https://www.dailydot.com/parsec/star-trek-picard-stardust-city-rag-episode-5-recap/
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Star Trek: Picard hasn’t featured any explicitly LGBTQ characters yet, which is really a surprise considering
Star Trek’s history.
TNG aired
a trans-coded episode back in 1992,
Deep Space Nine featured
one of the first lesbian kisses on American TV, and
Discovery includes a gay couple in the main cast. It feels weird to see Seven embroiled in a sexually charged standoff where this woman refers to her as “the one that got away,” while the nature of their relationship remains technically ambiguous.
Long-running franchises rarely allow legacy characters to come out, and Seven would be an ideal choice if they did it properly. During
Voyager’s run, her popularity was influenced by her
arguably exploitative image as a sex symbol, and her story concluded with a
very unpopular romance. Fans were more likely to ship Seven (and her eventual boyfriend Chakotay) with Captain Janeway, and Janeway/Seven was one of the most popular
femslash pairings of the nineties. They’re basically the Xena and Gabrielle of
Star Trek, laying the groundwork for Seven to have a female love-interest in
Picard.
I suspect the end of the episode is why the show’s creators chickened out. Whatever Jay and Seven’s relationship was before, Seven now wants her dead. After Picard’s crew rescue Bruce Maddox, Seven borrows a couple of phasers and returns to the nightclub, where she assassinates Jay. So if the show made Seven more obviously queer, they’d also be delivering a scenario where she murders her ex-girlfriend in the same episode.
Discovery was criticized for playing into the
“bury your gays” trope, so I can see why
Picard chose not to define this relationship. Personally, though, I thought it was a fumbled opportunity. In a show that’s making some bold moves elsewhere, they’re oddly conservative about queer representation.
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https://www.vulture.com/2020/02/jeri-ryan-seven-of-nine-star-trek-picard-interview.html
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I’m really excited to see where her storyline goes. I thought the exchange between Bjayzl and Seven was really fascinating at the end of the episode before Seven killed her. Bjayzl mentions that Seven has no hope. Do you agree with that?
I think that’s something we’re going to see her have to find as the season goes on. That’s part of her arc this year.
What was your favorite aspect of Seven’s arc in this episode?
I mean, the storyline is just gut-wrenching. What she goes through breaks my heart. But I love that it shows her resilience. She had to live through that horrific experience of having to put what is essentially her son out of his misery, watching him suffer. For all those 13 years that followed she’s been hunting this character she was really close to and trusted, Bjayzl, and finally gets to a point where she can seek her revenge. And I think as time goes on we find out if taking that life was really the closure she was seeking. It’s something she is going to struggle with coming to terms with [about] humanity — what it is and what it means.
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https://www.reddit.com/r/Picard/comments/f7v31f/spoilers_all_seven_of_nine_a_lesbian/