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Newsweek picks the top 10 captain candidates

CBS announced on Wednesday that it will air the 13-part first season in weekly instalments via its CBS All Access subscription streaming service after an initial launch of the premiere on regular television.
13 episodes?

Am I forgetting something, or did the writer just confuse speculation with official information?
 
Fuller said years ago he wanted Angela Bassett as his Captain with Rosario Dawson as the First Officer.

Who knows if he'll try to keep to that?
 
Fuller said years ago he wanted Angela Bassett as his Captain with Rosario Dawson as the First Officer.

Who knows if he'll try to keep to that?
Bassett has already said she won't be doing it, how can she fit both American Horror Story and Star Trek into her schedule? It'd be too much.

Dawson is a regular on Daredevil, as well as having to make appearances in other Marvel shows such as Jessica Jones and Luke Cage. She has enough on her plate right now.
 
I think we're ignoring the possibilities and wonders of TV land. How about Star Trek Black, where a bunch of renegade clones lead by Sara Manning wreak havoc, while Captain Felix (our first gay captain) hunts them down. Or, a violent war series Star Trek 100, with Captain Clark, once a civil minded artist turned renegade mass murderer, is taken out of prison to lead a one way mission to hell. Lexa is her Vulcan science officer, and once again, we have a gay captain.

But enough of the gay captains. We should have Captain Elizabeth Jennings starring in Star Trek Americans. Captain Jennings is actually a Klingon spy, but that's OK, because apparently Klingons turn out to be OK guys anyway.
 
Maggie Q, David Tennant, Patrick Wilson or Olivia Coleman from that list. Each would bring something different to the role.
 
I would love to see them pick somebody from an underrepresented group, or a group who are not usually seen as heroes. Star Trek has always been a very inclusive, diverse franchise, and I would love to see the new show's choice for a lead actor/actress continue that tradition.
 
Star Trek has always been a very inclusive, diverse franchise, ...
TOS: entire main cast was white
TNG: seven of nine main characters were white
DS9: five of eight were white
VOY: five of nine were white
ENT: five of seven were white

I don't see much diversity, the main cast was predominantly white, male and 100% of the characters were straight (even the android!). The myth that Star Trek was inclusive and diverse is pretty much bullshit.
 
I think you need to re-count


TOS: entire main cast was white
TNG: seven of nine main characters were white
DS9: five of eight were white
VOY: five of nine were white
ENT: five of seven were white

I don't see much diversity, the main cast was predominantly white, male and 100% of the characters were straight (even the android!). The myth that Star Trek was inclusive and diverse is pretty much bullshit.

This is just speculation on the author's part. There is no news here related to anyone Fuller has actually talked to.
Um yes, that's the point of the article.
 
TOS: entire main cast was white
TNG: seven of nine main characters were white
DS9: five of eight were white
VOY: five of nine were white
ENT: five of seven were white

I don't see much diversity, the main cast was predominantly white, male and 100% of the characters were straight (even the android!). The myth that Star Trek was inclusive and diverse is pretty much bullshit.
You could say that about any old show when you compare it with modern standards. Also, not sure if you even watched TOS, because that definitely didn't have an entirely white main cast. For the 60s, a main cast depicting a black woman, an alien who looked like Satan, a Russian and a Japanese on American television was pretty unheard of.

When your show is renowned for being one that Dr. Martin Luther King himself called an achievement for black rights, then yes, it is pretty diverse. Later entries to the franchise kind of strayed from the all-inclusive and diverse reputation it had, especially to do with LGBT people, but the original definitely made a big impact.
 
The other question is what is diversity based on? Is it the population of the country that produces it? The population of the Earth? The planet of origin of the fictional universe? The membership of the UFP?

If it's the USA, then African-Americans should only be 12% of the cast for example. Earth? Nearly 2-3rd of the population is from Asia. The UFP? Earth people should only be less than 1% of the crew..

Still, the later shows did expand on diversity much more than TOS. In TOS the make up of the extras and guest stars slowly started to go back to standard Hollywood of the time, and David Gerrold attributed it to :"hardening of the arteries"..in other words, they made a deliberate attempt to diversify early on in TOS, but as it went on, time pressures and production pressures negated this.

RAMA

You could say that about any old show when you compare it with modern standards. Also, not sure if you even watched TOS, because that definitely didn't have an entirely white main cast. For the 60s, a main cast depicting a black woman, an alien who looked like Satan, a Russian and a Japanese on American television was pretty unheard of.

When your show is renowned for being one that Dr. Martin Luther King himself called an achievement for black rights, then yes, it is pretty diverse. Later entries to the franchise kind of strayed from the all-inclusive and diverse reputation it had, especially to do with LGBT people, but the original definitely made a big impact.
 
Also, not sure if you even watched TOS, because that definitely didn't have an entirely white main cast.
Uhura and Sulu were not part of the main cast. TOS only had three main characters, some fans thinking of the "big seven" doesn't make it true.

But even if I missed some it doesn't change the fact that the cast was primarily white and not very diverse over the decades. That many older shows were like that doesn't really matter, Star Trek still doesn't get an award for being diverse and inclusive because it wasn't.
 
In the case of TOS it might depend on who you consider to be "main cast." Spock, while played by a white male, wasn't white owing to being a Vulcan. Didn't Nimoy's makeup give him slight yellow complexion?
VOY: five of nine were white
Janeway, Paris, Seven and the EMH were White.
Chakotay was native American.
Torres was Hispanic and Klingon mix.
Kim was East Asian.
Tuvok was a alien.
ENT: five of seven were white
Archer, Trip and Reed were White.
Sato was East Asian.
Mayweather was Black.
T'Pol and Phlox were aliens
 
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