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- From: Adrian.Jenkin@f873.n800.z3.fidonet.org (Adrian Jenkin)
- Newsgroups: alt.alien.visitors
- Subject: Re: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
- Message-ID: <728207572.AA03498@csource.oz.au>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 01:01:00
- Sender: gateway@csource.oz.au
- Lines: 63
-
- In a message dated 20 Jan 93 00:02:27, nelson_p@apollo.hp.com wrote:
-
- N> Deeper, more complex, more thought-provoking philosophy; funnier
- N> humor, more suspenseful suspense ('cause you don't know how it's
- N> going to turn out), better production values, wittier dialogue,
- N> etc. What did you THINK I meant by "better"? No matter what
- N> quality you think a TV show offers, for either intellectual
- N> stimulation or "entertainment" I can probably find a book,
- N> movie, lecture, or some participatory activity (game, hobby,
- N> sport, discussion, etc) that offers better.
-
- Yes and worse, Television can not hope to cope with the complexities which can
- be presented by with written word. It has to be presented via a visual medium
- where as a book is visualised by the mind.
-
- This is not a fault of telivision, just a limitation.
-
-
- N> But today TV's choices are just as artificial; whereas in 1960
- N> the only black faces TV showed were train porters or cooks,
- N> today TV goes out of it's way to ensure that every group of
- N> people: every office scene, starship crew, classroom, etc,
- N> is carefully populated with as much ethnic and gender diversity
- N> as they can manage, always making sure that women are given
- N> non-stereotyped roles for females (security officers) and
- N> blacks are given non-stereotyped roles for blacks (scientists,
- N> engineers, etc). This is not an improvement, it's just more
- N> artifice.
-
- N> And it provides the viewer with the false sense of satisfaction
- N> that he, or TV, is confronting these issues. I've literally
- N> heard people say things like, "I'm not racist, I watch the Bill
- N> Cosby show".
- N>
-
- Yes, but racism is a strange thing, everyone is racist in some way.
- Racism in it's simplest form is a product of a person's prejudices and a
- person's prejudices are what we all judge things by and make our inital
- responses in reflection of. It is just a case of learning and letting our
- prejudices be altered (hopefully for the better).
-
- As for blacks and so on in stories I remember reading a book by Arthur C.
- Clarke which involved a tourist bus (of sorts) which was trapped in a crater
- that had opened up beneath it on the moon (I think the title had the words by
- Earthlight - or Moonlight in it somewhere).
-
- There were two main male characters and they were talking when one asked the
- other how he felt about his Aboriginal (Australian Aboriginal) heritage.
-
- This shook me quite a bit in that I had not realised that this character was
- black! This is how I feel it should be, that we take people as they are and
- don't bring colour into it at all.
-
- That includes accusing Star Trek of adding token nationalities because you feel
- it is politically correct!!
-
- Later people,
-
- Adrian Jenkin
-
-
- * Origin: The Deep Woods BBS (08) 287-2224 (3:800/873)
-
-