I just see it as an anachronism and ignore it. It's like Spock having a paper printout on his console except more offensive.
A paper printout????? I don't know; that's pretty bad.

I just see it as an anachronism and ignore it. It's like Spock having a paper printout on his console except more offensive.
That's a pretty good way of looking at it.I just see it as an anachronism and ignore it. It's like Spock having a paper printout on his console except more offensive.
In a lot of ways, that line is like the miniskirt/skort uniforms the women wore. In the moment, in the '60s, miniskirts were empowering and gave women a sense of control over their lives and how they were perceived. By the time of the late '70s, there was a groundswell of contempt for the idea that showing that much skin could make women be seen as more powerful and in control than a more covered up look. There is no consideration for the miniskirt replacing the long pleated skirts of Donna Reed or Princess's poodle skirts and their perceived limitations, just the idea that an exposed woman is an exploited one.
Pike was meant to be saying that women could be officers, he's just not used to the idea. Our later out of context interpretation can no longer recognize that concept.
However, the "myth" of the network wanting to eliminate the female first officer was debunked by Herb Solow and Robert Justman in Inside Star Trek: The Real Story. In the book, they state that NBC supported the idea of a strong woman in a leading role, they only rejected Majel Barrett, feeling the actress is not talented enough to pull off such a role, and "carry" a show as co-star. (Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, p. 60)
Good Man. Now if everybody would hold that view, sanity might return.I don't give it a second thought. I'm not big on judging the past by the standards of the present.
. It's like Spock having a paper printout
QUARK: What is that disgusting smell?
NOG: I think it's called tobacco. It's a deadly drug. When used frequently, it destroys the internal organs.
QUARK: If it's so deadly, then why do they use it?
NOG: It's also highly addictive.
ROM: How do they get their hands on it?
NOG: They buy it in stores.
QUARK: They buy it? If they'll buy poison, they'll buy anything. I think I'm going to like it here.
And the bridge is probably a dangerous area of the ship to be in.
I think the casting and the writing were probably the real reasons. "The Cage" is very, very dry, with none of the humor that TOS had, or the spark that Shatner brought to the Captain role, or the humor & warmth that DeForest Kelley brought to Dr. McCoy. Everyone carries themselves very seriously and doesn't display much in the way of personality. Jeffrey Hunter does a good job as Pike, but as his character is having a crisis of confidence and is on the verge of quitting, he's not the most appealing or relatable character, either. This Enterprise isn't really a ship you'd care to spend time on every week. But they ironed out those early problems and ended up with a classic television series.Roddenberry said for years that NBC rejected "The Cage" for being "too cerebral" -- meaning "my work was too smart," kind of a humble-brag. But I think the real reason was that it was too sexual, and incidentally the cast wasn't especially appealing.
even in 1989 people thought fax machines would be in every room in 2015 XD
If there's a better way to fire Marty McFly for insider trading, I'd like to hear it.Multiple ones if I recall rightly
I'd just rather dismiss it as "One bad episode said it in an ambiguous way, and it was just the way some of the people who made the show thought," and leave it in the dustbin of history where it belongs.I always though it would be interesting to accept TOS as sexist in universe and explain it in a prequel, and explain why things change afterward in a near sequel. I used to like to imagine some sort of demographic or economic catastrophe occurred which incidentally set women's rights back, like the Black Death or Great Depression. Or it was a long recovery from WWIII which only started getting better around TOS. Regardless it would be a neat way to learn about why societies become sexist and how they can change to be less sexist. Perhaps that's better for a couple Trek novels.
She took classes at the University of Northern Alabama prior to entering Starfleet Academy, and arrived on campus wearing a sweat shirt with U.N.A. on the front, and she wore the shirt from time to time while at the acadeny. And that's where the nickname of "Una" come from."Una"
No, of course not. It just that immediately after a ship arrives in spacedock the crew recieves shore leave and the crew will be getting ready to go. And the waste from the brig gets sprayed from a ceiling nozzle in the yeomans locker room and they would like to look nice for their leave.And the "Do not flush in spacedock" sign from TFF. Are they really implying that brig waste gets ejected direct into space?
Yeah, except there is a body of evidence as to women's place in the TOS universe, and not just in one episode.I'd just rather dismiss it as "One bad episode
There's enough of other stuff to show it's not something to take at face value. It's just an interesting thought experiment to wonder why they would be sexist, and just as interesting to counter it with what factors they have in place which make it ridiculous.I'd just rather dismiss it as "One bad episode said it in an ambiguous way, and it was just the way some of the people who made the show thought," and leave it in the dustbin of history where it belongs.
Why?Because there no way in fucking hell that's her actual name.
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