Im always happy to take an honest apology
Congratulations. You have one for the collection

Im always happy to take an honest apology
According to David Gerrold he had written an entire episode about a gay couple, I believe called "Blood and Fire" that would feature a gay couple. Gene was initially supportive and then shut it down. If I recall correctly Gerrold thought it was Gene's lawyer who axed the idea.Didn't the TNG writers want to put gay couples in the background and get overruled?
According to David Gerrold he had written an entire episode about a gay couple, I believe called "Blood and Fire" that would feature a gay couple. Gene was initially supportive and then shut it down. If I recall correctly Gerrold thought it was Gene's lawyer who axed the idea.
Thank you. I had read his recollection in his "Star Wolf" leading up the story he had rewritten for his own series.I have a 1992 Cinefantastique that interviewed Gerrold in detail on this whole story. I think you have it mostly right, except that there was something about the lawyer being asked by Roddenberry to lie to Gerrold on his behalf. I could dig that magazine up and confirm. I appreciate contemporary accounts of incidents much more than retrospective ones. People change their stories over time.
That's good. I still have my TOS action figures, both from the TV show and from TMP. As you say, they're very different.There’s a world of difference between action figures pre and post Star Wars, and indeed for television shows vs films at that time. So no, I am not arguing there were no female action figures at that time. That would be silly.
McCoy didn't run around crying that he sensed pain or any other emotion. That was Spock's department (ie. when he did the mind-meld with the Horta).In terms of Troi/McCoy, gonna have to agree to disagree...I think it’s perfectly clear that the ‘state of the crew/voice of emotions/empathetic advisor’ role carries between the two, and one is clearly an extension of the other in intent; however much that changes...especially once Guinan shows up and brings the ‘old friend, have a drink’ aspect.
It's... weird to think of any "American" accent as being exotic, though I'll admit to some feeling of weirdness the first time I heard a Southern accent; my grandparents and I were at a tourist place in British Columbia, there was a tour group from the U.S., and one of the men asked me to pass him some cutlery in the dining room (it was self-serve). At first I had trouble figuring out what he was even saying.From my perpspective, an ‘American’ accent would be exotic in a way that Irish wouldn’t, let alone countries with a whole other mainstream language. Whatever history made that happen...which is long and complex, whether on a national level, or me a personal one... well, we are where we are.
Yes, you should have. It's a proper noun, which are supposed to be capitalized.Unfortunately we don’t have a handy catch all for that, so I am left with leaving off capitals and inverted commas. I probably shouldn’t have capitalised Americans...
This was made into a fan film, and it's one of the better ones from that particular outfit.According to David Gerrold he had written an entire episode about a gay couple, I believe called "Blood and Fire" that would feature a gay couple. Gene was initially supportive and then shut it down. If I recall correctly Gerrold thought it was Gene's lawyer who axed the idea.
I don't know how Trekkie, Star Trek a story about a couple would be. Wouldn't a story about something like their ship crashing on a harsh or lush unpopulated or populated planet, or about a scientific discovery of a techno-space bubble time space etc.According to David Gerrold he had written an entire episode about a gay couple, I believe called "Blood and Fire" that would feature a gay couple. Gene was initially supportive and then shut it down. If I recall correctly Gerrold thought it was Gene's lawyer who axed the idea.
That wasn't the only part of the story, as I believe it was to be an AIDs metaphor as well. Look up "Star Wolf: Blood and Fire" to see Gerrold's story.I don't know how Trekkie, Star Trek a story about a couple would be. Wouldn't a story about something like their ship crashing on a harsh or lush unpopulated or populated planet, or about a scientific discovery of a techno-space bubble time space etc.
I thought I had heard about it. I'll have to look it up.This was made into a fan film, and it's one of the better ones from that particular outfit.
So it's a Star Trek story where instead of Mark going back to his quarters where he lives with Lori, it's Mark goes back to his quarters where he lives with Larry.That wasn't the only part of the story, as I believe it was to be an AIDs metaphor as well. Look up "Star Wolf: Blood and Fire" to see Gerrold's story.
Also, @Marlonius posted right above you describing it too.
I thought I had heard about it. I'll have to look it up.
Maybe but it definitely would have been a step towards the progress Trek always boasted about.It's most likely best that they skipped it.
That script was turned into a fan film and it was pretty bad. The gay guys make out for 5 minutes, then one of them joins an away team, gets space aids and after the crew deliberating if they should preemptively murder the entire away team gay guy #1 dies and gay guy #2 is devastated and leaves the ship ...According to David Gerrold he had written an entire episode about a gay couple, I believe called "Blood and Fire" that would feature a gay couple. Gene was initially supportive and then shut it down. If I recall correctly Gerrold thought it was Gene's lawyer who axed the idea.
That script was turned into a fan film and it was pretty bad.
The series should have featured gay characters but that script was not the way to do it.
Then you rework the idea or the script. Happened all the time in TOS and TNG, with the "Bonding" being a prime example.Maybe they wanted to make a gay episode but there just wasn't a story good enough. The idea of a gay episode wasn't rejected because it had gay people in it but because there wasn't a story good enough to film.
Thank you.Main summary - no lawyer involved, it was another writer as you'll see.
MI in the same period had a female operative doing dangerous work on the field and a black tech whiz. TOS had a black receptionist who rarely leaved her station.EDIT - what about TOS, same question?
There are times when it's necessary if you want to tell a story at all. I spent over a dozen years working backstage in musical theatre in my city, and there were plays we did where we had to use Caucasian actors, singers, and dancers because there were simply not enough people from Puerto Rico or Thailand available to play those roles in West Side Story or The King and I.
Dr. Ann Mulhall was neither a damsel, a vamp, nor a succubus. Neither was Areel Shaw.
That's an interesting and well made list.I don't disagree with these two examples. And I say as much in this list I made a while back (which doesn't currently have a home so I'm drop boxing it) about all the weird, sexist stuff in each episode of TOS. Take a look at it if you have the time. It's a slog. The bad far outweighs the good.
, i.e. "The Outcast"
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