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Star Trek' icon George Takei discusses his graphic memoir 'It Rhymes With Takei,' coming out at age 68 and the importance of ...
Strange New Worlds season 3 won't fully deal with the darkest moment of season 2, hints Babs Olusanmokun, who plays Dr.
Klingon: One of the earliest pop culture invented languages, this language from Star Trek was deliberately designed to sound as alien as possible.
George Takei hid his "whole self" for 68 years. Celebrating his new memoir, he talks "liberating" feeling of coming out and ...
George Takei didn't come out as gay until he was 68, but don't refer to it as his time in the closet.. A more apt word would be "imprisoned," he tells USA TODAY. The "Star Trek" actor knows what ...
Klingon is difficult but not impossible, weird yet totally believable. Anyone can put on a pair of pointed ears or memorize some lines of dialogue, but learning to speak Klingon requires genuine ...
The spokesperson decided not to answer in English or Welsh. — -- If people want to know about UFO sightings in Wales, they better speak Klingon. When Shadow Health Minister Darren Millar ...
Captain Koloth (William Campbell) and his Klingon crew are also spending time on the station, and when a drunken Klingon insults the Enterprise, the two crews break out into a brawl.
With that being said, there were even questions about doing a musical for Star Trek: Strange New Worlds on the director's end not long after he signed on. Dermott Downs said he had some doubts ...
Klingon taste buds supposedly perceive the drink as sweet on its own, but to humans and their soft, fluffy tongues, it tastes notably bitter and requires quite a lot of sugar to make it palatable.
Before George Takei broke out with his role on “Star Trek” and became a cultural icon, his last name was often mispronounced.