It never occurred to me until today... he speaks with an American accent but was raised by Russians?
Ok, then by that logic, Chekov should speak with an American accent.
Because the creative team didn't want him to.
I’m more bothered by Rivas’ use of late-20th century total communication. By the 24th century, ASL or any other signed languages should be unrecognizable. I’ve seen film reels of folks from over a hundred years ago and I didn’t understand the half of what the person was signing.
I absolutely hate Loud as a Whisper. I always skip it when I do a TNG rewatch.
True, for stage plays and such - even hard sci-fi - there still has to be a way to relate to the audience so they don't wander - but I certainly wouldn't necessarily call their dialogue "late-20th century total communication". It's a bit too formal (which was Roddenberry's idea of how humans would evolve since the 20th century) for even the parents of most of us (then or now), and even in the 1980s people of most ages tended to use slang or otherwise informal vernacular. To really reach to the more mainstream if not outlandish audiences of the time, they needed to use the slang terms the kids used and say to Worf "Hey bud, it's totally like rad that you went into teh service and did so swell." (Turns to Guinan: "Well that sucks rocks, gag me with a spoon.")
So Roddenberry got it fairly right in his bible. One cannot escape the reality of the current time and place the shows are made - that's inevitable for costumes, set design, hair design, and speech... but DSC and Orville have both been less than stellar in that regard. Quite lazy at times, in fact. And particularly so for the latter, believe it or not. It's not an unfair criticism to make. In the future, humans will evolve and change linguistic patterns. It's sci-fi. Set in the future. When x years pass by they probably won't be right but why not try? They can try, at least to a token extent. If they wanted. Makes more sense to try, no? And if audiences can't handle anything so minor than to have a to make the slightest effort to grasp another concept, since sci-fi typically is about concepts in an allegorical and/or metaphorical universe of its own (and all that nerdy geek intellectually brainysmurf shtuff), then what are they doing watching sci-fi and not Bert and Ernie and Tinkle Winkle instead? (Yes, my post is a tad OTT but only in the equal and opposite direction. Could be worse though, check out "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century", particularly its first season, for a real example of their not bothering to try... *shudder*
"Loud as a Whisper" is actually pretty innovative, all things considered.
I like to use my own family as an example of that. My mother's mother was from Scotland, but grew up in NYC. While great-grandpa's accent was so thick I could barely understand him, Gram's was softened by growing up here. Mom's father was born in Brooklyn and grew up in Da Bronx. He had a heavy Archie Bunker accent. Mom was born in the Bronx, but grew up in NJ, where she lost any NY accent. My sister and I were born in NJ. I stayed here while she moved to South Carolina 30 years ago. She now has a 50% southern twang with some Jerseyisms. Her oldest son was born in NJ, but grew up in SC since his tweens, so he sounds like he's right out of Deliverance.Mind you, there are solid cases of a child adopting an accent neither of her parents has - Deanna Troi in particular.
And the only one we actually need.That's probably the best explanation we can possibly get.
It depends on who else he grew up around on that colony world. Many of us here are kids of immigrants with accents, but we do not speak with our parents' accent.It never occurred to me until today... he speaks with an American accent but was raised by Russians?
Nikolai doesn't speak with an accent either. So I figured the boys just had a good English teacher.
Same goes for the Picard family. None of them speak with French accents, and neither does Jean-Luc's friend Louis. So it's likely that the local English teacher spoke with an English accent, and most natives of LaBarre picked that up.
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