivalent to a holodeck.

Megatokyo

The Megatokyo comic 1337 has a reference to redshirts.

Mother Goose and Grimm

This comic has several references to Star Trek, including Spock summoning McCoy to the bridge because Kirk had knocked himself silly after setting the laser printer on stun.

My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic (IDW Comics)

In Issue #2, Pinkie Pie finds a pony skull in the Appleloosan Mountains and it names it "Mr. Bones", due to the skull having Leonard McCoy's hair style.

In Issue #3, Fluttershy's line, "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few" is a line from Spock in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.

In Issue #9, Princess Luna's shapeshifting t-shirt gains an Starfleet emblem during the race event with Big Macintosh.

In Issue #10, there are some ponies that resemble James T. Kirk and Spock, a gray pony that resembles Bilar tells them, "Joy to you friends! Come for the festival are ya?"; this is a reference to the episode "The Return of the Archons".

In Issue #11, in the basement were Shining Armor plays a game similar to Dungeons & Dragons with his friends, there is a poster that has a Constitution-class refit, possible the USS Enterprise and the title is "Star Trot II", an obviously reference to Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.

In Issue # 16, Rainbow Dash's imagination drops them straight onto the pony version of Star Trek: The Original Series. Naturally, she's Kirk, Twilight Sparkle is Spock, and Rarity is Uhura. There's also a pony version of Yeoman Rand in the background of one shot.

In Issue # 25, when Rainbow Dash asks Twilight Sparkle why Spike isn't carrying Rarity's bags, she tells her that he is currently at a Pony Trek convention.

In the Micro-Series #10, there are several references in the next order: Princess Luna's pet opossum is named Tiberius, a possible reference to James T. Kirk, during the conference, an Earth pony has a cutie mark with the Starfleet emblem, and at the fair page, there is an airship with the number "1701", referencing the registry number of the USS Enterprise.

In Friends Forever Issue #2, among the various scenarios that Discord puts the CMC through includes a full-on take of Star Trek: The Next Generation.

It has the Cutie Mark Crusaders (Scootaloo, Apple Bloom, and Sweetie Belle) dressed up as Riker, La Forge, and Picard respectively and seen on the bridge of the USS Enterprise. Rarity's cat, Opal, is dressed up as a TNG-era Romulan. When she attacks, Scootaloo shouts that they should "Split the ship in half". Discord is seen at the end of that portion, dressed in Q's judge outfit from "Encounter at Farpoint", musing where he had seen this before.

Night of the Living Trekkies

A comedy-horror novel about a zombie outbreak at a Trek convention. The YouTube trailer for it says it is set at the "Botany Bay Hotel & Convention Center" and features a reporter named "Natasha Yar".

Omicron Ceti III

The title of Thomas P. Balázs' story, and the anthology volume it is featured in, is named after the planet from TOS: "This Side of Paradise".

The Onion

The satirical newspaper The Onion frequently makes references to Star Trek. One of its recurring columnists, an obnoxious sci-fi fan named Larry Groznic, sometimes mentions the franchise - in addition to occasionally mentioning meetings with Trek actors such as John de Lancie and Marc Alaimo [24], he boasts in the October 15, 2001 issue of writing a crossover with Back to the Future in which Doc and Marty secretly assist Kirk and Spock in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home [25] (evidently forgetting the resemblance Doc bears to someone of Kirk's acquaintance), while in the April 10, 2003 issue, in harshly criticizing someone for his decision not to learn Elvish, he wonders if that person would even bother to learn a language as simple and inelegant as Klingonese [26]. The paper has also made light of Barack Obama's well-known status as a Trek fan - three weeks after the release of Star Trek (a video on its website showed a faux newscast [27] in which numerous Trekkies leave the theater with harsh words for the "fun, watchable" film) the front page of the May 26, 2009 issue included a picture [28] of Obama giving a press conference with fake Vulcan ears, with "Obama Addresses Nation Still Wearing Spock Ears" in a caption below, while in the December 9, 2009 issue, amid the uproar following the uninvited presence of a Virginia couple's at a state dinner, an "infographic" [29] revealed numerous other White House security breaches, including the accessing of sensitive information by thousands of people; this was blamed on the fact that Obama's passowrd, "NCC-1701", was not a terribly difficult one to crack.

Pale Kings and Princes by Robert B. Parker

Adapted into a TV movie starring Avery Brooks (who reprises his role Hawk from the TV show Spenser: For Hire with Carolyn McCormick) and Barbara Williams.

When Felipe Esteva asks Spenser "Do you know who I am?", Spenser replies "Ricardo Montalban. I loved you in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan."

Penny Arcade

The web comic Penny Arcade make various references to Star Trek throughout the series. These can be seen at their website, or in their book collections.

Pokémon

In the second chapter of the manga The Electric Tale of Pikachu, a loose adaptation of the animated series, Ash mentions that his Pikachu's name is "Jean-Luc Pikachu". Pikachu is also seen to be wearing a Starfleet combadge in the panel in question.

PvP

The web comic Player vs. Player make various references to Star Trek, most notably Star Trek: The Original Series, throughout the series. These can be seen at their website, or in their book collections, of which book five is titled "Treks On".

Redshirts

See Redshirts

Redshirts is satire of most very TOS episode, with Wil Wheaton mentioned in the dedication epigraph and narrating its audiobook.

The Universal Union, Space Fleet, Captain Lucius Abernathy, Q'eeng, Anatoly Kerensky, Chief Medical Officer Hanson, and Chief Engineer West are all parallels of the United Federation of Planets, Starfleet, James T. Kirk, Spock, Pavel Chekov, Leonard McCoy and Montgomery Scott. When explaining why their lives are so dangerous, Jenkins puts up a picture of the Enterprise and says that they're living in a poorly-written TOS knockoff. Upon time-traveling back to 2012 Los Angeles, Brian Abnett says to Duvall that somebody has to be the redshirt.

During a book signing at the Burbank Public Library, the author and Wil acted out a sketch in which Wil is a labor lawyer with the firm of Koenig, Nichols, and Montalban suing the Universal Union over all the redshirt deaths, including how a deliberately unidentified captain was allowing a child to fly the ship.

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal

This popular webcomic has referenced Star Trek several times.

In one 2011 comic ([30]), the bonus joke accessed by the red button has a geek inneptly trying to difuse an awkward situation arising from having different favorite Star Wars movies by mentioning "because all of Star Trek is great".

In a 2014 comic ([31]), two kids explore the ethical questions arising from using the transporter, based on the assumption that a transported being would be killed and a clone created elsewhere. (this is generally a characteristic of real ideas on how a transporter might conceivably work, but is not the case with star trek transporters, as explained for example in the Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual). They ponder a number of scenarios, and then conclude that while they don't have answers now, "this is the kind of stuff you get all figured out by the time you're a grownup".

Serge A. Storms novels of Tim Dorsey

Torpedo Juice

Serge prefaces all his journal entries like a Captain's log complete with Stardate.

The Big Bamboo

One of Serge's demands for the return of Ally Street is the death of the person sitting behind him at a screening of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan for saying that Spock dies at the end.

When Elves Attack

Serge mentions that movie conversations get steered towards subjects like "The Trouble with Tribbles". Jim Davenport is also compared to Spock.

Sev Trek

Sev Trek by John Cook, is a web comic parody of Star Trek (as well as many other popular sci-fi shows) from The Original Series to Enterprise. It even spawned a computer animated "episode" of Sev Trek: TNG.

Shatnerquake

Shatnerquake is a novel by noted bizarro fiction author Jeff Burk. The story involves actor William Shatner being trapped at a convention at which he is forced into mortal combat against all the characters he has ever played, including multiple versions of James T. Kirk.

The Short-Timers by Gustav Hasford

When Joker and Rafter Man first meet the Lusthog Squad, they're at a movie theater watching George Takei's movie The Green Berets, where George is described as "Mr. Sulu."

Snippers

Snippers (meaning snippets) is a comic that appears daily in the Dutch newspaper Metro. In one comic, included in the fifth collection album, two people find a toy robot dropped in a park and contemplate the child that is crying at this very moment. In the next panel, a huge geek is seen crying in a room filled with various science fiction merchandise, including what appears to be a Star Trek poster.

Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson

It is said one can't beam into the Metaverse like James T. Kirk, and later Hiro notes that most hackers have pictures of the starship Enterprise on their walls. Also, L. Bob Rife purchased the aircraft carrier Enterprise from the United States Navy and made it his own personal yacht.

Sonic the Hedgehog comic book series

In the Knuckles the Echidna and Sonic the Hedgehog comic book series' produced by Archie Comics, the Echidna character Moonwatcher can be seen wearing a uniform that closely resembles the operations division TNG Starfleet uniforms. Furthermore, with the VISOR-like device over his eyes, he is quite similar in appearance to Geordi La Forge. A later issue introduced the "Battle Cruiser", a massive flying ship used by the Echidna group the Dark Legion. It's designs mimic those of the Klingon Bird-of-Prey, D'deridex-class and Galaxy-class ships.

It should be noted that both instances were created by Ken Penders, who worked on Star Trek comics in the past.

Suske en Wiske

This is a long-running and very popular Belgian comic book series, of which a handful of albums have been translated under various titles in English (though none of the ones mentioned below).

In the album "De Verradelijke Vinson", a dog which has infiltrated the underground base of a mad scientist thinks that it looks like a space base, something he has seen on tv on something called "Stardrek" (which translates to something like star muck.)

The album "De tikkende Tinkan" shows at one point various spaceships crashing down all over the world. One frame shows a ship very similar to the original Enterprise crashed into the Eiffel Tower.

Star Wars

The pre-refit USS Enterprise also made a cameo appearance in the Star Wars comic A Death Star is Born. Also, in the comic book adaptation for the Star Wars novel "Dark Force Rising," a boy on the planet Jomark can be seen holding a model of the Enterprise (Kirk, Spock, and McCoy are also in the frame).

Star Wolf

A series of sci-fi novels by David Gerrold about a hard-luck starship in the middle of an interstellar war also intended to be a TV series at one point.

The Middle of Nowhere

A crewmember says that they found the imp that had been sabotaging them dead inside an "Okuda tube," possibly a Jefferies tube-style compartment named for Michael Okuda.

Blood and Fire

A reworking of a Star Trek: The Next Generation episode rejected due to overarching homosexual thematics and an AIDS metaphor.

The new captain of the Star Wolf is said to have been previously posted on "The Big E," which is also said can't be risked on the front lines due to potential loss of morale if she's destroyed. A dead crewmember found on the Norway is named "M. Okuda."

Storm

Storm is a Dutch-British pulp science fiction comic book most popular in the Netherlands. The album "The Robots of Far Sied" has Storm saying "beam me up Scotty" as he prepares to be digitized.

Star Wreck: The Generation Gap

For the film series of the same name, please see Star Trek parodies and pop culture references (film)#Star Wreck.
File:StarWreck1Cover.jpg

Star Wreck cover

This mass-market paperback was first released in 1990. It is a tongue-in-cheek parody of the Trek universe, written by Wisconsin native Leah Rewolinski, with illustrations by Harry Trumbore. Six sequels followed. The books mainly center upon spoofs of the TOS and TNG series, with books six and seven spoofing DS9 as well.

The seven released titles in the series were:

  • Star Wreck: The Generation Gap (1990)
  • Star Wreck II: The Attack of the Jargonites (1992)
  • Star Wreck III: Time Warped: A Parody - Then, Now and Forever (1992)
  • Star Wreck IV: Live Long and Profit : A Collection of Cosmic Capers (1993)
  • Star Wreck V: The Undiscovered Nursing Home (1993)
  • Star Wreck 6: Geek Space Nine (1994)
  • Star Wreck 7: Space the Fido Frontier (1994)

Tales From Salonbay: Adventures in Xenocosmetology

A Star Trek inspired webcomic. The main character, Moxie Magnus, is a hairstylist and makeup artist on the Enterprise. Most of the comics feature her offering beauty tips to the various aliens the crew encounters.

The Technopriests

In the first issue of this comic book, a few visual references to Star Trek are made. A computer displays a LCARS interface, and later the uniforms of the Techo-pre-school have a remarkable resemblence to original series uniforms.

The War Against The Chtorr

A series of sci-fi novels by David Gerrold about an alien ecological invasion of Earth.

A Day For Damnation

A scientist says she ran a "Sternbach-Okuda" test on an alien organism.

The World God Only Knows

During Chapter 216 of the Manga "The World God Only Knows", Keima wears a uniform resembling one of starfleet when trying to convince Urara he's an alien.

xkcd

The web comic xkcd is well-known for its references to geek culture, so it should come at no surprise that it has referenced Star Trek on a number of occasions.

"Impostor" [32] has a character asking a linguist if Klingon is in the Finno-Ugric language family.

"Quantum Teleportation" [33] has a researcher lamenting that that the press always connects quantum teleportation research to the transporter from Star Trek, and then always write the same disappointed story when they find out it is not the same thing.

"House of Pancakes" [34] mentions the closing of the Star Trek Experience.

"Height" [35] is a logarithmic map of the observable universe, which shows both real and fictional objects. Included are the edge of Federation sector 001, and the Romulan Neutral Zone.

"Base System" [36] explains the Baseball metaphors for sex. "Downloading Star Trek fan fiction and replacing Riker's name with your Crush's" is depicted as out of play.

"Numbers" [37] charts the number of Google results for certain phrases with certain numbers inserted (for example; I'm <x> and have never had a boyfriend"). Amongst the sentences charted is, "There are <x> lights", referencing the famous scene from "Chain of Command, Part II".

"Darmok and Jalad" [38] is a parody of the episode "Darmok", and features Picard and Troi.

"Star Trek into Darkness" [39] concerned an epic wikipedia talk page discussion concerning the question if the "Into" in Star Trek Into Darkness should be capitalised.

"Interstellar Memes" [40] charts how far certain memes would have traveled given "speed-of-light delay". According to the comic, "Live long and prosper" might have made it to HD 211415 by now, while "Resistance is futile" would have reached Vega.

"Questions" [41] shows questions found using Google autocomplete. One of them is "Why are there two Spocks?", seemingly referencing the alternate reality.

"Data" [42] has a character proclaim that after Kirk and Picard, the most popular Star Trek character are Data to annoy a grammar pedant.

"Santa" [43] has a character using the phrase "the needs of the many..."

"Bracket" [44] mentions mister spock (as well as in an unrelated section Chris Pine).

Y The Last Man

In issue #27, Yorick and Agent 355 walk in the street of San Francisco. Yorick comments that the city doesn't completely suck and says that it is no wonder that the Federation of Planets choose it as its HQ location. Agent 355 doesn't understand his comment, and thinks that it is a Star Wars reference.

Ziggy

The September 28, 2011, edition of the Ziggy comic strip involves a transporter mishap, with a request to Scotty for assistance being heard coming from Ziggy's toilet.