Good grief. I've seen that with almost every main character I have watched over the years, including Star Trek. This is neither new nor noteworthy,I'll grant, she can be self-important and self-righteous from time to time.
Good grief. I've seen that with almost every main character I have watched over the years, including Star Trek. This is neither new nor noteworthy,I'll grant, she can be self-important and self-righteous from time to time.
I'll grant, she can be self-important and self-righteous from time to time.
Eh, we already had one. It died a slow death but died nonetheless.
I get that. Just don't think it will be enough to have a full thread. We'll see.That's also why I wanted to start a thread called "Why are so many commanders top heavy?" to consolidate some other redundant threads.
Hello everyone. I created this poll for a simple reason: every time in a thread someone says Michael is a "Mary Sue", that thread is deranged for pages and pages. So please, discuss here the topic to your heart content and leave the other threads alone.
I'll go first: obviously Michael ISN'T a Mary Sue. I mean, read every description of it out here. People are just using this term to describe a female character they don't like.
Prove me wrong![]()
Good grief. I've seen that with almost every main character I have watched over the years, including Star Trek. This is neither new nor noteworthy,
Yeah. No.The definition of a "Mary Sue" character is simply "a female character who is written without flaws and who is viewed as too perfect."
Firstly, I am not looking to prove you or anyone else wrong.
The definition of a "Mary Sue" character is simply "a female character who is written without flaws and who is viewed as too perfect."
I agree that this slang term is just slung about haphazardly (like "snowflake"). It's a troll term to instigate conflict not further discussions.
To me, I don't believe Michael Burnham is, by definition, a "Mary Sue," however, regardless whether she is or not I simply don't care as I like her. She's a hero young women can look up to and be inspired by - we men have never had a short supply of similar heroes to look to so why begrudge or try and fault the relatively few female heroic leads on TV? Let us not delude ourselves that TV and Film is somehow a meritocracy. It's not.
I grew up with a love of pulp magazine storytelling (Doc Savage, The Shadow, The Spider, etc.), and they were definitely the male equivalent of a "Mary Sue." Captain Kirk, Picard and Janeway could be said to be "Mary Sue"s. So if Michael Burnham is a "Mary Sue" then she is in damn fine company!
As I said, I've seen it before.Others here are more qualified to speak to this, but it strikes me this is a consequence of plot driven versus character driven. Burnham is who the plot needs her to be and she is bent to that will (again, just as many heroic male lead characters are).
I created this poll for a simple reason: every time in a thread someone says Michael is a "Mary Sue", that thread is deranged for pages and pages.
Good grief. I've seen that with almost every main character I have watched over the years, including Star Trek. This is neither new nor noteworthy,
Indeed there are. And I would love to see those better complaints in general. It is fatiguing to hear surface level critique, like the Mary Sue one, given any sort of serious consideration. If individuals do not like a show it's helpful to know the Why's rather than simple buzzwords.A fair point. Just stating that there are better complaints against Michael than being a Mary Sue (even if it is nothing new) .
A fair point. Just stating that there are better complaints against Michael than being a Mary Sue (even if it is nothing new) .
That's the one thing we can't change, I presume so you couldn't do a "which sexual fantasies do you enjoy" anonymous poll and then have the moderator switch it to public.ETA: it seems I can't. Can a moderator do it, please?
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