Great, now there's coffee all over my monitor.To be fair, he's blind.

Great, now there's coffee all over my monitor.To be fair, he's blind.

Let's not do thatLet's take an example set in the present day.
Reachingcyberstalker
All of them? It was going to end up killing all of them... and don't put that on the ship. The poor ship got hijacked by space weirdness, (like Data in Masks) & then forced to plunk out a lifeform, (like Troi in The Child)Who was the ship trying to molest in the one where the Enterprise turned into a train?
Because what Geordie did will be right in the enlightened future?Let's not do that
Because what Geordi did was written into a script written 35 years agoBecause what Geordie did will be right in the enlightened future?
So we can't criticize his behavior, considering that people here say he didn't nothing wrong?Because what Geordi did was written into a script written 35 years ago
He said what he believed were his intentions. It was his truth, about how he felt. You're scrutinizing his claim thru a modern lens, & labeling it blatant lies. Maybe he was exclusively romantically inclined, or maybe he was inclined to whatever possibilities presented themselves, but only knew how to encourage them by presenting it in a way that left both options on the table, and maybe that way of presenting was seen differently a third of a century ago, when it was writtenSo we can't criticize his behavior, considering that people here say he didn't nothing wrong?
He blatantly lied. I'm sure it was frowned upon even 35 years ago.
She's clearly uncomfortable during the dinner, and you'd have to be really charitable to say Geordi was just offering "friendship." Especially after he told her it was just a work dinner.He said what he believed were his intentions. It was his truth, about how he felt. You're scrutinizing his claim thru a modern lens, & labeling it blatant lies. Maybe he was exclusively romantically inclined, or maybe he was inclined to whatever possibilities presented themselves, but only knew how to encourage them by presenting it in a way that left both options on the table, and maybe that way of presenting was seen differently a third of a century ago, when it was written
Does he know why she's uncomfortable? He has no reason to think she is so because of him and his intentions, unless she tells him, which she eventually does.She's clearly uncomfortable during the dinner, and you'd have to be really charitable to say Geordi was just being awful
by offering "friendship." Especially after he told her it was just a work dinner.
True, which is why I'm not gonna ever say anything he did was right. There's a lot of red flags about his actions, (especially the capitalizing on foreknowledge thing, to artificially gain affinity) and in fact, when presented with some of his impressions, Guinan outright tells Geordi that very thing, that he's acting on a fantasy.In 1991, when the episode aired, I would have been 16. I definitely didn't think the way Geordi was carefully setting up the environment with the dimmed lighting and music was something you do when you're having a friend over for dinner. I thought (and think) it was something you do when you're trying to set up a date. As such, it's hard for me to lend much credence to the idea that Geordi was approaching Leah as a friend. He might have been willing to settle for that, but I think it's a yellow or even red flag to invite someone to your quarters for something that (to me) is pretty clearly set up to be a date with someone you have no preexisting relationship with without even making it clear that that's the intention ahead of time. If I'd been Leah and I'd walked in on that I would have gone right to, "WTF Geordi???"
And we should also bear in mind that he didn't randomly select the food as something he thought Leah might like, but rather deliberately chose something that he knew she would probably like precisely because he had prior knowledge of her.
The entire setup was artificial. A man with more integrity would have come clean before the date.
But it's the false pretense that matters. It's not work related. She doesn't work there. It's a professional courtesy to have her there. She is a guest. This was not presented as her being there to judge or condemn, or even inspect (like Jellico) what he's done to the engines, as she was clearly there to do. He doesn't have to answer for anything to her. It was presented as a collaboration of interests. She herself admits that the work is very personal to her. She has preemptively vilified this guy, & he has preemptively glamorized her. That's also personal, even if it's about work.I guess I don't consider them equivalent because her issues were essentially work-related, while his preconceptions about her (which he knew or should have known were preconceptions) were personal in nature. I also think he actively tried to manipulate her, while she may have been abrasive and such (as coworkers sometimes are), but I don't think she ever lied to nor tried to manipulate him.
It seems to me as though it would be very unprofessional to tell the person who designed the E's engines that she couldn't inspect them because she had a bad attitude. That's a bit reminiscent of how Our Heroes, supposedly the best of the best, showed either an inability or unwillingness to adapt to and work with Captain Jellico.
That's a substantial leap from me saying I understand something, enough to extend some empathy, to me excusing it, which I've been very careful to word things here so am I am not, if that matters, & neither did the episode really. That I've called attention to her behavior doesn't either imho. It's just fleshing out the entire landscape of social dynamics, with which to empathize.It really sounds like what you're saying is essentially, "Sure, Geordi was a creep, but Leah was a jerk to him too, so she deserved a bit of what she dished out."

"MEESA FIXA WARP DRIVE!"Wasn't it established before this episode that he is very bad at socializing with women he's interested in? Something with a violin player on a beach?
He's awkward, overwhelmed, leaning into creepiness, but he's not a bad guy, not a villain in the episode. Clumsy and all, yes, but he never had bad intentions.
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