So American viewers are so culturally small-minded that a TV show including non American culture would blow their minds? I don't think soYeah, it's an American show, and in the end Americans had to watch it or it would be cancelled.
So American viewers are so culturally small-minded that a TV show including non American culture would blow their minds? I don't think soYeah, it's an American show, and in the end Americans had to watch it or it would be cancelled.
Outlander?Well, except for Dowton Abbey, I cannot think of any popular period piece /present day television series shown in the US.
Well, except for Dowton Abbey, I cannot think of any popular period piece /present day television series shown in the US that are not set in the US.
I mean, I don't even know if the current Dr. Who is shown on a mainstream US channel.
The US exports their shows, not import them. Even shows like The Office and House of Cards were remade and set in the US.
I'm glad my daughters can watch Australian shows, and wife and I enjoy some BBC. They've gotten a lot of exposure to other cultures since they were 4.
Eh...you haven't seen some of my friends and my home movies from high schoolThat never hurt anyone.
I've not heard of Bridgeton, but a quick Google search shows it's relatively new.
The other movies and television mentioned.. Yes, you have me there.
Still, outside of our particular niche is scifi fantasy fans, the majority of lowest common denominator viewers in the US are not exposed to programs set in other countries.
Mariner is thrown in the brig for having her sleeves rolled, yet O'Brien did this for seven years and was never once reprimanded for it. Then there is Worf and his baldric, he wears it proudly and no one ever stops him, yet Ro and Gerron are both ordered to remove their earrings, yet Shaxs wears his again without any issue.
It wasn't Riker's ship.![]()
Of course it's rather daft to assume that all alien civilizations would follow the same naming conventions as Earth's western European cultural sphere. There are plenty of cultures right here on Earth that put the surname and/or other designators before the given name!
They are consistently inconsistent. If the Office of Standards and Practices ever got a hold of Star Trek they would be keel hauled.
So American viewers are so culturally small-minded that a TV show including non American culture would blow their minds? I don't think so
I mean, I don't even know if the current Dr. Who is shown on a mainstream US channel.
He is the executive officer who maintains the captain's expectations of daily operations. Doesn't make it his ship, no matter what he might think...and we all know he smuggled the chair off the bridge in Generations.Then why is he always the one shouting, "Red alert!"?![]()
Bashier only had it recorded from his initial intake with Garak.In "The Wire," Dr. Bashir didn't realize that "Elim" was Garak's first name until Enabran Tain told him. But wouldn't he have had access to Garak's full name as part of his medical chart? It's never suggested that Garak was using a different first name as an alias or something.
Eh...you haven't seen some of my friends and my home movies from high school![]()
Bashir only had it recorded from his initial intake with Garak.
Bashir: What's your name?
Garak: Garak is my name.
Bashir: Garak. Nothing else?
Garak: Garak.
He was a political refugee and hated by Dukat. I think his cover was safe enough.A Cardassian who is so evasive that he won't even give his full name? I'm sure that the Bajoran government LOVED that. Probably a good thing that Starfleet was in charge of the station. The Bajoran Militia probably would have spaced him within a week. (Maybe, since he was a tailor, he claimed that he only had one name because he's like some kind of weirdo fashion designer.)
Picard likes to throw him a bone.Then why is he always the one shouting, "Red alert!"?![]()
He was a political refugee and hated by Dukat. I think his cover was safe enough.
Because Dukat hated him.How do they know that that's not a cover for him to be a spy?
Later on in the episode, Ro pulled off a nice trick with her uniform.As for Ro, I would chalk that up to cultural illiteracy on Riker's part. He assumed that it was a personal decoration and didn't know about its religious significance just like they didn't know that she was supposed to be addressed as "Ensign Ro," not "Ensign Laren." (Cultural ignorance about that part of the galaxy might also explain why Captain Picard referred to "Captain Gul Macet," not realizing that "Gul" was already his rank, not part of his name.)
Also, wasn't she always wearing it on the wrong ear? IIRC, every other Bajoran wore the earring on their right ear. She's the only one who wore it on the left. I seem to recall the DS9 Relaunch novels saying that she did that in protest because the left ear is the one that Vedeks grab in order to sense your pagh, so she wore it there to discourage them from grabbing it. So, by wearing it that way, it's less a symbol of religious devotion and more like an act of blasphemy? That's an interesting question. How much leniency should you be granted in cultural expression if your main expression is contempt for that culture?
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