On CBS East Side/West Side had a black woman secretary—Cicely Tyson—as a main cast member in 1963, three years before Uhura, and on NBC The Man From U.N.C.L.E. has a "Russian" as co-lead before Trek hit the airwaves. The year before Trek bowed NBC's I Spy had a black male co-lead and CBS also had a black member of the regular cast of Hogan's Heroes the same year. and Mission: Impossible had a black member of the team who was treated as equal to the others.
I guess when you get right down to it, Star Trek is not nearly as groundbreaking as Trekkies like to believe. Trekkies like to think, sometimes, that Star Trek was unprecedented, doing things that no one else was doing. Maybe Star Trek was a bit unusual, sometimes going against the common grain at the time, but when you look at it dispassionately it really wasn't charting new courses.
So I guess when it comes Berman Trek, if you want to criticize Berman Trek for not having homosexual characters against overall TV, that's one thing. But if you want to argue Berman Trek was behind the curve when compared to the original series breaking boundaries, perhaps that's not as fair of an argument to make.
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