Australians take pride in the country having been started by criminals so maybe that's why Firefly has always been popular here 
The underdog is always the preferred hero.

The underdog is always the preferred hero.
Australians take pride in the country having been started by criminals so maybe that's why Firefly has always been popular here
The underdog is always the preferred hero.
What soured the show for me was that many of the main characters were criminals.instead of being powerful and confrontational, the Firefly crew dodge conflict and stay under the radar
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Australians take pride in the country having been started by criminals so maybe that's why Firefly has always been popular here
The underdog is always the preferred hero.
That's a very good question. All of a sudden, I wonder how an episode like "City on the Edge of Forever" would play in Germany. The entire premise is that Kirk had to let his love interest die, because the love interest would eventually keep us out of war with the Nazis, who would then overrun the world. (I believe, based on the few German people that I've met, that they would respond the same as an American audience, since modern Germans are as strongly opposed to their Nazi past as we Americans are.)
Or even more confrontational: "Patterns of Force". I understand that episode was actually banned in Germany for several decades because of the specific Nazi references.
These 'German' examples are the ones that first come to mind, but they are by no means the only ones.
The BBC neatly edited out a reference by Data to the 'Irish Unification of 2024' in their first run of the TNG ep 'the high ground'...
It was more than his head that exploded! They blew open his chest, and there was a horrible monster inside. It was like something from a horror film, so I can understand removing it for a timeslot that included children. (Note: I am actually a horror fan myself.)
Be interesting to watch the re-edited episode, dubbed into English, and see what they did with it.And they changed the sequences of the scenes, making a different story out of it.
Be interesting to watch the re-edited episode, dubbed into English, and see what they did with it.And they changed the sequences of the scenes, making a different story out of it.
It was more than his head that exploded! They blew open his chest, and there was a horrible monster inside. It was like something from a horror film, so I can understand removing it for a timeslot that included children. (Note: I am actually a horror fan myself.)[/QUOTEN]
The BBC also cut that scene, but then again TNG did air Wed 18:00-18:45. So the scene wasn't really suitable for that time slot. I believe Sky did the same though it aired the uncut version later in the evening. Post watershed.
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