Not boasting or anything but sure, there was them as well.Weren't there four other guys who did Liddypool proud as well?

Not boasting or anything but sure, there was them as well.Weren't there four other guys who did Liddypool proud as well?
A bad representation of reality would be showing identical proportions across all sectors of a population.If the casting really ends up being two-thirds male, then of course it's a really bad representation of reality
A bad representation of reality would be showing identical proportions across all sectors of a population.
A bad representation is having six series that are all predominantly male. Nobody expects all of them to be completely 50:50. But since the previous shows were so shitty about equal representation it's not asking too much for a 2017 show to be less stupid about it.
Equal representation would be cool, having it predominantly female is fine, too, considering all other Trek shows were heavily skewed in the other direction.
Having YET ANOTHER predominantly male cast would be lame.
I honestly don't understand why I have to explain this again and again. It's like so many people don't get representation in media.
A bad representation is having six series that are all predominantly male. Nobody expects all of them to be completely 50:50. But since the previous shows were so shitty about equal representation it's not asking too much for a 2017 show to be less stupid about it.
Equal representation would be cool, having it predominantly female is fine, too, considering all other Trek shows were heavily skewed in the other direction.
Having YET ANOTHER predominantly male cast would be lame.
I honestly don't understand why I have to explain this again and again. It's like so many people don't get representation in media.
A two-thirds male crew is not unrealistic whatsoever.
Of course I don't know, but if I had to guess about the future, naturally I'd draw on history. I'd expect to see certain fields skewed one way, and others another, just like we see today.In 6 series?
What do you know about what'll be realistic gender splits in starship crews centuries from now? Work at Starfleet very obviously isn't about upper body strength which might have favored males.
Your post reminds me of the people who whined about the all-female Ghostbusters because "women wouldn't be drawn to the completely fictional and fantastic job of hunting ghosts".![]()
Of course I don't know, but if I had to guess about the future, naturally I'd draw on history. I'd expect to see certain fields skewed one way, and others another, just like we see today.
But you were the one making assertions about reality, so you tell me. What makes you think a 50/50 split would be realistic centuries from now, where it is not today and never has been in centuries past?
Of course I don't know, but if I had to guess about the future, naturally I'd draw on history. I'd expect to see certain fields skewed one way, and others another, just like we see today.
But you were the one making assertions about reality, so you tell me. What makes you think a 50/50 split would be realistic centuries from now, where it is not today and never has been in centuries past?
Because the Star Trek is supposed to depict an optimistic take on humanity without institutionalised sexist bullshit.Of course I don't know, but if I had to guess about the future, naturally I'd draw on history. I'd expect to see certain fields skewed one way, and others another, just like we see today.
But you were the one making assertions about reality, so you tell me. What makes you think a 50/50 split would be realistic centuries from now, where it is not today and never has been in centuries past?
It's like so many people don't get representation in media.
It has, but that was a mistake.Is Star Trek fundamentally optimistic? I wish it was, but it's been getting darker since the 90s
Just because someone is a white male doesn't mean that every white male feels represented.
How about the fact that, when women are given equal opportunities to succeed, they do at least as well (if not better) than men?
Women are underrepresented in a lot of fields, not for lack of capability, but because they are actively discouraged from pursuing them.
One could perhaps argue that the future might be worse in this regard, but we're talking about Star Trek: a fundamentally optimistic vision of the future. Which would suggest parity or something pretty close to it as the ideal.
It is kinda tricky. Even if the person who made the casting would be an android perfectly free of any conscious or unconscious bias, and would honestly just choose the most talented person for each role, the bias would still exist because of the pool of available people to choose from. Other people choosing actors certainly have biases, and this affects the actors' careers, so if you are looking for actors with some established acting chops, the white males will already be over presented in that pool of people. Being 'colourblind (or 'genderblind') this way works only if everybody does it, and they certainly don't.I find it intriguing. There was a rather big deal made by Fuller about 'gender blind, colour blind' casting at one point.
If this was the result of that process, and that ideal picked these candidates as simply being the best person they auditioned for each role, would that casting ideal be quickly disqualified because it didn't yield the desired result?
I've noticed a trend of 'colour blind' casting results being praised in theory, but only continued to be praised when the result was colour-bias against one demographic. Which baffles me in many ways as being the opposite of the point :/
I'm in complete agreement with everything here, except the last, assuming by "parity" you mean equal ratios in every career or interest group. That situation does not logically follow from equal opportunity in a diverse population, and it is certainly not un-optimistic of me to expect that this would not happen.
....so if you are looking for actors with some established acting chops, the white males will already be over presented in that pool of people. Being 'colourblind (or 'genderblind') this way works only if everybody does it, and they certainly don't.
Why doesn't it logically follow? Do you think men and women are just naturally better/worse at some jobs? Or even most jobs?
Why doesn't it logically follow? Do you think men and women are just naturally better/worse at some jobs? Or even most jobs?
Yet now that women aren't discouraged or banned from higher education anymore... they're actually the majority of uni students in many countries.
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