You had to name the last character you saw on TV to be your six inch tall peotector. I got Sisko. Yes. I'm covered, watch out everyone else!xD
After my father took early retirement he still had to sign on to maintain his NI record, even though he didn't need to work (and was effectively ruled out of seeking work in some sectors by the retirement deal).There could be long pauses between work.
The worst incident I've heard of is an argument between Auberjonois and Brooks during Far Beyond the Stars over the type of anger the characters should portray. It was over professional matters.
OTOH, Garrett Wang and Robert Beltran intercepted cast members, led by Kate Mulgrew, who hoped to get Jeri Ryan fired because she received too much attention. That's simply petty.
I have read that Nicole Nicols wanted her skirt shorter, in that time it was a sign of feminism/freedom because they could choose for themselves what to wear
A recurring issue is how men co-opt changes made to help empower women. Yes, shorter skirts in Star Trek helped show empowerment for Nichols and Whitney, but it also constrained the women guest stars to wear the same short skirt, whether they liked it or not, and they were often forced to parade in costume before the producers, including Mr. Roddenbery himself. There is almost no way of winning.The TOS short skirts were not as outrageous in 1965 as they would be now. The trend toward shorter skirts started in the late 1950s. When my mom was 18, in 1960, her grandmother took her on a fashion shopping trip to New York and brought back some short skirts and dresses to start college in style. (Short being above the knee, not as short as miniskirts of the late 1960s.) My mom's parents got calls from overly concerned acquaintances about how short her skirts were, and the parents laughed it off. The next few years showed that she was just ahead of the trend on the west coast. Back then, fashion still started in New York and worked its way westwards... Short skirts were seen as a symbol of women's liberation and youth, not primarily a sex symbol.
See https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/the-miniskirt-myth
An episode of "Inglorious Treksperts", about B5 of all things, I listened to recently hinted that some people didn't get along on DS9. Mark A. Altman who did "The Fifty Year Mission" interviewed people for those books and wasn't allowed to include stuff. They mentioned this in comparison to TNG cast and related it to the B5 and TOS cast. I feel like there was just different groups who got along well, compared to some united whole.
Thx. I saw several recent posts-so I thought it was one that kinda kept going and going, like the energizer bunny. This was my first post-so I’ll try to be aware. Thx for letting me knowWelcome to Trek BBS @Sci-fi mom !
You may not have noticed, but this thread has been dormant for the past 4 years. The last post before yours was in September of 2019. As a rule we ask that members not revive threads which have been inactive for more than a year. If it's a subject that interests you then feel free to create a new thread of your own and link back to any pertinent information in the old thread.
Normally I would close a thread that's been resurrected after such a long time, but since other members have re-engaged in the topic I'll leave.
Happy posting!![]()
Is there anything substantial to learn about the DS9 cast really, anything that would surprise us?An episode of "Inglorious Treksperts", about B5 of all things, I listened to recently hinted that some people didn't get along on DS9. Mark A. Altman who did "The Fifty Year Mission" interviewed people for those books and wasn't allowed to include stuff. They mentioned this in comparison to TNG cast and related it to the B5 and TOS cast. I feel like there was just different groups who got along well, compared to some united whole.
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