Yeah I never felt like Chekov was played for laughs at all.It depended on the episode. Chekov's role in some TOS episodes was actually fairly smart, and the back up for Spock at the science station.
Yeah I never felt like Chekov was played for laughs at all.It depended on the episode. Chekov's role in some TOS episodes was actually fairly smart, and the back up for Spock at the science station.
The exaggerated accent. The invented in Russia gag.Yeah I never felt like Chekov was played for laughs at all.
Yes, its different form of humor. If Spock comments about Vulcan superiority were play for laughs or he spoke in a comical "Vulcan" accent it would be the same. Now McCoy's country shtick and Scotty's Scot shtick do come close.Is that different from McCoy's shtick when taking digs at Spock?
Ok, I had a feeling something was par for the course.Yes, its different form of humor. If Spock comments about Vulcan superiority were play for laughs or he spoke in a comical "Vulcan" accent it would be the same. Now McCoy's country shtick and Scotty's Scot shtick do come close.
He was a good screamer.Ok, I had a feeling something was par for the course.
Also, even if Chekov was meant for laughs, he had other dimensions as well.
Still have nightmares over TMP and TWOK's screams.He was a good screamer.
Yep. And Berman tried to live up to how Roddenberry ran things. All one has to do is look at TNG season one and see where Roddenberry failed to do anything that challenged the views of the time. Berman carried that on, for the most part.
Yep. Roddenberry was not really interested in alienating any potential viewers whatever by courting any controversy other than his fascination with sex. Read the various accounts of his refusal to green light scripts featuring gay characters. Of course, this stuff is customarily blamed on his lawyer who was supposedly openly homophobic...but that don't make it so.
Also, Mister Agony Booth and Klingon Agonizer Victim.Still have nightmares over TMP and TWOK's screams.
I think-------
TNG did very little envelope pushing because of the idea that all our problems (the "isms")
were solved so there was no point in bringing up certain social topics because "it wasn't an issue" in the 24th century.
But that's what I like about Trek.
But all we got were alien of the week analogies to social problems like "The Outcast". It was just so utopian.They didn't try to mention any real historical social problems like homophobia --they just sort of ignored them. It was more willing to mention the generic problems from the past--poverty, illness disease etc.
So when you get to a situation in the 24th century where a person of a certain ethinicity--any ethnicity--any culture--is asked to participate in a holographic program from the past where that person's ethnicity would have been treated poorly, what would that person do?
Would that person not care, because it's no longer an issue, or would they prefer to set it out and not participate because he or she resents that time period in history? What would be a realistic answer?
DS9 and Voyager was taking that situation on.
This comes up with Sisko and Vics casino. It was handled subtly.
Yeah I never felt like Chekov was played for laughs at all.
Was referring to TOS but fair point.St IV.
Uh, ST VI: TUC anyone?
Erm. Vics casino is a hologram. Sisko mostly avoided it because of the era I thought? There was certainly dialogue, I think in one of the books, and Sisko does eventually sing at Vics.....not sure what to get out of ' no'
That it was in no way subtle.
Nor was the "no."
I never said I disagreed, I was pointing out that Roddenberry himself was the root of the problem.
Oh, yeah the root of the issue was Rodenberry, but once Berman took over if he really wanted he could have moved away from Rodenberry's formula a lot more than he did.OK, but @JD's post basically granted that fact to begin with, when referring to "the vision" from the '80s. At least that's how I read it.
Carry on.![]()
Oh yeah there was a lot of studio interference, but there were also a lot more progressive shows on the networks, so it can't have been all them.I actually blame the studio for the failures of the 90s more than Berman or the rest of the staff.
I mean, I'm fairly confident that it was the studio that turned what might have been a fairly provocative issue-oriented episode like "Rejoined" into an obvious ratings grab.
Or it was the studio who took a talented, multi-faceted woman like Jeri Ryan and turned her into a puerile fantasy object.
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