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Should they have had a female Commodore in TOS?

Yes, as you yourself point out, there are career paths that lead to the rank of admiral that don't involve being the captain of a ship at any point.

I would point out that there are enough of those career paths for them to be considered "common."

You're right, I was thinking of the majority of USN flag officers being line officers, which they are, but there are enough of the others to fairly use the word "common."
 
Because Stocker, Tracy, Merrick and Decker are tragic or failed/weak characters they could have cast a female commander (and women in general) in a bad light, or that's how it might have been perceived.

Stocker I think is a total no go, but those other characters would only be perceived badly because of all the other poor women characters that had been on the show. If you show you can have strong women then you can show weak ones with no problem. Unfortunately TOS was only interested in the latter. Seeing a female Merrick sandwiched between a number of Mata Hari and damsel tropes and compounded by the space hooker Kirk accepts as tribute in the very same episode would have been problematic. But no worse than the rest of the show.

I, for one, would have LOVED to see Matt Decker as a woman if play exactly the way it was as aired. Someone weary, disheveled, yet filled with rage. Insisting Spock walk over to the con to speak to Kirk. Having actual bloodlust. Beating the shit out of a younger man. Sacrificing herself heroically and having that sacrifice pay off. That would have been the female role to rule the 60's, boy. There actually would have been nothing like it for 10 more years.

fuckyeahladydecker!
 
I, for one, would have LOVED to see Matt Decker as a woman if play exactly the way it was as aired. Someone weary, disheveled, yet filled with rage.
But that role would have portrayed a (1960's) female character in a bad light in a way that a male character wouldn't have been. Male Decker was pushed past the breaking point, female Decker would have been perceived as a "weak little girl." Similar with Stocker, clueless solely because she's a woman.

:)
 
We need to be careful to keep things in context with the times. Star Trek began nearly 50 years ago, and the roles of women in our society have drastically changed since it went on the air. My opinion is that, as progressive as GR was, his views of women still reflected the times in which he lived to a large extent. The women's uniforms on the show were primarily short skirts, which would be offensive to many today. It's an oversimplification to believe the world was simply full of sexists at that time. It's societal. Keep in mind that there are still places in this world today where women are not allowed to vote, or even drive a car.
 
Male Decker was pushed past the breaking point, female Decker would have been perceived as a "weak little girl." Similar with Stocker, clueless solely because she's a woman.

:)

I disagree and I gave my reasons already. Decker is too fleshed out to be considered a trope no matter what the gender. There is not real comparison to Stocker who is a stock (punny) character who's just there to get in the way.
 
Even in the 70s, you didn't see any female Commodores.

[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5EmnQp3V48[/yt]
 
It would be rare in the 1960s to not use "man" rather than person. I don't think that became the normal thing to say unit....maybe the 90s. I remember it becoming an issue with some people in High School and that was in the mid-90s. When Political Correctness was a big thing.

Or course the 60s was also a time before the large push in the Navy to put more women on ships.
 
It would've been nice to have female captains, commodores, etc. on TOS, just like it would've been nice to have episodes that focused on Sulu, Chekov, Uhura or Chapel more. Or another Mudd episode, or another Pike episode.

But I forgive TOS because I think it would've gotten there eventually. I see Star Trek as a series that ended prematurely. In a sense, it's an unfinished story.

Who knows what Year 4 and 5 would've brought? If quality and creative control had been what it was in Seasons 1 and 2, I think we would've eventually seen a female commodore or an Uhura episode or two.
 
And there's the talk in a couple of episodes that it takes a special 'man' to be a Starship captain, not a special person.


When was this said? Just asking. I do not recall this specific quote.
He might be referring to Commodore Stone talking to Kirk in "Courtmartial." Stone says something like, "Only one man in a million can command a starship."

I don't think that's meant to be taken literally.
 
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