Nah, he was just there for official first contact. T'Pol's grandma was trapsing around Earth in the 1950s.
Allegedly...
Nah, he was just there for official first contact. T'Pol's grandma was trapsing around Earth in the 1950s.
Velcro didn't invent it's self.Allegedly...
Nah - the ending scene between Spock and Rand in TOS S1 - "The Enemy Within" beats that for sexism, hands down.I'm watching "Wolf in the Fold" and am thinking its probably the most sexist episode of TOS...
Um, Mudd’s Women with crewmen, even Spock leching at the women as they walk by with wah-wah trumpets accompanying their hip-ness?
Written by Stephen Kandel, based on a story by Gene Roddenberry..With close ups of wiggling backsides, Eve saying "you don't want a woman to cook, sew and cry" etc. I wonder, did a man or woman write this episode?![]()
I'm aware. I was asking rhetorically with a dollop of ironyWritten by Stephen Kandel, based on a story by Gene Roddenberry
I think the women kicking/punching thing is more down to the preferences of individual producers than any official sort of policy. So I don't think that "censorship" is the right term.
I was watching the Avengers the other day and Emma Peel had some fight scene in sensible pants but I noticed that her scene fighting other women were heavily cut. We got to see when men fought her but nothing when she fought another lady - just that the enemy woman was tied up at the end of the fight. I can only think there were rules on TV at the time stopping women hitting other women or women being hit. I don't know. I suppose it could have been an artistic decision but it seems so strange to me watching the scenes.A random thought: kicking would provide the opportunity to show off a woman's legs whereas punching would not?
The point was that the miners didn't want wives to be their life partners and helpmates; all they wanted were trophy wives who were beautiful (and maybe good in bed). That's just as relevant today as it was in 1966.With close ups of wiggling backsides, Eve saying "you don't want a woman to cook, sew and cry" etc. I wonder, did a man or woman write this episode?![]()
Today, sure. But in 1966 that wasn’t the general view of a wife even though she dud a lot more than cook and sew. And really how many in 1966 could foresee how much society would change in the decades to come?Sure but it could have been expressed in a more convincing way. Like instead of cooking and sewing, maybe balancing the books, making sure things in the settlement are working, being a partner....
I know of the McCoy close up in Mudd's Women and the change of shirt for Kirk in Charlie X. Plus the footage of Uhura in the navigator position from Balance of Terror. What other examples spring to mind?Oh yes, I agree. Those first few episodes were obviously done in a hurry. Some of the editing gaffes are evidence of that. Mudd's Women and Charlie X have more continuity errors than some of the later episodes. The Man Trap has a few also. I don't mind them just as I don't mind the stuff I was talking about. Just saying Mudd's Woman was written very much with a male POV and is one of those episodes that really shows its age more than some others.
I still prefer Mudd himself in this episode than in the second season. He deserves his fate in this but I, Mudd seemed cruel.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.