Actually I was going back to the premiere, where Sisko was First Officer
of his ship. I felt his character should have been a captain of that
starship, not the XO.

-----Original Message-----
From: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Astromancer
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2005 19:20
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Re: What does Sci-Fi have against Black
people?


On one point, I have to say militarily was incorrect...Sisko was a
commander, but of an outpost, not a ship, which I am assuming the
captain's rank was reserved for ship's commanders...But I do see your
point...

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:Your point is dead-on, which is what I
meant. Star Trek was the beacon, starting slowly (a Black woman, no
Black men in major roles), then grew with Geordi (whose disability
definitely raised eyebrows among Blacks) and Worf, and reaching fruition
in Sisko. The series matured in its treatment of people of color (though
why Sisko was the only lead character in all the shows that started out
as a commander instead of a captain was puzzling).  That's what I meant
about "Enterprise" going backwards. They literally regressed over three
decades and relegated the Black and Asian characters to the same levels
of background noise that unfortunately mostly defined Uhura and Sulu.
And speaking of Sulu, MAJOR crime to my mind that George Takei, who has
great screen presence, was never able to shine in Trek as he deserved.
I'd have loved to have seen a movie based on his Excelsior.

And you are so correct in saying that you hate the treatment of people
of color on Galactica more now that you like it. I'm the same way. I
hated the show when it started, wrote a scathing review in our group,
then grew to love it. But then I look up and see the Asian girl being
the love interest for two different white dudes, and ditto for the Black
girl (Moore hints to a developing love triangle between the Sister,
Billy, and Apollo). I see no Brothers playing anything but guards and
"muscle", as you say. And i just have to wonder, is it intentional or
just more of the same white ignorance? Moore is a white man, and maybe
bringing women of color on to be love interests for white men is
"diversity" to him. Maybe he hasn't noticed that on several occassions
he's used BBM (Big Black Men) as prisoners, and that they're even
stereotypically dark-skinned and bald.  Maybe he just doesn't get it,
but I know it bothers me a great deal. Like I said, when the entire
Pegasus command structure
turns out white, and two bald brothers show up as the Admiral's personal
guard, I was stunned.

I'm hoping season three will somehow address this problem.




"tetsuwanatom1" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  wrote:

Well, you know, we hold up Trek as the beacon, but it was really just 
the first. I don't think they really got it until TNG was deep into 
its run. Uhura was a hot swingin babe in a miniskirt. TOS did have 
black cast members playing doctors (!) and scientists (!!!) though. 
But really, a black dude with "space shades?" Burton really worked 
that character into something. And what abt other minorities in TNG? 
Had the Japanese nurse . . ..  Worf, he's Klingon, just the actor is 
black. Casting Dorn as Worf though did lead to primarily casting 
black (men) as Klingons most often. Same could be said for Tuvok, 
though Vulcans are a little more human looking so his color is more 
in your face. 
Funny that the lack of black males on BSG bothers me more now than it 
did at first. That's because I HATED the show at first. Now it's at 
least tolerable. I like Olmos, Sackhoff has grown on me, and I'm a 
bit curious to see where their going, even if on occasion they do 
telegraph their punches. To that end, I'm also kinda hanging around 
to see if Moore will EVER come right out and say that there is racism 
in the colonies, as his constant presentation of black males as 
jailbirds and muscle seems to suggest. Or perhaps one day he'll admit 
he just has no idea what to do with issues of race or ethnic actors 
(who are not asian women).
-------------- Original message -------------- 
--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, "Keith Johnson" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> yeah, "Enterprise" was a huge one. I posted a review of every single
> episode here, and I can think of maybe one show--two at best--where
> Mayweather had a significant role. I often stated only half-jokingly
> that he had less screen time than Archer's dog Porthos!  Hoshi--the
> Asian Comm officer--fared only slighter better. It was very 
confusing
> for a modern Star Trek show to take steps backwards in usage of 
people
> of color. Before we had Geordi, Worf, Tuvok, Torres. Some used 
better
> than others, but all used more than Mayweather. That misstep was more
> of the same bad written that helped doom the series, as the whole 
thing
> was a confused mess until the last season.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of Carole McDonnell
> Sent: Monday, October 10, 2005 09:56
> To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [scifinoir2] Re: What does Sci-Fi have against Black 
people?
> 
> Ah, so true!!
> 
> That's also one of the reasons I couldn't watch Enterprise. They 
didn't 
> seem to know what to do with "the black guy." I mean...they had 
> a "black guy" on the deck and all. But it was so obvious, they 
didn't 
> think enough to give him a personality. So he was just this good-
> natured token. Quota filled but essentials still not understood. -C
> 
> --- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, Astromancer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > I think it is as simple as this: 'We' didn't write it...'We' have 
> very little to do with it...'We' are not part of his world...
> 
> 
> Keith Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:And to repost yet again,
> I'm still wondering. On the season-ending show
> where the Battlestar Pegasus is found, Admiral Caine travels to
> Galactica. As her Raptor doors open, we see that she's accompanied 
by an
> impressive group of officers and security. The first to disembark 
are
> two snarling, armed guards, who scan the crowd with suspicion. I was
> struck that both of these bookends were Black--and  bald...   

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