Sidewinder wrote: ↑2017-10-19 02:13pm
mr friendly guy wrote: ↑2017-10-02 11:43am
Ok, I am going to have to watch this on DVD, but I have heard it viewed from a review (from someone who got triggered by lack of white men) saying that the Klingons are being invaded by the Federation, and the Klingons are allegory for white nationalists and the Federation are allegory for those advocate open borders or something.
The writers for the show INTENTIONALLY tried to trigger people.
Business Insider article, dated September 22, 2017 wrote:Aaron Haberts, a co-executive producer on the show, told the outlet that Donald Trump's candidacy was "front and center in our minds" when they started putting the series together in 2015.
Haberts said one of the antagonist groups on "Star Trek: Discovery" is an extremist Klingon sect, whose rallying cry, "Remain Klingon," the show made intentionally similar to Trump's "Make America Great Again" slogan.
"It's a call to isolationism," Haberts said of the slogan. "It's about racial purity, and it's about wanting to take care of yourself. And if anybody is reaching a hand out to help you, it's about smacking it away.
"That was pretty provocative for us," he continued. "And it wasn't necessarily something that we wanted to completely lean into. But it was happening. We were hearing the stories."
Personally, I doubt alienating your own audience this way is smart. Do the writers assume "'Star Wars' is for Republicans, 'Star Trek' is for Democrats- fuck the Republicans!" and there are no people like myself (a Chinese-American) who happen to like BOTH franchises, when COMPETENTLY WRITTEN?
First of all, I don't see anything about Star Wars there, so I'm not sure where that's coming from.
Second of all, I have absolutely no objection to them addressing political issues in Star Trek. It can be well-done or badly-done, but given that pretty much any topic can have political implications, there's really no way to avoid political implications in a show like this, and if you try, you're probably going to get something completely vapid.
And in my experience, whenever people rage about how 'they're politicizing (insert fictional franchise here)" and they just want it to be "well-written" and not political... what they more or less invariably mean is "I don't want it to have a political message I DISAGREE WITH."
Pretty much nobody really wants their entertainment to be apolitical. Nor is it possible for it to be so.
And Star Trek has always been fairly political. I'd be more surprised if they
didn't address the Donald.
I also object strongly to the implication that "anti-Trump=only for Democrats". Since when was objecting to a traitorous, bigoted, authoritarian sexual predator a single-party issue? Trump has glaring flaws which transcend (or ought to transcend) any single party platform.
If they alienate some viewers by being "political", good on them. It means they're at least actually standing for something, rather than pretending to be "balanced" and "not political" (ie vapid drivel which is either too cynical or too cowardly to stand for anything).
Now, from everything I've heard (I haven't had a chance to watch it yet), and from the teasers, Discovery has plenty of other flaws. But there's nothing wrong with being political, or even taking a political stand. Its a question of how you present it. Ham-fisted preaching usually sucks, in my experience, but that's hardly the only way to do it.
"I know its easy to be defeatist here because nothing has seemingly reigned Trump in so far. But I will say this: every asshole succeeds until finally, they don't. Again, 18 months before he resigned, Nixon had a sky-high approval rating of 67%. Harvey Weinstein was winning Oscars until one day, he definitely wasn't."-John Oliver
"The greatest enemy of a good plan is the dream of a perfect plan."-General Von Clauswitz, describing my opinion of Bernie or Busters and third partiers in a nutshell.
I SUPPORT A NATIONAL GENERAL STRIKE TO REMOVE TRUMP FROM OFFICE.