Damn ... only 430 people on board, and at least two psychiatrists? Must've been one neurotic crew.Kirk also had mission specialists:
MCCOY [on monitor]: Oh, I'm assigning your technical aide, Captain. One of our psychiatrists does have a background in rehabilitative therapy. Doctor Noel, standing by in the transporter room now.
When Noel was on duty, the lines wrapped around the corridors, for some reason.Damn ... only 430 people on board, and at least two psychiatrists? Must've been one neurotic crew.
If only Riker had been wearing a skant in that scene too.You're right. My memories are degrading as they age in the transporter buffer. By-the-by, is that Tarsha Yar in a mini-shirt uniform and go-go boots in the final scene of the Farpoint episode?
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He really should have, I honestly kinda liked the skant on men. Star Trek often talks big about how progressive it is when it was never that special in that regard. "Oh, it's the 80s now, we are so progressive, on TNG the men will wear mini skirts too, it's not the 60s anymore! Equality of the sexes, yay!" And then they chickened out immediately by only putting it on two male extras before phasing it out completely.If only Riker had been wearing a skant in that scene too.
When it's presented as an everyday occurence in universe and not a special alien planet or period piece costume then yes, it's progressive. Even today in 2019 you can post the pictures of the male extras in skants on facebook and people will laugh at them or ask why they were wearing those costumes.Is wearing a skant all that "progressive"? Men have been wearing "skants" for thousands of years. I blame the Germans for introducing pantalones.
Both Kirk and Spock wore actual mini-skirts (not skants).
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It is kind of funny that they both show more skin than the female crew though.![]()
Those aren't mini-skirts, those are one piece with the upper torso garments. The Romans called what Spock is wearing, resembling a t shirt several sizes too large, a tunic.
That is following ancient Greek styles where men usually had bare arms and legs while women usually wore dresses that covered the legs. But never fear, female guest stars often showed much more skin that Kirk & Spock in many other episodes.
Women wearing the TNG skants didn't have pantyhose, so there's no need for the men wearing those outfits to either.I think the women all shaved their legs and wore panty-hose with their mini-uniforms, so, men wearing skants should do the same.
No.Am I the only sick and twisted mind who sees the title as "The rapist on the bridge" every time I log on?
Maybe I need a therapist.
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