Experience. Not smarts and talent.
Totally agree. Number One didn't get there on talent. She got there as the producer's girlfriend.

Experience. Not smarts and talent.
Totally absurd. Just looking for a reason to be offended by something.Pike in "The Cage" randomly remarks that he "can't get used" to having a woman on the bridge (while giving a "you're one of the good ones"-type line to Una), then spends the rest of the episode alternating between having incredibly misogynistic fantasies about Vina and fantasizing over his female subordinates so much that the Talosians pick up on it and abduct Una and Colt for him. Then of course the episode is written in such a way that Pike has to assert his dominance over "his" women and get violent to save them all from the Talosians -- and then the episode reassures us that Vina would never want to rejoin human society because she's clearly become too ugly to be accepted.
So, yeah, "The Cage" is full of toxic masculinity. It's just written with a narrative voice which endorses that misogyny.
Totally absurd. Just looking for a reason to be offended by something.
Actually no. The Cage stresses that women can be in control but does it in a way that was relatable to a 60s audience. Colt has the same training as her male counterparts.Pike in "The Cage" randomly remarks that he "can't get used" to having a woman on the bridge (while giving a "you're one of the good ones"-type line to Una), then spends the rest of the episode alternating between having incredibly misogynistic fantasies about Vina and fantasizing over his female subordinates so much that the Talosians pick up on it and abduct Una and Colt for him. Then of course the episode is written in such a way that Pike has to assert his dominance over "his" women and get violent to save them all from the Talosians -- and then the episode reassures us that Vina would never want to rejoin human society because she's clearly become too ugly to be accepted.
So, yeah, "The Cage" is full of toxic masculinity. It's just written with a narrative voice which endorses that misogyny.
Pike in "The Cage" randomly remarks that he "can't get used" to having a woman on the bridge (while giving a "you're one of the good ones"-type line to Una), then spends the rest of the episode alternating between having incredibly misogynistic fantasies about Vina and fantasizing over his female subordinates so much that the Talosians pick up on it and abduct Una and Colt for him. Then of course the episode is written in such a way that Pike has to assert his dominance over "his" women and get violent to save them all from the Talosians -- and then the episode reassures us that Vina would never want to rejoin human society because she's clearly become too ugly to be accepted.
So, yeah, "The Cage" is full of toxic masculinity. It's just written with a narrative voice which endorses that misogyny.
And yet you completely misread everything.Nope. I just hold with the notion that men and women are equal.
Nothing controversial about your comment. You are stating facts. The only issue at play here is someone (not you) with a preconceived mindset where facts have no meaning and no understanding of historical context. They have bought into a worldview of notions with no connection to reality.Una? There isn't an "Una" in The Cage.
However, a human woman called "Number One" is. I imagine if Roddenberry wanted to name her, he would have...
Thus we see the issue: a 1960's production looked at through modern eyes.
And I await the fallout of this comment
So which is it? The Cage and its approach to gender roles is simply product of its time, or its totally not misogynistic and outdated at all? i’m getting a lot of mixed messages from these responses.
Anyway. It is possible to both accept that The Cage was well-meaning by 1960s standards, and that it doesnt hold up well today. That’s not ‘having no understanding of historical context’. I am not stupid. I understand that the line about not being used to having women on the bridge played differently to an audience in the 60s.
You can be critical of something and still enjoy it! In fact that’s healthy. I personally am quite disheartened that so many people are apparently completely blind to the sexism that pervades much of TOS.
Pike in "The Cage" randomly remarks that he "can't get used" to having a woman on the bridge (while giving a "you're one of the good ones"-type line to Una), then spends the rest of the episode alternating between having incredibly misogynistic fantasies about Vina and fantasizing over his female subordinates so much that the Talosians pick up on it and abduct Una and Colt for him. Then of course the episode is written in such a way that Pike has to assert his dominance over "his" women and get violent to save them all from the Talosians -- and then the episode reassures us that Vina would never want to rejoin human society because she's clearly become too ugly to be accepted.
So, yeah, "The Cage" is full of toxic masculinity. It's just written with a narrative voice which endorses that misogyny.
Totally absurd. Just looking for a reason to be offended by something.
Nothing controversial about your comment. You are stating facts. The only issue at play here is someone (not you) with a preconceived mindset where facts have no meaning and no understanding of historical context. They have bought into a worldview of notions with no connection to reality.
Art is always interpreted and reinterpreted by the audience. Yes, the Cage was a product of it's time. And that time reflected a more misogynistic attitude at least in some measure. Also, yes, Number One is a human woman in the episode. There is also no character named Colt in the episode.Una? There isn't an "Una" in The Cage.
However, a human woman called "Number One" is. I imagine if Roddenberry wanted to name her, he would have...
Thus we see the issue: a 1960's production looked at through modern eyes.
And I await the fallout of this comment
I think it would be calmer if people weren't so defensive about past sexism being pointed out. Like it or not, TOS did have sexism
I assumed Sci was attempting a bit of humor by referring to the Number One character as "Una," the feminine form of "one" in Spanish and Italian.Una? There isn't an "Una" in The Cage.
However, a human woman called "Number One" is. I imagine if Roddenberry wanted to name her, he would have...
Laurel Goodwin was credited as playing Yeoman J.M. Colt, although that name is never mentioned in the dialogue.There is also no character named Colt in the episode.
Which is fine. But name in dialog is all I care about.Laurel Goodwin was credited as playing Yeoman J.M. Colt, although that name is never mentioned in the dialogue.
I'm so angry right now...I don’t think it’s worth getting worked up over.
That's fine. They work together for me close enough.I don’t try to justify how any of these characters fit together because they don’t.
Well, yes. A dramatization of Kirk's logs, as Gene intendedThe Original Series is its own thing. Always has been, always will be.
Much of TOS was very sexist but the Cage was sort of the high point. It got worse after this...I think it would be calmer if people weren't so defensive about past sexism being pointed out. Like it or not, TOS did have sexism
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