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Little Deuce Coupe
Robin Curtis (definite)
Ricardo Montalban (suspected...but if he wasn't a fan, why would he return to do a movie?)
Stephen Collins (suspected)
Jolene Blalock (definite <didn't see her on the list, but I did see her mentioned in the thread>)
zipkirk1966
I don't know if she is a fan or not but I was watching TNG on G4 and saw someone say a desperate housewife Teri Hatcher. Season 2 The Outrageous Okona she plays the transporter operator B.G Robison if she is then add her to the list.

Brian
Takara_Soong
Of course we need to add JJ Abrams to the list.
jadziaezri
what about scott bakula
savagediana
QUOTE(TheUnicornHunter @ Dec 31 2004, 02:14 AM) [snapback]293725[/snapback]

I remember Kevin Newman who did a short stint as host of Good Morning America was a trekkie (I don't know what happened to him - I think he has gone back to Canada)


LOL!!! Thank you for that. :D

QUOTE(Klingonmike @ Feb 17 2005, 11:52 AM) [snapback]303986[/snapback]

No one has mentioned Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. he and his whole family were big Star Trek fans, As a matter of fact its because of Dr. King that Nichelle Nichols (Uhura) stayed on the show!



Yes, someone did mention that before, but not in as much detail. That's awesome!!! smile.gif
Takara_Soong
I've received confirmation that author Sherrilyn Kenyon (who also writes under the name Kinley MacGregor) is a Trek fan. For those not familiar with her work, she writes a paranormal series called Dark-Hunters that is really good. I haven't read her Kinley McGregor books but they are historical rather than paranormal.
LCARS 24
What's the first thing Will Sasso asked someone who claimed to be a psychic in a skit on MAD TV? "When's it gonna be like Star Trek?" That's in addition to their Trek skits.
Takara_Soong
I'm going to add another writer to the list - Tanya Huff. She's best know for her Victory Nelson series which I just finished reading. Here's a couple of examples from the last novel, Blood Debt, which was about "organ-legging" (selling organs, in this case kidneys, for illegal transplant operations):
QUOTE
"We were watching Jeopardy," she continued, able to talk about what had happened now that it was officially over. "It was the championship round. Miss Evans had just shouted out "Who is Captain Kirk?' when all of a sudden, she sort of whimpered and clapped her hands over her ears. She looked like she'd heard something horrible except I didn't hear anything at all. The next thing I knew, she was... gone."

QUOTE
Since they knew he'd lost it locally, organ-legging was beginning to make more sense. And the motive for removing the organ? That was the only easy answer. Profit.
So maybe we should look for a Ferengi, he snorted.
Takara_Soong
Here's the list updated once again:
  • Colin Powell
  • Dahlai Lama
  • Tom Hanks
  • Dr. Mae Jamieson
  • Neil Armstrong
  • Jean Simmons (actress)
  • Paul Sorvino
  • Mira Sorvino
  • Berkeley Breathed (cartoonist - Opus, Bloom County)
  • Bill Amend (cartoonist - Fox Trot)
  • Seth McFarlane (creator of Family Guy)
  • Bill Gates
  • Al Gore
  • Eddie Murphy
  • Jason Alexander
  • Dr. Stephen Hawking
  • Scott Adams (cartoonist - Dilbert)
  • Isaac Asimov
  • Laurell K. Hamilton
  • Douglas Adams
  • Carol Moseley Braun
  • Christan Slater
  • Whoopi Goldberg
  • Most, if not all, of NASA
  • Most, if not all, of Microsoft
  • George Noory
  • Art Bell
  • Marc Scott Zicree
  • Ben Browder
  • Rockne S. O'Bannon
  • Charles M. Schulz
  • King Abdullah of Jordan
  • Vin Diesel
  • John Glenn
  • Mel Gibson
  • Sally Ride
  • Mick Fleetwood
  • James Worthy
  • Bebe Neuworth
  • Kelsey Grammer
  • Tom Morello
  • Martin Luther King Jr.
  • Arthur C. Clarke
  • Rod Serling
  • Trey Parker
  • Matt Stone
  • Howard Stern
  • Will Smith
  • Iggy Pop
  • Ben Stiller
  • Conan O'Brien
  • Kirstie Alley
  • Tom Bergeron
  • Beastie Boys
  • Kevin Newman
  • Richard Dean Anderson
  • Drew Carey
  • Eric McCormack
  • Weird Al Yankovic
  • Joss Whedon
  • Mel Brooks
  • Robert Atkins
  • Kathy Lee Gifford
  • Paul "Big Show" Wight
  • George Lucas
  • Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson
  • Tim Allen
  • Neal McDonough
  • Barry Manilow
  • Robin Williams
  • Paul McGillion
  • Jim Meddick (cartoonist - Monty)
  • Dave Foley
  • David Hewlett
  • Number of people at Pixar Animation
  • late Douglas Adams
  • Alan Keyes (Repulican Senate candidate, Illinois)
  • Dennis Haysbert
  • Brad Paisley
  • Jim Davidson
  • Jonathan Ross
  • The Wiggles
  • Someone working on the kids' series Big Comfy Couch
  • Jane Wiedlin (formerly of the GoGo's)
  • David Reddick (cartoonist)
  • Kevin Sorbo
  • Tony Danza
  • Bryan Singer
  • David X. Cohen
  • Alec Newman
  • Jon Stewart
  • Rick Rashid, the top researcher at Microsoft
  • Prime Minister Stephen Harper (Canada)
  • Quentin Tarantino
  • Andy Dick
  • Mark Hamill
  • Angelina Jolie
  • Graeme Edge, Moody Blues' drummer
  • Kirsten Dunst
  • Robin Curtis
  • Jolene Blalock
  • JJ Abrams
  • Scott Bakula
  • Sherrilyn Kenyon/Kinley MacGregor
  • Will Sasso
  • Tanya Huff
  • Daniel Craig
  • Someone in charge at Beavis and Butthead

I've updated the list to those included in this thread. I've also added the current James Bond, Daniel Craig to the list after reading this at st.com:
QUOTE
Daniel Craig, the suave Brit who has redefined the iconic role of James Bond in "Casino Royale," wants a crack at another longstanding venerable franchise. Turns out he is a massive Star Trek fan and would jump at the chance to don a Starfleet uniform. "I would love a stint in the TV show or in a film," Craig revealed, according to World Entertainment News Network. "It's been a secret ambition of mine for years."

Takara_Soong
According to Cindy Adams in the NY Post, Russell Crowe was a Trek fan when he was a kid.
SpinerFan
Hopefully no one's said this already...
James Marsters (Spike on Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
Kisame Hoshigaki
Wow, Bill Gates, Will Smith, David Palmer, Tom Hanks. Really?

George Lucas?! HA HA! Oh the Irony.
Troy
forgot patrick stewart....but i kinda knew seth macfarland was a trekkie when he kept adding patrick stewart to the guest list lol
Alterego

I don't remember if it's been said before but Brent Spiner does the voice of Conan O'Brien in South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut.
Lt. Van Roy
I loved the segment when he had Nimoy and Takei on talking about the feux Klingons in the White House.
Takara_Soong
I'm adding Nicole de Boer. I was reading an article at Trek Today where she said that before joining DS9 she was a big TNG fan.
DaboGirl
You can add Iowa Senator Tom Harkin to the list as well.
DaboGirl
James Kevin Brown known as Kevin Brown of the Texas Rangers, Baltimore Orioles, Florida Marlins, San Diego Padres, Los Angeles Dodgers, and New York Yankees.



QUOTE
Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., who had bid $1 billion for England's Manchester United soccer team -- the Dodger coffers opened wide. Just in case a record-setting paycheck wasn't enough to erase his concerns about spending most of the season 3,000 miles from his family, the Dodgers also gave Brown the use of a private jet up to twelve times during the season to fly his wife and two sons to the West Coast. A "Star Wars" poster signed by producer George Lucas helped seal the deal, even though Brown was actually a Star Trek fan.

Link: http://www.baseballlibrary.com/ballplayers...evin_Brown_1965

QUOTE
The injustice here is about more than just money. How fair is it to Montreal, or to Kansas City, or to Pittsburgh, or Cincinnati, or Milwaukee, or Oakland, that the Dodgers, as part of the wooing process, can take Kevin Brown, a big Star Trek fan, over to the Twentieth Century Fox studio where the new Star Wars movie is filming? The big-money salary aside, where is the competitive balance in Rupert Murdoch's ability to call on all the resources of News Corp.'s vast media and entertainment empire when he is recruiting a player?
Space, in Brown's favorite TV show, is called the Final Frontier. The Dodgers are helping him explore the stratosphere of that frontier now. But they won't be there by themselves for long, because Malone is right: If the Dodgers didn't do it, somebody else would have.

Link: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m120...222/ai_53487432
DaboGirl


Barack Obama is a big fan of Star Trek. He said himself: "I grew up on Star Trek. I believe in the final frontier." And, when Leonard Nimoy was the guest on NPR's "Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me!" in September, he said that he had run into "one of the presidential candidates" and that that candidate had, upon seeing Nimoy, given him the Vulcan salute. He refused to name the candidate, but said he "was not John McCain." (Ed. Note: not to mention, he is the best example of the strength of IDIC we've seen in a long time)
Link: http://blog.wired.com/geekdad/2008/11/5-signs-preside.html

Last Friday, at a campaign event in Wyoming, presidential hopeful Barack Obama said the following: "I grew up on Star Trek. I believe in the final frontier."
Link: http://trekmovie.com/2008/03/09/the-next-space-frontier/
Stephen of Borg
Joel Hodgson, Mike Nelson and the rest of the cast of Mystery Science Theater 3000 are huge Trek fans. They make tons of Trek references on many episode and Mike was Janeway in one episode


trekz
QUOTE (DaboGirl @ Nov 6 2008, 11:56 AM) *


Barack Obama is a big fan of Star Trek. He said himself: "I grew up on Star Trek. I believe in the final frontier." And, when Leonard Nimoy was the guest on NPR's "Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me!" in September, he said that he had run into "one of the presidential candidates" and that that candidate had, upon seeing Nimoy, given him the Vulcan salute. He refused to name the candidate, but said he "was not John McCain." (Ed. Note: not to mention, he is the best example of the strength of IDIC we've seen in a long time)
Link: http://blog.wired.com/geekdad/2008/11/5-signs-preside.html

Last Friday, at a campaign event in Wyoming, presidential hopeful Barack Obama said the following: "I grew up on Star Trek. I believe in the final frontier."
Link: http://trekmovie.com/2008/03/09/the-next-space-frontier/

Very cool Dabo Girl! I had missed that. Thanks for the links and mentioning it! You rock!
DaboGirl
More Obama is a Trekkie quotes:

QUOTE
According to the actor Leonard Nimoy, who played Mr. Spock in the series, Obama flashed him the split four-fingered Vulcan salute when the two crossed paths last year. In May in Des Moines, Newsweek caught Obama teasing wife Michelle about her belt buckle, saying it was studded with Star Trek-powering dilithium crystals and adding, "Beam me up, Scotty!" As he laughed at his own joke, Michelle Obama rolled her eyes, as geek wives often do.




QUOTE
As a youngster, Obama collected Spider-Man and Conan the Barbarian comic books. His Senate website used to have a photo of him posing in front of a Superman statue, and in October at New York's Alfred Smith dinner he joked: "I was actually born on Krypton and sent here by my father Jor-El to save the planet Earth." Jor-El was the father of Superman, born on the planet Krypton.




Link to entire story: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/ga...nt-1215625.html

Lt. Van Roy
QUOTE
(12-25) 04:00 PST Washington - --

Get ready for the geek-in-chief.

President-elect Barack Obama used to collect comic books, can't part with his BlackBerry, and once flashed "Star Trek" star Leonard "Mr. Spock" Nimoy the Vulcan "Live Long and Prosper" sign.

That and other evidence has convinced some of Obama's nerdier fans that he'll be the first American president to show distinct signs of geekiness. And that's got them as excited as a Tribble around a Klingon.

Obama is good at "repressing his inner geek, but you can tell it's there," especially when he goes into nuanced explanations of technical matters, said Benjamin Nugent, author of the book "American Nerd: The Story of My People."

"One imagines a terrifying rally of 'Star Trek' people shouting, 'One of us!' " Nugent said, in an interview conducted by e-mail, of course.

Others see only some geek qualities, qualifying the president-elect as merely "nerd-adjacent." After all, he's an athlete and kind of cool, some experts demur. Still, there's enough there for geeks to celebrate.

Psychology professor Larry Welkowitz of Keene State College in New Hampshire speculated that there's a shift in what's cool and that "smart can be in. Maybe that started with the computer programmers of the '90s. The Bill Gateses of the world are OK."

The Obama transition team would not comment on the president-elect's geek qualities, even when it was suggested those could be positive. And his old college friends give the geek idea a split vote.

While Margot Mifflin, now a journalism professor in New York, said she saw no geeky signs in Obama as a freshman at Occidental College in Los Angeles, Amiekoleh Kimbrew Usafi recalled it differently, despite the lack of technology in 1979.

"He's a geek because he was smart," Usafi said, noting that Occidental was a geeky school to start with, billing itself as the Yale of the West. "I remember he would be hitting his books. I would see him in the library. ... There were a lot of girls that liked him because he was cute, but he kept his head in the direction he was going in. I would see him studying all the time."

Wired magazine first crowed about Obama the geek, complete with five reasons in its GeekDad blog. A lot depends on the definition of geek, which to Wired is more compliment than insult.

GeekDad contributor Matt Blum, a software engineer in Reston, Va., defines geeks as having high intellects, embracing technology, "getting excited about things in the future especially, particularly fiction," having a science viewpoint and being steeped in the geek culture of science fiction and fantasy.

Geeks know and use references from "Star Trek," Dungeons & Dragons and comic books. And, he added, they are nitpicky, unafraid to correct mixed science fiction metaphors, such as confusing the Andorians of "Star Trek" with the "Star Wars" Iridonians.

Here's a quick geek cultural check for Obama:

-- Technology. Click that icon. He's the candidate who tried to announce his vice presidential pick by text message and embraced Facebook as a campaign tool. He's seldom seen without a BlackBerry and talks of a chief technology officer for the nation.

-- Comic books. As a youngster, Obama collected Spider-Man and Conan the Barbarian comic books. His old Senate Web site posts a photo of him posing in front of a Superman statue, and in October at New York's Alfred Smith dinner he joked: "I was actually born on Krypton and sent here by my father Jor-El to save the planet Earth." Jor-El was the father of Superman, born on the planet Krypton.

-- "Star Trek," the long-running TV show. According to the actor Leonard Nimoy, who played Mr. Spock in the series, Obama flashed him the split four-fingered Vulcan salute when the two crossed paths last year. In May in Des Moines, Newsweek caught Obama teasing his wife, Michelle, about her belt buckle, saying it was studded with dilithium crystals, the energy source in "Star Trek," and adding, "Beam me up, Scotty!" As he laughed at his own joke, she rolled her eyes, as geek wives often do.

Yes, geeks have wives. That's one of the things that separates them from nerds and dorks.

"A geek is someone who has the knowledge of the geeky type stuff and has social graces," Blum said. "A nerd is someone who has the knowledge but not the social graces and a dork is someone who has neither."

Geek-in-chief
By that definition Obama is a geek, not a nerd or dork, Blum said. Nerds are the type who live in their parents' basements until they're 45, whereas geeks are more normal, he said.

"I'm a geek because I'm a dad," Blum said. "I managed to find a woman who wished to marry me and have children with me."

Blum said Obama qualifies as the first geek-in-chief because George W. Bush was too much a cheerleader and Bill Clinton too wonky and not technological enough. The other presidents came of age before geek culture did, so don't qualify.

But don't discount John Quincy Adams as a geeky guy who steeped himself in government as a teenager, contends author Nugent who by adding that historical reference reinforces his geek expertise.

In some ways, though, experts say Obama is just too cool, too athletic, too normal to wear the geek cape. Obama did use drugs and was a high school athlete, missing out on two prime nerd qualities, Nugent said.

Dan Sarewitz, a professor of science and society at Arizona State University, said calling Obama a geek is unfair both to the president-elect and geeks.

"He's too cool to be a geek; he's a decent basketball player; he knows how to dance; he dresses well," Sarewitz said. "It's too high a standard for geeks to possibly live up to."

All the nerds at home can at least try, though, courtesy of a heavily muscled "beach blanket Obama" action figure selling for $29.95.

So is Obama a geek?

In the words of Alan Leshner, president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, which had two past leaders appointed by Obama to high posts: "I hope so."
Stephen of Borg
not sure, but this one may have been said


Vic Mignogna (voice of Edward Elric in popular anime Fullmetal Alchemist)
DaboGirl


Nerdiness comes naturally to Dawson

LOS ANGELES -- Because we don't know Klingon, we'll spell it out in English: Rosario Dawson is a comics-adoring, Star Trek-worshipping geek.

This may not come as a revelation if you've followed Dawson's choices in recent years -- co-creating the 2006 comic series Occult Crimes Taskforce, signing on for Frank Miller's Sin City -- but what may is the depth of her, well, nerdiness.

Whether she's articulating how each cinematic Batman through the decades has reflected the comics as well as the political climate of the time, or raving about the trailer for May's Trek reboot, she's the real deal.

"As a kid, I was always around comics; my uncle is a comic-book artist. He would keep them in plastic; there was this sacred ritual of reading comics that was so important.

"I can't believe that now that's translated to a compliment about my persona. I'm like, 'Really?' It's something I bond with my brother about. There's definitely something in the blood

"My grandmother used to collect comics when she was younger, actually, and her mother threw out all her originals which is awful because she had the first Superman. I still cry about that sometimes. That's so messed up. That could've put me through college."



Link: http://www.winnipegsun.com/entertainment/2...898076-sun.html



Rosario Dawson was born in New York City, the daughter of Isabel, a plumber of Puerto Rican and African descent, and Greg Dawson, a construction worker of Native American and Irish descent. She is perhaps best known for her roles in the films Sin City, Rent, Men in Black II, The Adventures of Pluto Nash, Josie and the Pussycats, and Death Proof.

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