Comment on You miss 100% of the targets you don't phaser.
FlyingSquid@lemmy.world 1 year agoI know. It should have been a man. It’s ridiculous that the first positive queer characters on Star Trek were on Discovery. It shouldn’t have taken that long.
gregorum@lemm.ee 1 year ago
Ira Stephen Behr and Ronald D. Moore later lamented that they didn’t push back harder against Berman and other producers for queer representation on DS9 in the DS9 documentary What We Left Behind. They notably had tried in the beginning with Garak and Bashir and were immediately shut down.
EmpathicVagrant@lemmy.world 1 year ago
All I’m saying is they had daily lunch dates and Bashir doesn’t pursue Dax as much when Garak is around.
gregorum@lemm.ee 1 year ago
all I’m saying is nobody gets their pants altered that often, and “your pants are ready to be picked up” is their fuck code.
HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club 1 year ago
Garak would be a power bottom.
Mirshe@lemmy.world 1 year ago
From what I understand, the bigger issue was that the producers thought the networks would get cagey if they went any further with queer representation. You must sadly remember that this was the 90s - not even ten years since a White House press secretary had openly laughed in a press conference about gay people dying of AIDS.
gregorum@lemm.ee 1 year ago
The show was made for syndication, so it wasn’t airing on any particular network. It was Rick Berman that had the issue with it on Deep Space 9, and both he and Brannon Braga (aka “Bermaga”) that had an issue with it on Voyager and TNG. Both of them are known homophobes. 
But even what happened with Ellen in 1995 and Will and Grace in 1997, didn’t make much progress on Star Trek. There was even a with lieutenant hawk and his husband in Star Trek first contact that was cut per Rick Berman‘s orders.