Star trek has always been allegorical and left leaning.
I think TOS was. I tend to think the spinoffs slowly started moving to the right. Especially when they portrayed humanity as this great thing and everyone should be like us.
Star trek has always been allegorical and left leaning.
I admit I am mighty jealous that you've been months into the future, traveled back to tell me that that's how it happens.
I'll still watch, and still pay. But it's nice to know, thanks, future traveller man.
But Lokai and Bele were fun to watch. That was a gulf that got larger and larger between TOS and the spinoffs. I want exploring space to be fun to a degree. It'll be tough to stay with the show if its House of Cards in space.
I'm not the one who said it, the producers did. It is a fifteen part story.
One statement that does not tell us everything. People need to the chill the fuck out.
Really? Whose upset besides you? We're just talking about a TV series.
If you think this is what it's about, I don't think you've been paying attention. From the beginning it was all about "coming together", "understanding each other", learning the Klingons "aren't the enemy" etc, all typical Trek stuff.Attack political views they don't agree with?
Being anti-Trump is the least brave thing to do in Hollywood.
Your calling me upset for being excited?
The doom and gloom of people wanting to not watch the show over something inevitable and not worth abandoning it over is perplexing and kind of sad really.
T'Kumva is almost definitely inspired by Trump, but I doubt we'll see anything overtly anti-Trump. If anything, it's anti-division itself. And assuming the writers are competent, the story and characters will be expanded into something that stands on its own rather than being a carbon copy of present day politics and politicians.
You're...
Just circle-jerking each other over Discovery would get pretty dull, pretty quick.
Immediately condeming it for something people knew far too well it would be doing to be sour and dismissive however, is extremely dull everytime.
No one has done that, so...
Absolutely, this is bread and butter Star Trek stuff, since The Corbomite Manoeuvre. "Our enemy is just like us", finding humanity in the Other, is one of the most core themes in Star Trek. It's nice to see that Discovery will be returning to it."understanding each other", learning the Klingons "aren't the enemy" etc, all typical Trek stuff
I think it was the other way around, there were still definite conservative messages in TOS and STNG didn't really have any. The one world united idea is anathema to the right wing.I think TOS was. I tend to think the spinoffs slowly started moving to the right. Especially when they portrayed humanity as this great thing and everyone should be like us.
It's nice to see that Discovery will be returning to it.
The one world united idea is anathema to the right wing.
Trek, a known franchise for such commentary and in this turbulant time, is ready to tackle it too, and people can't jump ship fast enough.
Based on limited information, there seems to be more energy, more of a sense of fun to The Orville. Discovery feels more like it takes everything very seriously, one of the aspects of the Berman years that I most disliked.
I'll have to wait and see the episodes to see how they shake out.
If you think this is what it's about, I don't think you've been paying attention. From the beginning it was all about "coming together", "understanding each other", learning the Klingons "aren't the enemy" etc, all typical Trek stuff.
"I feel like one of the themes we are exploring is universal and is a lesson I feel like as human beings we have to learn over and over again – is you think you know ‘the other,’ but you really don’t. You have to sort of cognitively re-frame or break or deviate from your own point of view to really understand. You have to forget what you knew before.
One of the big steps in that journey is how to understand yourself. You have to understand yourself before you can better see others. The show is called “Discovery” and it is called “Discovery” for a reason, because our characters are on a journey."
"We are also talking about not only war, but something that is really bubbling up in the United States right now, isolationism. Our country has so many different philosophies. Do we extend a hand? Do we shut it down? And that is also two viewpoints that are being expressed. The Klingons are not necessarily the Russians anymore. The Klingons – I think we will see far more in, frankly, people in the United States and different factions in the United States.
And that is not to say they are bad, but what we really wanted to do too is understand two differing points of view and really explore it. And I think when people look at the Klingons – I frankly love what they represent. Not in terms necessarily of all the messaging, but in terms of learning about them and learning why they are who they are and making sure they aren’t just the enemy.
And then finding a way to come together. How do we bring everyone back together? What do we do? What does it take? It is a big challenge for us, but that is what season one is all about."
T'Kumva is almost definitely inspired by Trump, but I doubt we'll see anything overtly anti-Trump. If anything, it's anti-division itself. And assuming the writers are competent, the story and characters will be expanded into something that stands on its own rather than being a carbon copy of present day politics and politicians.
Nah..the UFP is the UN and the right hates the UN. Simple as that. It doesn't equate at all.TNG was the one to start the "you need to be like us (America)" stuff that runs throughout modern Trek.
Nah..the UFP is the UN and the right hates the UN.
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