Actually Riley delivered that line when Spock relieved him of duty and ordered Uhura to take over his station. If anything, Riley was saying he's in favor of gender equality!The Naked TimeI do recall a slight sexist remark (from an infected Riley) who states, “Let the women work too!” I forget what context that remark was made, but I believe it was when Kirk gives an order to Uhura on the bridge, and Riley overhears from Engineering.
SPOCK: You haven't answered my question. Where is Mister Sulu?
RILEY: Have no fear, O'Riley's here. And one Irishman is worth ten thousand of you --
SPOCK: You're relieved, Mister Riley. Lieutenant Uhura, take over this station.
UHURA: Yes, sir.
RILEY: Now that's what I like. Let the women work too. Universal suffrage!
Actually Riley delivered that line when Spock relieved him of duty and ordered Uhura to take over his station. If anything, Riley was saying he's in favor of gender equality!The Naked TimeI do recall a slight sexist remark (from an infected Riley) who states, “Let the women work too!” I forget what context that remark was made, but I believe it was when Kirk gives an order to Uhura on the bridge, and Riley overhears from Engineering.
SPOCK: You haven't answered my question. Where is Mister Sulu?
RILEY: Have no fear, O'Riley's here. And one Irishman is worth ten thousand of you --
SPOCK: You're relieved, Mister Riley. Lieutenant Uhura, take over this station.
UHURA: Yes, sir.
RILEY: Now that's what I like. Let the women work too. Universal suffrage!
We're told the Enterprise can destroy the entire planet of Eminiar VII as if they were the death star, yet they can't destroy a lousy asteroid in "The Paradise Syndrome".
I may have to watch the episode at a later date to get the context of the line, but I wonder if it was Kirk's way of bluffing Anan 7 to buy more time?
We're told the Enterprise can destroy the entire planet of Eminiar VII as if they were the death star, yet they can't destroy a lousy asteroid in "The Paradise Syndrome".
I may have to watch the episode at a later date to get the context of the line, but I wonder if it was Kirk's way of bluffing Anan 7 to buy more time?
It's more Scotty's reaction to the order. Kirk has no way to tell Scotty it's a bluff, which would mean that the general order itself is automatically a bluff. If so, it's possible that everybody has to play along as part of the general order but in this case this would include the crew pretending with each other. Seems unlikely...
We're told the Enterprise can destroy the entire planet of Eminiar VII as if they were the death star, yet they can't destroy a lousy asteroid in "The Paradise Syndrome".
SCOTT: The entire inhabited surface of your planet will be destroyed.
Actually Riley delivered that line when Spock relieved him of duty and ordered Uhura to take over his station. If anything, Riley was saying he's in favor of gender equality!The Naked TimeI do recall a slight sexist remark (from an infected Riley) who states, “Let the women work too!” I forget what context that remark was made, but I believe it was when Kirk gives an order to Uhura on the bridge, and Riley overhears from Engineering.
SPOCK: You haven't answered my question. Where is Mister Sulu?
RILEY: Have no fear, O'Riley's here. And one Irishman is worth ten thousand of you --
SPOCK: You're relieved, Mister Riley. Lieutenant Uhura, take over this station.
UHURA: Yes, sir.
RILEY: Now that's what I like. Let the women work too. Universal suffrage!
You'd think that a General Order like that would need to be confirmed by someone else like the self-destruct.
Weren't those guys faking Kirk's voice anyway or was it some other episode? Anyway the voice print would at least need to be verified.
Actually Riley delivered that line when Spock relieved him of duty and ordered Uhura to take over his station. If anything, Riley was saying he's in favor of gender equality!The Naked TimeI do recall a slight sexist remark (from an infected Riley) who states, “Let the women work too!” I forget what context that remark was made, but I believe it was when Kirk gives an order to Uhura on the bridge, and Riley overhears from Engineering.
SPOCK: You haven't answered my question. Where is Mister Sulu?
RILEY: Have no fear, O'Riley's here. And one Irishman is worth ten thousand of you --
SPOCK: You're relieved, Mister Riley. Lieutenant Uhura, take over this station.
UHURA: Yes, sir.
RILEY: Now that's what I like. Let the women work too. Universal suffrage!
Of course, suffrage doesn't mean what the context would imply. It doesn't mean to share the work load. Suffrage means the right to vote, and universal suffrage means everybody having the right to vote in political elections (i.e., including women). This is one of the examples in Star Trek when the staff got basic vocabulary wrong, particularly in having been evidently influenced by what the words sound like they ought to mean and seemingly in an effort to sound educated while failing on both accounts, which includes the infamous* "zoological gardens will furnish a variety of plant life" line in "The Cage"/"The Menagerie".**
* - Or, if not infamous, then egregious.
** - Zoological gardens are for exhibiting animals, not plants.
So was it the writer writing the wrong word, the actor saying the line wrong, or was it the character of Riley that was wrong?
I chalk the "universal suffrage" line up to Riley (a) being drunk on funny water and (b) trying to crack a lame joke.So was it the writer writing the wrong word, the actor saying the line wrong, or was it the character of Riley that was wrong?
Door number one. High on funny water or not, a 23rd century person shouldn't have even noticed that a woman was taking over navigation.
OK, I can see that might have been the intent, though it is lame. If it really was intended as a play on words, an overt cue to that effect would have helped, like a wink or a nudge (which I don't recall being there).I chalk the "universal suffrage" line up to Riley (a) being drunk on funny water and (b) trying to crack a lame joke.
Yes, that made me sad.Then there's that "one to the fourth power" line from "Court Martial" . . .![]()
I think you are confusing "destroy the planet" with destroy all of the civilization on it. The planet would still be there, but everyone would be dead, flattened by photon torpedoes and phaser strikes.
CLAUDIUS: But on the other hand, why even bother to send your men down? From what I understand, your vessel could lay waste to the entire surface of the world.
On the other hand, I like the way McCoy acts when he first meets Khan – who holds a stolen knife at the doctor's throat. He says, “Well, either strangle me or cut my throat. Make up your mind!” Even though he is sometimes grating, McCoy is the type who has shown to be pretty bold at times. (He did stand in front of a jousting knight in 'Shore Leave'!)
The original episode did, in fact, have a miniature FX shot of the Botany Bay dropping away from the Enterprise.Space Seed
However, the remastered version of this episode is pretty cool, especially during one scene as we actually see the DY-500 vessel let go by the Enterprise's tractor beams at one point as Khan takes over the Kirk's ship. (We didn't really see this in the original version, but just 'heard' about it through Kirk's log entry).
The original episode did, in fact, have a miniature FX shot of the Botany Bay dropping away from the Enterprise.Space Seed
However, the remastered version of this episode is pretty cool, especially during one scene as we actually see the DY-500 vessel let go by the Enterprise's tractor beams at one point as Khan takes over the Kirk's ship. (We didn't really see this in the original version, but just 'heard' about it through Kirk's log entry).
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