And yet, they swore plenty of times before STIV
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Thats not a hardcore swear word. They were able to use that on 1960s tv. Again sttvh explained it.
And yet, they swore plenty of times before STIV
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They had to fight the censors to be able to use the word "hell" on TOS. According to Memory Alpha, they only said the word six times on the show.Thats not a hardcore swear word. They were able to use that on 1960s tv. Again sttvh explained it.
Yup.Saying it's not a "hardcore" swear word is just goalpost shifting.
They had to fight the censors to be able to use the word "hell" on TOS. According to Memory Alpha, they only said the word six times on the show.
Saying it's not a "hardcore" swear word is just goalpost shifting.
Except they swear in TOS and the films. It's not out of place then so why now?Again it was set up in sttvh. Sorry but picard swearing was out of place.
It is. If one swear is outdated they all are.Not goal post shifting at all. If i said hell vs the f word as a kid the F word would have gotten me in way more trouble. I know you guys love all kurtzman trek but lets admit it here it no longer seems like the future at times. Everything from the language to the clothes speak current times not the future. The future of trek now looks and sounds like any other sci fi property. Snw is the outlier right now.
For the jokes in STIV.Except they swear in TOS and the films. It's not out of place then so why now?
Vin Disel: Ha-ha.For the jokes in STIV.
Except they swear in TOS and the films. It's not out of place then so why now?
It's not like newer Trek is swearing more. There's like 3 instances. It's not "constant" not unprofessional nor lesser vision of the future.Yes there is swearing in older instalments of Star Trek. But it is very mild and not used in every day vocabulary. That's established in Star Trek.
And when the odd time the characters do swear it serves the scene.
The up most best use of any swearing in Star Trek imo is the death of David Marcus. You feel Kirk's pain when he calls Kruge a Klingon Bastard.
It was according to the standards of the time.We've had many years without the need to include that level of swearing. Be it being tv censorship or codes & standards of the American tv of the time.
Star Trek has always used the language of the time it was filmed in.Not goal post shifting at all. If i said hell vs the f word as a kid the F word would have gotten me in way more trouble. I know you guys love all kurtzman trek but lets admit it here it no longer seems like the future at times. Everything from the language to the clothes speak current times not the future. The future of trek now looks and sounds like any other sci fi property. Snw is the outlier right now.
Neither do I.but I don't treat Trek as special if it's supposed to be our future.
Was watching some clips on YouTube recently with Star Trek scenes. And a scene from Picard popped up. Anyway the clip in question had a character drop the F-Bomb. I don't know why but that use of swearing in Star Trek is bad imo.
For me, I still think it is very out of place.
The show I was referring to is The Expanse, which does take place in the future, where Earth is a united world, and the UN is basically a world government, making the Secretary General essentially the leader of Earth. And we see her swearing while dealing with other heads of state as well as using such colorful phrases as "everybody gets a pony and a blow job." Indeed at one point, this character was saying fuck at least eight times per episode.The UN isn't exactly the Federation or vice-versa, either, because one of them isn't scripted in its own imaginative realm. Some people like these new imaginative universes and understandably believe those can tell interesting and encompassing fictional stories without swearing, especially if the script can't set the scene right or, worse, if the actors can't convey it with the level of depth to sell it right. Assuming the show in question is about people just like us and not from the future where maybe they don't swear so frequently and ebulliently* in the future and for any underlying reasons they wish to tell or show?
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