The fan films have been more progressive - Hidden Frontier and Phase II/New Voyager come to mind as good examples.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I heard that the Phase II/New Voyager approach was rather ham-fisted.
The fan films have been more progressive - Hidden Frontier and Phase II/New Voyager come to mind as good examples.
...why doesn't Star Trek qualify?
The fan films have been more progressive - Hidden Frontier and Phase II/New Voyager come to mind as good examples.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I heard that the Phase II/New Voyager approach was rather ham-fisted.
I get annoyed by "The Outcast" because it's about conforming to peer pressure rather than rising above it; that "she" was fixed", and was now content with that.
But the episode takes the side of Riker and the peer pressuring government is portrayed as the closed minded bad guys. It is a strong tragic ending but not one that is meant to side with peer pressure.
Off the top of my head, there were shows in that era that dealt with HIV. I can't think of many shows that handled homosexuality all that well at that time.
Off the top of my head, there were shows in that era that dealt with HIV. I can't think of many shows that handled homosexuality all that well at that time.
I wonder sometimes about Full House and My Two Dads, both of which ran at the same time as TNG. Both shows went to lengths to emphasize that the men raising the kids together were not gay. But, looking at it in hindsight, I wonder if they were actually shows about same sex couples adopting that couldn't come right out and say that is what they were about. They did get society ready for the idea of same sex parents raising kids together. Full House was even set in San Francisco... Maybe that was actually a clever way to go about it. If the goal is to get people who aren't comfortable with homosexuality comfortable with it, maybe that's the right way to do it- first get them used to the idea that same sex relationships can be loving, that they can raise kids, and whatnot, and then leave delving into the sexual aspect until last.
I don't actually remember the shows well at all, so maybe that is totally off base though...
Who was clueless that the weapons she brought aboard contain sleeping people and not (you know) a warhead.
After reading CorporalClegg's post, I googled Sagat talking about his character being gay and at least he does seem to be implying that that was the subtext of the show. When he is asked about it in interviews, his take is along the lines of "come on, three guys living together in San Francisco raising kids... You really can't guess what their sexual orientation is?" If that really was the intention, then I have to say, that is pretty damn cool that they were not just already doing it in the late 1980s, but that they were doing it in family tv that targeted middle America. That said, it could also just be Sagat trying to make it seem edgier after the fact.
There was plenty of messages in TNG episodes. They had biracial relationships, episodes showing the evils of genetic experimentation, heap of episodes showing acceptance of other cultures, the evils of love of money, vegetarianism, the evils of alcohol. Its wrong to say that TNG had no social messages.But they weren't working any taboo issues. The original Star Trek gets more credit than it deserves on this front, but compared to the spinoffs, it was a downright counter-culture production.
Drugs are bad! Mmkay, thanks for the heads up.
The thing is, by the 1980s, the content of TV shows tackled more liberal issues in general, thanks at least partially to the success of TOS was famous for doing so and was such a huge success (after cancellation, I know, but beside the point).
So, I think TNG wasn't any less progressive than TOS, and it did take on issues. The difference is that when TNG launched, all the other shows did so as well.
But TNG did break other taboos, though in a more silent way. There was the "society without money" part at the height of capitalism, and "Ménage à Troi" suggested that Riker and Troi, while not a couple, were actually Friends with Benefits.
I definitely wanted to see that relationship bear fruit. I think it could have been a fascinating study of not only interspecies relationships, but also same sex interspecies relationships. Remember how Worf/Dax, and Kira/Odo was treated as perfectly normal? Yeah, that, but for same sex couples.It's really a shame too how tptb limited Bashir and Garek's scenes later in the series because of the gay. They had great chemistry together whether tptb wanted to make that overtly gay or just keep them as a complicated friendship with subtext.
Me too.
Besides, Sid is![]()
Well, meaningful is different than groundbreaking, controversial, topical, or unique.
That's true, but I was responding to Ryan who claimed that "TNG didn't rock the boat or tackle topics in any meaningful way, other than superficially". But you're right that these episodes weren't exactly progressive. Meaningful, but not progressive.
Can you give an example of a show from that time that did stand out in your opinion? I suppose the problem that I'm having in this debate is that I'm not sure what I'm arguing against. What is your criteria for a socially relevant show and why doesn't Star Trek qualify?My point is witch hunting, the value of a person (in a 1980s TV show), and the meaning of an individual's life are common themes in TV shows. They were done well in those TNG episodes, but they weren't anything that stands out in the greater context of 1980s TV.
Too many shows were tackling serious and topical issues without hiding behind all the general metaphors by then, too.
B'Elanna Torres was Latina as well as being half Klingon.
Yep. To an extent, I think the idea that the story just had a theme is sometimes being taken as it tackled an issue. The messages, when they exist, are seldom unique, or that profound or cutting edge.
I really think you're underestimating the effect that Star Trek had on society. Take this interview with Nichell Nichols for example.
Nichelle Nichols said:"One of the promoters came up and said someone wanted to meet me. He said he's my greatest fan," says Nichols, 78. "I thought it was some Trekker, some kid. I turned in my seat and there was Dr. Martin Luther King with a big smile on his face. He said, 'I am a Trekker, I am your biggest fan.'"
At that point, Nichols thought of herself as just a cast member on the show and hadn't fully grasped the racial implications of her part. She'd dealt with race all her life, of course, even on the set at Paramount, where a security guard hurled insults at her, but she hadn't grasped the importance of an African-American woman having a position of respect on TV.
Nichols thanked King, and told him she was leaving the show.
"He was telling me why I could not [resign]," she recalls. "He said I had the first nonstereotypical role, I had a role with honor, dignity and intelligence. He said, 'You simply cannot abdicate, this is an important role. This is why we are marching. We never thought we'd see this on TV.'"
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv-movies/star-trek-actress-nichelle-nichols-martin-luther-king-jr-impacted-decision-stay-enterprise-article-1.154674
As often as that story has changed over the years, I'm not sure how much weight I'd give it. YMMV.
But at the end of the day, it wasn't Roddenberry that drove racial diversity on Star Trek... it was advertisers and NBC. They were the ones to realize that minorities had money to spend. All one has to do is compare the lily-white "The Cage" to later episodes. If Nichols had left the series, I have no doubt she would've been replaced with another minority character.
The original Star Trek was an incredible TV series. But it also benefits from being in the right place at the right time.
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