What about Dulmer and Lucsly?
werent they in the deep space episode where the deep space 9 crew time traveled in the past and they encountered the captain kirk and his crew along with the tribbles
What about Dulmer and Lucsly?
Well, no. Despite always being referred to as "television's first interracial kiss" there were in fact several interracial kisses on television prior. Hell, TOS had a few interracial kisses prior to Plato's Stepchildren.Kirk and Uhura had an important kiss that changed tv history
factual is when I talk about a scene in the show or the series or sometimes gathering critics reviews. or do cross reference between SNW/TOS/AOS to see what is out of sync and call out the hypocrisy.I really don't think you understand the meaning of the word "factual."
SNW has some bad issues but when anyone is trying to discredit the kirk/uhura kiss just to stick to the masterpiece narrative of SNW the show is weaker than I thought.Well, no. Despite always being referred to as "television's first interracial kiss" there were in fact several interracial kisses on television prior. Hell, TOS had a few interracial kisses prior to Plato's Stepchildren.

Well, no. Despite always being referred to as "television's first interracial kiss" there were in fact several interracial kisses on television prior. Hell, TOS had a few interracial kisses prior to Plato's Stepchildren.
Uhura wasn't part of TOS's main cast.Well maybe they are talking prime time or between main cast characters.
A factual or objective statement would be saying something like, "Spock was the XO of the Enterprise." A subjective statement or opinion would be saying something like, "Spock was the best XO of the Enterprise." I happen to think Spock was the best XO in the franchise... but that is my opinion. It's not a fact.factual is when I talk about a scene in the show or the series or sometimes gathering critics reviews. or do cross reference between SNW/TOS/AOS to see what is out of sync and call out the hypocrisy.
critics can be terrible but sometimes they pick up on a common theme. perception is reality.
SNW has some bad issues but when anyone is trying to discredit the kirk/uhura kiss just to stick to the masterpiece narrative of SNW the show is weaker than I thought.
reality: there have been arguments of what is TRULY the first interracial kiss but it is official the Kirk/Uhura is usually sited at the first.
trying to erase that to deflect the mistake this show made of putting a near 20 year age gap between the actors in the self proclaimed prequels when in TOS there was only a 3 year age gap between Kirk/Uhura actors would be more ridiculous than both kirk and spock dating a khan in SNW.
Next thing you will tell me is that SNW Chapel has more in common with TOS Chapel than AOS Uhura has more with TOS Uhura. the pathetic rewrite of trek lore to explain some of the nonsensical aspect of SNW gets more laughable.
I knew SNW like most recent trek content have issues but when we are now discrediting real social impact in the real world like the kirk/uhura kiss just to make SNW and its CW Level look better....then.... this is bad. very bad. too much illusion going on.
Thank you for proving my point. You really don't know the meaning of the word "factual."factual is when I talk about a scene in the show or the series or sometimes gathering critics reviews. or do cross reference between SNW/TOS/AOS to see what is out of sync and call out the hypocrisy.
critics can be terrible but sometimes they pick up on a common theme. perception is reality.
Now, here’s something that’s actually factual: the first interracial kiss on television was not on Star Trek.reality: there have been arguments of what is TRULY the first interracial kiss but it is official the Kirk/Uhura is usually sited at the first.
fakehistoryhunter.net
I think I asked @Maurice about it once but I can't recall the answer. I had the same memory but I think it was more from discussions here than an actual article.I could’ve sworn the Fact Trek folks did an article on the Kirk/Uhura kiss, but I’m unable to find it.
I did, however, find this very thorough examination which has multiple instances of prior interracial kisses on television, dating back to Lucy and Desi in 1951:
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NOT the first interracial kiss on TV
It is often said that the first interracial kiss on TV was the (involuntary) kiss between Captain James Tiberius Kirk (William Shatner) and translator and communications officer Nyota Uhura (Nichel…fakehistoryhunter.net
There it is, thank you! Forgot it was on Harvey’s old blog site.![]()
TV's First Interracial Kiss?
A blog dedicated to untangling 50 years of fact and legend about the making of the original Star Trek (NBC, 1966-69) using primary sources.startrekfactcheck.blogspot.com
As a POC please I find this kind of ignorance laughable. Lt Uhura was the first black female character to get a prominent role on TV in the 1960s as NOT a slave or a mammy stereotype.Uhura wasn't part of TOS's main cast.
I said it is often sighted as the first officially but one of the memorable of the first. though the bigger issue in 2025 is why both Uhura/Una do not get to do much.
One, it's cited.I said it is often sighted as the first officially but one of the memorable of the first. though the bigger issue in 2025 is why both Uhura/Una do not get to do much.
Your lack of understanding as to how television worked in the 60’s is utterly apparent. Star Trek was never an ensemble show. Shatner and Nimoy were the two leads, Kelley was eventually bumped up. Everyone else were contracted recurring roles, which is reflected in multiple memos I and others have read in Gene Roddenberry’s and Bob Justman’s papers at UCLA.As a POC please I find this kind of ignorance laughable. Lt Uhura was the first black female character to get a prominent role on TV in the 1960s as NOT a slave or a mammy stereotype.
she was iconic and a trail blazer and while the show was Kirk and Spock. She was part of the ensemble. Definitely more important than Chapel and Rand.
Also Considering Martin Luther King wrote to Nichelle and told her to stay on the show because her presence just been there was having an impact on TV. Erasing Uhura's history in TOS because you cannot handle the criticism of how SNW chose to handle the character by 2020s is almost offending me but as a POC I can take this kind of talk in fandom. I have been doing this for years.
The core cast of TOS are
Kirk
Spock
Mccoy
Uhura
Scotty
Chekov
Sulu
This is the ensemble, it is why even in the reboot they stuck with this 7 characters. to erase Uhura is subtle just reflects poorly on SNW reception not TOS.
As to MLK influencing Nichols, how and when that happened isn't clear, as Nichols' own accounts aren't always in agreement. Ande Kindryd (née Richardson) told us she recall Nichols excitedly telling her about meeting King, so that supports her having met him, but the circumstances are unclear, thus we have only Nichols' accounts to go on.The CBS network was running the drama East Side/West Side, featuring the breakthrough character Jane Foster (Cicely Tyson), a Black woman who was not a domestic but a professional in an office, a supporting role and the third listed in the show’s closing credits (only star George C. Scott appeared in the open). She even wore her hair “natural” and not straightened or hidden under a wig. That was a big deal in 1963.
By 60s standard Uhura was a big deal.One, it's cited.
Two, they've done plenty as members of an ensemble, which is more than Uhura ever did in TOS, given that Nichols was considering leaving the show.
There, often citing scaring example is still wrong. It's a terrible feather in the cap to of a loudly proclaimed progressive show to force a kiss.
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