Compared to other science fiction tv shows and movies shows of the era, the original STAR TREK was pretty cutting-edge. It may not have been the most progressive show on tv but . . ..
Just the other day I was watching THE GREEN SLIME, a 1968 scifi movie set aboard a space station. Ohmigod, even though the movie was supposedly set in the future, with flying cars and space probes and computers everywhere, it looked like an episode of MAD MEN in space. The "United Nations Space Command" seemed to be run entirely by clean-cut white guys with American accents. There wasn't a non-white face in the entire movie (even though it was filmed in Japan).
And with the exception of the leading lady, who was mostly there to be fought over by the two rugged male leads, the only women in sight were nurses and secretaries with no dialogue (but who screamed fearfully whenever the Green Slime attacked). Despite the futuristic setting, it's painfully obvious that it never even occured to anyone involved that the future wouldn't look like, say, NASA circa 1963.
And this was an MGM movie made two or three years after TOS debuted . . .
So, yeah, we have to give TOS credit for being ahead of its contemporaries at the time. Trust me, it's aged much better than THE GREEN SLIME!
Just the other day I was watching THE GREEN SLIME, a 1968 scifi movie set aboard a space station. Ohmigod, even though the movie was supposedly set in the future, with flying cars and space probes and computers everywhere, it looked like an episode of MAD MEN in space. The "United Nations Space Command" seemed to be run entirely by clean-cut white guys with American accents. There wasn't a non-white face in the entire movie (even though it was filmed in Japan).
And with the exception of the leading lady, who was mostly there to be fought over by the two rugged male leads, the only women in sight were nurses and secretaries with no dialogue (but who screamed fearfully whenever the Green Slime attacked). Despite the futuristic setting, it's painfully obvious that it never even occured to anyone involved that the future wouldn't look like, say, NASA circa 1963.
And this was an MGM movie made two or three years after TOS debuted . . .
So, yeah, we have to give TOS credit for being ahead of its contemporaries at the time. Trust me, it's aged much better than THE GREEN SLIME!

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