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  3. "when did Star Trek get woke??"

"when did Star Trek get woke??"

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  • kats@chaosfem.twK kats@chaosfem.tw

    @lawyersgunsnmoney @Lana Credit also Lucille Ball for using her own money and connections to make Gene's vision a reality.

    lawyersgunsnmoney@mstdn.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
    lawyersgunsnmoney@mstdn.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
    lawyersgunsnmoney@mstdn.social
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #36

    @KatS I was not aware of that! She should receive credit, it’s wonderful she did that. @Lana

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • 47363@norden.social4 47363@norden.social

      @Lana

      Sorry to ask, but what is a "shirt skirt"?
      A typo, or is/was it a thing?

      (Stoopid forrinner here, my dictionary doesn't help, i and o sit next to each other on the keyboard, but maybe it's just something I haven't come across yet… 🫣 😟)

      mrencyclopedia@retro.pizzaM This user is from outside of this forum
      mrencyclopedia@retro.pizzaM This user is from outside of this forum
      mrencyclopedia@retro.pizza
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #37

      @47363 @Lana I suspect it's a typo for "short skirt" but yeah it can be a shirt skirt too

      fluffy@plush.cityF 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

        "when did Star Trek get woke??"

        In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

        In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

        In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

        Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

        prefec2@norden.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
        prefec2@norden.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
        prefec2@norden.social
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #38

        @Lana thank you. This cannot be pointed out often enough.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • pteryx@dice.campP pteryx@dice.camp

          @Lana @roknrol
          Heck, *the writers of Wrath of Khan* forgot. It's a known continuity error that Khan's original episode was in season 1, yet Khan reacted to Chekhov with "I never forget a face".

          quantium40@sueden.socialQ This user is from outside of this forum
          quantium40@sueden.socialQ This user is from outside of this forum
          quantium40@sueden.social
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #39

          @pteryx @Lana @roknrol At least they found a canonic excuse for that: He wasn't bridge officer by that time but had already a job on enterprise and Khan met him there off-screen (Koenig joked it had been in a restroom).

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

            "when did Star Trek get woke??"

            In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

            In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

            In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

            Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

            duncan_blues@norden.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
            duncan_blues@norden.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
            duncan_blues@norden.social
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #40

            @Lana _bookmarked for reference_

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

              "when did Star Trek get woke??"

              In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

              In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

              In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

              Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

              lag_netzpolitik_bw@linke.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
              lag_netzpolitik_bw@linke.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
              lag_netzpolitik_bw@linke.social
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #41

              @Lana This is Gold.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

                "when did Star Trek get woke??"

                In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

                In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

                In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

                Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

                apzpins@some.apz.fiA This user is from outside of this forum
                apzpins@some.apz.fiA This user is from outside of this forum
                apzpins@some.apz.fi
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #42

                @Lana Wait until you gear about Rage against the machine! They've gone POLITICAL too! Can you believe it?!

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • wintermane@dice.campW wintermane@dice.camp

                  @CaseyL @Lana @roknrol

                  Apparently Nimoy/Spock was a huge hit with American housewives.

                  caseyl@mastodon.nzC This user is from outside of this forum
                  caseyl@mastodon.nzC This user is from outside of this forum
                  caseyl@mastodon.nz
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #43

                  @Wintermane @Lana @roknrol

                  In one of his Star Trek books, about working with the show, Gerrold talks about the fan mail Nimoy got (and that Mark Lenard also got, after playing Sarek). Very steamy, and sometimes pretty explicit!

                  wintermane@dice.campW 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

                    "when did Star Trek get woke??"

                    In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

                    In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

                    In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

                    Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

                    musevg@23.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                    musevg@23.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                    musevg@23.social
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #44

                    @Lana
                    This is why I prefer Star Trek SO much over Star Wars.

                    (Yes, the light sabres and Jedi powers are cool. But at the bottom line it's just Jung/Campbells Hero's Journey over and over again.)

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • cjust@infosec.exchangeC cjust@infosec.exchange

                      @Lana

                      a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps

                      I think that one thing missing from this commentary is: yes, this is shortly after the Japanese internment camps.

                      With the character portrayed by an actor who was actually detained in one of these camps!

                      olm_e@tchafia.beO This user is from outside of this forum
                      olm_e@tchafia.beO This user is from outside of this forum
                      olm_e@tchafia.be
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #45

                      @cjust @Lana -> and he still is very 🌈 @georgetakei

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • treevor@dice.campT treevor@dice.camp

                        @Lana Yep, Star Trek was always supposed to be woke. It hasn't always succeeded at being woke, and has regularly failed to be as woke as many people would like, but being woke has always been the point.

                        shinydelight@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                        shinydelight@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                        shinydelight@mastodon.social
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #46

                        @TreeVor Well, back in those days they still had to learn a lot about that concept but clearly you can see, that they were willing to go the extra mile and learn.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • caseyl@mastodon.nzC caseyl@mastodon.nz

                          @Wintermane @Lana @roknrol

                          In one of his Star Trek books, about working with the show, Gerrold talks about the fan mail Nimoy got (and that Mark Lenard also got, after playing Sarek). Very steamy, and sometimes pretty explicit!

                          wintermane@dice.campW This user is from outside of this forum
                          wintermane@dice.campW This user is from outside of this forum
                          wintermane@dice.camp
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #47

                          @CaseyL @Lana @roknrol
                          Aye, that's what I mean. I saw it in an interview at one point.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Y ysotomayor@mastodon.social

                            @Lana Mildly annoyed you missed my favorite series, Voyager. Back to your point though. Yup, no notes. Star Trek has always, and I hope it continues to be, woke as shit! I hope the fiends at Paramount don't ruin it.

                            bluestarultor@tech.lgbtB This user is from outside of this forum
                            bluestarultor@tech.lgbtB This user is from outside of this forum
                            bluestarultor@tech.lgbt
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #48

                            @ysotomayor @Lana Character limits exist! XD

                            But absolutely, it came out swinging with Janeway and the first thing she did was make Maquis fighters key members of her crew, one of which was a Hispanic half-Klingon. They also had a Black Vulcan (ironically, not his first time playing one, but canonically a different character), a disgraced pilot, and a virtual doctor who very much wanted to be turned off when not in use at first. The whole premise of the show started with "get along or else."

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

                              "when did Star Trek get woke??"

                              In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

                              In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

                              In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

                              Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

                              davidhmccoy@mastodon.worldD This user is from outside of this forum
                              davidhmccoy@mastodon.worldD This user is from outside of this forum
                              davidhmccoy@mastodon.world
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #49

                              @Lana

                              “Don’t grow up to be the person the hero would punch in the face.”

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

                                "when did Star Trek get woke??"

                                In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

                                In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

                                In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

                                Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

                                franceskamann@freeradical.zoneF This user is from outside of this forum
                                franceskamann@freeradical.zoneF This user is from outside of this forum
                                franceskamann@freeradical.zone
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #50

                                @Lana

                                Star Trek doesn't seem all that woke anymore.

                                I miss Captain Sisko.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

                                  "when did Star Trek get woke??"

                                  In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

                                  In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

                                  In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

                                  Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

                                  itspomf@chitter.xyzI This user is from outside of this forum
                                  itspomf@chitter.xyzI This user is from outside of this forum
                                  itspomf@chitter.xyz
                                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                                  #51

                                  @Lana my gay ass growing up: heck yeah 🖖

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • cjust@infosec.exchangeC cjust@infosec.exchange

                                    @Lana

                                    a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps

                                    I think that one thing missing from this commentary is: yes, this is shortly after the Japanese internment camps.

                                    With the character portrayed by an actor who was actually detained in one of these camps!

                                    davidtheeviloverlord@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                    davidtheeviloverlord@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                    davidtheeviloverlord@mastodon.social
                                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                                    #52

                                    @cjust @Lana

                                    Came here to say that.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • 47363@norden.social4 47363@norden.social

                                      @Lana

                                      Sorry to ask, but what is a "shirt skirt"?
                                      A typo, or is/was it a thing?

                                      (Stoopid forrinner here, my dictionary doesn't help, i and o sit next to each other on the keyboard, but maybe it's just something I haven't come across yet… 🫣 😟)

                                      terryhancock@realsocial.lifeT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      terryhancock@realsocial.lifeT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      terryhancock@realsocial.life
                                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                                      #53

                                      @47363 @Lana

                                      Technically, they are mini-dresses, not skirts.

                                      But then, the Star Trek art department actually calls them "skants" -- at least for the Next Generation (which also has men wearing them, at least in the 1st season, on extras in the background). Pretty sure they made this name up, as I haven't heard it anywhere else. But that makes it very specific, so that's cool.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

                                        "when did Star Trek get woke??"

                                        In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

                                        In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

                                        In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

                                        Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

                                        frugalgamer@snug.moeF This user is from outside of this forum
                                        frugalgamer@snug.moeF This user is from outside of this forum
                                        frugalgamer@snug.moe
                                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                                        #54

                                        @Lana Pithy comebacks aside, I always just love reading these synopses of Star Trek because they make me so happy. I love what Star Trek was and what it stood for.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • lana@beige.partyL lana@beige.party

                                          "when did Star Trek get woke??"

                                          In the very first episode of Star Trek: the original series, we see a white Captain reporting to his black Admiral boss, a black woman on the bridge just a couple years after Jim Crow was abolished, wearing a short skirt (a symbol of feminist liberation at the time), a Japanese helmsman on the bridge only 20 years after the internment camps, a Russian crewmate on the bridge during the Cold War [edit: actually did not appear until Season 2 but the point stands], and the foundation of the modern concept of queercoding.

                                          In the very first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we see male crossdressing crew members, a female officer on the bridge in charge of security, a literal ship's counselor stationed at all times on the bridge, a single mom raising her teenage son on her own while juggling a full career in medicine, a blind mechanic whose "disability" is shown to be a strength, and an angry, all-powerful godlike being who is revealed to be simply a petulant child masquerading as a deity.

                                          In the very first episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9, we see a black man gain a powerful command position, respect the hell out of the customs of a religion he didn't understand, show respect and equal treatment to members of three other alien races he didn't understand, appoint a female guerilla fighter who defeated imperialist fascists to a position of authority within his administration and defer to her judgement in areas of her expertise, accept his friend's gender change, and tell his son he loves him.

                                          Star Trek has always been woke. You just grew up to be a bad person.

                                          usagitsukino@kolektiva.socialU This user is from outside of this forum
                                          usagitsukino@kolektiva.socialU This user is from outside of this forum
                                          usagitsukino@kolektiva.social
                                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                                          #55

                                          @Lana wish it still was "woke" the newer shows are more conservative and more pro war and imperialism then the 90's shows by far its not close

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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