Trek had its own boy genius crew member (Wesley Crusher).
Crusher was an adolescent, 14 when the show debuted. GQ's Laredo was a preteen, more in the vein of
Lost in Space's Will Robinson or
Galactica 1980's Doctor Zee. In particular, Laredo bears a very strong resemblance to Heironymous Fox, the boy genius that Gary Coleman played in two season-1
Buck Rogers episodes.
This isn't a competition. Every time I try to point out that GQ referenced things
besides Trek, people think I'm somehow denying the Trek parallels and start arguing against me. But there's nothing to argue about. The Trek parallels are obvious and can be stipulated to. They're just not the
only SFTV references in the movie. As I said, a good parody doesn't limit itself to referencing only one thing. (Look at
Spaceballs. It's mainly a
Star Wars parody, but it also contains nods to other sci-fi like
Star Trek, Planet of the Apes, Alien, etc. It's not either/or.)
Sci-Fi has changed in the past twenty years. There's the rise of the various interconnected "universes" -- in order to understand a scene from movie "D", you have to have watched S3E9 of TV series "B" (yes, I'm looking at you, Marvel).
The only time a Marvel Cinematic Universe movie has referenced something that originated on TV was in
Avengers: Endgame when
Agent Carter's Edwin Jarvis made a cameo as Howard Stark's valet/chauffeur. But to a viewer who hadn't seen
Agent Carter, there would have been nothing confusing about the scene. Movie viewers would remember Tony Stark's JARVIS AI, and if they noticed the name Jarvis at all, they'd just think "Ohhh, that must be who Tony named his AI after" and have no trouble following it.
It's the TV series that follow the movies' lead, not the other way around. After all, the movies are immensely more profitable to the company, so of course they're in the lead. Also, it takes far longer to shoot and post-produce a movie than a TV episode, so it's logistically impossible for the movies to keep up with the TV references; it only really works in the other direction.
Any TV references in movie franchises are just Easter eggs, not necessary for understanding the story. A lot of people who saw
Rogue One never realized that Saw Gererra was a returning character from
The Clone Wars, because that connection was irrelevant to the story. And the brief glimpses of Chopper and the
Ghost from
Rebels were incidental and easily overlooked. These references are not meant to create barriers to comprehension, merely to be a bonus for those who happen to catch them.