
Tag Archives: Star Trek
Haiku and photo: “Not my job”

Not my job
Dammit, Jim, I’m a
Veterinarian. I
Treat dogs, not dog stars.
.
.
#haiku #poem #poetry #photo #dammit #veterinarian #astronomer #dog #dogstar #davidebooker #startrek #knoxville #tennessee #september
092618 and 092621
Filed under 2018, 2021, haiku, photo, photo by David E. Booker, poem, Poetry by David E. Booker
Haiku to you Thursday (and photo): “Geek who?”
Who am I? you ask. /
Some days, logic says a geek. /
Other days are blurred.

Filed under 2018, Haiku to You Thursday, poetry by author
Photo finish Friday: “Stuffed (red) shirt”

Star Trek’s Lt. Commander Montgomery Scott and Star Trek: The Next Generation’s Captain Jean-luc Picard. To boldly go where no stuffed shirt has gone before.
Filed under 2017, photo by David E. Booker, Photo Finish Friday
Photo finish Friday: “Woodn’t you know it?”
Filed under 2017, photo by David E. Booker, Photo Finish Friday
Photo finish Friday: “It’s Christmas when…”
You know it’s Christmas when…
- You find a half-empty cup of eggnog in your refrigerator and you mix it with milk and chocolate syrup for your breakfast drink.
- You get to eat slightly lumpy chipped beef on toasted bagel, because, well, you’re home for the holidays and you just do.
- Your artificial Christmas tree sheds needles like real one.
- You set up your outdoor inflatable Christmas decorations and two of them die. One right out of storage from last Christmas, and the other shortly after it has been set up and inflated for this year.
- In order to entice your significant other into at least being more tolerant of your outdoor inflatables, you replace one of the ones that dies with something she likes but you have no fondness for – an inflatable pink flamingo. Even though it’s carrying a gift and wearing a red stocking cap, it still is not a favorite.
- Two Christmas packages arrive and they rattle – but they shouldn’t.
- You find a Christmas card from several years back from a friend and mentor whom you had lost touch with and learned recently died earlier this year.
- You pay a repair to fix a major appliance, and the problem he finds is an easy fix you should have seen if you had been a little more on the ball.
- You receive a present you wanted, but it turns out not to be all that interesting, but you also receive a present that you didn’t want and it turns out to be the most interesting thing you received. In kids, this is known as “The-cardboard-box-is-more-fun-to-play-with-than-the-toy-inside phenomenon.” It happens with adults, too. We just don’t generally call it that, or own up to it.
- To boldly go where no Christmas tree has gone … recently. For the first time in five years you get to put up your Star Trek Christmas tree. And because you have so many, you decide to limit the decorations to those from The Original Series, because it is the original and you are that old.
- A young lady shows up at your doorstep, gently tapping on your door, a bag of homemade Michelle Obama’s shortbread cookies in her hand. She gives them to you and says, “Merry Christmas.” Then she scurries away.
- You’re driving around with you kids looking at Christmas lights and see Santa crossing the street and walking into a dive bar on the edge of your neighborhood. Not sure how to explain that one.

“Beam me somewhere Mr. Scott. Any ol’ place in Earth or space. You pick the century and I’ll pick the spot.”
Filed under 2016, photo by David E. Booker, Photo Finish Friday
Photo finish Friday: “Picture of health”
Commemorating 50 years of Star Trek. One of the original, iconic characters, Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy.
Filed under 2016, photo by David E. Booker, Photo Finish Friday
Read This: The story behind Star Trek’s iconic, ceaseless sound effects · Great Job, Internet! · The A.V. Club
Very few programs in television history can be easily identified by their sound effects alone. The original 1966-69 run of Gene Roddenberry’s Star Trek belongs in that select fraternity, thanks to the efforts of sound mixer Doug Grindstaff and other craftsmen who toiled on the classic science-fictio





