Thank you very much, George! I knew there were bits that had fallen through the 
cracks.





---------[ Received Mail Content ]----------

 Subject : Re: [scifinoir2] Blacks in Space: If sci-fi is the future, why is it 
so white?

 Date : Thu, 4 Jun 2009 11:55:27 -0700 (PDT)

 From : George Arterberry <brotherfromhow...@yahoo.com>

 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com


Captain Tryla Scott was a Human Starfleet officer and commanding officer of the 
USS Renegade. By the mid-24th century, she was the youngest Starfleet officer 
to attain the rank of captain, which made her something of a legend. 

Given that Captain Picard was 28 years of age when he assumed command of the 
Stargazer (See Jean-Luc Picard), it seems likely that Scott was no older than 
27 upon assuming command of the Renegade. 
In 2364, Scott met with fellow captains Jean-Luc Picard, Rixx, and Walker Keel 
at Dytallix B to discuss the infiltration of Starfleet Command by neural 
parasites. However, Scott was subsequently infested by a parasite. While under 
its control, she attacked Picard and William T. Riker inside Starfleet 
Headquarters. Riker was forced to fire at her with a high-setting phaser blast, 
upon which the parasite fled her body. (TNG: "Conspiracy") 

Tryla Scott was played by actress Ursaline Bryant. It is not clear if all the 
personnel were killed when the parasites left their bodies, as Admiral Gregory 
Quinn survived a kill-power phaser blast, and the ordeal of separating from the 
parasite, but it is clear that, on Beverly Crusher's recommendation, many of 
the phasers were probably on high settings

--- On Thu, 6/4/09, Martin Baxter  wrote:


From: Martin Baxter 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Blacks in Space: If sci-fi is the future, why is it 
so white?
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Date: Thursday, June 4, 2009, 7:48 AM












Keith, if memory serves, she was 27 when she made captain. She met Picard in 
the ep in which Picard was called out to some waaaaaaaaaaaaaay out-of-the-way 
planet by an old friend and fellow Starfleet captain, along with another 
captain, to enlist Picard's aid in fighting the threat posed by a bunch of 
slug-like aliens who were taking over Starfleet officers. One had already taken 
over the Commanding Admiral and his aide, the guy who conducted the interviews 
with all of the Enterprise's officers to determine if they were infected. Give 
me more time to think. It's early...





---------[ Received Mail Content ]----------
Subject : Re: [scifinoir2] Blacks in Space: If sci-fi is the future, why is it 
so white?
Date : Thu, 4 Jun 2009 02:13:00 +0000 (UTC)
>From : Keith Johnson 
To : scifino...@yahoogro ups.com

Captain Scott was killed? Wha' happened? And how old was she when she made 
captain? 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "George Arterberry" 
To: scifino...@yahoogro ups.com 
Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2009 12:30:42 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Blacks in Space: If sci-fi is the future, why is it 
so white? 









Very good points. 

The USA is about to enter a stagnant period in space travel with NASa retiring 
the shuttle,and China along with India with manned missions to the Moon and 
Mars in near term. 

My fear is that space may become militarized fairly quickly and economically 
for now America is focused elsewhere. 

As for the article I've seen many ST episodes with Blacks as adimirals but 
little to say after inspecting the Enterpise or something to that affect.Even 
had a charater who was a sister and the fastest person ever to reach the rank 
of captain in Starfleet history.No backstory on her in the show.Too bad she was 
killed off in novel form. 



--- On Tue, 6/2/09, Liggins Bill wrote: 



From: Liggins Bill 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Blacks in Space: If sci-fi is the future, why is it 
so white? 
To: scifino...@yahoogro ups.com 
Date: Tuesday, June 2, 2009, 7:30 AM 





What about true life? When was a black astronaut part of the resident crew of 
the International Space Station? How about never. Black astronauts were among 
the crews that chauffeured them to the ISS. They stayed a few days then had to 
leave. But when comes to those resident crews, the ISS is still restricted 
housing when it comes to blacks. Because of that, black astronauts are not 
getting the endurance training needed for a mission to Mars. So when it comes 
time to chose a crew for that Mars mission, black astronauts may be at the 
bottom of the list. Hopefully this will be reviewed by the new NASA director 
and changed before NASA loses its leadership in the international space race. 





Bill Liggins 
Author of "WARNING," a Sci-Fi Novel 
http://www.authorsd en.com/visit/ author.asp? authorid= 4905 
bill_liggins@ yahoo.com 

--- On Mon, 6/1/09, Curtis, Jr. wrote: 



From: Curtis, Jr. 
Subject: [scifinoir2] Blacks in Space: If sci-fi is the future, why is it so 
white? 
To: scifino...@yahoogro ups.com 
Date: Monday, June 1, 2009, 11:58 PM 




Blacks in Space 

If sci-fi is the future, why is it so white? 

Danielle C. Belton | May 29, 2009 


Star Trek's Lt. Uhura was a science-fiction pioneer in the 1970s -- a black 
woman answering the phone, I mean computer, in space. Uhura, played by actress 
Nichelle Nichols, was the communications officer, a role that would go on to be 
a popular one for futuristic minorities. While she was groundbreaking in that 
she was a black woman who survived quite well in space, her story lines were 
few, her adventures were stunted, and her romances were nonexistent. The 
philandering Capt. Kirk had to be forced to kiss the comely Uhura -- apparently 
in the future, interracial lip-lock is just as controversial as it was in the 
1970s. 
Nichols paved the way for Kandyse McClure's character Petty Officer Dualla, a 
black woman who also starts out answering the phone, on the critically 
acclaimed Battlestar Galactica series remake that wrapped this year. Dualla 
fares better than Uhura in that she gets her own story line, experiences a real 
romance, and has some adventures. But she commits suicide in the final season 
of the series. 

And these are the two primary options for blacks in space: Either you're 
marginalized or killed off. (Or, in the worst-case scenario, you're 
marginalized and still die.) 

So when word got out that director J.J. Abrams was set to re-envision the 
original Star Trek, with a big-budget film released last month, I was looking 
out for Lt. Uhura. And she is certainly there, played by actress Zoë Saldana. 
She's right where we left her in the 1970s, still answering the phone. 

Science-fiction story lines might take place in the future, but they are 
written in the now. They reflect the mind-set of the creators and the times 
they live in. If most science-fiction films are to be believed, in the future 
English is the main language. Not only do human beings still exist, they are 
almost all white and they have mastered quantum physics. I'm sure none of this 
has anything to do with the genre being dominated by the American film industry 
and predominantly white, male writers. They've merely looked into their crystal 
ball and seen the future. And the future is white! 

Actor Joe Morton, who appeared in both writer/director John Sayles' 1984 cult 
classic The Brother From Another Planet and 1991 blockbuster Terminator 2: 
Judgment Day, recalls an old Richard Pryor joke. "Hollywood didn't think we'd 
be around in the future," Morton says, "so why put us in the sci-fi movies?" 

He continues, "If you are a 50- to 60-year-old white producer in Hollywood, for 
the `heroic image' you're not going to think of a black man or woman. 
Consequently, black roles in sci-fi are tokens. He was the communications 
expert. The communications expert would also then be the first one to be 
killed. First one to die." When George Lucas offered Samuel L. Jackson a role 
in the final Star Wars prequel as the Jedi Mace Windu, Jackson agreed on the 
condition his character not die "like some punk." 

This is understandable coming from an actor who dies in many films, including a 
few sci-fi flicks (Jurassic Park and Deep Blue Sea), often a few minutes after 
his opening scene. And Jackson is not alone. Actress Bianca Lawson only lasted 
for three episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer before her character, a Jamaican 
vampire-slayer named Kendra, is killed off. Charles S. Dutton is heavily 
featured in the third film of the Alien franchise, but his character dies a 
horrid, painful death. In the bug-killing, utopian/ fascism parody Starship 
Troopers, all the minority characters are purposeless and peripheral. The lone 
black female washes out of boot camp after accidentally killing a fellow 
recruit. 

The controversial death of Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje' s character Mr. Eko on 
ABC's Lost at the hands (does it have hands?) of the "smoke monster" led many 
minority fans to believe there was a conspiracy to cleanse the show of all its 
black and Latino characters. Before Eko was gobbled up by the dark, bilious 
puff, minority actors Harold Perrineau and Michelle Rodriguez had also been 
written off the show. 

This isn't to say that minorities are always relegated to minor guest 
characters who are doomed to die a purposeless death. In Terminator 2, Morton's 
character dies trying to save the world. Morpheus, the rebel leader played by 
Laurence Fishburne in The Matrix, guides the hero to his true path, and Capt. 
Benjamin Sisko of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine was the first African American 
actor to lead a starship on the long-running franchise. While his character was 
thin the first few seasons, eventually the writers gave Sisko well-rounded 
stories and a passionate personality that separated him from the more stoic but 
popular Capt. Jean Luc-Picard from the previous series. Sisko was an 
improvement over the castrated black characters of Star Trek: The Next 
Generation, which included Giordi LaForge, a blind desk-jockey played by LeVar 
Burton, and Guinan, an advice-giving bartender played by Whoopi Goldberg. 

And then there's Lando. Darius James, a pop-culture writer and author, says it 
wasn't until Star Wars that all big questions about blacks, space, and "the 
future" were finally answered in the form of a wavy-haired playboy. "Lando 
Calrissian," James says, referring to Billy Dee Williams' character in the Star 
Wars movies. "The big question had always been -- would black people survive 
into the future? He was there." Lando was not the communications officer. He 
did not suddenly die offscreen. He was not disabled and had free license to 
flirt with the princess, even if she didn't reciprocate. 

There is also what might be called the Will Smith exception. This phenomenon, 
in which Smith and Smith alone is able to fully transcend the stereotypes that 
most often befall black characters in sci-fi movies, is most clearly 
illustrated in Independence Day, the 1996 mega-hit. The movie features a 
classic moment: two fighter pilots, one black and one white, off to save the 
world from aliens. They are a jovial, ebony-ivory duo, a classic casting 
combination that pops up in American movies from Blazing Saddles to Lethal 
Weapon. In any other film, it would have been Harry Connick Jr., who played 
Smith's best friend and fellow fighter pilot, celebrating the "fireworks" at 
the end, and Will Smith would have entered the cannon of black actors who died 
valiantly so their white co-stars would have someone to fight for in memory. 
But in this movie, it was Smith who was launched to fame after punching out an 
alien and announcing, "Welcome to Earth." He's since
 gone on to star in t! wo Men in Black films, I, Robot, I Am Legend, and other 
blockbusters. 

"Will Smith has been very smart about all that stuff," Morton says. "As his 
star began to rise he began to research what movies did best. A lot of the time 
those movies were sci-fi. The more CGI [computer generated images] in a movie, 
then that movie did even better." 

Most Hollywood sci-fi presents a "post-racial" world in which we've moved from 
fighting each other over cultural differences to fighting some bigger 
intergalactic evil. On its face, this type of film should allow for more 
color-blind casting and minority roles. Yet even in the Star Wars and Star Trek 
universes, where the humanoids are "beyond race," black and other minority 
actors are rare. Morton calls such tokenized roles the "new Mammy" -- only 
instead of the slave taking care of the white protagonist, blacks are now in 
roles of authority, the captain or head of the FBI, but still exist to prop up 
the white character, who is usually more central to the plot. Films like Deep 
Impact and the Star Wars franchise, as well as TV shows like Star Trek, 
Dollhouse, and Firefly, feature substantial black characters who are in a 
position of power but largely function as a helpmate to their white 
counterparts. 

This is why Sayles' The Brother From Another Planet, in which Morton plays a 
dark-skinned alien who crash-lands in Harlem, was so groundbreaking. "What John 
had in mind was to realize there were all these black people in New York, in 
the world, who had these tremendous amounts of talents and no place to exploit 
them," Morton says. "Here we have a guy who can cure things by touch but has no 
place in the world to go." 

The key to how minority characters are presented is in the hands of the 
writers. And all the most celebrated filmmakers, from Buffy the Vampire 
Slayer's Joss Whedon and the new Star Trek film director J.J. Abrams to 
oldsters like George Lucas and Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, are white 
men. Most of the second- and third-tier screenwriters are, too. 

James, the author and film critic, says these writers are delusional about our 
inevitable, multiracial future. "There's a state of denial about their own 
extinction," he jokes. "They're gone. Past history!" The reality is if humans 
are still around in another 3,000 years, there are only going to be more brown 
people. Shouldn't there be a Jamaican fleet captain? A Samoan first officer? A 
Chinese-Aborigine scientist? These writers have chosen to portray a nearly 
all-white world. What do they think happened to the billions upon billions of 
Earth's brown people? 

Perhaps they are all there in this future but, just as in the past, you can't 
see them. Like the black elevator operator of yesteryear or your Ecuadorian 
maid, they are there but not in the foreground. Still answering the phone in 
space. If you went to the bowels of the Battlestar, would you find a kitchen 
filled with young black and Latino men? If you searched for those bathrooms on 
the Enterprise would you find a black woman scrubbing the floor? 

In 1992, author Derrick Bell wrote the terrifying book Faces at the Bottom of 
the Well, in which he argues that "racism is an integral, permanent, and 
indestructible component of this society" -- even in the future. In his short 
story, "The Space Traders," filmed by brothers Warrington and Reginald Hudlin 
for their short-lived HBO series Cosmic Slop in 1994, Bell tells of an alien 
race that offers riches to a cash-strapped, polluted America if it will just 
fork over all its black people. For what purpose, no one knows. But it's only a 
matter of time before all black people are rounded up to be shipped off to 
space. Blacks plead their case, but whites, blinded by wealth and power, 
conclude that offering up an entire race is simply the most logical thing to 
do. 

Cosmic Slop, which was meant to be a minority-filled, Twilight Zone–style show, 
only aired one episode and was pronounced a failure. The show did not usher in 
a belle époque of black sci-fi. Black characters were soon back to answering 
the phone and playing caretaker roles. 

"If science fiction is supposed to be a metaphor for something much greater 
than the world we live in, what we have now is what it will be unless we tell 
the story," Morton says. "On some level, we've kind of done it to ourselves. If 
we want to change what those images are, we have to do something to make those 
changes come to fruition." 

Danielle C. Belton is a freelance journalist, satirist, and editor of the blog, 
The Black Snob. 

http://www.prospect .org/cs/articles ?article= blacks_in_ space 







http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=JQdwk8Yntds 















 


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