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What do you think about people "Shipping" Kirk and Spock?

Kirk/Spock relationship?

  • I think they have minor romantic qualities, Kind-of. (Y)

    Votes: 5 8.5%
  • there is no way in hell. (N)

    Votes: 4 6.8%
  • they're definitely in love (Y)

    Votes: 3 5.1%
  • they're just best friends (N)

    Votes: 42 71.2%
  • other opinion (please comment!!)

    Votes: 5 8.5%

  • Total voters
    59
I don't really think Kirk and Spock had an offscreen relationship that was any more significant than what was shown onscreen, and I don't really think anyone else does either, but there's nothing to explicitly rule it out either, and if it entertains people to consider it and they're not trying to force their views upon others, then I think it's pretty harmless and perhap quite amusing. IDIC.

However, I do wonder whether some of the reactions I've seen in this thread would be as strongly worded if we were talking about a heteronormative shipping. Perhaps Janeway and Chakotay?
 
However, I do wonder whether some of the reactions I've seen in this thread would be as strongly worded if we were talking about a heteronormative shipping. Perhaps Janeway and Chakotay?
Boring as paint drying.

Sorry, romance between main characters is low hanging drama fruit, regardless of orientation.
 
I find heteronormatlve romances pretty boring too. ;p

(yes, I know that wasn't what you were saying, but you set me up for it)
 
I find heteronormatlve romances pretty boring too. ;p

(yes, I know that wasn't what you were saying, but you set me up for it)
I would agree.

Romances in most entertainment media is my least favorite aspect. Shipping in fan fiction is easily my least favorite type of fan fiction because it's so boring. Relationships are hard work, sweat, commitment and effort which fiction cannot capture well, mostly. There are occasional exceptions but mostly outside of Star Trek.
 
I think it's more of an issue in the more episodic Treks than in the ones that were more willing to embrace long-form storytelling. The "romance in a day" stuff is pretty weak in general (and cringeworthy if the actors don't have chemistry), but relationships like Kira-Odo and Worf-Dax (and even Worf-Troi, which did have some build-up) I found reasonably enjoyable.
 
I think it's more of an issue in the more episodic Treks than in the ones that were more willing to embrace long-form storytelling. The "romance in a day" stuff is pretty weak in general (and cringeworthy if the actors don't have chemistry), but relationships like Kira-Odo and Worf-Dax (and even Worf-Troi, which did have some build-up) I found reasonably enjoyable.
Less boring is still boring.

Again, there are exceptions. I think Paris/Torres was decent, Stamets/Culber worked reasonably well, and Marcus/Kirk in the Kelvin films.

Outside of Star Trek there's more variety, less I be accused of hating all romance in fiction.
 
I have a fair amount of romance in my own novel-in-progress. Although as far as actual sex is concerned, it's definitely nothing like the sex scenes in David Gerrold's When HARLIE Was One. Or Cogswell & Spano's Spock, Messiah!.

I go out of my way to leave everything to the imagination.
 
I'm late to the discussion, so I'm starting at page 1 of the thread.

If Kirk and Spock were meant to be gay, we would know that.

How would we know that? Is there some physical trait we've all overlooked during the past almost-60 years?

You can't just look at someone and know if they're gay any more than you can just look at someone and tell if they're atheist. I realize that's not a precise analogy, but it fits the list of "things you can't tell just by looking at someone".

Keep in mind that in the 1960s, American TV not only didn't show gay couples, they didn't even show people in heterosexual marriages sharing the same bed! For the past 50-odd years I've been wondering just where Pebbles Flintstone was conceived, because Fred and Wilma slept in separate beds, and both of them were very narrow single beds.

Of all the things I care about the least in fiction it's vehicle design.

Character sex lives are a close second. People can think what they want. People have fantasized about Spock forever.

57mhfY6.jpg

Spock Enslaved is rather notorious. It's notorious to the point where it's usually listed for some insane price on eBay and similar sites, to the tune of $250-$500 USD.

I own a copy, but I didn't pay anywhere near that much. I think I got mine for under $25 CAD (this was at a time when the exchange rate was less horrendous for Canadians).

Idk, I think Kirk/Spock fic doesn't hurt anyone. I could easily write a fic in which they're just co-workers and I could easily write one in which they're lovers because their relationship can be interpreted in so many ways. They're one of those pairings where either way makes complete sense and you don't have to jump through a zillion hoops to achieve your writing aim.

In general I think shipping Kirk/Spock (or any other pairing) is fine unless it becomes rabid and/or people start to yell at each other about their headcanons - ship wars are among the most annoying things a fandom can produce.

Actually, there's something worse - when people start confusing the characters with the actors. That's why some actors are wary of fan events, and aren't too happy about fanfic. Colin Morgan, for instance, is very uncomfortable when fans talk about the various 'ships in BBC Merlin. The thing with that cast is that whether it's same-sex or heterosexual, there aren't many pairings among the characters that wouldn't be believable (obviously the incestuous ones are off the table - no Gwen/Elyan, for instance, as they're siblings).

So on the one hand, some of the actors get uncomfortable at events when fans ramble on about the story ideas they have, completely oblivious that they're imagining characters played by real people in those situations. But on the other hand? It's fun. I'm writing Merlin fanfic, and yes, some of it dances around same-sex relationships. But in my case, even though I don't mind reading a well-written, non-explicit same-sex relationship story, that's not what I'm comfortable writing. It makes sense to mention it for the plot, but it's not ultimately where I'm going.

It's the same for any fandom, including TOS or any other variety of Trek. I would imagine some of them have been more than a little annoyed over the years when fans' fantasies have gotten a bit too public.

there's a bit of a look between Spock and Uhura during the musical bit of Charlie X. Oh there was absolutely something going on there.

My take on that is Uhura is flirting. Leonard Nimoy is trying very hard not to give in to a fit of laughter.

That's all it ever was between those two characters in TOS. Uhura flirted. Spock/Nimoy reacted either logically, or at least tried not to burst out laughing at the absurdity of that musical scene.

What the nuTrek people did was take a brief moment of friendly flirting in TOS and pervert it into something that shows nuUhura as someone so selfish and unprofessional that she would openly rant and whine about their "relationship" while on duty - even basically telling the Captain to shut up while she continued to carry on about it.

Yeah but then the same could be said about Kirk/Spock or other pairings. Whenever there are certain "looks" or special closeness between two characters, some people are going to interpret that as romantic or sexual tension, pretty much as what happens in real life when you see two persons who are "really, really close". In my opinion, the case for Spock/Uhura in TOS is very weak, but Uhura/Scotty in TFF is obvious. And yet others don't see it that way, and interpret the scene in TFF as just a case of two good friends who fell under the influence of Sybok (and thus had no real romantic relationship). So... :shrug:

EDIT: Then the showrunners sometimes make the most contradictory decisions, like making Spock/Uhura a thing in the Kelvin films, based on the flimsy evidence of a single look. And on the other hand, making Sulu (who did in fact have a crush on Uhura in the series), suddenly gay. Despite George Takei himself saying that it went against the character's concept. That makes zero sense for me.
They really should have respected Takei's wishes in this. Who would know the character of Sulu better than the actor who played him for so many decades? And for Zoe Saldana to mouth off about it in an interview, stick her nose in the air, and say that Takei "needs to grow up"... good grief. You don't tell someone with his life experiences to "grow up." He had to grow up before he was even out of childhood (I don't remember hearing that Saldana was chucked into a concentration camp during her childhood just for having the wrong ancestors).

It's harmless fun for those into it, and I'd LOVE to see the Internet melt down if it ever became canon a la Garak/Bashir.

Garak/Bashir stories have been around for a loooong time. I have no definite opinion on this pairing; as long as the story is written well, I'd give it a chance.

At the end of "Mirror Mirror" Kirk was obviously going to make a pass at his subordinate Marlena.

Watch "Trials and Tribble-ations" and then come back to this point. That wasn't the original Tribbles episode Sisko was inserted into for his final 23rd century scene (where he couldn't resist the opportunity to meet Kirk). Sisko was superimposed into the exact place where Prime universe Marlena Moreau was.

When you consider the dialogue Kirk and Spock had about the "young lady" and Kirk saying that "she seemed like a nice, likeable girl" and remember Sisko in the space she occupied in "Mirror, Mirror"... I can't take that scene seriously in either show.

Lower Decks, S5 E9. There's also the podcast done recently by Alexander Siddig and Andrew Robinson, but that's technically non canon.

I think that writers and speculators can ship who they want, within whatever rules are set by the site they're on. A good example would be "all relationships between consenting adult sentients are permissible".

As for Kirk/Spock, I see them the way I see Bashir/O'Brien, Data/Geordi, Harry/Tom, and Harry Potter/Ron Weasley. That is to say, an epic bromance that is perfect as it is, and doesn't need to be more.
When it comes to HP and the WolfStar fans vs. the fans who insist these characters are not a couple, it doesn't matter to me. As long as the stories are well-written, I don't care if it's Sirius/Remus or one or both and a female partner. All I do know is that Remus/Tonks had zero chemistry. Their relationship is about as interesting as watching paint dry.

Same with Trek. A good story can make any pairing work. Even Chakotay/Seven.
 
For the past 50-odd years I've been wondering just where Pebbles Flintstone was conceived, because Fred and Wilma slept in separate beds, and both of them were very narrow single beds.
On the floor, in a wild night of prehistoric passion.
 
They really should have respected Takei's wishes in this.

Why? Takei has no ownership over the character. Life changes, society changes, and in new incarnations of older properties characters change.

What the nuTrek people did was take a brief moment of friendly flirting in TOS and pervert it into something that shows nuUhura as someone so selfish and unprofessional that she would openly rant and whine about their "relationship" while on duty - even basically telling the Captain to shut up while she continued to carry on about it.

They picked up on a bit of nuance from TOS. As far as being unprofessional, I'm pretty sure if we look through TOS we can find plenty of times the characters were being unprofessional.

Uhura chewing out a senior officer (Spock) in "The Man Trap", is right off the top of my head. Maybe being a bit straightforward with her emotions is a Uhura character trait. In TOS or the Abramsverse.
 
They really should have respected Takei's wishes in this. Who would know the character of Sulu better than the actor who played him for so many decades? And for Zoe Saldana to mouth off about it in an interview, stick her nose in the air, and say that Takei "needs to grow up"... good grief.
Yeah, telling a gay actor how to be gay is... really presumtuous? Also gay Sulu makes zero sense, alternate reality or not.
We may not know a lot about Sulu, but a couple things we know is that he likes ancient firearms and women. He flirted with Uhura (mirror Sulu as well), with that hippie girl, was checking out that Klingon woman in one of the movies, had a daughter (presumably with his wife) etc. On the other hand, what chemistry does he have with any male character? A couple of bro jokes with Chekov?? Literally any of the three main characters would make more sense as gay/bi than Sulu!
They just made him gay in the Kelvinverse because the original actor happens to be gay in his private life. Which is incredibly narrow-minded. Actors are actors, they aren't restricted to play just what they are. Imagine if actors who play villains had to be evil persons in real life...
 
On the floor, in a wild night of prehistoric passion.
You mean, she wasn't conceived in the ticket queue at the Fenchurch St. Station?

Oh, wait, that was somebody else.

Uhura chewing out a senior officer (Spock) in "The Man Trap", is right off the top of my head.
I'm the first to admit that "The Man Trap" is (between the nightmare-fodder appearance of the salt vampire, and the preposterous biology thereof, and the fact that one of the false images reminded me of a beloved teacher) hardly my favorite episode, but I don't remember Uhura chewing anybody out, just politely complaining about a noisy door in her quarters.
 
I'm the first to admit that "The Man Trap" is (between the nightmare-fodder appearance of the salt vampire, and the preposterous biology thereof, and the fact that one of the false images reminded me of a beloved teacher) hardly my favorite episode, but I don't remember Uhura chewing anybody out, just politely complaining about a noisy door in her quarters.

SPOCK: Bridge acknowledging.
UHURA: I don't believe it.
SPOCK: Explain.
UHURA: You explain. That means that somebody is dead and you just sit there. It could be Captain Kirk. He's the closest thing you have to a friend.
SPOCK: Lieutenant, my demonstration of concern will not change what happened. The transporter room is very well-manned and they will call if they need my assistance.

 
Oh, yes. Like I said, not an episode I've seen many times. Probably more than two decades passed between the first and second times I saw it.
 
She's rather critical of Spock and openly so on the bridge is rather unprofessional given he is the acting commanding officer.
Yes, but the characters in these very first episodes were not very polished, as they were still working on their personalities (for example, Spock smiles a lot more in the early episodes, which in hindsight is pretty weird). Also that conversation was probably inserted just to inform the viewer that Spock is this cold, logical character who is often misunderstood by others.
I don't remember Uhura talking to Spock like that later on.
 
Just one of those things where we should be careful about what we complain about, because the things we complain about in a new version, usually exist in abundance in the older version. :techman:

Look, I know you adore NuTrek. We've had arguments about it dating back to 2009. But your analogy is apples and marshmallows.

RealUhura was disturbed at RealSpock's apparent lack of concern for a fellow crewmember who was in danger.

NuUhura just constantly whined about her relationship with nuSpock.
 
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