Essentially, you're saying he aimed for a suggestion of future unity, but wound up implying a dismissive stereotype instead?
I adore Spock's line here:
TRELANE: And are its natives predatory?
SPOCK: Not generally. But there have been exceptions.
Trelane zaps the bridge crew back to Gothos, where a sumptuous feast has been laid out. Kirk introduces Uhura and Yeoman Teresa Ross - I'm surprised a little they didn't take the opportunity here to give Uhura a first name.
Spock again gets a terrific line, and Trelane's response is great too:
SPOCK: I object to you. I object to intellect without discipline. I object to power without constructive purpose.
TRELANE: Oh, Mister Spock, you do have one saving grace after all. You're ill-mannered.
Yes, I know. I played SFB myself, but it was a looooooooooooooong time ago. I just wondered if there was a specific reason you brought it up.The Gorn are one of the major races in SFB.
so this was my only exposure until SNW brought them back.
Ah. Just blame my faulty memory.Just because you had said
Hilarious.
I find that very hard to rationalize.At this point, if SNW had actually come before TOS, Spock, Scotty, and maybe Uhura would recognize the enemy. We can rationalize that they were too concerned about Kirk to say, "Hey, I know what that is!"
Was there ever any suggestion that she had no first name? Some people don't.
I totally support this. I never liked Nyota. I also don't like Pavel, but what can I do? It's established in the Orginal Series, and that's my jam.
I hate to say it, but giving full names to Scotty and Chekov, but not to Sulu and Uhura, makes GR seem very much like a man of his time. And I suspect he got "Sulu" by leafing through a Rand McNally atlas and lighting on the Sulu Sea. He should have let George pick a plausible Japanese name, and forget the reductionist idea that the character had to represent all "epicanthal fold" Asians, the way Spock represented all Vulcans.
Supporting characters not having first names (or proper names at all) isn't limited to Star Trek.
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea had: Kowalski, Patterson, Sparks, Doc, Benson, Clark, etc...
The Time Tunnel had "Jerry."
Not to mention Gillian, Endora, Quincy and Carleton the Doorman.
Growing up, I never once wondered if Sulu or Uhura had, or even were, first or last names.
Too much work.I find that very hard to rationalize.
And now that I'm thinking about it, that was a pretty primative violent solution the Metrons came up with. Seems to me the oh-so-civilized Metrons could have shown us primitive violent humans how to solve disputes by oh say having Kirk and the Gorn captain TALK out a solution perhaps?
That was sort of the point - the Metrons were offended by these primitive trespassers on their territory.And now that I'm thinking about it, that was a pretty primative violent solution the Metrons came up with. Seems to me the oh-so-civilized Metrons could have shown us primitive violent humans how to solve disputes by oh say having Kirk and the Gorn captain TALK out a solution perhaps?
I guess that's what I'm saying. The Metron acted so above us, but they have flaws too.That was sort of the point - the Metrons were offended by these primitive trespassers on their territory.
A bit of a case of "OK junior, you want violence? You'll it!"
It belies their superior attitude at the end but that's fine too; the Metrons have flaws
The whole Minnow compliment were indeed given full names, but they were never used in the show:That's right! Gilligan himself never got a first name. And he never got a dinner.![]()
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