Hmmm...
... nah. Not worth the time.
... nah. Not worth the time.
I’ve had better conversations with cats.Hmmm...
... nah. Not worth the time.
Why not?
Fitting for the Ferengi's origins.Because it would be very much American culture right now: zero sum. The story would be women can't succeed without the destruction of men. America is all about extinguishing the alternative view. And what you would do is change a patriarchy for a matriarchy. You've changed one bad situation for another.
Because it would be very much American culture right now: zero sum. The story would be women can't succeed without the destruction of men. America is all about extinguishing the alternative view. And what you would do is change a patriarchy for a matriarchy. You've changed one bad situation for another.
It would have been more interesting to see the old characters go through the change, Quark et al. And they sort of did did that. Moogie led the way. She was smart, she knew her stuff... she showed the men up through prowess for and ingenuity. Pel too. Rom become Nagus. I felt like the change was occuring, and the implication was a few years down the road it'd be like women driving cars in Saudi Arabia. The start of a long but hopefully upward journey.
Seeing new, random Ferengi going through the change... of a story from hundreds of years ago. I don't see the dramatic driver. Men now can't drive cars and women can... nah...
But, if that doesn't do it, don't blame DSC. DS9 had The Orion Syndicate. Probably a forerunner of The Emerald Chain.
Star Trek has often dealt in contemporary (to us) social archetypes through the different species they include. The DSC writers wanted an archetype of a slithery, conniving, treacherous, dangerous, back-stabbing-for-gain race. That was already what the TNG writers had in mind for the Ferngi, but the Ferengi were later diluted by subsequent writers to be more buffoonish.
I am not an expert.
If you would like to explain how that characters actions and personality is consistent with Orion culture I would be glad to hear about it.
So........There is no point discussing the cultural traits of any Star Trek race?
Unfortunately Star Trek has fallen in to that trap too.What's a mistake is to just be like, "Well, she was bubbly and not overtly sexual, so she wasn't being very Orion."
Unfortunately Star Trek has fallen in to that trap too.
I completely agree. Berman era was way worse with it, especially Voyager. Even ENT did a better job than VOY.Agreed, but I think modern Star Trek is much better at avoiding it than Berman-era Star Trek.
They’re living Gene Roddenberry’s true dream of the future. They’re all commie nudist who live purely for sexual pleasure and the betterment of their species. They just lay around rubbing each other’s ears and gladly giving anything they have to offer to strangers. A kind species, visiting them is going to be weird as fuck, but they’re a kind species. Like if Ned Flanders ran an orgy.I hope that if they ever do bring back the Ferengi, they’ve gone full communist.
They’re living Gene Roddenberry’s true dream of the future. They’re all commie nudist who live purely for sexual pleasure and the betterment of their species. They just lay around rubbing each other’s ears and gladly giving anything they have to offer to strangers. A kind species, visiting them is going to be weird as fuck, but they’re a kind species. Like if Ned Flanders ran an orgy.
We've created art. Don't fear it.I truly regret starting this conversation.......
Cardassian culture is well-done, for instance, and so is Vulcan culture -- lots of different factions and personalities at play with lots of different ideas about what it means to be "Cardassian" or "Vulcan."
The thing I like about that bit of their history is that by making first contact humans and Vulcans saved each other.Totally agree, especially when Vulcan history and culture was fleshed out a bit further in Enterprise.
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