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When Trek insults our intelligence

Born on Earth, raised on Vulcan.

I don’t believe we have an exact location on Earth, though...

Are we sure though? Wasn't she on a colony world of some sort when her parents were killed? I'm fuzzy on the backstory, to be honest.
 
I would have made her a human born on the Vulcan homeworld or one of its colonies, unless Vulcan has a closed door immigration policy for aliens, (T'Pau built a wall after she discovered the KirShara lol) they must have a human Diaspora on the planet, after 200 years.

Three dudes running a takeaway that does roaring trade in kohlinar season. Vulcans not welcoming.
 
Well they had Georgiou come from Malaysia like Michelle Yeoh IRL. Not the same place in Malaysia though.
 
Wasn't the film 'The Gods Must Be Crazy' sort of a cargo cult film....something about a Coke bottle dropped out of an airplane and causing cultural contamination for a primitive culture or some such?
It was found by a band of Bushmen from the Kalahari Desert. Before its coming, there was no greed or covetousness in the band. But everyone wanted to possess it afterward, and caused a lot of negativity and ill will among the people.

And yeah, it's a fun movie (the sequel's good, too). :)

Despite having telepathic powers. You'd think they'd just check out her memories to see what she was supposed to look like. :)
Or they could have just compared her to themselves. One head, two arms and hands, two legs and feet... shouldn't have been that difficult to figure out.

My favorite sci-fi movie of all time is probably the original PLANET OF THE APES.

The entire plot falls apart the minute you wonder why Taylor never notices that the apes are speaking English.

Doesn't matter. Still a classic movie.
Taylor and Brent could simply have been two of the stereotypical American travelers who just naturally expect that no matter where they go, everyone they meet will speak English, so they never thought there was anything at all unusual. :p

It's at a point like that where I feel it is a representation of, not literally the way it is.

Some people feel the need to make a movie with correct language for the content. Like Germans speaking German in....'U-571', I think it was?

I don't feel the need for that level of 'authenticity'. I am comfortable with a movie like 'Battle of the Bulge'. I know that the Nazis in Germany didn't speak English as their primary language. I set that aside and concentrate on the story.
Some years ago I watched the Shogun miniseries in French. It wasn't hard to follow, since the French dialogue wasn't too fast to keep up, and the rest was in Japanese. Since I know less than a dozen words of Japanese anyway, it didn't make any difference.

Now...that one I do have a problem with.

Not only is Picard not a homewrecker (he wouldn't sleep with Beverly while she's still married to Jack), but surely birth control in the 24th century will have advanced to the point where it is absolutely 100% effective.

Meaning, Wesley couldn't be the accidental result of a Picard/Beverly fling, because there would be no more unplanned pregnancies.
Deanna was impregnated without her consent in "The Child." Tom and B'Elanna weren't expecting Miral, Samantha didn't know she was pregnant with Naomi until after Voyager arrived in the Delta Quadrant (at least that's how I remember it), and One essentially had three parents: Seven, a male Voyager crewmember (don't recall who), and the Doctor's mobile emitter. Not that the latter was any kind of normal pregnancy, but a child was still created.

Also, are we assuming that there are still labels such as "homewrecker" in the 24th century?
Why not? Even in the "enlightened" 24th century, there are still selfish people who think they have the right to intrude on and interfere with other people's marriages/committed relationships.

You'd think. But there sure seem to be a lot of unexpected children anyway: Hi, David Marcus, Alexander, Dukat's illegitimate daughter, that kid who posed as Picard's long-lost son . . . :)

And didn't Kassidy Yates get pregnant because Sisko forgot to take his shots?
Miramanee's baby with Kirk... not that it was a bad situation since they were married and in love, but it was nevertheless a surprise for Kirk (and the audience).

And don't forget Seska's child, when she tried to pass it off as Chakotay's.

Now there’s a visual Image. I didn’t think he and Spock were that close.
I haven't read any Spock/McCoy slashfic, but I know it exists. Of course it's nowhere near as prevalent as other slash pairings.

Nope. Never seen a bathroom in Star Trek. That's what the transporter is for.
Q dropped in on Janeway in her bathtub, which was located in the bathroom of her quarters.

TcTBnrb.gif
Data's right. It wasn't funny.

Using Canadian tax breaks doesn't make it a Canadian show.
On paper, it might... depending on how much of the cast and crew are Canadian. We have "Canadian content" quotas that all Canadian networks have to abide by. Shows like Highlander, for instance, helped fill this quota since it was filmed in Vancouver and employed enough Canadian actors and crew.

The same reason why a Frenchman sounds like a middle class Yorkshireman in TNG and most aliens sound American in the franchise.
I don't get bothered by Picard's accent, since by that point England and France had been exchanging languages, culture, and territory for over 1000 years.
 
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ts a shame they have such limited imaginations and still stick to present day national stereotypes,
As David Gerrold wrote in The World of Star Trek, audiences applauded John Wayne playing a 1966 character in notional westerns set in the 19th century, but laughed Gregory Peck off the screen when he presented an authentic characterization. So I don't see it as a lack of imagination on the part of the producers, but rather as an accommodation to certain practical realities.

Star Trek is a commercial enterprise intended to make real money from certain real target audiences. Alpha Centaurians from the 24th century are not among that cohort. Alas, the license holders' sensibilities have not evolved, so to speak.
 
Star Trek is a commercial enterprise intended to make real money from certain real target audiences. Alpha Centaurians from the 24th century are not among that cohort. Alas, the license holders' sensibilities have not evolved, so to speak.

Exactly. It is 21st century viewers that they have to connect with to have a successful product.
 
Hmmm....If TOS was remade just as it was (not rebooted) with the only difference being current actors and actresses in the roles, which current young audiences could readily identify with, I wonder if it would be well-received by them? Is it more the 'look' of TOS, or is it that they have no interest in actors and actresses whom they don't identify with because they are from a different era?

Like having Leonardo DiCaprio as Kirk and Kate Winslet as Edith Keeler.

Extreme examples, I know, and would have been more current for audiences after Titanic in the 90s, but you get the idea.
 
We currently have six shows...

The lead character has been from Iowa (Kirk), France (Picard), Louisiana (Sisko), Indiana (Janeway), and Upstate New York (Archer). We don't know where Burnham is from, that I am aware of. But I'm betting she is from somewhere in North America.

Wasn't she born on the Human/Vulcan school planet that two different people killed her parents on somehow?
 
Despite having telepathic powers. You'd think they'd just check out her memories to see what she was supposed to look like. :)

Yeah, but we don't know what kind of shape Vina's body was in. She could be missing quite a bit of muscle and bone that were damaged beyond repair.
 
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