Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2 Episode 2 Easter Eggs and References
Oh no, this week's Star Trek: Lower Decks is an episode about Easter eggs!

Spoilers ahead for Star Trek: Lower Decks, Season 2, Episode 2, âKayshon, His Eyes Openâ
In The Next Generation episode âThe Most Toys,â Kivas Fajo tried to keep Data forever. The idea that someone thought it was okay to âcollectâ was an oddly self-referential concept for Star Trek even in the 1990s. Just like now, the idea of a Star Trek collectible was a thing hardcore Star Trek fans thought about all the time. But, other than the fact that everyone would actually want to âcollectâ Data, âThe Most Toysâ wasnât actually about Star Trek collectibles.
But, the newest Star Trek: Lower Decks episode, kind of is? In âKayshon, His Eyes Open,â the crew of the Cerritos encounters one of those famous collectors, while the crew of the Titan deal with some very familiar transporter clones. Itâs almost like this is an episode that is filled with as many Easter eggs on purpose. Hereâs everything we caught.
Beta Shift
When Jet s the Lower Deckers at the start of the episode, itâs implied they are on âBeta Shift.â This seems to check-out with Season 1, in which it was clear that the Cerritos was on a LOVES to reference.)
Sonic Showers
Although sonic showers are referenced a lot in Star Trek, weâve only seen sonic showers a few times. The first time was in The Motion Picture, and since then weâve only glimpsed the showers. The visual effect for the communal sonic showers here is very similar to TMP, but the idea of communal showering for the lower officers vaguely references the novelization of The Motion Picture, too. If you know, then you know.
Collectors
Again the idea of various âCollectorsâ in the galaxy references Kivas Fajo and âThe Most Toys.â This is what Freeman means by âthey all tried to collect Data.â
Dr. Migleemo
Notably, the Cerritosâs counselor, the avian Dr. Migleemo returns in this episode, once again, voiced by Paul. F. Tompkins. Echoing Counselor Troiâs non-standard uniform, Migleemo appears to wear whatever he wants while on duty, even sitting on the bridge.
Items Owned By the Collector, Take 1
When the landing party for the Cerritos first boards the ship, just in the first room alone there are a ton of Easter eggs. Getting all of these is gonna be tricky, but weâre gonna give it a go. Hereâs what you can spot when you pause the first couple of shots in the first room of the Collectorâs Ship.
- Captain Picard paper mache head from âCaptain Picard Dayâ (TNG, âThe Pegasusâ)
- The Game (TNG, âThe Gameâ)
- Baseball Bat and ball (Possible DS9 Sisko reference?)
- Giant Unicorn (Possible Blade Runner reference?)
- Marty McFlyâs Shoes (Back to the Future)
- Terran Empire Flag (TOS, âMirror, Mirror)
- Khanâs Necklace (The Wrath of Khan)
- Valiant flight recorder (TOS, âWhere No Man Has Gone Before)
- Gold TOS Uniform
- Giant Pink Tribble (TAS, âMore Tribbles, More Troubles)
- M-113 lifeform (TOS, âThe Man Trap.â Also, this is AT LEAST the third time the Salt Vampire has appeared on Lower Decks. And, having the M-113 lifeform as a collectible not only references âThe Man Trap,â but also, âThe Squire of Gothos,â in which your boy Trelane had an M-113 creature as a museum piece, too!)
Special Shout-Out: Betazoid Gift Box
First appearing in TNGâs âHaven,â this was a talking box that was meant to âbondâ with the person who got the gift.
The existence of this artifact here is also possible a double reference to two other things: In âHaven,â the face of the Gift Box was played by Armin Shimmerman, more famous later as Quark on DS9. But, on top of that, back in 1994 the Star Trek: The Next Generation Collectible Card Game (published by Decipher Inc.) had a very powerful card based on the Betazoid Gift Box. If you played the game, you know this was a rare and useful card that was wellâŚvery collectible.
Special Shout-Out: Whose trombone is that?
We briefly see a trombone in one of the collectorâs cases, which seems like an easy reference to Riker. But, which one? Because this episode also directly references âSecond Chances,â and Will Rikerâs duplicate Thomas Riker, itâs possible that this is the trombone that Will gave to Thomas at the end of that TNG episode. Briefly, hereâs the case for that being Thomas Rikerâs trombone: In the DS9 episode âDefiantâ Thomas Riker tried to steal the Defiant, but was later arrested by Starfleet. Presumably, this would mean all of his stuff would have been confiscated, including his trombone!
Keyshon is a Tamarian
Tamarians or âthe Children of Tamaâ originate in the TNG episode âDarmok.â In case you forgot, Picard cracked the case with this species by learning they spoke exclusively through metaphor and analogy. Mariner mocks this by pointing out all you have to do is listen for âcontext clues.â
Riker lovesâŚRogue Squadron?
Riker tells Boimler to use âattack pattern delta,â on the Pakled ship. This seems to be a reference to The Empire Strikes Back in which Luke tells the snowspeeders of Rogue Squadron, âAttack pattern delta, go now!â
Items Owned By the Collector, Take 2
Hereâs another go at seeing how many Easter eggs were jammed into like less than 2-minutes of screentime.
- Kataan Probe (TNG, âThe Inner Lightâ)
- Vulcan lirpa weapon (TOS, âAmok Time,â)
- Klingon batâleth (TNG, DS9, Voyager et al.)
- Andorian dueling weapon (Enterprise, âUnited.â)
- Shark in a Tank (A reference to the real-life artist Damien Hirst, probably?)
- Mars Rover
- Kadis-kot game set (Voyager)
- Château Picard wine crate (Picard)
- Isomagnetic disintegrator (Worfâs bazooka from Insurrection)
Tendi is later holding:
- A trident scanner (Scotty loved this thing in TOS)
- AndâŚa Kurlan naiskos (TNG, âThe Chase,â a very big episode for canon!)
Kahlessâ fornication helmet
Tendi says that this specific Klingon artifact is clearly something Kahless (the Klingon Jesus) wore whileâŚwell, the name speaks for itself. But which Kahless? Hmmm? The fake clone Kahless from âRightful Heir?â or the real-deal Kahless from the 9th century? The Kahless reference gets doubly meta, because, as youâll see later, Lower Decks eventually references the very first reference in canon to Kahless, too.
Dataâs Picasso-esque painting of Spot
Barely visible, just as Mariner and the gang are trying to escape, we see Dataâs painting of his cat Spot, first seen in the TNG episode âInheritance,â and later in the background in the movie Generations.
Boimlerâs description of the Enterprise-D
Letâs combine two scenes here! In two pivotal moments in the episode, Boimler is defending the honor and relative coolness of the TNG adventures on the Enterprise-D, which he just calls âthe D.â Hereâs what it seems like heâs referencing.
- âThey went to other dimensions⌠(This seems to reference the idea that âThe Dâ did go to another dimension in the episode âWhere No One Has Gone Before.â It also could reference âYesterdayâs Enterprise,â but nobody would that.)
- âThey fought the BorgâŚâ (This references âQ, Who,â âThe Best of Both Worlds,â and âDescent.â
- âThey insurrected!â (This seems to reference Star Trek: Insurrection, which was not the Enterprise-D, but instead, the Enterprise-E! The Lower Decks writers surely know this. Why doesnât Boimler know this? Maybe the game of telephone in the Federation is a little inaccurate? In LDS Season 1, the news of Dataâs brother seemed to travelâŚvery slowly?)
- âThey had a regular string quartet.â (This references several TNG episodes, notably âSarek,â and again, âInheritance,â)
- âRiker was jamming on the tromboneâ (A ton of TNG, including âThe Next Phase,â âFuture Imperfect,â and of course, âSecond Chances.â)
- âCatching love diseaseâ (Probably TNGâs âThe Naked Nowâ)
- âActing in playsâ (This mostly references Riker acting in one of Crusherâs plays in TNGâs âFrame of Mind.â)
The remains of Spock Two?
In the spooky skeleton room, we see what appears to be a giant humanoid skeleton wearing a blue TOSâera Starfleet uniform. Who is this? The best guess? This is the giant Spock clone from The Animated Series episode âThe Infinite Vulcan.â
Excalbian Bones and Abe Lincoln
Toward the end of the episode, the gang is trapped in a diorama that seems to have an alien and a skeleton of Abraham Lincoln. This references the TOS episode âThe Savage Curtainâ in which the Excalbians produced copies of Lincoln, along with Kahless and Surak. This episode was the first reference in Trek canon to both Kahless and Surak, and so, basically created the backstories of both Vulcan and Klingon cultures through historically inaccurate versions of those people. Funny, right?
Transporter clone
When Boimler beams the away team out through the distortion field, Riker says âoh, Iâve heard this tune before.â This references the TNG banger âSecond Chances,â in which Rikerâs transporter duplicate was discovered on a planet years after the fact. In this sense, Boimlerâs transporter clone got off easy. Also, the idea that one of the transporter duplicates makes different decisions that the other also references âSecond Chances,â in which âThomasâ Riker ends up being a different person than Will. The idea that both canât serve on the Titan anymore might reference the idea that the TNG writing staff considered killing off the âfirstâ Will Riker, and replacing him with his duplicate. This would have meant Data would have become the first officer in Season 6, and Riker, the operations officer. It didnât happen, but from the point of view of the Titan crew, something like this basically DID just happen.
The Riker lean
While talking to the Mr. Boimlers, Riker puts one foot up on a couch. Classic Riker lean. Classic.
âComputer play Night Birdâ
Just before Boimler leaves the Ready Room, âWilliam Boimlerâ and Riker are sharing some Romulan Ale. Riker says âcomputer, play âNight Bird.ââ This also references âSecond Chances,â in which Riker is unable to play the trombone solo for this song, which Troi teases him about endlessly. âNight Birdâ also appears to be a made-up song. But who knows, maybe William Boimler will be able to master it?
Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2 airs on Paramount+ on Thursdays.