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Is the Planetary Union in "Orville" a military?

This makes a great deal of sense as television, given that most Americans in the last couple of generations have no experience whatever with serving in the military.
Active duty, reserves, guard, and vets add up to about 23.8 million. Almost 9.6 percent of the adult population.

Then figure in their families, and actually quite a number of people in America are familiar with the military.
 
Oh my cock, are we really doing this? It's bad enough this has been done to death, and zombified in regards to Starfleet, but when it comes to the Planetary Union's Fleet, they are definitely, categorically and canonically military.
Admit it--everyone knew it was going to happen.

The military isn't a cult that transforms people into ultra rigid and formal, those who serve are just ordinary people with a stressful job, and they blow off their steam the same way anyone else would. And what we see on Orville is consistent with that mentality.
Anyone who doesn't believe this should go read the Terminal Lance comic series.

And yet an alarmingly high percentage of Americans sloppily say "the Army" when referencing either the entire military or one of the other three branches.
:brickwall:
 
I have another theory in that it's not just a military but one that hasn't had to fight a major war in a very long time which is something that even Starfleet can't say because they had to fight in many wars over the years. That's why even though, as others have explained a casual attitude is normal for solders, you also don't seem to see the more hardened types as well.

Jason
 
I have another theory in that it's not just a military but one that hasn't had to fight a major war in a very long time which is something that even Starfleet can't say because they had to fight in many wars over the years. That's why even though, as others have explained a casual attitude is normal for solders, you also don't seem to see the more hardened types as well.

Or maybe they're a bunch of casual fuckups because this is a comedy by Seth McFarlane and not a serious exploration of a futuristic military, and no theories are required.
 
True enough, but neither is Starfleet.

Those writers were never interested in the structure or rationales of their Space Navy. It was a convenient and familiar idea, already plowed by hundreds if not thousands of pulp sf stories and used explicitly in a number of such TV series and movies.

As they generated more and more material and needed to fill in details needed for particular stories they simply mapped them from convenient facts about modern American military organizations, movie cliches about the U.S. Navy, and contradicted that stuff wherever it was inconvenient to their plots.

The Reset-Of-The-Week format of 1960s TV drama meant that the ramifications of the characters continually improvising and defying the chain of command never had to be dealt with.

Finally, GR started styling himself as a kind of hippy sage and decided to pronounce that the whole thing wasn't really a military force after all, because fighting and stuff was seriously uncool.
 
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As far as Starfleet, how many full military organizations allow their people to resign (ala: Worf during the Klingon civil war)?

Anybody who walks into a captains office and says "I resign my commision" gets to spend some time in the brig.
The most famous American example, The Flying Tigers going to fight in China. While Worf may not have had a Section 31 operator placing him in the war the actual Army and Navy Departments were not placing pilots in China either. His resignation did not come when a Borg cube was on its way to sector 001 or during the Dominion War.

People resigning to avoid being deployed only really became a problem in say 1968 or 2005 when services were stop losing soldiers. At other times if you resigned, then you resigned.
 
Or maybe they're a bunch of casual fuckups because this is a comedy by Seth McFarlane and not a serious exploration of a futuristic military, and no theories are required.

Somehow I don't think it's like that.

I've never seen the show either, and I admit SMC's involvement did make me skittish. But everything I've actually heard suggests that it's equal parts drama and comedy. (Perhaps even a bit more of the former.) And that it's definitely NOT Family Guy in space.
 
Somehow I don't think it's like that.

I've never seen the show either, and I admit SMC's involvement did make me skittish. But everything I've actually heard suggests that it's equal parts drama and comedy. (Perhaps even a bit more of the former.) And that it's definitely NOT Family Guy in space.

I've seen every episode. The comedy doesn't fit with the drama very well, because it's definitely crass Family Guy comedy shoved into an episode of TNG. The show would be stronger with less of the comedy. At any rate, a serious military show this is emphatically not.
 
I've seen every episode. The comedy doesn't fit with the drama very well, because it's definitely crass Family Guy comedy shoved into an episode of TNG. The show would be stronger with less of the comedy. At any rate, a serious military show this is emphatically not.
Is someone calling it a serious military show? O_o

I think the drama and the comedy fit just fine together and work well, especially with the character moments. I loathe Family Guy for all its worth so the fact that the humor is (generally) inoffensive to mildly offensive is ok.

Also, the military tells jokes too. Ever been with a group of American Marines before? I think I learned more new and creative ways to swear and be offensive there than any film.
 
Is someone calling it a serious military show? O_o

I think the drama and the comedy fit just fine together and work well, especially with the character moments. I loathe Family Guy for all its worth so the fact that the humor is (generally) inoffensive to mildly offensive is ok.

Also, the military tells jokes too. Ever been with a group of American Marines before? I think I learned more new and creative ways to swear and be offensive there than any film.

This.
 
I have another theory in that it's not just a military but one that hasn't had to fight a major war in a very long time
My different theory is that the Orville is a low level second class ship which goes a long way toward explaining the lax attitude aboard, and that the "real" planetary union military ships (the big cruisers we saw) are probably more military.
 
My different theory is that the Orville is a low level second class ship which goes a long way toward explaining the lax attitude aboard, and that the "real" planetary union military ships (the big cruisers we saw) are probably more military.

A "McHale's Navy" type of situation? I got to admit I think that is very possible as well. I think a lack of war though might also helped created that kind of situation as well. I also wonder how long the Planetary Union has been around. Do they have a Federation or is it more like "Enterprise" in that it's just Starfleet right now and other alien governments are still more on their own.

Jason
 
My different theory is that the Orville is a low level second class ship
That's not a theory, the Orville is a mid-level cruiser, as established in dialogue.
A "McHale's Navy" type of situation? I got to admit I think that is very possible as well. I think a lack of war though might also helped created that kind of situation as well. I also wonder how long the Planetary Union has been around. Do they have a Federation or is it more like "Enterprise" in that it's just Starfleet right now and other alien governments are still more on their own.

Jason
I thought the Planetary Union is more or less a Federation analogue? And we see many other species are allowed to serve in their fleet, a Moclan and Xeleyan are on Orville's senior staff and we see any number of aliens on the crew.
 
That's not a theory, the Orville is a mid-level cruiser, as established in dialogue.

I thought the Planetary Union is more or less a Federation analogue? And we see many other species are allowed to serve in their fleet, a Moclan and Xeleyan are on Orville's senior staff and we see any number of aliens on the crew.

I wonder how big though the Federation analogy goes. Is it hundreds of planets or just a handful. How much impact does each world have on the service? Is it like the United Nations were ever country still has it's own self interest or is it really part of one big government and alien civilizations are more like states in the United States.

Jason
 
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