The original television series - The one African character, Uhura is nothing more than a telephone operator and note how she sits at the BACK of the bridge. She also protrayed as an object of lust.
Uhura was, by the way, a ground-breaking character and an inspiration to black people in her day. To the point where Nichelle Nichols, dissatisfied with the thin part, was encouraged by Martin Luther King to continue playing it... because that's just how thin the pickings were for black actors and actresses on the small screen at the time.
She was, of course, relatively marginal and a glorified phone operator in a miniskirt (part of which was due to TOS' pervasive sexism, which was actually a lot worse than its racism). However, I note that even here your critique of the racism misses its mark: Uhura was actually very rarely portrayed as an object of lust, with one notable exception -- explained by alien influence -- that itself stands out as supposedly historic for this very reason. That reflected the ambient Jim Crow mores still in the air in the Sixties.
If you're talking about the Sixties and you still can't target your critique accurately? That's something that should tell you you have some reading and learning to do before sounding off on this topic. (Also, incidentally, Uhura is not the only Black character we see in TOS.)
I can't believe there are 9 pages of responses to an obvious troll post.
No, what "worked" was that our community took what was a very antagonistic opening post and turned it into what for the most part is a very healthy discussion.I can't believe there are 9 pages of responses to an obvious troll post.
Seems it worked.
Uhura: Any number of listings (I personally read the first 10) when I Googled "did MLK and Nichelle have a conversation?"...they most certainly did...just like she said...and, I also learned that there was a "black/white"'romance story line with her when she was in "The Lieutenants" that was not allowed to air because of the time and the content...Roddenberry was later quoted as lamenting this, and being determined to make Star Trek as diverse as he was possibly able...
STOP THE MADNESS!!!
Crying racist these days in many circumstances is akin to the boy who cried wolf; it is just not the case. Consider the time in which TOS was made; racist, hardly. Race is an important issue but when it is used every time someone farts; it loses all relevance and the argument becomes a joke . . . like this thread.
The only people who are taking any of this seriously are the one who missed the fact that the original post is satire.[/QUOTE]
Is satire code for shit ?
Because thats what the whole opening gambit on this thread is, just shit, plain and simple.
STOP THE MADNESS!!!
Crying racist these days in many circumstances is akin to the boy who cried wolf; it is just not the case. Consider the time in which TOS was made; racist, hardly. Race is an important issue but when it is used every time someone farts; it loses all relevance and the argument becomes a joke . . . like this thread.
The only people who are taking any of this seriously are the one who missed the fact that the original post is satire.[/QUOTE]
Is satire code for shit ?
Because thats what the whole opening gambit on this thread is, just shit, plain and simple.
I don't know. Whatever elicits this
And the opening scene in Kevin Smith's "Chasing Amy" featuring Hooper-X addresses this issue in a remarkable way (it's a must-see - and apparently was the inspiration for the OP and Locutus...)
whether folly, foolishness, or just plain FUBAR, can't be all bad!!!!![]()
Thank you! I wanted to post this, but couldn't remember his name.Also Doctor M'Benga, not only a Starfleet physician, but also a specialist on Vulcan physiology.
Thank you! I wanted to post this, but couldn't remember his name.As you said, he was no mere doctor, but a specialist!
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...TNG was considered White America in space...
1. The Ligonians are 'tribal.' (Well, newsflash: There are 'tribal' people in Asia, Africa, and South America. Are you going to tell them their lifestyle is 'racist?')
2. The fact that Tasha Yar is attracted to an alien that looks like a black man is 'racist.' (Hmmm, a black man and white female being together is racist, yet no one has a problem with every Asian woman being paired with primarily white males. Apparently, interracial relationships are wrong unless you are a certain gender or race).
1. The Ligonians are 'tribal.' (Well, newsflash: There are 'tribal' people in Asia, Africa, and South America. Are you going to tell them their lifestyle is 'racist?')
2. The fact that Tasha Yar is attracted to an alien that looks like a black man is 'racist.' (Hmmm, a black man and white female being together is racist, yet no one has a problem with every Asian woman being paired with primarily white males. Apparently, interracial relationships are wrong unless you are a certain gender or race).
Neither of those are the actual complaints about the episode. If the episode were about Tasha being attracted to him, there would be no problem. Tasha is kidnapped by a black skinned alien who thinks that because he 'Won her fairly' that he is entitled by his 'Ancient customs' to coerce her into marriage, after which due to those customs she is made to fight a battle to the death with his existing wife.
The one TNG episode with a planet of predominantly black people and it's the most rapey episode in the series, portraying them as putting arcane tribal traditions and superstitions over basic human rights and respect for women.
The episode got a pass because it was 1987 and that kind of thing was kind of expected on television. If an episode like that came out today that internet would be exploding with outrage about it.
Interesting point though about most black actors are romantically paired with other black actors, that's probably the best argument or actual racism raised in this thread. Although, Worf's two primary love interests were both white women. Leah Brahms is white, and Worf's white adoptive brother marries a black skinned alien. And Jake dates a white skinned dabo girl. There are plenty of examples in the series of actors of one race being romantically paired with actors of other races. And other than in Code of Honor, none of those examples are rapey.
The franchise as a whole is clearly racist against aliens, because all of the major on-screen aliens are always portrayed by humans, as uglier versions of humans, and those that don't have humanoid forms (bipedal, opposable thumbs, etc.) aren't depicted as much as those with unique physiology different than our own, and when such species are shown, they're nearly always sinister.
The problem is there just aren't enough alien actors!
I can't find a single one with a unique physiology on IMDb!
And those that are aliens, have human features, like Ted Raimi.
(Clearly, I'm joking.
Except the Raimi part.)
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