The Star Trek thread
- Time_Traveller
- Posts: 2298
- Joined: Sun May 16, 2021 4:49 pm
- Location: San Francisco, USA, June 7th 1929 C.E
Re: The Star Trek thread
"We all have our time machines, don't we. Those that take us back are memories...And those that carry us forward, are dreams."
-H.G Wells.
-H.G Wells.
Re: The Star Trek thread
A vote for Trump, a third party candidate, or no vote at all, is a vote for a dystopian future.
Re: The Star Trek thread
The 'banned' Star Trek episode that promised a united Ireland
5 hours ago
When sci-fi writer Melinda M Snodgrass sat down to write Star Trek episode The High Ground, she had little idea of the unexpected ripples of controversy it would still be making more than three decades later.
"We became aware of it later... and there isn't much you can do about it," she says, speaking to the BBC from her home in New Mexico. "Writing for television is like laying track for a train that's about 300 feet behind you. You really don't have time to stop."
While the series has legions of followers steeped in its lore, that one particular episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation has lived long and prospered in infamy.
It comes down to a scene in which the android character Data, played by actor Brent Spiner, talks about the "Irish unification of 2024" as an example of violence successfully achieving a political aim.
Originally shown in the US in 1990, there was so much concern over the exchange that the episode was not broadcast on the BBC or Irish public broadcaster RTÉ.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-68342135
5 hours ago
When sci-fi writer Melinda M Snodgrass sat down to write Star Trek episode The High Ground, she had little idea of the unexpected ripples of controversy it would still be making more than three decades later.
"We became aware of it later... and there isn't much you can do about it," she says, speaking to the BBC from her home in New Mexico. "Writing for television is like laying track for a train that's about 300 feet behind you. You really don't have time to stop."
While the series has legions of followers steeped in its lore, that one particular episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation has lived long and prospered in infamy.
It comes down to a scene in which the android character Data, played by actor Brent Spiner, talks about the "Irish unification of 2024" as an example of violence successfully achieving a political aim.
Originally shown in the US in 1990, there was so much concern over the exchange that the episode was not broadcast on the BBC or Irish public broadcaster RTÉ.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-68342135
A vote for Trump, a third party candidate, or no vote at all, is a vote for a dystopian future.
Re: The Star Trek thread
A vote for Trump, a third party candidate, or no vote at all, is a vote for a dystopian future.
Re: The Star Trek thread
A vote for Trump, a third party candidate, or no vote at all, is a vote for a dystopian future.
- Time_Traveller
- Posts: 2298
- Joined: Sun May 16, 2021 4:49 pm
- Location: San Francisco, USA, June 7th 1929 C.E
Re: The Star Trek thread
"We all have our time machines, don't we. Those that take us back are memories...And those that carry us forward, are dreams."
-H.G Wells.
-H.G Wells.