Entertainment
7 min read
William Shatner Hilariously Mocks Stephen Miller's 'Star Trek' Criticism
The Daily Beast
January 20, 2026•2 days ago

AI-Generated SummaryAuto-generated
William Shatner satirized Stephen Miller's criticism of the new Star Trek series. Miller deemed a scene with a character wearing glasses "tragic." Shatner feigned outrage over this perceived oversight, suggesting Starfleet should have cured hyperopia. Miller, seemingly missing the sarcasm, responded by discussing Kirk's death and suggesting Paramount make amends with Shatner.
William Shatner gleefully mocked White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller over his culture-war broadside against Paramount’s new Star Trek series.
Miller, 40, lashed out at Star Trek: Starfleet Academy on Thursday, deriding an innocuous scene featuring Holly Hunter, who stars as Captain Nahla Ake, as “tragic” in an X post.
On Monday, Shatner, 94, responded to Miller’s suggestion by writing, “I am so on the same page with you @StephenM!”
But it did not take long to become apparent that the Canadian-born actor—who played Captain James T. Kirk in the original Star Trek series—was ridiculing Miller as he feigned outrage over Hunter’s character wearing glasses.
“The fact that they have not cured Hyperopia by the 32rd Century is an abysmal oversight on the writers!” he wrote. “Also @paramountplus needs to up the budget because I’m sure that a well-oiled organization like Starfleet in the distant future could afford more than one pair of glasses for at least this hyperopic bridge crew.”
Shatner continued, “Do they pass the glasses around while piloting the ship? Shame on the line producers!” before addressing Miller directly:
“That is what you meant, right? I am ready to assume command of the series! Call me!” he wrote.
But the dig apparently went light-years over Miller’s head.
“Paramount screwed up royally when they decided to kill off Kirk in Star Trek Generations. @WilliamShatner disagreed strenuously but was a team player and out-acted everyone in the film. But it’s not too late for Paramount to make amends with Shatner and save the franchise. Do it!” the oblivious Trump aide replied to Shatner’s post.
Shatner, whose character was killed off in the 1994 film Star Trek Generations, told the Daily Beast in a 2017 interview that he was “apolitical.”
But he slammed Trump in May for the president’s repeated calls to make Canada the U.S.’s 51st state.
“At a certain point, persistence becomes insulting,” Shatner told Fox News’ Jesse Watters, before quipping that Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney should turn the tables on Trump and offer the U.S. a spot as Canada’s 11th province.
In a follow-up X post, Shatner encouraged his followers to consider Trump’s annexation ideas through a Canadian’s eyes. “Doesn’t feel good; does it? Learn a lesson from it,” he said.
Rate this article
Login to rate this article
Comments
Please login to comment
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
