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"Plato's Stepchildren" and Southern TV Stations

How about we say "storytelling convention." I like the word "trope." I think it sounds hip. Or hep, or whatever they say these days. But I think I'll go with "storytelling convention" to sound more authoritative and less casual.

Kor
 
How about we say "storytelling convention." I like the word "trope." I think it sounds hip. Or hep, or whatever they say these days. But I think I'll go with "storytelling convention" to sound more authoritative and less casual.

Kor

"It's 'hip', Aunt Harriet -- they changed it." :)

"Storytelling convention" is great. But, like "trope", it's not always applicable. Language has a purpose, dammit!

(worldbuilding, lore, and trope are the words that have dumbed down critical writing to the point of uselessness).
 
What does that even mean?

Trek didn't cause a cultural shift with the kiss, that's true. It was just at the head of the wave. But that's significant, too.

Just like Star Trek put a woman on the bridge, and then a Black woman on the bridge. Given that I can count the number of science fiction stories in a year (in the mid/late 60s) that do that, that's even more significant.

Here is another science fiction story from the mid/late 60s with a woman on the bridge for your list.

Empress of Outer Space, A Bertram Chandler, 1965. A spaceship captain has been elected as empress of a space empire with considerable (though not absolute) power and is quite competent and rather arrogant about her space expertise..
 
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Here is another science fiction story from the mid/late 60s with a woman on the bridge for your list.

Empess of Outer Space, A Bertram Chandler, 1965. A spaceship captain has been elected as empress of a space empire with considerable (though not absolute) power and is quite competent and rather arrogant about her space expertise..

Thanks. Chandler is one of the better ones. He's had women in his space service (albeit, outnumbered and generally in "female" roles) since the 50s.
 
In my friend Paul Scrabo's direct-to-video indy "Dr. Horror's Erotic House of Idiots," there's a short sequence set aboard a ship from an all-female planet with an all-female crew. I even have a small role - I play the ship's computer, which is imbued with the personality of the last male on the planet. Here's a dramatic still:
idiots2.jpg
 
In my friend Paul Scrabo's direct-to-video indy "Dr. Horror's Erotic House of Idiots," there's a short sequence set aboard a ship from an all-female planet with an all-female crew. I even have a small role - I play the ship's computer, which is imbued with the personality of the last male on the planet. Here's a dramatic still:
idiots2.jpg
Shows as a broken link for me.
 
Even one of my college profs repeated the notion that the Uhura/Kirk kiss was the first interracial kiss on TV. This claim has been echoed over and over again for years. I wonder who first made the assertion.

Kor

I noticed that many of Nichols' obituaries used phrasing like "often believed to be the first interracial kiss" or "sometimes cited as the first interracial kiss" to get around that the fact that the oft-repeated claim is only correct if you add a lot of qualifiers and disclaimers.

Personally, I'm fine with "one of the first and most celebrated interrracial kisses on American TV."
 
i''m confused.
If you only count black-white kisses and not a peck on the cheek, was it the first on American TV?
BTW. Do we know what the first same-sex kiss was? Wait maybe we should qualify that male-to-male and not a peck on the cheek?
 
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