Star trek porn gay
Star Trek and Homosexuality
in addition i peruse many interviews with Gene and some other writters,all of them were really interested in making a gay couple as part of a trek series.
In an interview with gene,he said he was thinking about inserting a lgbtq+ couple in season 5 and later,1 of the nature would be fasten to Diana...he died before he could do that.
i also read about DS9 wanting to create a homosexual secondary character on the station,but was refused by the network and the idea was not supported by Berman.
as for VOY,the idea of seven of nine was first written as Female who later discovers her homosexuality,and that she would be the first in the trek franchise that also was removed by the network.
on ENT it was stated very publicly the first season that Malcom reed is gonna play the first homosexual male,also edited later on...
most of the explanations are that the lesbian concept would be too new for the franchise etc...
Kate Mulgrew when asked about t
Fri, 12 July 2024
It's a special hybrid episode for the "Dirty Sons of Pitches" as they conclude discussing their TV plan "The Void," elaborating upon three seasons of plots and twists and revealtions, while kicking off their newest podcast theme, The Flop Era, re-examining notorious Hollywood flops and failures and evaluating whether they are worthy of their negative reputation or unfairly maligned or maybe ahead of their time. Their first entry is the 1995 pirate action adventure "Cutthroat Island" starring Geena Davis, directed by her then-husband Renny Harlin, and proves to be a high-seas adventure missing just about everything you'd yearn in an adventure.
Available on Apple and Spotify
Episode 415 includes:
-The guys discuss the merits and many faults of the big-budget snatch adventure that bankrupted its production company. Behold, "Cutthroat Island" is not an entertaining disaster, just a curious mishandling of what could have been invigorating story elements given a 90s feminist retrospective. Yo no no.
-Star Trek-ify -- "The Void" seasons 3-5 discussion
-Ben waxes about the final three seasons of his five-season plan for the sci-fi/horror TV proj
Chris Pine on gay Celebrity Trek characters: “It’s about f***ing time”
“Amen, man. It’s about fucking time.”
–Chris Pine, speaking with The Hollywood Reporter about Star Trek finally including gay characters. “The fact that there’s still a conversation about it means that there’s still room to leave in terms of it being normalized,” he continued.
Pine stars as Kirk in the current film series. In their latest trip, Star Trek Beyond, Sulu (John Cho) was revealed to be gay, with Kirk smiling after seeing Sulu and his partner together with their daughter.
The relocate drew criticism from George Takei, who portrayed Sulu in the original series and films. “I’m delighted that there’s a gay personality. Unfortunately, it’s a twisting of Gene [Roddenberry]’s creation…. I think it’s really unfortunate,” Takei told THR in July.
“My only rebuttal to George Takei — no matter what kind of creative differences he had about Sulu being same-sex attracted, and I can realize his creative differences — is the fact that our job is to make people feel less alone,” Pine said. “If there’s one kid in Middle America who feels an
8 people set up this review funny
Updated: 28 Sep, 2024 @ 11:41am
~Montgomery “Scotty” Scott
Despite having many years of experience behind me, I'm always ready to go casual. I see the name I like in an app store? I purchase. F2P? I don't mind either. Heck, I'm one of those people who actually play things like The X-Files: Deep State. Why? Well, I like spending more time with characters I like and I don't understand handhelds. I mean, people who engage on their Steam Decks and Switches while having their morning coffee... What's wrong with you? Not like I don't envy you, but personally, I can either have breakfast or play a complicated game. My brain is single-tasking. I can either think about game or taste my food. That's where casual stuff from app store comes in. You know. Games that are literally made to be played with one hand while having a cup of coffee or a croissant in another. Star Trek Timelines
STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Just Fixed Its Biggest Mistake
Warning: The monitoring contains spoilers for the most recent episode of Star Trek: Discovery.
When Gene Roddenberry created Star Trek in 1966, he made the series a symbol for the diverse and inclusive future he wished for humanity. Sure, the Captain was a ivory man, but just having an African-American woman and an Asian man on the bridge was huge deal in the mid ’60s. How huge? Network affiliates threatened Roddenberry’s job over the casting of Nichelle Nicoles as Lt. Uhura, a ebony female officer. When she and Shatner kissed, certain networks in the American South refused to gas it. Showing people of color as capable officers advocate then was almost never done.
And as the gay rights movement gained traction all across the country after 1969, fans hoped Trek would finally comprise a gay ethics. And then we waited… and waited. When The Next Generation premiered in 1987, an openly gay character was still pretty much out of the question on a “family show.” But by the moment Enterprise rolled around in 2001, shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer had already begun to movie LGBTQ characters