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Pop culture references in TrekLit?

But once again we seem to be getting into in-universe crossovers with other media properties, which isn't what the original poster was asking about. The question was about characters in Trek being aware of present-day fiction, brand names, and other popular culture as popular culture.

True, true. That was exactly what I was wondering about in my original post. Still, some of the other posts have been interesting, even if not directly on-topic.

- Byron
 
i remember reading the UK-produced X-Men comic in the 90s and a kid on the letter's page suggested Sir Patrick. that was circa 1995!

he also suggested this guy as Wolverine... :guffaw:
 
As I recall Elvis is referenced in one of the earliest Next Gen Novels. Eyes of the Beholders I believe by AC Crispin if memory serves.

Also in Debtors Planet Riker invites Work to watch a movie that sounds pretty much like Lethal Weapon.
 
As I recall Elvis is referenced in one of the earliest Next Gen Novels. Eyes of the Beholders I believe by AC Crispin if memory serves.

That's the one. :)

Also in Debtors Planet Riker invites Work to watch a movie that sounds pretty much like Lethal Weapon.

Missing Link 3, I believe?

As I recall, in that same book, Worf offers an idea for the next movie night. Observe:

Worf: "It is more...glorious. The hero is silent. The villains are obvious. And there are well-choreographed sequences of hand-to-hand combat.

It is called...Rambo V."

Riker: "And you say it's more 'glorious'?"

Worf: "Everyone dies."


Hmm...so far, there's only been four Rambo/First-Blood films. The last one was only a few years ago--and Stallone's no spring chicken. The Expendables may still show him on top of his game (I haven't seen it yet)--but...if there will be a "Rambo V", it's going to have to be pretty soon....
 
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In DTI: Watching the Clock, a few characters make references to classic 19th- and 20th-century science fiction pertaining to time travel, including Wells's The Time Machine, Asimov's The End of Eternity and "The Dead Past," and Clarke & Baxter's The Light of Other Days.

Well, you've sold me. I must buy DTI if only to support authors who make references to Isaac Asimov. :-D

(The good doctor is my favorite author.)
 
Starfleet Academy: The Delta Anomaly's 23rd century San Francisco is very much today's version but with a few aliens and a space college thrown in. Laptops, flash drives, phones... but I can't recall any secific brands being mentioned.
 
The question was about characters in Trek being aware of present-day fiction, brand names, and other popular culture as popular culture.

True, true. That was exactly what I was wondering about in my original post. Still, some of the other posts have been interesting, even if not directly on-topic.
Okay here's one:
http://memory-beta.wikia.com/wiki/Jack_Daniel's

I remembered this, because A Less Perfect Union also had a more veiled reference to Kirk and Gary Mitchell sharing a bottle of Jack.
 
Didn't Taranatar fight a holodeck Predator in a DS9 Relaunch novel?

In the comics, there has been a red alien who resembled the alien queen from "Alien", a green Christmas alien that resembled the Grinch (Dr Seuss), and Kirk, Spock and McCoy briefly appeared to a delusional crewman as Opus, Bill and Portnoy from the "Bloom County" comic strips.
 
Kirk, Spock and McCoy briefly appeared to a delusional crewman as Opus, Bill and Portnoy from the "Bloom County" comic strips.

Okay...that rings a bell in my head. I can almost picture it. But, I can't, for the life of me, remember where I saw that... :wtf:

DC Comics first series #51, written by Peter David.

trekbloom.jpg

I love "Google Image Search"!

Kirk: "Mr Spock, are you a penguin?"
Spock: "Not that I am aware of, sir".

:guffaw:
 
I think it was in Warpath where Taran'atar was battling holodeck opponents which were implicitly the Xenomorphs from the Alien franchise. It wasn't explicitly stated that the creatures were based on a work of in-universe fiction, but that's the logical interpretation.

It was Mission Gamma: Cathedral, and I wrote the scene. I've had a lot of people recognize what it was supposed to be, but a lot who didn't as well, so it worked either way!

And I believe that I referenced Stephen King in one of the books I wrote Riker in...
 
I think it was in Warpath where Taran'atar was battling holodeck opponents which were implicitly the Xenomorphs from the Alien franchise. It wasn't explicitly stated that the creatures were based on a work of in-universe fiction, but that's the logical interpretation.

It was Mission Gamma: Cathedral, and I wrote the scene. I've had a lot of people recognize what it was supposed to be, but a lot who didn't as well, so it worked either way!

And I believe that I referenced Stephen King in one of the books I wrote Riker in...

Thanks for chiming in Andy. I just read Cathedral a few books ago. I remember the holosuite scene but I totally missed the Alien reference. I guess I must've just flew through the scene. I'll have to go back and look at it.

I just started Worlds of DS9: Trill: Unjoined so it's quite timely that one of my posts caught your attention.

- Byron
 
The question was about characters in Trek being aware of present-day fiction, brand names, and other popular culture as popular culture.

True, true. That was exactly what I was wondering about in my original post. Still, some of the other posts have been interesting, even if not directly on-topic.
Okay here's one:
http://memory-beta.wikia.com/wiki/Jack_Daniel's

I remembered this, because A Less Perfect Union also had a more veiled reference to Kirk and Gary Mitchell sharing a bottle of Jack.
A bottle of Jack Daniel's Black Label is among the liquor McCoy's unpacking in The Final Reflection's framing scenes.
 
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