Also interesting that Sirtis auditioned for the role of Yar.
Rosalind Chao was also considered for Tasha at one point.
Not sure what would have become of Keiko O’Brien, but an interesting point to think about
Also interesting that Sirtis auditioned for the role of Yar.
I always had the impression that nobody really knew what they were doing at the beginning. What saved the first season of TNG (well aside from the "Star Trek" name) is that all TV sci-fi before it was so low quality that this new series simply shined bright in comparison.
I must say that if their intention was to create a character similar to Vasquez, I don't think they achieved their goal with Tasha. I'm not saying this as a criticism eh!
Rosalind Chao was also considered for Tasha at one point.
Fun fact: Vasquez was played by a Jewish actress, who had her skin and hair darkened to look Latino. She also played John Connor's foster mom in Terminator 2.
I must say that if their intention was to create a character similar to Vasquez, I don't think they achieved their goal with Tasha. I'm not saying this as a criticism eh!
A tough latin woman seems to me a such generic concept that I don't know if there really would have been a risk of lawsuit...Roddenberry & company as well as Paramount should be glad that creating Macha Hernandez never got off of the ground, because all that would've happened would've been a lawsuit from SLM Entertainment and 20th Century Fox, over infringement.
I must say that if their intention was to create a character similar to Vasquez, I don't think they achieved their goal with Tasha. I'm not saying this as a criticism eh!
Uhmm, I don't see much resemblance. Vasquez was the classic sterotype of the hot-headed soldier, ready to shoot first and then ask questions. The peculiarity (for the 80s) was that she was a woman. Tasha just seems to me to be a very thorough person in her work, maybe a little too dedicated. But her work also requires a minimum of diplomatic skills that I don't think Vasquez had. Also, Vasquez seems like a stereotypical butch to me. Tasha if she wanted she could also be feminine.Tasha was... Vasquezish.
They share many of the same traits, they're just in a different environment. The only two real big differences are ethnicity, which should be irrelevant, and the kind of wise-cracking type attitude of Vasquez, which doesn't really fit in TNG.
Uhmm, I don't see much resemblance. Vasquez was the classic sterotype of the hot-headed soldier, ready to shoot first and then ask questions. The peculiarity (for the 80s) was that she was a woman. Tasha just seems to me to be a very thorough person in her work, maybe a little too dedicated. But her work also requires a minimum of diplomatic skills that I don't think Vasquez had. Also, Vasquez seems like a stereotypical butch to me. Tasha if she wanted she could also be feminine.
And let's be frank: we all know that at least in TNG there are no LBGTQI+ people: all humans are perfect cis-gender. The writers probably thought that any sexual or gender orientation that deviated from the "norm" was cured at an early age by genetic engineering. Your average 80s sitcom was more progressive in its portrayal of non-straight people than TNG.
I can speak this as my teens have several friends who say they are a part of the population because it is cool, it is easier to be accepted. I read a sociological perspective that being straight is associated with being an oppressor and that's not what people what to be associated with. It's not cool to be a part of that group.I might be totally wrong and this is all 100% true and in no way a trend but... it does seem like it's "cool" right now, so along with the bona fide LGBT people, there are some who are attracted to it for the cool factor.
I would imagine there is a huge cultural shift in the later part of this century, much less 22nd, 23rd or 24th.My point to that was that by the 24th century, there may well have been a cultural shift away from some of that, and the number of people identifying as LGBT may be lower than today, making it a bit less likely still to encounter someone. Hell even on Discovery, when Idira tells Stamets their pronouns, Stamets sounds almost surprised, like it's something uncommon to hear. In 2024 real world, I wouldn't even bat an eye if someone said their pronouns are "they/them" (i'm 40 years old and i'll mess it up from time to time, not out of disrespected... I just went a long time without doing that and it's a fairly recent change for me... I try, but my brain assigns gender to people and sometimes I don't catch it on the way out.)
I can speak this as my teens have several friends who say they are a part of the population because it is cool, it is easier to be accepted. I read a sociological perspective that being straight is associated with being an oppressor and that's not what people what to be associated with. It's not cool to be a part of that group.
But yeah. TNG could have, and probably should have, done... SOMETHING with gay representation
Uh, I didn't get it. Was it sarcasm?Denise Crosby would have been a fantastic Keiko Ishikawa.
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