Thems fightin' words!Let's hope they do a Kes with Tilly and sideline her before dropping her off somewhere so we can be done with Wesley II
She was a breath of fresh air.
Thems fightin' words!Let's hope they do a Kes with Tilly and sideline her before dropping her off somewhere so we can be done with Wesley II
Ah, this old chestnut again. You've never complained about any of the other Trek shows disproportionately having a larger percentage of males in their main casts than females, or the fact they are 100% heterosexual. But suddenly, having more than two women in the main and supporting cast combined, and having gay people present is "unrealistically disproportionate and it would be better to have a 50/50 blend."this whole time the only thing I've been advocating is a natural blend, 50/50.
No that's how you do representation. They have a gay couple and they're never treated as anything other than ordinary because at that point it is ordinary, it practically is now. They're just one of the couples on the ship, we get to know and care for them. They have black characters and they're just doing their job like everyone else. We get to know and care for them. Representation isn't about pointing out differences, it's about showing how people who are different are just like everyone else when it comes to certain things, like traveling through space. It's not even for the white male majority fanbase, it's for the LGBTQ and black fans so they can see someone like them being just like everyone else on Star Trek and they don't want to hear how they're different every single day, believe me it gets pointed out enough in real life.I'd actually argue that representation is not really that political - assuredly it shouldn't be political. Though o course bigots disagree. That said, media companies typically pat themselves on the back for representation as having done the hard work of dealing with "issues" the writing mostly ignores.
I mean, I'm not sure Star Trek is the right place to address this stuff in general, since it's supposed to be an optimistic future where we're past all the "isms" and "phobias." That said, it does stick in my craw when you have a contemporary show with a token black friend (something unfortunately still rare IRL) where blackness is never remarked upon and racism is never actually addressed in plot. It's window dressing to make the white majority feel good about aspirational inclusion without doing the hard work of examining their own assumptions. But apparently the mere presence of people who aren't straight white males is still offensive to some, so baby steps I guess?
Other than her rank, I really hope the confirmed continuation of her Command Training Program is also a dead end... I mean, what are her chances of actually getting to command a Starfleet vessel, anyway? If this were like Voyager, at least they could use the prospect of getting home as an explanation, but they're stuck in the future and it looks like they're staying for the rest of the show. She'd basically have to outlive every other officer and then she could have an empty ship all for herself with maybe a dozen enlisted senior citizens and possibly a bunch of kids. It's not like any future military would want her with her a-millennium-out-of-date training. It would be like putting a medieval Hanseatic sailor on the bridge of the USS Nimitz and asking them to sail to Norfolk.Let's just hope they don't keep Tilly at her current rank for 7 years.
"Where No Man Has Gone Before" is very much a character story. So is "The Cage," for that matter, and by extension "The Menagerie."I'd argue with the exception of Amok Time there were basically no character-based stories in TOS. Kirk/Spock/McCoy had distinct personalities which caused them to react in a certain way to the plots of the week, but ultimately the choice to focus on those stories was not done to inform us anything about them as characters.
Hadn't thought of that until now, but you are right, with Tilly's overarching story they've practically reached a dead end with the new setting. Will be interesting to see if they address that point and whether her arc somehow still lands her in any command position at some point.Other than her rank, I really hope the confirmed continuation of her Command Training Program is also a dead end... I mean, what are her chances of actually getting to command a Starfleet vessel, anyway? If this were like Voyager, at least they could use the prospect of getting home as an explanation, but they're stuck in the future and it looks like they're staying for the rest of the show. She'd basically have to outlive every other officer and then she could have an empty ship all for herself with maybe a dozen enlisted senior citizens and possibly a bunch of kids. It's not like any future military would want her with her a-millennium-out-of-date training. It would be like putting a medieval Hanseatic sailor on the bridge of the USS Nimitz and asking them to sail to Norfolk.
The writers seemed to have built an exit - ramp from their untenable notion of a vessel moving hundreds of years into the future, and yet being able to survive in a galaxy that has advanced far beyond them by making the future an apparently desolate post-apocalyptic environment.Other than her rank, I really hope the confirmed continuation of her Command Training Program is also a dead end... I mean, what are her chances of actually getting to command a Starfleet vessel, anyway? If this were like Voyager, at least they could use the prospect of getting home as an explanation, but they're stuck in the future and it looks like they're staying for the rest of the show. She'd basically have to outlive every other officer and then she could have an empty ship all for herself with maybe a dozen enlisted senior citizens and possibly a bunch of kids. It's not like any future military would want her with her a-millennium-out-of-date training. It would be like putting a medieval Hanseatic sailor on the bridge of the USS Nimitz and asking them to sail to Norfolk.
Were I a producer, I would intentionally create a show in which the main cast consisted entirely of women, minorities and LGBTQ+ people (some even being a combination of all three criteria) with only a single token straight white male who serves no useful purpose at all just because I know it would piss people like you off.
I'm definitely hoping Tilly is a Nog instead of a Kim.Fair enough.
Similar concept - out time/space, limited resources, hostile/unknown environment, not sure who to trust, etc. etc.
Let's just hope they don't keep Tilly at her current rank for 7 years.
Hadn't thought of that until now, but you are right, with Tilly's overarching story they've practically reached a dead end with the new setting. Will be interesting to see if they address that point and whether her arc somehow still lands her in any command position at some point.
In WNMHGB, you have Kirk struggling with the transformation of Mitchell into a danger to the ship and crew and struggling with the advice that Spock has given him. Kirk seeks to compromise and maroon Gary instead of killing him, though in the end he has to do what Spock proposed to begin with. That defines Kirk as both a compassionate and conscientious man, who tries not only to safeguard the ship, but also to protect Gary as well, who as Kirk points out didn't ask for what happened to him. We also see the prototypical dynamic of human feelings vs impersonal logic played out between Kirk and Spock.
As for "The Cage," it's pretty much all about Pike's character as a weary captain, considering what he might do instead of carrying the burden of command.
That means it's Tilly's time to shine!If they're rebuilding the Federation, there should be a need for command officers in a new Starfleet.
You've never complained about any of the other Trek shows disproportionately having a larger percentage of males in their main casts than females, or the fact they are 100% heterosexual.
Were I a producer, I would intentionally create a show in which the main cast consisted entirely of women, minorities and LGBTQ+ people (some even being a combination of all three criteria) with only a single token straight white male who serves no useful purpose at all just because I know it would piss people like you off.
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Crap crap news
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Can't believe it.
Although it does cheer me up that UPN will die shortly behind Enterprise. Well done UPN![]()
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Spock is straight and white, so is Sarek. Having pointy ears doesn't mean they don't count. And there is no pendulum, this is a forward going process and has been so for the entire history of television and media. It will only increase in the future so get used to it.And you know this how? I've already said MULTIPLE times, that that was wrong too, and that two wrongs don't make a right. But why listen to reason and debate properly when you can accuse a poster of something they're not or put words in their mouth time and time again.
So basically, Discovery? With Lorca as the only straight white male in season 1 and Pike and Leland as the only straight white men in season 2? Think about it.
You can carry on deluding yourself into thinking I'm some bigot that doesn't like women or gay people. Feel free, I couldn't care less. I'll just laugh knowing how utterly wrong you are. It's very easy to paint people who don't subscribe to this "representation" check-boxing of casting as bigots, as you've done.
Treat casting naturally, don't swing the pendulum so far the other way it's in the next sector. That's all.
Spock is straight and white, so is Sarek. Having pointy ears doesn't mean they don't count. And there is no pendulum, this is a forward going process and has been so for the entire history of television and media. It will only increase in the future so get used to it.
They count, just like a gay actor playing a gay Klingon would count as gay representation. The closest we got to that before was Garak, who was clearly into Bashir in early seasons.I do wonder how you would count characters like Odo, Quark, and Neelix though, who were played by white men, but were so heavily made up race wasn't really all that clear.
Is it really as disproportionate as you claim? Let's see. Wikipedia claims there are about 770 million people living in Europe and the Asian part of Russia, an indeterminate supermajority of whom are white. I don't really have the time to collect census data on all European countries, but let's be generous and say 700 million people. The European global diaspora is a bit better defined, with 510 million people if we discount Latin Americans of partial European ancestry. That gives us a rough estimate of about 1.2 billion white people out of a global population of 7.8 billion. If roughly half of them are male, you get about 600 million white males. Total. Which amounts to a whopping ~8%* of the global population. That means two white men out of every 25 characters.So basically, Discovery? With Lorca as the only straight white male in season 1 and Pike and Leland as the only straight white men in season 2? Think about it.
Is it really as disproportionate as you claim? Let's see. Wikipedia claims there are about 770 million people living in Europe and the Asian part of Russia, an indeterminate supermajority of whom are white. I don't really have the time to collect census data on all European countries, but let's be generous and say 700 million people. The European global diaspora is a bit better defined, with 510 million people if we discount Latin Americans of partial European ancestry. That gives us a rough estimate of about 1.2 billion white people out of a global population of 7.8 billion. If roughly half of them are male, you get about 600 million white males. Total. Which amounts to a whopping ~8%* of the global population. That means two white men out of every 25 characters.
*7,69%, to be exact, but as we've already used rounded estimates to begin with, we can't afford the luxury of precision. And I'm rounding up to the closest integer just to be generous.
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