Is It?
Just because some creatives wanted to push the envelope and have an edgier show, means the show is not generally family friendly?
You're fixating on a label and trying to cherrypick the evidence to "prove" it. Labels are not the end goal of understanding, just the first rough approximation. We dwell far too much on them.
As I've said, I reject reducing this to a binary question, either it's a family show or it's not. Life is an essay question, not a true-false test. There's a whole continuum of maturity levels in commercial TV, and TNG was somewhere in the middle, albeit toward the more mature end.
I also reject the "some creatives" characterization. As I've said,
Star Trek was all
about pushing the envelope. That's what defined it originally. Gene Roddenberry's entire goal in creating TOS was to make the first non-anthology science fiction series that was an adult drama
instead of a kid-friendly family show. He strove to make it as mature and sophisticated as the most acclaimed adult dramas of the '60s, and he pushed the envelope of TV sexuality and skin to a degree that put him at constant odds with the censors.
By the time TNG came along, SFTV had hardly matured at all since the '60s, and '80s SFTV was dominated by lightweight schlock such as
Knight Rider and
Automan. So TNG coming along as a smart, sophisticated adult drama was as exceptional in its day as TOS had been, and as I've already mentioned repeatedly, Roddenberry strove in TNG's first season to take advantage of lessened censorship and be even more overt about sexuality than he'd been allowed to get in TOS, as seen in episodes like "The Naked Now" and "Justice." So it wasn't just "some creatives" who wanted to push the envelope, it was the guy who created the entire franchise. Pushing the envelope was
Star Trek's whole
job.
“Conspiracy” was outside the norm of an episode of Star Trek.
In your opinion. But it was still made, and "Chain of Command" was still made, along with other intense episodes that wouldn't have gotten made if TNG had really fit into the rigid "family show" mold you're falsely trying to force it into.
You say yourself, establish a continuum. Weapons like phasers and laser are probably treated different from real weapons, and seen as cartoonish. We are talking ‘90s tv here.
It's not about the nature of the weapon, it's about its effect. The
Rambo cartoon in the '80s featured realistic guns and bullets, but the bullets never hit a living thing, only inanimate objects, and no character in the show was allowed to say the word "kill" or "dead." By the same token,
The A-Team had climaxes driven by huge amounts of gunplay, but since it was a family show, the bullets almost never hit anybody and people rarely died. By contrast, TNG used energy weapons, but those weapons killed people all the time, even blew up entire ships and killed thousands.
Because there is something called “being mainstream”. Being mainstream implies widespread acceptance. LGBT rights weren’t mainstream. It was still very much underground. Homophobia was what was mainstream at the time, despite efforts to change that.
At most, you can only criticize Trek for not going against the grain and what was considered mainstream at the time.
Hell, yes, I can! That's exactly the point!
Star Trek was never supposed to be "mainstream." The entire reason it was created was to go against mainstream norms and break new ground. Limiting
Star Trek to conventional expectations, especially where social justice and inclusion are concerned, is a failure to live up to what
Star Trek was created to be.
And maybe it was decided it was more important to keep Trek on the air to keep on promoting progressive values, such as feminism and civil rights.
Bullshit. Feminism and civil rights were much further along in the '80s-'90s than gay rights. As I said, gay rights were the hot issue at the time as much as civil rights were in the '60s.
Star Trek, if done right, would've been on the vanguard. Roddenberry promised in 1987 that it would be, that he would give the fans the gay inclusion they were clamoring for, but the people who took charge of the show as his health failed consistently betrayed that promise. It is bullshit revisionist history to claim it was too soon to deal with that issue. The issue was on the table before TNG even premiered.
Since they also aired in more conservative countries that, while might be fine with consuming American media, are otherwise very proud of the culture they have. Cultures that are far more harsh towards the LGBT community. So, some ideas have to be softly introduced, or the plug is pulled. Basically, soft power in action.
Are you saying it would have been better if Trek got cancelled again in the early ‘90s, rather than continue on for another decade spreading its messages regarding progressivism?
Oh, that's specious. How many times do we have to restate the fact that dozens of other shows in the same era
did feature gay characters and issues and did not get cancelled for it? STOP DENYING THE OBJECTIVE FACTS!