Thanks! But yours is more awesomer. Those Dune paintings by John Schoenherr rock, and that's one of the best ones.
So what is your position? Bob Hope is or is not part of mainstream culture? What about Fred Astaire or Valentino?The comedian is different than the joke. Hope didn't build his career on telling jokes with references that people didn't get.People of what age?When a comedian can paraphrase Scotty complaining about the engines for his routine and people get it, it is pretty much a known thing.
Not all people are baby boomers.
Those things pass when new generations arrive.
Bob Hope was mainstream once as well.
807
Same for me.Now, as a member of a diehard fan base of the originally broadcast version of Star Trek, I know I am a member of a dying breed. To me, the 1960's version of Star Trek is Star Trek.
Glad to hear it!Same for me.
Nicely said JB. I also watch the others. Often, my favorite episodes have something to do with the original crew.Agreed! TOS is the only Star Trek for me too! Although I do watch the others, TNG, DS9 and VOY it's the original that really counts!
Thanks! But yours is more awesomer. Those Dune paintings by John Schoenherr rock, and that's one of the best ones.
So what is your position? Bob Hope is or is not part of mainstream culture? What about Fred Astaire or Valentino?The comedian is different than the joke. Hope didn't build his career on telling jokes with references that people didn't get.People of what age?
Not all people are baby boomers.
Those things pass when new generations arrive.
Bob Hope was mainstream once as well.
807
Let me guess: all things before the 60's are "obviously" not part of pop culture while 60 and 70 items will forever be part of pop culture?
Seems like a case of "looking a the world through baby boomer glasses"
2995
I'd say that there was a time when Trek was part of a 'zeitgeist' that it currently no longer is, but that isn't exactly the same as popular culture.
On reflection I'd say it *is* pop culture, by the very merit that everybody knows who Spock and Kirk are. And Khaaaaaaan.They're icons, and that's enough to make it pop cultural.
But that isn't quite the same as, say, how people treat Star Wars with a kind of never-ending reverence, even when new productions aren't being made. Star Wars is the juggernaut of pop culture.
Star Trek is, and always will be, something 'other' to a lot of people.![]()
30+ people are pop culture nowI'd say that there was a time when Trek was part of a 'zeitgeist' that it currently no longer is, but that isn't exactly the same as popular culture.
On reflection I'd say it *is* pop culture, by the very merit that everybody knows who Spock and Kirk are. And Khaaaaaaan.They're icons, and that's enough to make it pop cultural.
But that isn't quite the same as, say, how people treat Star Wars with a kind of never-ending reverence, even when new productions aren't being made. Star Wars is the juggernaut of pop culture.
Star Trek is, and always will be, something 'other' to a lot of people.![]()
Of course people know Spock and Kirk and Khan and even Picard! hell even ST II was the most mainstream out of any ST movie before Nutrek and TNG touched lives of 80s kids like me as much as the OS touched the lives of 60s kids.
No, it just proves the baby boomers are now the old age executives and decision makers.Coming late to the party:
The fact that Nimoy's death was front-page news, and that multiple "tribute" magazines quickly flooded grocery stores, drug stores, dollar stores, and so on, displayed alongside the latest issues of PEOPLE or COSMOPOLITAN, indicates to me that Spock (and by extension STAR TREK) is still deeply entrenched in American pop culture.
Again, we're not talking comic-book shops here or the dealers room at a Trek convention. We're talking the check-out line at your neighborhood grocery store.
The mainstream media would not have treated Nimoy's passing as a Big Deal unless they thought that the whole world still remembered Spock . . ..
No, it just proves the baby boomers are now the old age executives and decision makers.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.