Interviewing William Shatner about "Star Trek" is like interviewing Neil Armstrong about Apollo XI. Chances are someone's already asked the question you want to ask.
No, that's not quite right.
Armstrong actually went to the moon. Shatner is an actor who played a character. And while everyone knows that James T. Kirk was born in Iowa, famously beat the Kobyashu Maneuver Test at the Academy, outwitted a Gorn and defeated Khan in the Mutara Nebulae, Kirk isn't real. But when the rich familiar voice says "Hello," everything in your fan-boy brain lights up and says "I am talking to the Captain of the Enterprise!"
Because you are. There might have been "Trek" without Shatner, but there wouldn't have been 50 years' worth. There's a reason every new captain is compared against Kirk, and it's because the man made the mold.
JL: At 85, you're not even close to resting on your laurels. What's your latest project?
WS: A movie called "Better Late Than Never." Henry Winkler, George Foreman, Terry Bradshaw, a young comedian named Jeff Dye — we went to Asia, along with a huge camera crew. We'd never been to Asia, and we proceeded to get lost in the Tokyo subway system and eat crickets and talk to elephants. It was an extraordinary adventure, and a story about how these strangers became good buddies.
JL: Never been there before, eh? You must be steeling yourself for headlines that say "Shatner Boldly Goes Where No Shatner Has Gone Before."
WS: I am well steeled.