Fine. Sorry for bringing it up further.
I think he was having a really bad day in general though, what with the comment about the Orion Traders on one hand and the poorly worded remark about his new Yeoman on the other.Considering what we learn about Orion slave women thanks to ENT, I wonder if Pike really thought that through.
Personally, I tend to interpret his line as Pike simply being unused to having a female Yeoman (since his previous ones were all male) but it came out all wrong. His subsequent attempts to cover the blunder just make things more awkward as from the above post we clearly see that there were already other women on the Bridge.I guess he saw this officer as different too.
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I see no reason to do backflips to make the line work or create a separate "universe". Just ignore the line and move on.
And even before her there were a few female Admirals seen in background roles on Enterprise.Let's not forget Capt Erika Hernandez on Enterprise. She'd be the first female captain, chronologically.
I don't know if this has been discussed before, so I'll mention it.
The other franchise is far more unified and integrated. To give one example, Rogue One has a similar feel to Star Wars: A New Hope, in terms of uniforms and fell. Our franchise, however is not, and, to give the most famous example, the Klingons look different, which leads to problems explaining why they look different. And, to give a second example, the Starfleet uniforms are also different.
Not only that, our stories tend to contradict each other, because, when TOS started, they were literally making it up as they went along. And, after that, they didn't bother to maintain a consistency. And let's not even talk about the reboot.
That may be because only one man owned it for decades, and, even now, there is a centralized story group of writers who tell that story. Ours, on the other hand, are owned by Paramount and CBS separately, with no central command to ensure consistency. And that detracts from our enjoyment of the stories.
Any thoughts?
Star Wars is very inconsistent, something that becomes ever more plainly obvious if those movies are watched in chronological order.
I wonder what the backflips are for the whiter than white crew? All the other nonwhite personnel were in the Engineering sector?I see no reason to do backflips to make the line work or create a separate "universe". Just ignore the line and move on.
Gene Roddenberry was a notorious womanizer, and he would eventually marry Number One, as in Majel Barrett, so it would seem obvious he would have a pilot talking of female slaves (who engaged in erotic dancing), and the women on the Enterprise would wear mini-skirts.
But he still had a female as First Officer, and he even had an African woman as communications officer, so he wasn't totally sexist.
Star Wars is very inconsistent, something that becomes ever more plainly obvious if those movies are watched in chronological order.
All long-running franchises will hit this wall at some point. It's inevitable, when you're trying to tell stories in a single universe, but the writers of that universe are diversely spread across half a century or more. Inconsistencies will creep in.
As with any nitpick in a story, if the inconsistencies are good or great they're more often more easily accepted/forgiven/etc. The Borg Queen is the best example, as is Q - the one who said he'd stop interfering with humans (but still does after a retcon, per "Q Who") or how the trial was done yet it never ended, and so on. And that's when individual taste makes an appearance...![]()
Inconsistency is the name of game. Even within ESB and ROTJ you can find inconsistencies, and things that don't "feel" like Star Wars, especially if ANH is the only point of reference.Star Wars is very inconsistent, something that becomes ever more plainly obvious if those movies are watched in chronological order.
All long-running franchises will hit this wall at some point. It's inevitable, when you're trying to tell stories in a single universe, but the writers of that universe are diversely spread across half a century or more. Inconsistencies will creep in.
Gene Roddenberry was a notorious womanizer, and he would eventually marry Number One, as in Majel Barrett, so it would seem obvious he would have a pilot talking of female slaves (who engaged in erotic dancing), and the women on the Enterprise would wear mini-skirts.
But he still had a female as First Officer, and he even had an African woman as communications officer, so he wasn't totally sexist.
And he was banging both of them!But he still had a female as First Officer, and he even had an African woman as communications officer, so he wasn't totally sexist.
And he was banging both of them!
I heard Nichelle Nichols say in a con a few years back that he did.He didn't bang Uhura ... did he?
Oh Roddenberry, you shameless cad.
Yeah. Most people don't realize just how much Empire retconned various things from Star Wars for the sake of making it a trilogy. The opening crawl of SW states that the stolen Death Star plans "can save [Leia's] people and restore freedom to the galaxy." And the huge celebration and medal ceremony at the end of SW really only makes sense if they just won the war against the Empire, rather than just a single battle. But TESB starts with the Rebel Alliance on the run and in hiding against the still all-powerful Empire. The galaxy is far from having freedom restored to it.Inconsistency is the name of game. Even within ESB and ROTJ you can find inconsistencies, and things that don't "feel" like Star Wars, especially if ANH is the only point of reference.
Good point.Trek is different animal, all together, since it references real world human history for its backdrop, rather than the space fantasy history.
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