trans girl / physically disabled / ace inclusionist uwu / tag discussion of trans deaths and disabled deaths and alcohol thanks
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i tore through my room looking for my glasses and they were just hiding in the blankets. the blankets i bunched up and threw in the corner to look for my glasses
using βiβm gayβ to justify yourself and your decisions is good and fun when itβs to defend your tacky outfit or your 3am impulse-buys on amazon but donβt let me catch you using it to defend your racism and transphobia babes!
Watching xena
Heartwarming reunion and disturbing yet sad emotionally charged episode with good effects
Next episode
Xena has lice she refuses to acknowledge and Gabrielle has a raging foot fungus she wont stop showing people
I love living in the future with advanced technology. Itβs so great how I can just press a button on a machine and it will splutter hot, fresh coffee outwards at a horizontal angle onto my uniform, completely missing my cup. It saves me the convenience of spilling it on myself through human error.
yβall know some of us are probably gonna use slang we use today when weβre like 50 and the teenagers of 2050 are gonna make fun of old people in their improv classes by saying shit likeΒ βooh.thats a big mood kevin, im really kinning this it has big dick energyβΒ
Who was the first person to invent tattoos like what the fuck. βWell if I put the ink on top of my skin it just washes off, so what if I stab myself with it one thousand timesβ
I really hope most people are aware of why Amok Time was made in the first place
I should start off by saying that Star Trek was made with a female audience in mind. Itβs why Captain Kirkβs shirt rips and why heβs shirtless a lot, since the makers of the show were expecting to draw in a female audience with the good looks of William Shatner. Star Trek was even considered fake sci fi for girls by most male sci fi fans.
I have to mention that first because the show was banking on the female audience to fawn over Captain Kirk, and many of the women watching did, but they soon realized that even more women were fawning over Spock. When the show got renewed for a second season, they wanted to make sure they could retain the same female audience, most importantly the Spock fangirls, so they decided to treat their female audience with Amok Time.
Every single decision involved in the plot of the episode was made withΒ βhow do we give these ladies what they want without hurting his likability?β. Pon Farr was made up so Spock would have a reason to act super horny while still being the same alien everyone knew and love, TβPring leaving Spock while Spock was planning on being loyal to her to show off how loyal he is to romantic partners, and his Pon Farr being cured without actually having sex was to keep him single.
TL;DR Amok Time was made for straight girl wank bank but instead they created the K/S community
I donβt think it was inadvertent at all – Theodore Sturgeon, the writer of Amok Time, was openly gay and was known for constantly trying to slip gay shit past the censors. He also wrote the backrub scene and lots of other k/s moments. Lgbt people in the 60s wanted to see themselves represented in media just as much as we do, but because of censorship laws it all had to be subtextual.
Iβd like to look at this from another angle, because I think thereβs more to it than Sturgeon was gay, therefore the gay subtext.
At the time Trek was airing, CBS thought of it as a kidsβ show and boys were assumed to be the primary audience of Sci-Fi. In 1967 – 1969 girls were not thought of as being interested in Sci-Fi for its own sake (no matter how wrong media producers were about that). Girls were the half of the demographic that had to be brought in by βgirl thingsβ, e.g., fashion and romance and cute (non-threateningly good looking) male characters. An example would be the inclusion of Chekov with his Monkees haircut during the second season.
So yes, when it was discovered that there was actually a female demographic gravitating to the show on its own, for its own reasons (e.g., Spock, the dynamic between Spock & Kirk), then Roddenberry, a very clever man, decided to exploit these things for all they were worth.
One of the best and most time-honored ways of doing this is through the βAre They Or Arenβt They (Lovers)?β question (aka the Bromance), primarily of interest (so it is assumed) to the female audience. What makes the question work is that itβs always hinted at but never, ever answered. If you answer the question, you resolve the undercurrent of sexual tension and you kill the show (or it must become another kind of show).
It is also something that Theodore Sturgeon, a well-established science fiction writer at the time βAmok Timeβ was written, would have known. He would also have known where to look for a story idea that would really grab the audience, not with fistfights, rubber monsters or planet-devouring robots, but with the question: What do I (and the rest of the audience) most want to see? The answer is always the forbidden, the thing held back, kept under wraps.
βAmok Timeβ and Pon Farr is one of the best examples of βAre They Or Arenβt They?β because the engine that drives the story is that strong undercurrent of unresolved sexual tension (aka gay subtext). At the time the show aired, few in the audience would have spotted that subtext, which was how they got away with it, but the female and gay contingent would certainly have felt its effects. When a show brushes close to your half-conscious fantasies, it is absolutely electrifying, though you may not be able to explain exactly why.
Sturgeon headed straight for the forbidden: to strip Spock emotionally naked. Pon Farr was the vehicle with which to do it. Β Show after show (and Nimoy himself, as he developed the character) gave the female audience teasing little hints at the inner Spock, the smouldering interior landscape, the potentially barbaric sexual and emotional inner being he was keeping hold of with an iron fist. βAmok Timeβ is an emotional striptease that pays off by symbolically answering Are They Or Arenβt They?
In writing, and this includes television writing, when you have written a fight scene, particularly one that is cathartic, you should examine it with the same critical eye as you would a sex scene. This is because in terms of character development, fight scenes and sex scenes do the same thing: they strip the character bare by showing you their βinner animalβ, their deepest needs, desires and fears. This is something else Sturgeon would have known. It is the reason Pon Farr is structured to only have two possible resolutions: sex or a fight (or denied either, death). So when Spock finally does explode, how does it happen? A fight to the death not with Stonn, his actual rival for T’Pring, but with Kirk (with the acknowledgment that Spock didnβt choose Kirk for this purpose, but Sturgeon, the writer did).
On an emotional and symbolic level, the answer to Are They Or Arenβt They is a resounding YES, THEY ARE. On a conscious, visual level, the answer remains ambiguous, a hint, subtext, thus keeping the unresolved sexual tension intact. However physical the fight, the consummation remains emotional only, and thus the show, and the chemistry between Kirk & Spock, goes on. Itβs an elegant solution to a big problem: How can you give the audience what it wants, without really giving them what they want and destroying the show (as it would have been at that time)?
So IMO, Pon Farr was not quite so deliberately created to give Trek a hefty dose of gay subtext, nor is that subtext just an accidental byproduct. Itβs a great writer weaving all of that together to make a very compelling story.
damnβ¦.
Just one last thing, Sturgeon won a βGaylactic Spectrum Awardβ (given to LGBT+ science fiction/fantasy novels and short stories) for a piece he wrote called The World Well Lost. Itβs about humans who discover a pair of male aliens who are deeply, intrinsically in love, kinda like Spock and Jim βΊοΈ
(Also, I donβt believe Sturgeon was gay, I believe he was actually bisexual or sexually fluid, but Iβll have to check because I donβt know for sure.)
Pinnocchio could tell us so much about the universe. He could randomly claim things like, βThe Big Bang happened,β and his nose would confirm or deny our theories.
Pinocchioβs not omniscient, you stupid fucking redditors, his nose grows when heβs intentionally being dishonest.