10 False Star Trek Facts You Probably Still Believe

Oh no, I'm an officer in red in an odd numbered Star Trek film! Beam Me Up, Scotty!

Star Trek False Facts Red Shirt Death
CBS

Star Trek has been around since 1966 and in that time, many many urban legends, myths and believable untruths have built up around the franchise. Much like incorrectly quoted lines from famous movies, some of these 'facts' are simply being misrepresented along the way.

From this list, there are a mix of those entries that would be more widely known by people who might not be specifically Star Trek fans. Most people would be familiar with the phrase Beam Me Up, Scotty and one of the most common ongoing jokes is that to wear a certain colour on the Enterprise means you'd want to have your will in order before reporting for duty.

However, there are other facts that many people simply accept as truth. Surely it was Kirk who first captained the Enterprise? Spock doesn't have feelings, he's a Vulcan! And of course, the greatest belief of them all - Gene Roddenberry was solely responsible for the stories and arcs of Star Trek that we know today. Well, not so.

Full disclosure: there is much of this list that would be considered fairly niche information. Meaning, there are facts that most people would have thought to be true and then other facts that potentially only people who have watched the series for a time may have considered true. So, this is a list breaking down a mix of the well known and the obscure, finally shining truth on years and years of lies!

10. Wearing A Red Shirt Means Certain Death

Star Trek False Facts Red Shirt Death
Paramount

So, going by this image, let's get an order of six coffins put together, right?

Family Guy manages to capture the ludicrousness of the Red Shirt Conundrum up in one of its early episodes. Kirk assembles an away team, in which one of the team will almost certainly be killed. The team will be Kirk, Spock, McCoy and Ensign Ricky.

Ricky, you're a dead man.

This one is a popular gag that is debunked by percentages rather than anything else. On the Original Series, security personnel wore red. In the Next Generation, security wore gold. Both red and gold are within a few points of each other on the death ratio however when this is compared to the number of red/gold shirts on the ships, statistically, their survival rates were quite high.

As there are usually far fewer science and command division officers on board the various ships, their percentage rates are much higher in terms of mortality. Does this sound like splitting hair? To be fair, yes it absolutely is.

Perhaps another way to look at it is this: was Kirk really an awful captain who always got his crew killed? The answer to that is emphatically no. In terms of sheer numbers, in Kirk's first five years, 96 crewmen out of a compliment of 430 died according to Roddenberry's novelisation of the Motion Picture. In contrast, out of 85 crew members on Enterprise, Archer had almost one-quarter of them die during the Xindi arc alone.

So, while wearing red may have invited a bit more rough and tumble than the other colours, its not actually the death sentence it seems to be!

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Writer. Reader. Host. I'm Seán, I live in Ireland and I'm the poster child for dangerous obsessions with Star Trek. Check me out on Twitter @seanferrick