"And sometimes, dispassionately, they had to weed."The Monoliths have two jobs.
1. To periodically kick the lower life form with the most promise up the evolutionary ladder a little until they have a space program.
"And sometimes, dispassionately, they had to weed."The Monoliths have two jobs.
1. To periodically kick the lower life form with the most promise up the evolutionary ladder a little until they have a space program.
G'Kar pretty much said as much when he sold weapons to Earth. One assumes that they had enough of a grasp of the basics to be able to reverse-engineer and reproduce the more complicated stuff. Thought the Centauri claim that the Narns were a "barbaric people" barely out of the stone age when they showed up, there's reason to suspect that this may not have been the case.I think that the Narns were basically making Khyber Pass Copies of Centauri technology.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khyber_Pass_Copy
Is there any realistic possibility of making Khyber Pass copies of tech that you don't understand?
One could certainly make that argument, but the way the Centauri tell it, they seem to mean it quite literally.If they were at the same level we are now, or maybe even 10 or 20 years ago, then that might seen like they were barely out of the Stone Age to a more advanced race like the Centauri.
Or Londo's rewrites of Vir's reports, that was creative reassessment.One could certainly make that argument, but the way the Centauri tell it, they seem to mean it quite literally.
But as I said, they're pretty well known for out-and-out fabrication if it suits them. Half the time they may even choose to believe it themselves. Remember that bit about them trying to convince Earth that they're a lost Centauri colony? The result of a clerical error you say? Yeah, sure Londo. Whatevs.![]()
Still, for it's time having an African woman, an Asian man and a person with a Russian accent in positions of authority (and none were particularly stereotypical) was all extremely progressive.
That was to add a certain randomness to what surname some of the background characters were assigned, often leading to some very unexpected combinations (e.g. an asian person with a jewish surname, an african person with a native american name etc.)
"A View from the Gallery"One of the finest shows. Love B5, and it had some iconic episodes. I loved the little side episodes like the one about the two workers on the station and what they did in a day, no main characters stealing the screen time, but you saw things from the POV of these two workers who were just mundane nobodies. I can't for the life of me remember the episode title, but it was good.
I'd say that Trek was always pretty good when it came to race & gender diversity in casting supporting & guest roles. Indeed, going all the way back to the original pilot with the 'Number One' character that GR had to loose in order to keep Spock for the second pilot.
Still, for it's time having an African woman, an Asian man and a person with a Russian accent in positions of authority (and none were particularly stereotypical) was all extremely progressive.
In TNG onwards it seemed like at least half of the Starfleet Admirals that appeared were either female or non-Caucasian. Also quite impressive for it's time and B5 mostly did the same, though more with the EA captains. IIRC most (but by no means *all*) of the Generals were older white guys.
What B5 seemed to do differently in this regard was a bit more subtle and generally not the sort of thing you'd notice unless you paid *really* close attention. That was to add a certain randomness to what surname some of the background characters were assigned, often leading to some very unexpected combinations (e.g. an asian person with a jewish surname, an african person with a native american name etc.)
The idea being IIRC that in a couple centuries, the old cultural barriers aren't going to mean as much, particularly if a given individual is descended from colonists, which may start with a small-ish population wither very diverse ancestry. After a couple generation of intermarrying, the above combinations may be downright common in say, Marsborn citizens.
One that Trek could emulate is the casting of Kim Miyori as captain of the Earth Force vessel Churchill.
For example, what if Picard was a dark-skinned individual who was still an Franco-Brit who had a relationship with the attractive Beverly Crusher, still portrayed by Gates McFadden?
"A View from the Gallery"
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