I’m also of the mind Leland is not dead - or at least, he’s been infiltrated / discombobulated by Control - and will appear again.
I hate to say this, but I'm bored with the A.I. story already. I want discovery, not a topic that has been talked to death by this time in sci-fi books/shows.
You really think this one event would be the talk of the town for the next 100 years?
I don't think so. I liked that they for once verbally acknowledged the existence of non-heteronormative humans in ST.Sorry if this has already been asked, but had they ever used the word "gay" (as synonymous of "homosexual") on screen before in Star Trek..?
Oh well. They just needed more than (checking...) 600 hours of produced Star Trek content to admit that gays exist.I don't think so. I liked that they for once verbally acknowledged the existence of non-heteronormative humans in ST.
Although the stereotypical depiction of non-het folks mostly did people a disservice and helped perpetuate prejudice...Oh well. They just needed more than (checking...) 600 hours of produced Star Trek content to admit that gays exist.
Your average '90s sitcom was more progressive...
I'm happy that it's clear I was jokingAlthough the stereotypical depiction of non-het folks mostly did people a disservice and helped perpetuate prejudice...
...but yes, I can tell you're kidding.
Seriously, I thought it was nice that finally, someone said things like "non-binary" and "gay" without turning the subject into an after school special (which would have othered queer people even more than they usually are). It could have been handled better, probably, but at least the depictions on DISCO are not a collection of queer-coded stereotypes, which is a step forward.
2004 BSG was, for all its flaws, a bit ahead where queer representation is concerned, but I'm glad Trek is at least on acknowledging terms, now. They got past the "very special episode" thing as well as conflating sexuality and gender, which is a win in my book. Baby steps are better than no steps.![]()
I'm happy that it's clear I was joking.
And really, even when they dealt with the subject with some "very special episode" (i.e. The Outcast) they didn't do a very good job... (btw, I don't consider Rejoined an episode about LBGT themes, but more about social prejudices - I mean, in the original draft of the story Dax's former lover was male).
I’m also of the mind Leland is not dead - or at least, he’s been infiltrated / discombobulated by Control - and will appear again.
It has certainly aged badly as an episode about homosexuality, but it has accidentally become a fairly decent episode about the idea of gender. Soren is essentially trans, or space trans anyway, and her society reject it as a disease or a deviancy. They deny her existence and then try to cure her. Riker meanwhile is accepting of her gender identity without question. Could be worse.True. The Outcast gets a gold star for trying, but dang, has that episode aged badly.
It has certainly aged badly as an episode about homosexuality, but it has accidentally become a fairly decent episode about the idea of gender. Soren is essentially trans, or space trans anyway, and her society reject it as a disease or a deviancy. They deny her existence and then try to cure her. Riker meanwhile is accepting of her gender identity without question. Could be worse.
Yeah he did, but there was no way Berman was going to allow that. You're right about the heteronormative romance, Rejoined cheats with this too, "oh they're really husband and wife".Didn't Frakes want Soren to be played by a male actor to make the whole thing a bit less
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