Eli | 19 | Biology major and Spanish minor | Christian | Slytherin | INFJ |

Fandoms: Tolkien, Game of Thrones, CLAMP, Naruto, Avatar: The Last Airbender, Star Wars, Sherlock Holmes, Supernatural, BioWare, Elder Scrolls, Kingdom Hearts, and more...

 

Star Trek is nearly 50 years old now and it’s been around for so long because I think it offers hope for us as a species. The thing people have always been attracted to (with Star Trek) is the idea that we might live beyond this age of conflict and uncertainty. And it’s not only that, but it’s also the ability to work together and live in a world where everyone is accepted no matter who you are.

The original series with Gene Roddenberry was incredibly progressive. It started barely 20 years after the end of World War II, with a Japanese officer aboard the Enterprise, a black woman in charge of an entire division, and a Russian on board—albeit in subordinate roles, but it was an incredibly progressive move. It offered this utopian idea of cooperation and that’s always going to be something to strive toward until we actually achieve it. In that respect, Star Trek will never go out of fashion.

Simon Pegg, about Star Trek. (via svealand)

(Source: brianyw)

kosmonauttihai:

How Sasuke puts on his Chuunin Exam finale outfit, a scientific illustration.
From the second Naruto Anime Profiles book.

kosmonauttihai:

How Sasuke puts on his Chuunin Exam finale outfit, a scientific illustration.

From the second Naruto Anime Profiles book.

profanespark:

I’m 100% convinced Chris Pine took lessons from William Shatner on how to appear completely love-struck when looking at Spock.

“Spock and Kirk…They’re two halves of almost the same person in many ways. Kirk is the heart and the gut and the soul and the passion and the impulsiveness. And Spock is that kind of cold logic and reason. (…) And I think both Spock and Kirk have something to learn from one another.” - Chris Pine

(Source: merlinsfuckingbeard)