Yeah but in cop shows it's often the opposite where the "by the book" boss won't do anything he sees as breaking the rules even if it means the killer remains free and can murder more. It's the subordinate like Dirty Harry who has to take things into his own hands to stop the bad guy with his ends justify the means attitude.
In Trek is often, not always, but often the superior who is mixed up in some shit that is illegal and/or immoral and they're the ones who have the ends justify the means attitude. And it's Picard or Kirk that have to be the one who has a code and acts to stop Admiral.
Because it makes for a good story?
Thanks Einstein for something that could be the response for 99% of the threads in here.
Use "It's not real" next time. That one is good too.
Basically if everyone used those as responses the whole point of a message board would be moot.
Thanks for your valuable insight all the same.
Calm down here, too.Re: Hanson's 'fantasy' about Shelby
One, he described as "Just an old man's fantasy." Meaning, he wished he were twenty/forty years younger, then he'd be of an age where it wouldn't seem 'creepy'. Two, and more importantly, the remake of Sabrina for example. Harrison Ford, almost sixty, Julia Ormond, not yet thirty, yet still cast as a plausible couple. And finally, Three, Maggie Gyllenhaal recenty revealed she had been passed over as a love interest for a 55 year old man because at 37 she was deemed 'too old to be believable.'
So why is it 'creepy' for an older man to find a younger, but full grown and mature, woman attractive? Some older men have never been in relationships before, and want children. Are they supposed to give up on the dream of being a father because being in a relationship with a younger woman is 'creepy' to someone not part of the relationship?
It was a joke......Not a damning commentary on age gaps in relationships.
You really can't tell the difference between a off the cuff light hearted quip vs. if I had gone on for 3 paragraphs about how wrong that kind of thinking was and it's a total reflection of the morality of our society today, there should be a strict age limit of no more than 10 years difference in romantic relationships and anyone who violates that is taking the express train to hell.
I know it's a message board and all and sometimes it can be difficult to tell the intent behind some comments...but good Lord.
What's next? That because I mentioned Kirk didn't sip his drink Morrow bought him and left the glass completely full being my way of saying that Kirk was being racist because I was implying that Kirk refused to take a drink of something bought for him by an African American (I guess he was from America) Get mad over that assumption as well if you want to. I guess Morrow could have been Canadian and now I'm making slanderous remarks against Canada.
In TNG it was the Admiral who was breaking a treaty and Picard and Riker had to stop it. That role reversal from the rebel underling who gets results vs the pencil pushing superior is often reversed on ST.
The boss of almost every main character on TV is portrayed as a jerk.
Because it makes for a good story?
Thanks Einstein for something that could be the response for 99% of the threads in here.
Use "It's not real" next time. That one is good too.
Basically if everyone used those as responses the whole point of a message board would be moot.
Thanks for your valuable insight all the same.
Calm down.
--Sran
Calm down here, too.Re: Hanson's 'fantasy' about Shelby
One, he described as "Just an old man's fantasy." Meaning, he wished he were twenty/forty years younger, then he'd be of an age where it wouldn't seem 'creepy'. Two, and more importantly, the remake of Sabrina for example. Harrison Ford, almost sixty, Julia Ormond, not yet thirty, yet still cast as a plausible couple. And finally, Three, Maggie Gyllenhaal recenty revealed she had been passed over as a love interest for a 55 year old man because at 37 she was deemed 'too old to be believable.'
So why is it 'creepy' for an older man to find a younger, but full grown and mature, woman attractive? Some older men have never been in relationships before, and want children. Are they supposed to give up on the dream of being a father because being in a relationship with a younger woman is 'creepy' to someone not part of the relationship?
It was a joke......Not a damning commentary on age gaps in relationships.
You really can't tell the difference between a off the cuff light hearted quip vs. if I had gone on for 3 paragraphs about how wrong that kind of thinking was and it's a total reflection of the morality of our society today, there should be a strict age limit of no more than 10 years difference in romantic relationships and anyone who violates that is taking the express train to hell.
I know it's a message board and all and sometimes it can be difficult to tell the intent behind some comments...but good Lord.
What's next? That because I mentioned Kirk didn't sip his drink Morrow bought him and left the glass completely full being my way of saying that Kirk was being racist because I was implying that Kirk refused to take a drink of something bought for him by an African American (I guess he was from America) Get mad over that assumption as well if you want to. I guess Morrow could have been Canadian and now I'm making slanderous remarks against Canada.
I wasn't responding to you directly. Indeed, most of the people that you go off on like this aren't. There is no vendetta with your name on it. I just wanted to comment on your observation, and make one of my own. That's all.
Completely calm. Guy wants to give a snarky and stupid answer that can apply to almost every question on here, then I'll be sure to thank them and let them know how much I appreciate his insightful input.
Don't make me the bad guy here. I start a thread with a legit question and someone gives a smartass answer and another jumps on me about age gap about discrimination in relationships because of a short quip and then says "Oh it wasn't directed at YOU."
Sorry if I don't just ignore it.
Then in the future maybe you may want to parse your response with something to make it clear you're not snapping back at me.
I say a few words about Hanson in jest and you respond with a two paragraph lecture about how Hanson said it, why it isn't wrong to feel that way and how my "beliefs" based off a few word quip are narrow and small-minded and then throw in Maggie Gyllanhall, Julia Ormond and Harrison Ford as real life examples to counter what you seem to feel I was saying.
Kind of hard to see it as a "general" response otherwise.
I think the phrase "calm down" would be applicable to your response.
The boss who's the hero's best friend is as much a recurring trope as the adversarial boss. (In which case it's often the boss's bosses who are the obstructionists and villains, e.g. Senator Kinsey on Stargate.)
The boss of almost every main character on TV is portrayed as a jerk.
Oh, there are some really nice TV bosses out there. General Hammond on Stargate SG-1 comes to mind. And of course Oscar Goldman on the bionic shows. And Pete Thornton on MacGyver. The boss who's the hero's best friend is as much a recurring trope as the adversarial boss. (In which case it's often the boss's bosses who are the obstructionists and villains, e.g. Senator Kinsey on Stargate.)
The boss of almost every main character on TV is portrayed as a jerk.
Oh, there are some really nice TV bosses out there. General Hammond on Stargate SG-1 comes to mind. And of course Oscar Goldman on the bionic shows. And Pete Thornton on MacGyver. The boss who's the hero's best friend is as much a recurring trope as the adversarial boss. (In which case it's often the boss's bosses who are the obstructionists and villains, e.g. Senator Kinsey on Stargate.)
General Hammond is definitely a rarity but the best example of who a superior officer should be. ANd in Stargate's case, he didnt fit in the trope you mentioned -- while friendly with the crew, it was more like a father, and usually off duty. ANd on at least 1 occasion, he denied "our team" an action they "needed" to do -- not because he was a jerk, for "legitimate reasons.
I think it takes a lot of thought, however, to develop that kind of character into a compelling and/or action oriented show.
Which is why we rarely saw it in Star Trek
Even Ambassador Soval gradually became less adversarial to Archer and more sympathetic as a character.
The interesting thing about General Hammond is that the character was originally conceived as the stereotypical hard-nosed, by the book authoritative military officer you usually see on TV. It was actor Don Davis who insisted on making him more reasonable and drew on the best aspects of superior officers he served under when he himself served in the military. So the General Hammond we've come to know and like is as much a creation of Don Davis as he is the Stargate writers'.
Sure, but there were hints of it earlier on, like in "Cease Fire," where Soval admitted at the end that Archer had not been "overly meddlesome."Even Ambassador Soval gradually became less adversarial to Archer and more sympathetic as a character.
Although, that didn't really happen until after Admiral Forrest was written out of the show.
And then there are the initially obstructionist superiors who later come around and become allies. There are a bunch of those in recent genre TV -- Captain Renard on Grimm, Captain Irving on Sleepy Hollow, Captain Essen on Gotham.
Kirk was one of the biggest jerk Admiral's I've seen.
The first time we see him with his new promotion he uses it to throw his weight around (some might say literally) to oust a highly capable officer out of command simply because he wanted a ship again. He could have gone along to advise and observe Decker, command the mission and oversee first contact with V'Ger with the authority of Starfleet behind him, he didn't have to assume command of the ship.
The one thing that annoys me are fans who complain about Nechayev and call her a bitch, even though all she did was issue Picard a few orders they didn't like--which is her job, given what was at stake.
You know....you're right. Kirk did throw his weight around to get Decker unfairly removed. I guess that makes him fair game too.
Although Bones did call him out on it in the meeting after the wormhole incident.
Kirk did kind of acknowledge it too later in the film when Decker made a suggestion and Kirk got pissed and Decker pointed out it was his job to offer alternatives. Kirk then paused and said "You're right" like he realized he'd been treating Decker like crap all along.
The boss of almost every main character on TV is portrayed as a jerk.
Oh, there are some really nice TV bosses out there. General Hammond on Stargate SG-1 comes to mind. And of course Oscar Goldman on the bionic shows. And Pete Thornton on MacGyver. The boss who's the hero's best friend is as much a recurring trope as the adversarial boss. (In which case it's often the boss's bosses who are the obstructionists and villains, e.g. Senator Kinsey on Stargate.)
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.