During the engineering work for the supersonic Concorde in England, "Thunderbirds" TV series creator Gerry Anderson was visiting the main facility one day. Someone asked him what he did for a living. Feeling massively outranked by all the engineering talent surrounding him there, he quietly replied that he made children's TV shows. Asked which ones, he mentioned Thunderbirds.

Within minutes he was surrounded by Concorde engineers who wanted to talk to him and shake his hand, many of whom told him it was his shows that had inspired them toward engineering careers, because they wanted to actually build the planes and rockets he had in his series. He was flabbergasted.

The original Star Trek had a similar effect on many career choices.

Now of course, TV mostly inspires people toward careers as lazy bums or crooks.

@lauren

Star Trek was the sort of thing that inspired me to pursue a lifetime of work with computers and computer programming. In my childhood, it was devoured alongside Apollo

Because of Star Trek I learned that more than anything else, my mind, logic, and proper methods of reasoning were the most powerful tools at my disposal

To this day Star Trek and it's descendants in the narrative tend to occupy more television time in my family than just about any other source of video entertainment