"an episode" well that's highly specific. Care to say which of the 15?
The Butchers Knife...
(See my post and link above)
"an episode" well that's highly specific. Care to say which of the 15?
The Butchers Knife...
Somehow the last part of my final sentence wasn't posted.you mean Brexit was reversed ? lol![]()
No. Just. No.Hmmm....If TOS was remade just as it was (not rebooted) with the only difference being current actors and actresses in the roles, which current young audiences could readily identify with, I wonder if it would be well-received by them? Is it more the 'look' of TOS, or is it that they have no interest in actors and actresses whom they don't identify with because they are from a different era?
Like having Leonardo DiCaprio as Kirk and Kate Winslet as Edith Keeler.
Roddenberry wanted to show a future where we all got along, basically under the American way of doing things. He was an American fighter pilot, an American policeman. He, and most of the other writers were/are American citizens. Star Trek was/is an "American" product through and through.
Much like Doctor Who, an alien time lord who could take the form of any race on the planet, is always British. Because that is the audience they are primarily selling the product to.
You're both right, of course, in real-world terms, but it's also possible to rationalize it pretty reasonably in-universe. There's evidence to suggest that in Star Trek's future, the global wars of the 21st (and late 20th!) century were far more devastating to Asia than to the US or European nations. Hence English remained the global lingua franca; when a one-world government was crafted after First Contact it was built on the western model; and Asians made up a significantly reduced share of the global population. When the Federation was formed less than a century later, Earth was the "neutral arbiter," the one world among the founders with no previous hostile relations with the others (and, perhaps?, the main hero of the Romulan War), so it became the seat of UFP government and the headquarters of Starfleet. In light of that, a disproportionate share of Starfleet recruits tend to come from Earth, and from (what were) the western nations on Earth.Yes, but the Federation is more similar to the United States form of government. The structure of the government is more like ours than other countries. ... I don't think they did it to 'exclude' the rest of the world, after all they had a pretty diverse cast. I think it was just a starting point. A basis to work off of.
Quite so.It has never bothered me, because I see it as just a (partially unconscious) projection of the society the writers know best and (supposedly) feel at home in into an idealised version of that in the 24th century, not as a statement by them that the future of humanity will be American.
Really? I never thought so; ounce for ounce I'd say Sisko is actually more "stereotypically" American. (Sure, TOS does have "The Omega Glory," which is an undeniably hokey episode... but even so it's fair to say that every halfway educated American can recite the Pledge of Allegiance and the opening lines of the Constitution, so that's nothing special about Kirk.) I am genuinely curious... where are you from, and what aspects of Kirk's character seem especially "American" to you in an unfamiliar way?However, I must say that Kirk in some cases feels 'too American' for me, which sometimes makes viewing TOS episodes a bit harder for me because I then feel I am watching something supposing an underlying culture that I don't actually know that well.
You say it with a smiley, but it's the truth. As an American born and bred, I am shamefully monolingual, and when I travel abroad I most definitely rely heavily on the fact that English is the global common tongue. (I don't do it unconsciously, though... so yeah, that's still a plot hole!...)Taylor and Brent [in Planet of the Apes] could simply have been two of the stereotypical American travelers who just naturally expect that no matter where they go, everyone they meet will speak English, so they never thought there was anything at all unusual.![]()
Yeah, no reason to believe that "all's fair in love and war" will become an unfamiliar phrase even centuries in the future. Still and all, though, I suspect that the word "homewrecker" may fall out of fashion... indeed, it largely already has, much like the expression that a child comes from a "broken home"... because it privileges the (frankly historically anomalous) nuclear-family scenario of two monogamously married parents raising offspring in their own home, and hence marginalizes anyone who lives in a different arrangement, through either circumstance or choice.Why not? Even in the "enlightened" 24th century, there are still selfish people who think they have the right to intrude on and interfere with other people's marriages/committed relationships.
"By that point"? How about "since the 11th century"?...I don't get bothered by Picard's accent, since by that point England and France had been exchanging languages, culture, and territory
Part of what I'd intended to say got cut off. I did go back and edit my post. Of course by the 24th century, there had been a shared history for over 1000 years."By that point"? How about "since the 11th century"?...![]()
That would be one way of looking at it, however that isn't the only way of interpreting the information presented.Star Trek is about humanity's exploration of the stars, not the USA's exploration of the galaxy.
During TOS I believe the intent was more a "space United Nations."The Federation is a representative democracy like the United States
Or maybe just to show exceptions?So the characters of Uhura, Chekov, La Forge, Picard, Scotty and Mr Leslie exist because they wanted to show how diverse American accents would be in the future?
Bomber pilot (not trying to cut you down there).Roddenberry ... He was an American fighter pilot
The actual internal structure of the Federation, and the Federation council, is largely unknown. We know of some terms being used, and there is a president who is elected, and Bajor is to select multiple people to be sent to the council.Yes, but the Federation is more similar to the United States form of government. The structure of the government is more like ours than other countries.
I would prefer that the future culture is different, and even somewhat strange, than the one I live in. Would make it more interesting.because I then feel I am watching something supposing an underlying culture that I don't actually know that well
In Who the Gods would Destroy, Kirk seem to be saying that a fairly resent event made the Federation closer than it was, or brought what it currently was into existence.The Federation felt like a fairly new organization in "Journey to Babel"
A war, perhaps?Kirk seem to be saying that a fairly resent event made the Federation closer than it was,
Who the Gods would Destroy
The actual internal structure of the Federation, and the Federation council, is largely unknown. We know of some terms being used, and there is a president who is elected, and Bajor is to select multiple people to be sent to the council.
Really? I never thought so; ounce for ounce I'd say Sisko is actually more "stereotypically" American. (Sure, TOS does have "The Omega Glory," which is an undeniably hokey episode... but even so it's fair to say that every halfway educated American can recite the Pledge of Allegiance and the opening lines of the Constitution, so that's nothing special about Kirk.) I am genuinely curious... where are you from, and what aspects of Kirk's character seem especially "American" to you in an unfamiliar way?
Since TOS was pitched as a Western style format ("Wagon Train to the Stars") I wonder if that was a product of the times.Perhaps it's not as much his character, but the 'hero template' he seems to be following. Often getting a feeling I'm really looking at a thinly veiled Western, where the noble young cowboy is driving into unchartered territory and representing the good of the law (in this case: the Federation). May have a few friends who ride with him and they ride into the sunset at the end of the episode, after having corrected the injustice they found this week, but we don't really learn that much about his private life- if he even has one. He is a larger than life figure (just generalising in very broad strokes, of course). I never cared for Westerns so perhaps this is wat alienates me ever so slightly.
Perhaps it's not as much his character, but the 'hero template' he seems to be following. Often getting a feeling I'm really looking at a thinly veiled Western, where the noble young cowboy is driving into unchartered territory and representing the good of the law (in this case: the Federation). May have a few friends who ride with him and they ride into the sunset at the end of the episode, after having corrected the injustice they found this week, but we don't really learn that much about his private life- if he even has one. He is a larger than life figure (just generalising in very broad strokes, of course). I never cared for Westerns so perhaps this is wat alienates me ever so slightly.
Snake oil ... was that like KY, back in the cowboy days?
I always hated the just a little surgical alteration can make you look like an alien species. Don't even get me started on Profit and Lace where they change Quark's sex.
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Discovery did a great job with this trope.I always hated the just a little surgical alteration can make you look like an alien species. Don't even get me started on Profit and Lace where they change Quark's sex.
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