And with all due respect, the Prime Directive doesn't stink of utopia.
Well, then you haven't seen it often enough.
McCoy and Kirk routinely made racist jokes at Spock's expense. If this were a modern military force he would have filed so many complaints Kirk would be busted down to hospitality ensign on the USS Ravenous. There wasn't ROOM for bigotry on Kirk's ship, when he wasn't having a go at SpockLack of bigotry,
How many episodes were spent discovering new planets? In one of those, Errand of Mercy, Spock specifically takes the role of a Vulcan merchant. Kirk mentions payday at some point in another episode. There are so many allusions or direct mentions of money in Star Trek that it is accepted mostly that some kind of currency existed. That is a thread that has been done many times, and I've lost interest in discussing it, but there are still many a person willing to vigorously punch the clown thinking about how money works or doesn't work in Star Trek. Prime Directive/General Order 1: exists in the story to get repeatedly violated, or as an excuse for Archer to commit mass murder.lack of money (specifically Star Trek IV), the Prime directive, etc. Kirk and crew spent most of their time voyaging around and discovering new planets so the specifics didn't come up as often.
lTNG was much more overt. But you have to remember that TNG Season 1, for all its faults, was very much designed to be a continuation of TOS, even down to some very key creative people from TOS (Bob Justman, D.C. Fontana, David Gerrold, not to mention Gene himself).
To make a lot of money and hire his mistress?Just the casting of TOS reveals Gene's goals for the series.
Which were the canon Klingons? The honorable ones? The moustache twirling ones? The smooth forehead ones? The Ruffles-forehead ones?
ETA: There were plenty of things said and shown in TOS that were either altered or ignored. We got over it.
You vagabond! Scallywag! Gene was holy and pure. He wanted to deliver us a world full of hope, promise, free healthcare, clean invisible toilet facilities, a well armed fleet of nonmilitary pacifist heavy cruisers, liberated women in microskirts with color coordinated BRIEFS and go-go boots.
so my theory is correct and there ARE open-air Parisian pissoirs built into Enterprise's corridor walls every so often.So basically Gene Roddenberry wanted you all to live in 2002-2007 European Union?
Well, that is one way to look at it. Not the way I ever have. Like I said (something you didn't chose to quote), you have to look at TOS in its era, not like it was made today. I would describe the what goes on between Kirk, McCoy and Spock as what passed for friendly banter at the time. It was part the exploration of Spock's alienness and humanity.That is extremely pedantic. I think most of us here have watched and rewatched these series far more than we ought to have. That everyone is going to take away something different from all those viewings is normal.
McCoy and Kirk routinely made racist jokes at Spock's expense. If this were a modern military force he would have filed so many complaints Kirk would be busted down to hospitality ensign on the USS Ravenous. There wasn't ROOM for bigotry on Kirk's ship, when he wasn't having a go at Spock
How many episodes were spent discovering new planets? In one of those, Errand of Mercy, Spock specifically takes the role of a Vulcan merchant. Kirk mentions payday at some point in another episode. There are so many allusions or direct mentions of money in Star Trek that it is accepted mostly that some kind of currency existed. That is a thread that has been done many times, and I've lost interest in discussing it, but there are still many a person willing to vigorously punch the clown thinking about how money works or doesn't work in Star Trek. Prime Directive/General Order 1: exists in the story to get repeatedly violated, or as an excuse for Archer to commit mass murder.
except it wasn't. Saint Gene would not allow writers to have contlict within the crew. TNG season 1 may have reused a plot or two and had colorful uniforms, but it is about as TOS'y as Mr Roger's Friendly Neighborhood. Gene hamstrung his writing staff, and they didn't get truly free until he kicked the bucket.
To make a lot of money and hire his mistress?
Boy, you really missed a key aspect of the Prime Directive. A growing a developing society. When Kirk does act, it is because it is either stagnant or been interfered with already so the Prime Directive does not apply, In A Private Little War, Kirk acts to counter Klingon interference. In The Apple, Kirk frees a stagnant population from a controlling computer (same as in Return of the Archons and For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky). It is brought up before Kirk ever interferes.The Klingons were exactly where they expanded upon lore, and not just let them continue on as cookie cutter stereotypes that often were presented, outside of the occasional main character.
"Keep whatever bigotry in your quarters." That's not a lack of bigotry. That's acknowledging it exists and allowing people to have their personal opinions while treating others with respect.
All the references to investment and credits. Kirk's confusion in ST IV is more an outlier than an indication, especially since McCoy states in the movie prior "Price you name. Money I got."
Hardly. Kirk regularly interfered in societies. Kirk gets a comment from Gill about how important the PD was, and then Kirk goes and violates it later on in things like "A Private Little War" and "The Apple."
And none of these things listed made TOS utopian in its vision.
I don't think I'd call how Star Trek portrays our future as a real utopia. It is utopian in that we have grown up and are better than we are now. Gene's vision of that in the 60's was limited by what he could actually show. It comes up now and again, but the series had to stick very close to 60's norms to stay on the air. NBC wanted action and adventure but Gene gave them philosophy as well. He cast the series so that modern audience don't even notice what at the time was one of the most diverse casts on TV. He made it very forward, but he had to be careful to avoid making it seem like he was championing communism. So what TOS shows is very limited, but it is there. TNG didn't have those same limits and Gene was free to craft things how he liked them and so we have a much nearer utopian society. It is not a pure utopia, but it takes us to a workable approximation of that. So even TNG is not a utopia, but it the best word to use. According to the dictionary a utopia is an imagined place or state of things in which everything is perfect. Things are not perfect, even in TNG. But from today I'd say that we get an image of where we'd end up in the 22nd century (Enterprise), the 23rd century (TOS and movies), and the 24th century (TNG, DS9, and Voyager and now Picard). Nothing is ever perfect. No season of TNG ever portrayed the Federation and Starfleet as perfect, but it does follow a progression and is closer to it even than TOS. So utopian is an imperfect word, but the one I've seen used to describe it most often.I haven't seen TOS enough? I was watching syndicated reruns as a very small child in the late 1970s. It's my favorite Trek series.
I've seen it enough. I don't see Earth and humanity in TOS being depicted as a "utopia."
LOL... nice one.You vagabond! Scallywag! Gene was holy and pure. He wanted to deliver us a world full of hope, promise, free healthcare, clean invisible toilet facilities, a well armed fleet of nonmilitary pacifist heavy cruisers, liberated women in microskirts with color coordinated BRIEFS and go-go boots. And thanks to him that is the world we live in today.
Why. They were part of the vernacular 300 years ago. Especially among sailors.. the equivalent of Starfleet personnel.
Nope, TOS, It was enhanced in TNG, but it was there in TOS.
What about Love Instructors? Do they get a little leeway when its time to explain talking dirty?Perhaps....but you'd never hear the New Humans saying such vile, revolting, non-family-friendly things.
Some viewers get that sense from the way she gets into Narek's personal space.Not really getting the perv, Rizzo just seems like a mean domineering sibling.
What you described is progress, not utopia. Most people don't confuse the two.It is utopian in that we have grown up and are better than we are now
I really should finish watching DS9, Voyager, and Enterprise. I've spot watched everything between Trials and Tribbleations and Flashback to In A Mirror Darkly, but I really should binge them. Maybe when the kids are older. The finale's for each are okay, but I just didn't get the feeling that the series were nearly as good as I had hoped.ENT did have a bold prequel concept that had never before been tried in Star Trek. It just fell into some of the habits of its immediate predecessor and didn't really strike out on its own as an original and daring storyline until the Xindi arc in Season 3.
***Ding****Ding****Ding***And the series eventually got around to providing an explanation,
"So utopian is an imperfect word, but the one I've seen used to describe it most often."What you described is progress, not utopia. Most people don't confuse the two.
And with all due respect, the Prime Directive doesn't stink of utopia.
Because you and others have used it improperly in order to make invalid claims on the franchise. Don't equivocate!"So utopian is an imperfect word, but the one I've seen used to describe it most often."
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