I didn't mind the catsuit, as long as everyone else (Gals and Guys) wore it as well.My issues with Seven's catsuit lie largely with the fact that it had a built-in corset, and Jeri Ryan had trouble breathing while wearing it. No one should have to work under those conditions.![]()
Troi wearing a uniform was a step forward.
Kira and Dax wearing the same uniforms as everyone else, same.
Janeway and Torres in uniform and Kes in modest civilian clothes, same.
Then, Seven's costume... one giant step BACKWARD for womankind.
I didn't mind the catsuit, as long as everyone else (Gals and Guys) wore it as well.
??? Where did you misunderstood what I wrote??? The point was if Chakotay, Paris, Tuvok, Neelix, Kim, the Doctor, Kes, Belanna, or Janeway wore the catsuit along with Seven, I'd be okay with it.
Tom was the lead in "Threshold".
were parings really needed? None of them made much sense to me on the show.
Chakotey and Seven made no sense at all.
Neelix and Kes was always going to be creepy.
About the only pairing I might have understood would have been 7 and the Doctor. Maybe Kim and Torres.
But I must admit that I've never encountered a character who has given me the same feelings as you seem to have when Kes shows up. Sort of not seeing the character as "a real person" or so. There have been characters in certain series which I have strongly disliked for different reasons but they have always been real to me.
About the only pairing I might have understood would have been 7 and the Doctor. Maybe Kim and Torres.
Janeway was schizophrenic.
Well that's what happens if all the writers have a different idea of what the character should be, and the character always has to be in the right. And when she also has to be not just a character but the "perfect" symbol of what a female captain could be.Janeway was schizophrenic.
Worse than that really since, unless they were tight-laced (which was often frowned upon and seen as vanity, but still happened far too often, just like people today will go to the sun studio far more often than what's healthy for the skin), Victorian corsets were a lot more comfortable than their modern fetish-wear equivalents. Movie and television costumes also often lack the under-garments a Victorian woman would have worn under the corset to protect her skin from scratches and chafing.And Seven was trapped in a Victorian torture device.
From what I understand from an interview I once read with Jeri Ryan, it was done on a dare or a bet. They knew right away that the pairing was nonsense and the audience would never buy it and that's why they limited it to a holodeck episode and the series finale.
No, Janeway had split or multiple personality disorder but she was not schizo-anything.
Paranoid schizophrenia and some other schizo- disorders actually run on one side of my family (I was lucky to avoid getting hit with it) and so it's a subject I happen to know a few things about. People often use schizophrenia interchangeable with split or multiple personality disorder but they are not the same thing at all. And I don't even known where or how some people got the idea that they were.
Well that's what happens if all the writers have a different idea of what the character should be, and the character always has to be in the right. And when she also has to be not just a character but the "perfect" symbol of what a female captain could be.
I'm of the opinion that that's probably not true. I'm guessing that you just don't watch or give much thought to shows with characters you don't buy. For example, I can't imagine that you (or anyone else) ever saw an episode of Homeboys in Outer Space and actually bought the characters (or anything else about the show).
And that was the case with me. I just stopped watching Voyager. Again, it wasn't until years later, in 2019, that I actually watched through the Voyager series.
I watched through it specifically because Seven of Nine turned up on the advertisements for the ST: Picard series and I wanted to familiarize myself with the character. I, at first, watched the series premier and then skipped to the last episode of season three and watched seasons four through seven from there. After I did that, I went back and watched the whole series from season one onward. I was able to do that because the later seasons with Seven sold me on the series in a way that the earlier seasons never did.
I watched ST: Picard all the way to the episode where Seven of Nine finally shows up and never watched another episode. My loss of interest in the series followed a similar (though not identical) trajectory as watching Voyager the first time. In this case, though, it wasn't so much a matter of rejecting the character(s) for not being 'real' so much as rejecting the entire series for not being Star Trek.
The series right from the start was breaking away from the long established ST formula and any time the production does something like that, it arouses a certain suspicion in the audience that the production might not know what they are doing. Seven finally makes her appearance in the series and it's not the same character that we are familiar with. It's a completely different character that we don't know anything about but just so happens to be played by the same actress. And so, like 'Threshold', the episode confirms our suspicions that the production doesn't know what they are doing.
Off on a tangent, my brother and I both consider ST: Nemesis to be among the best of the ST movies but the movie is counted among the worst by the larger ST fan base. My brother's theory is that the reason is that Nemesis (much like Picard) doesn't actually follow any of the standard ST formula for movies in the way that it was directed and that it would have faired much better if it had been a stand alone movie or part of a different franchise.
Anyone/Kes was. We consider 18 or so to be the minimum non-creepy age, and Kes was going to die at age 9.
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