Star Trek’s William Shatner Is Going to Space, and Twitter Has Thoughts
William Shatner, best known for playing Captain Kirk on the original Star Trek — and to a lesser extent, for doing a very memorable spoken-word cover of Elton John’s hit song “Rocket Man” — is officially going to space, and the denizens of Twitter have a lot to say about it.
Instead of the starship USS Enterprise, Shatner has been invited to climb aboard Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin rocket for a quick 10-minute trip to space on Oct. 12, according to Whether or not he remembers to say “Beam me up, Scotty!” as the spacecraft blasts off into the ether, the 90-year-old Shatner is still set to become the oldest person to ever go to space (the final frontier).
“Yes, it’s true; I’m going to be a ‘rocket man!'” Shatner on Monday.
Twitter users were quick to chime in with their thoughts and congratulations on Monday.
Lynda Carter, the actress who played Wonder Woman in the 1975 television series, at Shatner, “Congrats, @WilliamShatner! If you really gets to go to space, I hope I can really figure out how to get an invisible plane.”
Shatner , “I have no doubt you will get that invisible plane, Lynda.”
The news of Shatner being “launched into space” was so widespread on Monday that one user commented that the way some headlines are phrased makes it sound like Shatner is simply being catapulted into space with no context.
“I like how the use of the passive implies William Shatner has no say in the matter,” .
When actor Jason Alexander heard the news, he remembered one famous Seinfeld episode starring his character George Costanza.
“@WilliamShatner is going to space? My man! I guess this means I have to become a marine biologist,” Alexander.
Cue the many “The sea was angry that day, my friends,” memes.
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Other users harkened back to Shatner’s pre-Star Trek days when he starred in a Twilight Zone episode titled Nightmare at 20,000 Feet as a man flying home after recovering from a nervous breakdown. When he looks out the plane’s window, he sees a gremlin man staring back at him — but every time he tries to alert another passenger to the strange creature on the wing, it disappears.
“They better get this guy out on the side of the rocket when william shatner goes up,” , along with a still from the episode of the gremlin looking in the window at Shatner.
Actor, broadcaster, comedian, and writer Stephen Fry was overjoyed to hear of Shatner’s next great adventure.
“This is … I mean … come on. This is … surely you agree. This is EVERYTHING,” Fry.
Forbes writer Adi Gaskell to Fry’s tweet wondering whether Shatner was going to wear his Star Trek uniform.
But whatever Shatner decides to wear to space, it better not be a .
For his part, NBC News anchor Aaron Gilchrist , encouraging him to “boldly go” — where no man has ever gone before, of course.
But Mystic Pizza and Men in Black actor Vincent D’Onofrio might have with a simple, “Wow! That’s amazing dude.”
You can scroll through all of the aforementioned tweets and more below — but first, for your viewing pleasure, here’s Shatner talk-singing “Rocket Man,” cigarette dramatically in hand, in 1978.
So I read that is going up into space on the 12th. I hope things don't get weird or what up there!
— Trevor Markwart (@morbid_comics)
they better get this guy out on the side of the rocket when william shatner goes up
— Alex Geoffroy (@EsPyramid)
Wow! That's amazing dude.
— Vincent D'Onofrio (@vincentdonofrio)
Capt. Kirk is going to space FOR REAL! I'm here for it. Boldly go, !
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— Aaron Gilchrist (@nbcaaron)
This is … I mean … come on. This is … surely you agree. This is EVERYTHING
— Stephen Fry (@stephenfry)
is going to space? My man! I guess this means I have to become a marine biologist.
— jason alexander (@IJasonAlexander)
I like how the use of the passive implies William Shatner has no say in the matter
— Jack "Locked Account Quotetweeting You" Bernhardt (@jackbern23)
I have no doubt you will get that invisible plane, Lynda.
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— William Shatner (@WilliamShatner)
Main Image: (L-R) Leonard Nimoy as Spokc and William Shatner as Captain Kirk in Star Trek. Photo Credit: ViacomCBS
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