"Too white and male." That's a racist dog whistle. Statements such as that are discriminatory. And lead to discrimination, based upon immutable characteristics.
NGL = Not gonna Lie
No, it doesn't.This is a show, post-WW3, post-UE, but you have two big Americans, a British guy, a Japanese woman, a spacer (of unknown background, granted), a weird alien doctor, and a vulcan attache to represent the spearhead feeler of Earth, in the real-life context of post-9/11 reactionary politics and America swinging its big stick around (which as we saw lead it to itself in the face, hard, for the next twenty years).
It was pointed out when ENT came out and holds true now. Shove Phlox out the airlock, replace him with a Earth doc from somewhere and few would care if Archer or Reed (or both) were also jettisoned for more varied billings.
Calling out the disproportion of white and male as 'racist' however is a dog whistle for yourself, if anything. Oh champion of the white man, save your crocodile tears for Twitter or Truth.Social.
As for Enterprise, I still maintain having, in addition to a more varied crew and anything but the Akiraprise or anything looking remotely 23rd or 24th century - hemming it in for more 'local' affairs - which it did do, in spades, but could had fleshed out SolSys and its colonies more - would had helped, axe the Klings entirely, the Romulans should be the big mounting threat, not the xindi or Suliban or TCW, with a sub-antagonist to replace the xindi being a more local race - maybe Kzinti, maybe not, but something of that nature.
We know.
My young wife who is plumbing the past for old movies she's never seen before, just asked me if "House Party" is any good?
Are you sure this was meant for me? I've never heard of 'house party'.
Sci, one can be "white" and Latino.
House Party is a 90s movie with an almost completely black cast, some might even call it a black movie, which is true but sorta racist language now.
It's the other side of the spectrum.
Kid n play and Martin Laurence.
Good movie.
Although House Party may have aged just as poorly as 16 candles, it's been a while since I saw it last.
Sure, but I don't want the other side of the spectrum either. The NX-01 should had represented Earth by being a myriad crew, not a homogenous one.
Even in a speculative nuclear war that wipes out the Global North, the powers that'll arise could be everything from Argrentine, Brazilian, West, South and East African, Indian, Iranic, South East Asian, Indonesian....
We know that the Global North(west?) sort of comes out of Star Trek's WW3 okay while the east is hammered to shit , and while I can assume and concoct a lot of excuses for that, Enterprise as a series had the best position so far to explain what happened and why Earth and Starfleet is like it is, but frankly it feels like it doesn't.
What about the actors who were cast for their roles because of their talent and artistry? Don Bellisario said that he picked Scott Bakula, then a virtual unknown in Hollywood, because of his audition. His talent. By the time he was chosen for ENT, he had a slew of awards and a reputation as one of the most likable and professional actors in the business. And a hit sci-fi show on his resume, and a loyal, demographically desirable fan base.You're ignoring the entertainment industry's structural biases that made it easier for a white guy to be cast as the star of a network series like Quantum Leap in the first place.
What about the actors who were cast for their roles because of their talent and artistry? Don Bellisario said that he picked Scott Bakula, then a virtual unknown in Hollywood, because of his audition. His talent.
and a loyal, demographically desirable fan base.
being stuck on that network with its non-Trek demographic viewing audience,
By the time ENT premiered in 2001, UPN had been home to a Star Trek show for over six years. What demographic are you talking about if UPN's demographic was "non-Star Trek?"
With Rock’s involvement -- plus a 10-minute sneak peek that drew raves from advertisers in New York in May -- “Chris” was expected to open strongly. But its Thursday premiere received UPN’s highest rating ever for a sitcom, with 7.8 million total viewers, handing the season premiere of NBC comedy “Joey” a humiliating defeat. Back for its second year, “Joey’s” first half-hour drew 7.5 million viewers. UPN’s showing is especially impressive because the network is available only in 90% of the U.S. while NBC is available in virtually every market -- and “Joey” was spun off from the network’s mega-hit sitcom “Friends.” Last season, the NBC comedy averaged 10.2 million total viewers.
Advertiser-coveted consumers aged 25-54.And what desirable demographic is that?
Advertiser-coveted consumers aged 25-54.
"We're in the top-five demographic shows on television. Demographically, we're just huge. The numbers issue has changed so much since we started four years ago, in terms of what's acceptable and what's not acceptable, and the demographic thing has become such a huge part of it all. We fit very well demographically....I know that the advertisers love us, and I know that the affiliates love us, because we're leading in to their eleven o'clock news and the right people are watching. And, like it or not, that's a huge part of what television is."
From an article originally on sci-fi.com, an interview with Bakula. I ran across it on the Wayback Machine.
Advertiser-coveted consumers aged 25-54.
"We're in the top-five demographic shows on television. Demographically, we're just huge. The numbers issue has changed so much since we started four years ago, in terms of what's acceptable and what's not acceptable, and the demographic thing has become such a huge part of it all. We fit very well demographically....I know that the advertisers love us, and I know that the affiliates love us, because we're leading in to their eleven o'clock news and the right people are watching. And, like it or not, that's a huge part of what television is."
From an article originally on sci-fi.com, an interview with Bakula. I ran across it on the Wayback Machine.
Why were there no Latino actors?
There were no Latinos. Though you could count Latina, Erika Hernandez, being captain of the NX-02 as a sign of progress.
Hoshi was originally going to be the Latina character, before they made her Asian. But even then, she could have still brought a Latin cultural presence to the show through an interest in Brazilian culture: speaking Portuguese to a member of the crew or to someone back home, listening to Bossa Nova & Samba music in her quarters, teaching Brazilian dances, using Brazilian greetings, requested Brazilian meals or complained when there was no Brazilian food on the menu, show interest in the World Cup and critique how Brazil performs; talk about festivals such as the Brazilian Carnival. The writers either weren’t familiar with Brazilian culture to do so, or they just did not think about Hoshi that much to realize that she should have embraced Brazilian culture if she actually lived in Brazil.
Yes.Torres is not a Klingon name.
B'Elanna's father was Latin or maybe Spanish.
Sci said:Why were there no Latino actors?
There were no Latinos.
Though you could count Latina, Erika Hernandez, being captain of the NX-02 as a sign of progress.
Hoshi was originally going to be the Latina character, before they made her Asian. But even then, she could have still brought a Latin cultural presence to the show through an interest in Brazilian culture: speaking Portuguese to a member of the crew or to someone back home, listening to Bossa Nova & Samba music in her quarters, teaching Brazilian dances, using Brazilian greetings, requested Brazilian meals or complained when there was no Brazilian food on the menu, show interest in the World Cup and critique how Brazil performs; talk about festivals such as the Brazilian Carnival.
Yes.
There's also Sonya Gomez, whoeventually became a captain.
And now that I can remember, there was in fact a Latino captain in ENT. Carlos Ramirez of the Intrepid. Though he only appeared in the S2 finale for 5 seconds of screen time and was never mentioned again, aside from Reed taking command from him in "Twilight". He just wasn't developed as a character, recurring or otherwise, despite being a friend of Archer's.
You are being deliberately obtuse. Why were there no Latino characters? Why were there no Muslim characters? Why were there no Arab characters? Etc etc etc? The world is full of communities the principal characters could have been drawn from. But instead, Rick Berman and Brannon Braga actively chose to make three out of the five human characters white and actively chose to hire white actors for the two non-human characters.
Remember: white people are not the default setting for the human race. Berman and Braga actively chose to make it a nearly all-white cast. And then, during production, they actively chose to give fewer episodes to their only two non-white actors.
No, you don't fucking count a guest star who appeared in a grand total of three episodes in the final season when you're discussing the main cast that was set three years earlier.
Also, Hernandez didn't even get a fucking first name in the aired episode, so it's not like she was given any real development as a character.
That's nice. None of that is reflected in what's actually onscreen.
Congratulations, an obscure character who appeared in two early TNG episodes got a guest starring bit on the animated series thirty years later. Want a cookie?
Again, none of this is in any way relevant to the question of why Berman & Braga made the main cast of ENT so white. And the fact that all you can think of are obscure guest stars just speaks to how little Latinos were represented in Star Trek until DIS premiered.
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