First, I don't think Trip is in any way Bones, or even Bones-like. Trip had a kind of evolution representing humanity in general: distrust of anything non-human, but not necessarily hatred. Once exposed to a broader world view, he began a journey of understanding. And that included his relationship with T'Pol, in all its phases. Bones, to me, never had that kind of arc (partly because of the episodic nature of TOS), and frankly, had always struck me as just this close to being a mean old man. As someone who grew up feeling very much the racial outsider and who identified with Spock because of that, I found Bones often very hurtful, for no good reason. Even early-days Trip never was mean.
I also think the whole "stereotype" thing is overused and misused. Is it a stereotype for someone raised in the south to have a favorite food that is quintessentially southern? I hope not. Because my South Carolina-bred inlaws are then walking, talking stereotypes for having macaroni and cheese, cornbread, and collards at Thanksgiving. And I'm another stereotype of cold roast Boston because I prefer my food, um, sort of bland and boiled. There are cultural norms, and there are stereotypes, and I think people confuse them way too often.
Ditto the accent. For heaven's sake, people's accents stopped being completely geographical the instant everyone got a TV. My sister and I, raised together in New England, have completely different accents - and you'd be hard pressed to place either one. My foreign-born mother sometimes sounds more American than I do - and don't get me mad, because you'd need the Rosetta Stone program to decipher my temper tantrum. Do some people from Florida sound like Trip? Yes. Do other people from Florida sound unlike Trip? Yes. We know nothing about where his people are from, so any analysis of what he should and shouldn't sound like is pure speculation.
Finally, it's always been a pet peeve of mine that people stick Trip with the catfish eatin', "dumb hick" label. I've seen this idea all across the internet, and in lots of fan fiction. So, having a thick accent makes you a dumb hick? Then so is Bill Clinton. Having a xeno-learning curve makes you a dumb hick? Then so was Malcolm X. Playing the harmonica makes you a dumb hick? Then so is Stevie Wonder. Reading comic books makes you a dumb hick? Then so is Barack Obama. Eating regional southern foods makes you a dumb hick? Then so is Emeril Legasse. All of the above? No, they don't, in my opinion. I think coming to the dumb hick conclusion regarding any or all of those characteristics says more about our own prejudices than the character, who was, in the Trek world, a warp engineer, a commander on a starship, and pretty damned smart.
Trip is not my favorite character; I find him a little too amiable. I like my heroes way flawed. That's more interesting to me. But I don't think he's stupid, or incompetent. I think he makes a good foil for both Archer and T'Pol, which requires him to be a bit elastic, and less completely filled in. But he is the emotional center of the command crew, and I find that, watching the show, his emotions generally resonate with me because he represents Everyman onscreen.
I also think the whole "stereotype" thing is overused and misused. Is it a stereotype for someone raised in the south to have a favorite food that is quintessentially southern? I hope not. Because my South Carolina-bred inlaws are then walking, talking stereotypes for having macaroni and cheese, cornbread, and collards at Thanksgiving. And I'm another stereotype of cold roast Boston because I prefer my food, um, sort of bland and boiled. There are cultural norms, and there are stereotypes, and I think people confuse them way too often.
Ditto the accent. For heaven's sake, people's accents stopped being completely geographical the instant everyone got a TV. My sister and I, raised together in New England, have completely different accents - and you'd be hard pressed to place either one. My foreign-born mother sometimes sounds more American than I do - and don't get me mad, because you'd need the Rosetta Stone program to decipher my temper tantrum. Do some people from Florida sound like Trip? Yes. Do other people from Florida sound unlike Trip? Yes. We know nothing about where his people are from, so any analysis of what he should and shouldn't sound like is pure speculation.
Finally, it's always been a pet peeve of mine that people stick Trip with the catfish eatin', "dumb hick" label. I've seen this idea all across the internet, and in lots of fan fiction. So, having a thick accent makes you a dumb hick? Then so is Bill Clinton. Having a xeno-learning curve makes you a dumb hick? Then so was Malcolm X. Playing the harmonica makes you a dumb hick? Then so is Stevie Wonder. Reading comic books makes you a dumb hick? Then so is Barack Obama. Eating regional southern foods makes you a dumb hick? Then so is Emeril Legasse. All of the above? No, they don't, in my opinion. I think coming to the dumb hick conclusion regarding any or all of those characteristics says more about our own prejudices than the character, who was, in the Trek world, a warp engineer, a commander on a starship, and pretty damned smart.
Trip is not my favorite character; I find him a little too amiable. I like my heroes way flawed. That's more interesting to me. But I don't think he's stupid, or incompetent. I think he makes a good foil for both Archer and T'Pol, which requires him to be a bit elastic, and less completely filled in. But he is the emotional center of the command crew, and I find that, watching the show, his emotions generally resonate with me because he represents Everyman onscreen.