I'm pretty open-minded and even that sorta makes me a little uncomfortable. I mean...she clearly has emotional issues, is barely an adult and is the daughter of the man Kirk suspects of being a mass murderer.
I brought this up on the TOS forum and was told by the middle aged fanbase that it's fine and legal and not to question it.
Also according to Startrek.com, Amanda was 18 when 65 year old Sarek knocked her up.I'm pretty open-minded and even that sorta makes me a little uncomfortable. I mean...she clearly has emotional issues, is barely an adult and is the daughter of the man Kirk suspects of being a mass murderer.
I brought this up on the TOS forum and was told by the middle aged fanbase that it's fine and legal and not to question it.
"But different species and cultures."
Maybe so. Doesn't make it any less skeevy in context.
Again, what does this have to do with whatever I said?
This is the second time now that you seem to construe by that I say that most of the population of Mexico is mixed that that is some comment on racism or class difference, which has nothing to do with any of that.
Just curious. who did the "math" on Amanda's age?
I agree. However, it highlights differences in what is considered progressive in any given era or culture. Just consider how opinions about Roman Polanski have shifted or how each nation has framed it. While France honored him with a national award a few years ago, the public is less on his side, and Poles generally would like to see him extradited--this after decades of condemning US prudery and zealousness.I'm pretty open-minded and even that sorta makes me a little uncomfortable. I mean...she clearly has emotional issues, is barely an adult and is the daughter of the man Kirk suspects of being a mass murderer.
How progressive was TOS? A 33-year-old starship Captain was trying to make it with a barely legal teenage girl in one of the most cringe things possible in an episode with a pretty effective and creepy story otherwise.
Damn, Captain. She's 19. Even in the late 23rd century there must be people who look at that with a little cringe.
If only your grand father was alive today to see the world as it is.how I could have a grandfather who would be 149 years old today.
Yes, that is a surprise; it's very surprising and odd to begin with that alien cultures follow U.S.A. fashion standards, when other populations on Earth do not even do so. You'll find there to be population that either lack gendered fashion standards, or have them in an entirely different way than what the U.S.A. does.
They could find enough such actors for The Time Machine. Such actors walk the earth already in most of the Americas.
You claimed that "ever other country" had homogenized into a brown skin complexion, which is not the case.What does this have to do with anything I wrote? I simply said the U.S.A. is the only country in the Americas where such races still exist, rather than having merged into a homogeneous brown complexion. I never spoke of Europe, nor did I speak of any racism. I simply said that for the most part inhabitants of, say, Mexico all have a somewhat similar shade of brown skin.
There weren't Vulcans or Romulans portrayed by black actors until there were. I don't think there were Klingons portrayed by black actors until Michael Dorn. (I'm hoping I'm wrong about this.) Why should Bajorans be a special case? You're trying to make it seem that they cast a black actress as Jake's Bajoran girlfriend for purely racial reason, but without evidence, you're claim is just pure speculation.The problem is that no such “black bajoran” was seen before Jake Sisko got a love interest and the first one just happened to have to be one which is what D.S.9. constantly did with Jake and Benjamin Sisko.
Perhaps one time is a cosmological fluke, but it happened consistently.
I think you're really overthinking the intro to this show.Indeed it is not supposed to be, and that is the problem: it only shows Anglo-Saxon exploration achievements while Starfleet is supposedly an Earth organization and Earth is already unified under a central government.
Discovery shows LGBT characters being treated no differently than heterosexual crew members, their sexual orientation or identity never being portrayed as something novel or noteworthy. Indeed, it's the least interesting thing about these characters. I don't know what is horrible about it.Discovery handles it horribly with such ridiculous things as “l.g.b.t. identities” still existing 300 years into the future? Torchwood was much better with mankind simply not caring about such matters any more. Jack Harkness isn't “bisexual”; he is simply a person from his own perspective because he never consider anything else could be. Much as the Græco-Roman civilization had no words for “sexual orientations”, because such a thing did not exist as all citizens had relations with members of either sex.
Too bad you don't watch Voyager, the Banea are right up your alley.Not at all, as I said, we could have alien species where both sexes were played by say human female actors, but the males had brightly colored hair, peacock-esque, and the females were bald. There is no reason to have have the sex of aliens match that of the actor.
Welcome to the 90s and early 00s.Indeed, and this is the real reason; it veers into r/pointlesslygendered territory. — Why they would care for that is what one could and should wonder. Even if it be relevant to the plot it can easily be explained with a throwaway line and most of the time it isn't.
The very mentality of the people behind the scenes of the audience knowing what the sex of aliens is is what keeps Star Trek from being progressive as a franchise. The progressive man cares not for such trifles, such as for instance Jack Harkness, but yet again, he is pedigree “white”. I would have rather liked a 51th century England where everyone was of the brown color I spoke of.
No, you assume the builders are female because they were all played by human female actors. Nothing was mentioned of this sort: they could have been a single-sex species; they could have had as many as five sexes; the different eye colors they had could have actually been their sex characteristics; or maybe they had none beyond their reproductive system.
America was just beginning to show interracial relationships in its popular entertainment in the 90s. That Jake and Benjamin would have darker skin toned actresses play as their romantic interest, I would say it is more than speculation on how that just happened in a colorblind casting but deductive reasoning as to why.Again, these were American shows made with television budgets. Also, since TNG all Vulcans have bowl cut hairstyles, which is not a particularly prominent hairstyle nowadays (if ever). So at least some effort was made to make the Vulcans seem more alien, along with the pointed ears and prominent eye brows.
I'm sure Star Trek could have done the same, but as I already stated, I don't think it would been a particularly wise decision.
You claimed that "ever other country" had homogenized into a brown skin complexion, which is not the case.
There weren't Vulcans or Romulans portrayed by black actors until there were. I don't think there were Klingons portrayed by black actors until Michael Dorn. (I'm hoping I'm wrong about this.) Why should Bajorans be a special case? You're trying to make it seem that they cast a black actress as Jake's Bajoran girlfriend for purely racial reason, but without evidence, you're claim is just pure speculation.
I think you're really overthinking the intro to this show.
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MIchael Dorn was probably the first black actor to portray a Klingon, but he was not the first non-white. Branscombe Richmond played one of the Klingons in STIII:SFS, and one or more others may have been portrayed by indigenous actors (and one of the Klingons looked suspiciously like Captain Hook).. I don't think there were Klingons portrayed by black actors until Michael Dorn. (I'm hoping I'm wrong about this.)
Nothing impressive at that time and age; it has to be measured relative to the time.
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