I did not know this. BBC news covers an episode that was banned.
https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-68342135
https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-68342135
It doesn't seem controversial at all. Who didn't want peace?"The High Ground" was the only TNG episode omitted by the BBC (a few others received edits at different times). In January 1992, it was skipped over ("Deja Q" - on 15th Jan - following "The Hunted" on the 8th Jan). As the BBC article suggests, the reason given at the time was the organisation felt the reference to future Irish history too politically dubious and contentious to broadcast.
Given they had already edited three episodes by this point (albeit for violence - "Hide And Q", "Conspiracy" and "The Icarus Factor"), it is curious the BBC did not simply edit the scene to finish before the dialogue between Data and Picard. Perhaps the whole story of such stark terrorism was seen as too close to the bone. Sky One did broadcast the episode in November 1992 as a 'special episode' (outside of their daily Mon-Fri airings) on a Sunday evening, with the dialogue edited out.
"The High Ground" was not shown in subsequent BBC repeats of season three - in 1997 or 2002. It was finally broadcast in the early hours, without any fanfare, in 2007. Sky had added it to their regular repeat showings years before, sometimes edited, sometimes not.
CIC Video did not have any issue with the episode and it was released - unedited - with the usual "PG" certificate that other releases in the series got, in late 91/early 92.
Why didn't they simply edit in a line about some other fictional event? Would've been easy to do.
Data said:Yet there are numerous examples where it was successful. The independence of the Mexican State from Spain, the Irish Unification of 2024, and the Kensey Rebellion.
It doesn't seem controversial at all. Who didn't want peace?
It doesn't seem controversial at all. Who didn't want peace?
Because the history of certain nation states was achieved by getting rid of their oppressors with a gun in their hand. (July 4th 1776 anyone?)It would have been controversial because Data's united Ireland line was part of a series of examples he was giving Picard where terrorists achieved their goals through violence, rather than from peaceful negotiation. Picard unsurprisingly didn't agree with him!![]()
It doesn't seem controversial at all. Who didn't want peace?
Because the history of certain nation states was achieved by getting rid of their oppressors with a gun in their hand. (July 4th 1776 anyone?)
I knew the Beeb banned an episode (or two?) of TOS for a long time
Could people find these episodes on VHS?Four. "Miri" was shown once in 1970 and not repeated until 1992 due to complaints about violence, which caused the BBC to vet the rest of the series. "The Empath", "Whom Gods Destroy" and "Plato's Stepchildren" received their first BBC showings in the 1992 run.
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