
William Shatner is heading to Antarctica, and he wants you to join him
Newsy
Just over three years after the "Star Trek" actor returned from his real-life space trek, the 93-year-old will take off for the bottom of the Earth.
William Shatner saw Earth from the highest view; now he's heading to the bottom of it — and inviting you to join him.
The 93-year-old is setting sail for Antarctica on Dec. 19, which will mark just over three years since the "Star Trek" actor returned from a trip to space in real life, not just as Captain James T. Kirk.
Fellow space traveler NASA astronaut Scott Kelly will join Shatner on the 10-day Space2Sea expedition, and 260 others can too — if they pay for their $37,500 ticket.
The cheapest suite — priced at $35,500 — along with the top three most expensive ones — reaching $91,500 — are already sold out.
Presented by Future of Space, the trip aboard the new "ultra-luxury" vessel is said to be full of "awe-inspiring experiences," including "intimate encounters" with penguins, visits to remote historical locations and evenings full of stories from "esteemed guests," like Shatner. Travelers can also kayak the waters or go down deep under the ice in submersibles, both for additional charges.