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"I can't get used to having a woman on the bridge"

alpha_leonis

Captain
Captain
Obviously, when they produced "The Cage" and gave that line to Captain Pike, they were writing to an audience in 1964, when women in the military were "only" nurses, and not front-line officers. They were obviously self-conscious of the implications of that line, based on Pike's immediate interaction with Number One in that moment. Not to mention the fact that the rest of the run of TOS had women on the bridge all over the place (not just Uhura, but many other examples.) And in post-TOS prequel series like Enterprise and Discovery, there were women on bridges all over the place. Of course, nobody in 1964 had any idea that particular episode would still be culturally significant in 2020.

Frankly I can't see Bruce Greenwood or Anson Mount (or any modern Trek writer) interpreting the Pike character anywhere close to the face-value of that particular line. So I'm wondering, how do other people interpret that particular line in that particular episode? Especially in the context of what Star Trek has become in the 56 years since "The Cage", as opposed to how it was intended for its primary audience of television executives in 1964?
 
I don't see that there's much to interpret.

It is what it is. The line was 'of it's time' and is outdated/sexist when looked at from a 'modern' perspective.

In fifty years many aspects of our current media output will no doubt be viewed as outdated as well.

Just an inevitable part of cultural/societal change.
 
In a lot of ways, that line is like the miniskirt/skort uniforms the women wore. In the moment, in the '60s, miniskirts were empowering and gave women a sense of control over their lives and how they were perceived. By the time of the late '70s, there was a groundswell of contempt for the idea that showing that much skin could make women be seen as more powerful and in control than a more covered up look. There is no consideration for the miniskirt replacing the long pleated skirts of Donna Reed or Princess's poodle skirts and their perceived limitations, just the idea that an exposed woman is an exploited one.

Pike was meant to be saying that women could be officers, he's just not used to the idea. Our later out of context interpretation can no longer recognize that concept.
 
It doesn't even make sense at face value in the context of the episode. There are currently three women on the bridge at the time the line is given. That's about 25% of the personnel on the bridge.

The only way this line makes sense is that Pike isn't used to having a woman yeoman on the bridge. Then he realized how dumb that sounded gave that awkward apology to Number 1.
 
I don't see that there's much to interpret.

It is what it is. The line was 'of it's time' and is outdated/sexist when looked at from a 'modern' perspective.

In fifty years many aspects of our current media output will no doubt be viewed as outdated as well.

Just an inevitable part of cultural/societal change.
Agreed.

By the way, this line was, for whatever reason, cut for "The Menagerie." So, it didn't even air on TV until 1988.
 
There have been discussions of this in a few recent threads:

As I remember, that happens soon after the fight on Rigel VII, mentioned in the scene in Pike's cabin:

BOYCE: Sometimes a man'll tell his bartender things he'll never tell his doctor. What's been on your mind, Chris, the fight on Rigel Seven?
PIKE: Shouldn't it be? My own yeoman and two others dead, seven injured.
BOYCE: Was there anything you personally could have done to prevent it?
PIKE: Oh, I should have smelled trouble when I saw the swords and the armour. Instead of that, I let myself get trapped in that deserted fortress and attacked by one of their warriors.

When a second message from Talos IV is received, Pike decides to go to Talos IV to search for survivors:

(Colt enters. Pike turns around and bumps into her)
PIKE: Yeoman.
COLT: Yes, sir.
PIKE: I thought I told you that when I'm on the bridge
COLT: But you wanted the reports by oh five hundred. It's oh five hundred now, sir.
PIKE: Oh, I see. Thank you.
ONE: She's replacing your former yeoman, sir.
PIKE: She does a good job, all right. It's just that I can't get used to having a woman on the bridge. No offence, Lieutenant. You're different, of course.

Pike clearly blames himself for the injuries and deaths on Rigel VII, including his former yeoman, who, for all we know, might have died heroically defending his captain. And since the age of that former yeoman is not stated, it is possible that to Pike he seemed more like a yeo-boy than a yeo-man. And now Pike's new yeoman, constantly reminding Pike of Pike's mistake by being different from the former one, is Yeoman Colt, a yeo-woman, or even in Pke's eyes a yeo-girl, whose safety Pike is responsible for.

That may explain why Pike acts somewhat jumpy around Colt.

Just a minute or two earlier, Pike had been standing on the bridge beside a seated person who has always looked a lot like a woman to viewers, and who presumably is also different like Number one.

https://www.inverse.com/article/204...tumes-starfleet-uniforms-bryan-fuller-cosplay

Anyway, I expect that this thread may get a number of Opinions.
 
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It could've been a way to appease those who opposed a female bridge officer by saying she's the only one and it's a new thing.
 
It is worth noting also that the line appears only in the untransmitted "The Cage" pilot version, and that the offending line is one of the ones that was ommited from the two-part "Menagerie" footage that actually was broadcast as part of TOS. So, one can easily ignore it. Pike doesn't say it in "The Menagerie" version. :)

Also, the line makes no sense, as alongside Colt and Number One, there is a third female officer prominent on the bridge:

http://tos.trekcore.com/hd/albums/1x00hd/thecagehd0277.jpg
 
I don't see how there could even be a question here.

What we call "sexism" today is a very simple dramatic point: Pike is the common type of man (real and especially fictional) who is afraid of women, even if (and this is more common in fiction, alas!) also cursed with being a woman magnet of some sort. This sets up the tension when he gets confronted by the woman of his secret dreams - all of those - and has to cope. And not only with those dreams, but also with the flesh-and-blood coworker women who crowd his cell later on. How will our hero survive?

Now, this is a character trait that serves a specific story purpose in the pilot. But is it something that would have followed Pike through his serialized adventures? The writers wrote themselves in a bit of a corner there: Pike's lines suggest that his fears have not manifested before, and his awkward excusing and explaining is happening for basically the first time. So in-universe, Pike probably has been shaken by the recent losses and is letting show something that he will never ever allow to slip through... Or then the damage done here is permanent and he now has a reputation. Out-universe, though, I could see the writers sticking with what they have, the shy guy surrounded by the pushy babes trope, and skipping any introspection. But, OTOH, dropping the aspect as soon as the drama of the moment called for that. Character consistency never was a big deal in television writing back then, and wouldn't have been for Desilu either if TOS itself is anything to judge by.

It's not supposed to be subtle, mysterious, or offending. It's all there up front: the character looks at the camera and says "I'm afraid of women. Uh, I mean, excuse me, ladies, what I meant was, umm, ah, see that moonbat up there, gotta go, just remembered something...". And then sitcom hilarity follows as the director ushers in all the women one by one.

Timo Saloniemi
 
Which some higher up somewhere thought was a trap they couldn't write themselves out of, and rejected the pilot as a whole because of it. One of the few things that no one doubts GR about was that the higher ups didn't want a show that had an ongoing undercurrent of "Which one would he have chosen?", and he decided to agree with that interpretation.
 
Which some higher up somewhere thought was a trap they couldn't write themselves out of, and rejected the pilot as a whole because of it. One of the few things that no one doubts GR about was that the higher ups didn't want a show that had an ongoing undercurrent of "Which one would he have chosen?", and he decided to agree with that interpretation.
This is the first time I've heard that the "which one would Pike have chosen" question was a reason why "The Cage" was rejected. Do you or does anybody have a citation for that?
 
My take on it
In universe Pike was having a bad day, waiting for his Orion traders licence
In real life it was 1964, it was an American tv show about white people in space. The real life military had been desegregated in 1948 but someone forgot to remind Mr Roddenberry
 
This is the first time I've heard that the "which one would Pike have chosen" question was a reason why "The Cage" was rejected. Do you or does anybody have a citation for that?

Roddenberry said for years that NBC rejected "The Cage" for being "too cerebral" -- meaning "my work was too smart," kind of a humble-brag. But I think the real reason was that it was too sexual, and incidentally the cast wasn't especially appealing.
 
The thing is, no producer would reject a show based on details in a pilot - he'd lean on his elbows, look at the writer-hopeful, and say "These things have to change - and of course you knew that already - so now get writing the actual season and we'll see if it sells well enough for another". Or, if the pilot warranted, "This is crap. Outta here, and don't come back. Unless, of course, you pack pure gold. Like the last time I told you this."

Asking for second pilots was supposedly relatively rare back then, and the reasons for Trek being among those that got two pilots are probably known well enough. But fine-tuning things like dramatic points or premises doesn't call for that. Being disgusted with the cast is the one good reason to ask for a different pilot with a different ensemble - although naturally with all the other fixes thrown in, too.

If Hunter's Pike was too shy or too overbearing, too sexist or too Communist, that could be rewritten by the time of the first regular episode. If he needed to be named Winter, or established as ethnic Egyptian, that could be altered. If they wanted Lloyd Bridges instead, they might simply swap the lead. But if only Nimoy's supporting character was deemed worth keeping or, conversely, fault was found in all the others, and/or availability problems developed, then jumping straight into production would not work too well.

Timo Saloniemi
 
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