Retiring the Trek-O-Meter
Jack B. Sowards died on July 8th. His obit mentions he is most notable for having written Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, still considered the finest ST movie made. This brought something back into full recollection, something in need of a fitting send-off as well.
About a dozen years ago, some friends and I cobbled together a handy system for measuring the intensity of a person’s Star Trek fandom with a simple-to-use linear meter. This system of measurement served us very well (”Eddie– Check out the eight in line over there!”) during the incredible glut of franchise content available from the early 90s to just a few years ago. Here it is– and please, feel free to grade yourself:
10.0 The perfect score was defined in a TV Guide Star Trek Commemorative magazine in 1995. In an article about serious fandom (Klingon language camp, costumed convention-goers, etc.) was a piece about a young man who built a replica of the Enterprise bridge set in his mother’s basement– and would act out his own Star Trek adventures in it. Think about that for a moment. Ponder the sheer force of will behind doing such a thing. Consider the circumstances. This pegs the meter: It cannot be surpassed. Even the people who designed and built the ACTUAL sets for Star Trek cannot meet this score– They were PAID to do their work.
9.0 People who owned Trek costumes and attended conventions regularly. Fluent in Klingon. Have met Walter Koenig. Bjo Trimble was a 9.
8.0 People who have seriously followed the shows, did not have any strong criticisms of “Star Trek: Enterprise” and first-nighted the movies. People who knew who Bjo Trimble was.
7.0 Attended a few conventions, saw all the movies, but could not cite chapter and verse from any series but their favorite. Would not like being called a “Trekkie,” preferring “Trekfan.”
6.0 Wouldn’t be particularly put out to be called a “Trekkie.”
5.0 The great median. Knew and appreciated the franchise as a whole, but generally followed the herd.
4.0 Thought Seven of Nine was hot, but found “Voyager” boring; Thought T’Pol was hot, but found “Enterprise” boring. Liked the effects in the movies. Thought “Live Long and Prosper” was the slogan of a medical group.
3.0 Thought a “Gorn” was a sort of melon. Often confused “Babylon 5″ with “Deep Space 9.”
2.0 Watched “Next Generation” as a kid. Saw First Contact on cable a few years back, liked it.
1.0 Liked Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, but that’s just about it.
0.0 The bottom peg of the meter was defined by my dear departed dad, who was vaguely aware there was a show on TV called “Star Track” and it had something to do with Dr. Spock.
A few notes: Most normal people would not stick to one point on the meter for any length of time: Some 3s would shoot up into 7 or 8 territory during a ST movie premiere or series season finale. And most significantly, this is a linear scale– it measures x, intensity of fandom. The unmeasured y dimension is sanity. The scale assumes full sanity: Nutcases (Shatner-stalkers and that juror who wore a Starfleet uniform to the Whitewater grand jury in ‘96) can theoretically exceed 10, but they tend to take right turns and fall off the chart entirely. (Special props: Chris, for helping with the chart definitions)
The Star Trek franchise has run it’s course: the props and costumes are being auctioned off, and there are no serious plans for new content. It still feels a bit strange to live in a world without it. It’s been around in one form or another since 1966, about as long as I have: It was not difficult to assume the portal to the ST universe would remain open forever.
Even the kid with the bridge set in his mom’s basement has probably dismantled it long ago and moved on. I wouldn’t put money on it, mind you, but probably.
–Skot C. (a solid 7)





July 16th, 2007 at 4:20 am
Great scale. Love it. I also am a solid 7 - maybe 7.5.
Bjo was also IN “The Wrath Of Khan” — she told me that all the women were swooning over Ricardo’s chest. I wish I could recall if she said it was real or fake…
You said “was a 9″ — has Bjo passed on? Or just retired from Fandom? I tried to get hold of her a few years ago, and never heard back.
July 16th, 2007 at 4:21 am
OH - and ps - Bjo had a bridge set in her backyard…
July 16th, 2007 at 10:31 am
I stand corrected… Bjo was in the motionless picture, but worked on set of Khan.
Looks like she’s still alive and living in SoCal.
July 16th, 2007 at 11:45 am
The past tense is just that–referring to the past. I ain’t surprised Ms. Trimble is still kickin’– though the bridge set may indicate she needs to be up-classified.
Or not. Without new content (and fan content doesn’t count) Trek fandom loses it’s intensity and everyone’s numbers slide. It’s like a movie scene when the power is cut– we get the close-up of the BIG needle dropping inexorably to zero.
July 18th, 2007 at 3:31 pm
[...] In todays show: Welcome Back Potter: boy wizard breaks all the usual records… the truth is out there, but not for long… and in this week’s commentary; Guest-writer Skot reveals his system for quantifying geekdom. All this and your next kidney may be Dutch, today on Box Office Weekly. [...]
July 28th, 2007 at 1:52 am
[...] Looks like we retired the Trek-O-Meter too soon. [...]
October 26th, 2007 at 4:18 am
[...] Take out your Trek-O-Meters, kids! [...]