I figured if I could educate the young ones they would get their parents to care about the condition of their teeth.
#KLINGON HOMEWORLD HOW TO#
Not wanting to be considered a failure Frantley began visiting Klingon elementary schools to educate young Klingons on how to take care of their teeth. At times I regretted my decision and started to consider moving back to Millerton. When I told them the purpose of dentistry was to avoid pain they started avoiding me. But I have never had a warrior race that liked pain so much. We have a lot of Irish in Millerton you know. So when I explained that I take high-powered drills and drill into the pulpy tissue of nerves they began to like me and called me a “Dentist Warrior.” I had to tell them I didn’t do this to inflict pain but to help people avoid pain with their teeth.Īpparently Brantley’s explanation had crossed a cultural taboo with the Klingons. Newly arrived on the Klingon Homeworld Brantley set up shop and waited for his customers. He told me that they didn’t have dentists. So I asked him If he ever went to a dentist on his Homeworld. I looked at his teeth and said “If all Klingons have teeth like this then I should move there. I have lots of competition from other dentists. “Have you ever looked at Klingon teeth? They look worse than the English” said Frantley.īusiness in Millerton wasn’t booming. (We did.When Jack Frantley, DDS, moved his practice from upstate Millerton, New York to the Klingon Homeworld he figured he had it made. “Discovery” has added another piece to the Klingon intimacy puzzle, whether anyone really needed it or not. Apparently, Klingon sex is as much beat down as get down. Their warrior culture means their mating rituals are pretty rough, to say the least - often seemingly involving a number of injuries to both parties, including broken bones. “Star Trek” has depicted more than one human-Klingon romantic pairing over the years, and since there’s apparently some genetic compatibility between the two species, there are at least three major Trek characters with both human and Klingon parents or ancestry.Īlso Read: Top 25 Best Netflix Original Series, Ranked From Great to Phenomenal (Photos)Īs for the actual procreative act itself, “Star Trek” over the years has given fans plenty of interesting tidbits about just how Klingons get it on. Earlier in the season, Klingon L’Rell (Mary Chieffo) suggested that humans weren’t equipped to keep up with Klingons in the bedroom because of a deficiency of quantity.īut don’t feel too bad, humans hoping for a Klingon valentine: that’s not entirely true. This isn’t the first time “Discovery” hinted at just what Klingon males are packing.
#KLINGON HOMEWORLD TV#
Yes, we mean they apparently have two penises.Īlso Read: TV Shows You Should Binge-Watch Right Now, From 'OITNB' to 'Better Call Saul' (Photos) The shot pans down to show two distinct streams hitting the wall - essentially confirming that Klingons are, ah, doubly endowed. As the group walks down a dark street they pass a drunk Klingon urinating on a building. The away team finds themselves at what is essentially a Klingon bar-slash-casino-slash-brothel, where everybody is drunk, losing money, and yelling at each other.
That means a small team, including protagonist Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green), has to infiltrate a Klingon city by posing as a crew of non-Federation human gangsters. In the episode, the crew of the Discovery heads to the Klingon homeworld of Kronos with a plan to map the planet and attack Klingon military targets. Well, the final episode of “Star Trek: Discovery” Season 1 went ahead and definitively answered the question, while making a couple of jokes along the way. Yes, we mean speculated that they have two penises. Unsurprisingly, science fiction fans being what they are, Trekkers have long speculated that this means Klingons have two of everything. “Star Trek” shows like “The Next Generation” and “Voyager” have established that Klingons evolved numerous anatomical redundancies, including two livers, an eight-chambered heart, and two stomachs. That is, until Sunday night’s “Star Trek: Discovery” season finale.
The “Star Trek” franchise has spent a lot of time developing concepts about alien physiology across its many shows and movies, but one longtime fan theory about Klingon sexual anatomy has never been confirmed. (Warning: mild spoilers about the season finale of “Star Trek: Discovery.”)