I mentioned that Aliens had better female roles as a contemporary of TNG. And by 1992 there were many toys of the movie with Ripley having the most variants besides the alien. You’re putting more arbitrary limitations to secure your point.
You picked the example you think you have the best chance of ridiculing and dismissing. Erased the others. In 1983 Teela was captain of the royal guard serving a bigger role than Yar in the most popular toy franchise and cartoon of the time. GI Joe had major women characters in active combat and command roles in 1982. Samus Aran was the lead of a soon to be enormous video game franchise in 1986. Genre had already staked a claim on tough women by the time Gene started talking about TNG. Before that Trek’s biggest new female character was a hyper sexualized alien turned robot in plastic high heals.
And you think Tasha Yar is?
I honestly, no trolling, don’t understand the point you’re trying to make with this entire anecdote.
What conversation? Where Troi tells her she has the hots for Lutan? What could you find ground breaking about that?
I think you’re buying into Star Trek exceptionalism, which a media full of trekkies has been pumping us full of for years. Trek didn’t break much ground in the 60’s or the 80’s. It followed a lot of trends that were becoming popular and it often fell behind its peers. Just because you like a show best doesn’t mean it did everything the best.
I ‘erased’ nothing. Honestly, sometimes language evolves, other times people just mangle the shite out of it.
Tasha has *already* appeared in essays and critical theory writing on the subject. I am surprised I remember Mokey’s name, and I still remember being sat on the bed eagerly awaiting that first episode of Fraggle Rock.
You are doing a fandango on the head of a pin with with your Aliens nonsense. You said Aliens. The 1986 films. Not Alien. TNG started in 87, so worrying about really daft action figures from half a decade later as an example of The Joy of Ripley isn’t really going to work when talking about TNG next to its peers at the time.
The Aliens franchise was not its peer, there was a bigger gulf between cinema and TV back then. You could say it was close to being peers with Trek in general...there was the cinema franchise, though at this point the Alien films were the baby and Trek the grown up (four films versus 2, and lots of interesting DNA between the two) but explicitly talking about TNG? No. There was of course the booming straight to video market, which on an international level certainly was a peer of TNG in video rental stalls. But then we would be talking about Brigitte Nielsen flicks and what have you, not Saturday morning cartoons which are not in the same zone as 1m per episode live action syndicated series. Even then, it’s not that same family crossover drama that TNG was courting out of the gate.
It could be strongly argued that the ‘Aliens’ figures only exist as a result of TNGs popularity in the toy market with playmates around that same time (not to mention the rather mental robocop and terminator 2 figures...your target audience in those days for figures weren’t old enough to legally see those films in some territories. But...the success of Real Ghostbusters led to all sorts of plastic fantástica.) but again, that’s not really about representation or progressiveness, it’s about marketing. Tasha was in the first wave anyway, skin tight spandex all round, even on the chaps, and made by galloob. Which *is* interesting, and about representation and TNG, because here is a ‘boys market’ thing, explicitly also having three women front and centre. And three men. (Worf is a late game addition to the character cast ‘Klingon marine’ and Wesley too is side cast...though that’s not how things develop once writing happens and the shows on screen, and there they are full cast.)
Oh, and while I am at it, you over estimate Metroid. It was never a ‘big’ franchise until much much later (arguably still isn’t really) and pre TNG most of the world didn’t even know who Samus Aran was, let alone got to see her little blonde pixel pony tail in person. It’s nanas to sit it in the same arena, and this was an era before video games were anything like the cultural significance basket they are today.
In terms of my little anecdote, my point is that for my corner of the world, seeing a woman in charge, or with a ‘gun’ or as a lead etc would seem unremarkable. I have to put myself in other people’s shoes to find it remarkable in either a good or bad way.
Now, if I erased anything this time, I hope it was with a nice electric eraser, because they are fun to use.
Edit;
Knew I forgot something. A few probably. Firstly... the lutan conversation. Two women talking about sexual interest, basically perking on the guy. Not a lot of conversations like that in TV. They are also ‘good’ women, not the femme fatale stereotypes...their sexuality was not marking them out as ‘bad girls’ etc. Again, put that in context of the time.
The other thing...well, we may as well not discuss TNG in reference to TOS if we are gonna be using Tesla as any kind of example over in He-Man...the shield maiden love interest was done in the fifties by Tolkien, and Lois Lane had been around so long the stereotype was pensionable.
The usual female lead at the time was the sexually inert (because family TV) Secretary/mother/unrequited love stereotype. The Momeypenny was everywhere in TV in those days...knight rider, air wolf, street hawk...to hop into your favourite genre, we see the same thing over in Centurions etc. I have long been of a similar opinion to yourself in the terms that genre TV has always been way ahead of the progressive curve (to the point that all the modern hoo hah around it is just offensively reinventing the wheel....apart from gender/sexuality, Trek had all the bases covered before the turn of the Millenium by DS9 and Voyager. Babylon 5 and some of the late nineties boom will cover sexuality too.And that’s just TV.) A lot of your examples are t as golden as you recall. (Did you mention Transformers? For some reason it sticks in my head as really bad example....we got R.C in the movie, she’s pink, a ‘caregiver’ stereotype of the negative kind, and basically naffs off.) That’s why there’s that line between ‘caregiver’ as the TV stereotype as was, and what Crusher and Troi were, which was professionals.
TNG was a part of that revolution. Pretending otherwise is historical revision. (And it’s probably for the best Lesley became Wesley...heck, it wouldn’t be hard to convince me it was done by someone savvy enough not to stick a teenage girl around Rodenberry and some of the other execs.) Knocking down achievements of the past doesn’t make the present trends look better, it looks clumsy and a bit ‘year zero’ which is something that pissed a lot of people in the Trek community off when DSC tried it.
Oh..and Ilia was not particularly hypersexualised as a character. Quite the opposite, intentionally so. Wardrobe choices notwithstanding, but hey, Nimoy got to flash almost as much in TMP. Also, you appear to have...ahem...erased...Saavik and Carol Marcus, and of course Gillian.