Makes one wonder if Deltan techniques were among the ones Data was versed in.
Even though her backstory involved coming from a very sexual culture, TMP didn't do much to mention it. I can't remember if Rodenberry's novelization went into details, it's been decades since I read it.
thought ocurred:
I suppose she looked better bald than wearing some ugly forehead like so much of Star Trek afterwards.
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I liked Lt. Ilia. Even though her backstory involved coming from a very sexual culture, TMP didn't do much to mention it. I can't remember if Rodenberry's novelization went into details, it's been decades since I read it.
The only hint of Betazoid cultural sexuality we ever saw was the naked wedding tradition. Otherwise, nil (not counting Troi's own personal relationships scattered through the show, which were no different than any human character's would have been.)
So basically, Ilia was a friendly, plutonic co-worker, who had an awkward intro.
You mean platonic. A plutonic co-worker would be one made of magma that had solidified underground. (So, maybe an Excalbian?)
Anyway, I think Ilia was gorgeous even without her sexuality being played up.
Although, of course, it was TMP that introduced the "forehead alien" to Trek with the Klingons.
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I liked Lt. Ilia. Even though her backstory involved coming from a very sexual culture, TMP didn't do much to mention it. I can't remember if Rodenberry's novelization went into details, it's been decades since I read it.
So they started in with the antennae in front that soon after TOS. No wonder everyone these days thinks that's how they've always looked. Me, I thought they were inspired by bad art in the Marvel Comic books of the late '70s/early '80s.
^I don't think Theiss could've come up with anything much more revealing than Ilia's leisure robe. Anyway, the skimpiness of the female costumes in TOS and TMP came down to Roddenberry's preferences. After all, the producer (or director) approves everything the costume designer comes up with, so often the final designs are about pleasing them. With Roddenberry in charge, we would've gotten similar skimpiness regardless of who the costume designer was. (After all, Fletcher did the costumes for both TMP and TWOK. Their radical difference comes down to a difference in preference between Wise and Roddenberry for the former and Meyer and Bennett for the latter.)
So they started in with the antennae in front that soon after TOS. No wonder everyone these days thinks that's how they've always looked. Me, I thought they were inspired by bad art in the Marvel Comic books of the late '70s/early '80s.
The Marvel (and LA Times Syndicate artists) were compelled by contract to use the TMP look for the Andorians.
Some artistic license did slip through. For example, Chekov's girlfriend, in Marvel ST #16, had TOS-like caps on her forward-placed antennae.
Themon by Ian McLean, on Flickr
DC was not restricted in the same way:
Shapeshifter as an Andorian (DC #6) by Ian McLean, on Flickr
Lyndra Dean (DC #16) by Ian McLean, on Flickr
Then came ST IV, and advancements that enabled "no joins"!
UFP Councillor without hair by Ian McLean, on Flickr
UFP Councillor with hair by Ian McLean, on Flickr
I suppose Roddenberry approved Grace Lee Whitney's lack of make up, but approved it for Nichelle Nichols?
I really liked that interesting older guy they got to play the Andorian in Journey to Babel. That was good casting.
It was said in jest.
Jesus, Christopher, don't be so damn literal all the time. Sometimes it's frustrating that you can't even joke around without you having to "prove everything wrong".
It was said in jest.
Jesus, Christopher, don't be so damn literal all the time. Sometimes it's frustrating that you can't even joke around without you having to "prove everything wrong".
You didn't post a smiley or say "just kidding." Don't assume we can read your mind.
And just because a comment was made in jest, that doesn't mean I'm somehow forbidden to respond on the general topic. I'm just talking about the ideas that occur to me, the thoughts that go through my head. Since I have an analytical mind, that means I analyze. It's simply what I do. It's not a judgment of anyone, it's just how my mind works.
And I will never understand the attitude that being analytical and having a sense of humor are somehow contradictory. In my family, we're all intensely analytical, but we're also total cut-ups at the same time. A conversation among members of the Bennett clan will alternate between in-depth discussion of facts and principles and absurd puns and wisecracks on a regular basis. That's how I learned to communicate and interact. If you go to my profile page and look over my overall body of posts, you'll see a similar mix. Humor does not require shutting down the ability to analyze and question. Indeed, I daresay humor requires the ability to analyze and question.
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