Episode 8: Sex in Star Trek (LD 3×04 "Room for Growth") - podcast episode cover

Episode 8: Sex in Star Trek (LD 3×04 "Room for Growth")

Oct 01, 202238 min
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Episode description

Promo: Shakespeare Aliens (Melbourne Fringe)

LD 3×04 Room for Growth (Memory Alpha)
TNG 7×17 Masks (Memory Alpha)
LD 2×05 An Embarrassment Of Dooplers (Memory Alpha)

TOS 3×13 Wink of an Eye (Memory Alpha)
TOS 0×01 The Cage (Memory Alpha)

Sex is weird/dangerous/evil
TNG 1×03 The Naked Now (Memory Alpha)
Mirror Kira Nerys (Memory Alpha)
VOY 2×15 Threshold (Memory Alpha)
DS9 4×06 Rejoined (Memory Alpha)

TNG 1×03 The Naked Now (Memory Alpha)
DIS 1×09 Into the Forest I Go (Memory Alpha)

Sexuality vs Sensuality
Betazoid wedding (Memory Alpha)
DS9 1×17 The Forsaken (Memory Alpha)
DS9 7×14 Chimera (Memory Alpha)
Star Trek: Insurrection (Memory Alpha)

TNG 2×09 The Measure Of A Man (Memory Alpha)

Star Trek: First Contact (Memory Alpha)

DS9 5×03 Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places (Memory Alpha)

Pairing off on Voyager
VOY 2×25 Resolutions (Memory Alpha)
VOY 7×18 Human Error (Memory Alpha)

VOY 6×11 Fair Haven (Memory Alpha)

Watch: Dr. Bashir & Garak Express Their Love In Fanfic Performed By Alexander Siddig & Andrew Robinson (TrekMovie)

Music: Distänt Mind, Brigitte Handley

Transcript

Rob

This is Subspace Radio and I am Rob.

Kevin

Hailing frequencies open, Rob. It's Kev here.

Rob

Good to see you. We're here to talk about the latest episode of Star Trek that is out there in the ether, and it is season three, episode four of Lower Decks: "Room for Growth".

Kevin

That title already sounds dirty to me.

Rob

Yes.

Kevin

Our listeners will have probably glanced at their episode list and seen that the topic of today is sex in Star Trek. So welcome. Welcome to whatever this is going to be.

Rob

It is a red letter day. It is a red banner day. It is…

Kevin

It's a red something.

Rob

It's red tube. It's all tied into one. Yes, finally. I got a positive affirmation from Kevin Yank in our notes. He just put, "Okay, fine."

Kevin

They did it. Last week, I said, "Lower Decks, you know what you have to do," and they did it.

Rob

And they brought it so hardcore in this episode. Finally, I have been so patiently waiting for this, and I assume you have been as well, listeners. I'm sure, Kevin, you have spent long, long hours, long evenings lying…

Kevin

You can't imagine how long.

Rob

Oh, I can have a vague idea. But before we move on to this hot and spicy topic, let's have a look at Room for Growth. An episode involving an A and B plot, as always. And so Ruthford was sent off with the entire engineering crew after yet another disastrous possession. Those old things. Yes, the captain has been possessed by an ancient mask

Kevin

An ancient mask situation.

Rob

Yes.

Kevin

Have you seen that episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation that that was referencing?

Rob

I had not.

Kevin

It is not the most memorable one, that. We're talking season seven, episode 17, "Masks". I don't mind it. For the, the very trail end of TNG, where they were scraping the bottom of the barrel for ideas before they hit the high points of All Good Things, they went through a couple of weaker episodes like Masks.

Rob

There's certain cliched episodes you need to have within a sci-fi show. So there's always the body swap episode. There's always the sexy episode. There's always an episode where a mask is involved in some sort of way shape or form.

Kevin

This episode almost made my list of mixing it up episodes. When we talked to a little while back of cases where characters became possessed or played another character. In Masks, Commander Data puts on a mask and becomes this God who is uh, rebuilding the ship. And Picard manages to, at the last minute, find another mask in the library computer and put it on and talk Data down by role playing another God in their mythos.

Rob

So much theater.

Kevin

Data was the God of the sun, so Picard came in as the God of the moon and said, it's time to go to sleep sun. It's as dramatic as it sounds.

Rob

I dunno what you're talking about. That sounds like 45 minutes of pure Star Trek gold.

Kevin

I don't hate it, but uh, not, not everyone's favorite episode. Room for Growth, I'm seeing framed as a show about nothing. I've seen a few people compare it to an episode of Seinfeld, where nothing big or monumental happens. This is a character sitcom episode.

Rob

Yeah, leaning into the sitcom-ey type of comedy elements of it. And all those big, sweeping science fiction elements are put on hold. And it is pretty much just a social relationship thing. The antagonization between the Delta and the Beta teams, there. That's a very sitcom-ey type thing to do. And we're here to relax and we can't relax because we're engineers! And having the – I'm jumping ahead to the ending – and to have an ending where our heroes don't win is very much out of…

Kevin

That's very Seinfeld.

Rob

Where you've got a good sitcom where you let your characters fail.

Kevin

They reveal all their fatal flaws, and they all fail because of it. But at least they're stuck in it together at the…

Rob

And the twist where they think they've learned a lesson, but then they're actually betrayed.

Kevin

I'm wondering if we ever see Delta Shift again, because at the moment where they were making nice in the swamp below Hydroponics, waiting for the door to open, and they were becoming friends. I was like, oh, this is a nice way to end the Delta Shift epic. And then Delta shift says "Snooze, you lose!" and runs through the door. And I'm like, oh, does that mean it's back on? Or is that just a button on the end of the story, and we've actually done everything there is to do with Delta…?

Rob

Yeah, I mean, the Delta Shift trio were quite unremarkable in the way of…

Kevin

They are literally palette-swapped versions of our main characters, that's the gag.

Rob

Yeah. And, but not even in a heightened way or type of exaggerated way. But yeah, and they have like odd tropes that would only appear in like a sitcom or a comedy. Things like they start, tripping balls.

Kevin

I'm in an egg. I don't want to hatch.

Rob

That was a beautiful moment. And I fell a little bit in love with Mariner then.

Kevin

Oh, she's brought you completely around!

Rob

Just the moment how vulnerable she was when Tendi goes, look, I'm sorry, I got the out of your egg and then Mariner's there going, it was so warm in there. And I went, oh, that's beautiful.

Kevin

chin thing That is amazing that they brought that out uh, in this kind of animation.

Rob

I'm. Pretty much on the Mariner Starship now it was a beautiful moment.

Kevin

I also noticed, that the references have started to shift from references to Star Trek canon into references to Lower Decks canon.

Rob

Yes. And that, yeah, that's always a good shift when you are, you've created your own…

Kevin

Yeah. Your own bubble.

Rob

…own bubble.

Kevin

I don't think they'll ever get away from that entirely, but when they come into the swamp in hydroponics, did you see the little skeleton stuck beneath the branches? That was a dead Doopler from the episode An Embarrassment of Dooplers in season two, episode five, when the ship got overtaken by all of those replicating life forms, that was one of them stuck under there. I had to look it up.

I can't take credit for knowing that at a glance, but yeah, the site gags the references, like last episode, someone said shenanigans, and then there was immediately a pile of references to previous episodes. And I, I love that this show is standing on its own two feet. Now I, I don't need this to be the show of references.

Rob

So yeah, we've talked about it, but we haven't said whether, did you enjoy this episode?

Kevin

Oh! Yeah, I loved this! I love this episode for the fact, if we had not already talked about what a stereotypical Lower Decks episode is, I might this week be making the argument for this being one of it. Earlier in the season we said the stereotypical thing that stood out to us about Grounded was that something big and momentous happened off screen while our characters were here in the background and we stayed in the background with them while that went on.

This episode did something I would argue might be even more stereotypically Lower Decks. It told a story in the quiet moments, the mundane moments, the most of the time in which nothing exciting happens on a starship.

Rob

And it's very much the case of the Cali class ship is the lower deck of the Federation. So we've been dealing with the lower decks on a ship, like with Boimler and Mariner, but this was an episode where not even the Cali class are at that higher level. So even the captain's dealing with mundane stuff like her engineers just won't take a break. So it was very much the ultimate sitcom sci-fi. So it's what I love about Red Dwarf is like just, you know, scumbags in space.

You know, they're the lower echelon of humanity, let alone, sci-fi tropes, which for me is always endearing. I always, the American style of sitcom is always about who's the quickest wit who's the smartest, who's the most attractive. Where comedy for me, I much prefer that more relatable sense of struggling and how, sometimes you don't get everything your way.

Kevin

The story of the engineers being told to relax is on the one hand, I think it's perhaps the weaker part of this episode, just in pure entertainment value, but it does tell, I would say an insightful story about burnout. Like the way to treat burnout is not to take away the thing that gives someone a purpose for showing up to work.

Rob

And it did supply two of my favorite gags as well. So when the captain screams at one of the engineers, "Shut up Meredith!" And also later when Ruthford finally comes in with all the engineering crew and goes, stop right now what you're doing and the dog, the puppy looks at it. And he goes, "Oh no, not you little puppy. Keep on puppin!" So…

Kevin

Let's talk sex.

Rob

Look, not only do we have the subtle attempt, but it's still a little bit of objectification of two of our female crew…

Kevin

Yeah, not sex. Just maybe sexualization, but not actual sex. I think there is, there's interesting stuff to say about actual sex in Star Trek.

Rob

Yeah. There was, of course the reveal of Ransom's kink.

Kevin

Kink or survival technique for what sounds like a very traumatic episode in the

Rob

Wow. You're very beautiful. Kevin. I like how you, look, no kink shaming here, okay, let's—

Kevin

No, I am not judging him for…

Rob

No, no. And that's what I— I say it's a kink, you say it's a way of dealing with trauma. And I really enjoy that, that we've created this safe environment.

Kevin

Horses for courses.

Rob

But yes— Is it Trilvia?

Kevin

Churro-livia.

Rob

Churro-livia. Yeah. Hilarious. But the big thing is we had the entire holodeck fantasy of our doctor and our chief of security.

Kevin

T'Ana and Shaxs, they have been the, in the margins, will-they-won't-they recurring story for a while now. We've overheard them professing their love for each other.

Rob

In their little scene of The Naked Now homage, she was just attached to his naked body.

Kevin

Yeah. And this one pays it off and it's fun because our characters are both repulsed, but also are, they're like, oh, good for them. I'm glad they got there. They're happy for them.

Rob

And there's a beautiful line where he says I died and we didn't even, we haven't even talked about it.

Kevin

Uh, there, there is a whole bunch of stuff.

Rob

Put those away Diane. Put those away.

Kevin

Oh god, Diane is her kinky sex name? It's in 15 seconds that this show really runs away with it. And it's like back to back lines. "You love crime play." I love the idea that crime is such a foreign concept in the Star Trek world that they do it as a kink. They play it on the holodeck as a kink.

Rob

And that's what I really love at that moment where they walk in and they can't even pronounce bank, which I, I, I find A bahnk.

Kevin

Here in the bahnk. But yeah, I would dare say we're about to talk about sex in Star Trek as a whole, but right here in Lower Decks, the comedy cartoon, I would argue is the most healthy, sex positive, grown up look at two adults having sex that we have ever seen in the entire franchise history.

Rob

Look, especially within recent years, especially within a lot of the new iterations of Star Trek, they haven't really been able to identify the healthiest way to present it. It's been forced in or pressured in, or made more of a statement as opposed to just blending it into the story. Um, whereas with this, it was very much a case of they went all in. It's called crime play. It is all this, but it is healthy. There's they're stopping what they're doing.

They're talking it through, led by the male wanting to initiate the conversation, which is, mixing up the gender stereotypes.

Kevin

She's going, "We'll do the nasty on the counter and make the hostages watch."

Rob

Exactly. But no, there was no frustration in her or anything like that. It was just a case of all right, this is what we need to work through. And it was done in this really healthy, positive way. And it was effectively getting them back on track to…

Kevin

They worked through it. And then Delta shift told us later they were making something.

Rob

They were makin somethin! So yeah, I have a very particular view of it, but what's your, Kevin, what's your view of sex within the Star Trek universe?

Kevin

I like to pick moments. And I'll take us to a first moment. And I am quite confident it is the earliest moment that we will touch on today, because it is way back in Star Trek, the original series.

Rob

Yeah, okay.

Kevin

Captain Kirk obviously had a reputation with the ladies. We often see him seducing people or being seduced. And it's all great, but it is usually little more than a suave seduction ending in a kiss. This episode I'm thinking of though is the first time that, although only implied, it was made very clear to anyone paying attention that the deed was done.

Rob

Is that what the episode's called?

Kevin

It should have been. This is season three, episode 13 of Star Trek, the original series, Wink of an Eye.

Rob

So this is right near the end of its original run.

Kevin

Yeah, a famously weak season. And even, I would say this is a stronger episode in season three. It is worth watching. It has an interesting sci-fi idea in it, and our characters are mostly themselves. Uh, in this episode, the ship gets taken over by aliens who have accelerated to such a speed that they move imperceptively. Like, our characters can't see them, they move that fast. And anyone who drinks the water on this planet gets accelerated to their speed as well.

The aliens want to take over the ship, putting it into deep freeze and use the crew of the Enterprise as breeding stock, because their race is sterile, a side effect of their transition to high speed life. And so Kirk, obviously, is targeted first as the most attractive, eligible bachelor on the ship.

Rob

Of course.

Kevin

The female leader of the species accelerate him to their speed and immediately starts macking on him, and going "What? Forget about your ship! They'll be fine without you. Come to my bedroom!" On the one hand, like it's a little rapey in, in our modern standards. But on the other hand, it's also very empowering to this female leader where she has a member of her crew that is obviously in love with her, but they can't propagate the species together.

And so when he says, "Why do you have to fall so head-over-heels for this Captain Kirk?" She said, "Allow me the dignity of liking the person that I have to choose in order to do my duty." And it is really great to see like, way back in the sixties, this female leader own her sexuality, even in this kind of twisted sci-fi story.

Now, the moment that makes this episode especially worth talking about though, is that at a certain point Kirk pretends to give in and come around to her way of thinking. And he starts making out with her in his quarters and it gets pretty hot and heavy, and then it fades to commercial. And when they return from commercial, he's sitting on the edge of his bed, putting on his boots. And this is how they slipped implied sex past the censors.

Apparently like this is a famous thing that if the censors had been paying attention, they would've struck that. They would've said not even implied in our primetime television here, but they got it past. And I would say, when I first saw this episode, I was young enough for that to go right over my head. But this is the clearest time and earliest time that our captain got it on with an alien female. And it was right there for anyone paying attention.

Rob

There you go. And there's some positive things in there as well, especially from a quite loaded, and that's my understatement of the year, loaded era of, perceptions of women and minorities and all that type of stuff. So to have a strong female positive approach—

Kevin

The character and the act, neither of them are shamed. If anything, they are celebrated and empowered in this story, which is really cool.

Rob

And especially like considering if you rewatch The Cage, the rejected pilot, there's a fantasy moment where Pike is with the Orion, green-skinned dancer, and it implies that he's like in the frontier, trading off exotic slave girls. And you're going ah, right. Okay. This is very unhealthy. So to have, within that same decade, an episode of the actual series, once it's got up showing that type of positivity is a really good thing.

Kevin

But this still nevertheless falls prey to the pattern that I see for most of Star Trek history, where Star Trek needed to be a PG show that kids could watch in the family room, and therefore sex had to be abstracted or implied or worked around…

Rob

Yes.

Kevin

…a way that the kiddies would be oblivious to it.

Rob

Yes, but it doesn't, but it also, it's still leaned into quite a lot.

Kevin

It was still there, and it was a plot point.

Rob

This is a good place for me to come in. I've always looked upon sex within Star Trek as weird. That like Star Trek doesn't know what to do with sex. It's a family show, but we also want to explore deeper themes, and cross many concepts and theories of science and all that type of stuff. But when it comes down to, just, getting it on, they're not sure what to do with it. So it's either like The Naked Now or The Naked Time or stuff like that, where it's this disease and it's this threat.

And if you're exploring your sexuality or your inhibitions are being lost, this is something dangerous. And so like a zipping down of the uniform is a sign of the whole society of the Federation is falling apart. And if you do it, you die. Sorta like the tropes of a horror movie: you have sex, you die. If you stay a virgin, you live to the end. Or you go into the mirror universe, where they're all in tight leather, and they're sexually liberated and they're in the evil universe.

So like in Deep Space Nine, Kira Nerys in the parallel universe is like the ruler of the ship, and she has multiple lovers and it's implied that she's a little bit bi as well.

Kevin

It's a bit like smoking. You know, for a while there, if a character was smoking, you knew immediately they were the villain of the movie and it's the vice of it…

Rob

Yes.

Kevin

…thing that they fixated on.

Rob

Yes. So, it always was implied that it's, yeah. It's either a plot point or it's an awkward gag at the end, where Paris and Janeway have evolved into futuristic slugs and they possibly had sex, but they're not aware of it, but they kind of are. And so it's that weird type of dynamic and I'm there going, is there anything healthy within the Star Trek universe when it comes to sex?

Cuz then when we talked about Deep Space Nine, it's all caught up in nineties politics, which is, if you look at it, sexual politics in the nineties were still incredibly conservative when it came to representation.

And so ooh the big controversial moment where we have a same sex kiss between Dax and her former lover or something, they put in so much sci-fi babble about going well in that particular version the incarnation was a male and all this type of stuff and all the type of layers upon layers instead of just letting it be a healthy thing. It's let's not talk about sex, but when we do it it's something nasty or evil.

Kevin

You mentioned The Naked Now, and I do wanna touch on that, because I think that is probably the most memorable character beat based around sex. Data losing his virginity to Tasha Yar. And it is played so many different ways, every time they come back to it. The actual event in The Naked Now is so cringy, because yes, they are both or at least Tasha is incapacitated with this drunken…

Rob

She slicked her hair back.

Kevin

Oh, she's licked her hair back. She showed her under boobs and… and she, she welcomes Data into her den, checking if he is fully functional along the way. But the, the most awkward part of it is the speech of vulnerability she gives first, saying, I had to stay just ahead of the rape gangs as I was growing up as a little girl. And now what I want in my partner is tenderness, is safety and in a way, like I can almost see what they were going for.

It is sweet that this woman who has sexual trauma in her past would need the safety of, effectively, a sex toy that would do her no harm and would give her exactly what she asked for with no judgment. Data would be the safest partner for someone who had sexual trauma in their lives. It's almost there, but they play the sexual trauma for titillation, I feel.

There is no more charitable an audience for Star Trek than me, so I want it to be okay, but rewatching that yesterday I was like, nah, it is not okay. She comes in in a state of undress, in a state of sexualization, and immediately talks about her rapers. When they remastered this show, I wish they could have done a couple of rewrites in the process.

Rob

There's two words that you don't really want to have combined in any conversation, let alone Star Trek, you don't want the words rape and gang mentioned in any way.

Kevin

No. Not in a scene that ends the way that scene ended. Certainly.

Rob

Yeah, that's done at the start of a scene into tenderness. Like even within this modern incarnation of Star Trek starting with Discovery, there's been implications of one of the characters who was a Klingon and has gone through horrible surgery to become human and implications there about sexual dynamic there and manipulation and harassment.

So yeah, getting to Lower Decks the relationship within a holodeck program in black and white has finally shown us a healthy approach to all different types of relationships that don't just have to be monogamous within our view of a man and a woman.

Kevin

I don't necessarily need to see a couple having healthy sex in order to believe that they do. I don't need it to be shown.

Rob

No.

Kevin

But when they use sex as a plot point, you're right. Their batting average is a little low in terms of when does it seem healthy and realistic versus when is it just a little off kilter? When are the writers just a little afraid to go there or just a little weird about it?

Rob

Yeah. Like it's the creation of the Betazoid race, and their culture, and how very much sexually liberated they are. Like the wedding ceremonies are done naked from what I remember. Deanna Troi's mom, obviously played by the great Majel Barrett, and her appearances on Deep Space Nine for me were really interesting because my favorite character obviously is Odo.

And so his evolution over seven seasons is always great to watch, but her first appearance, I believe it's season one, she perceives Odo from the point of view of she's attracted to him. And she brings out a side of him that, he hasn't even really been aware of. He's got feelings for Kira, but his sexuality is something he hasn't really explored or understood. And so to have a strong, confident, older woman who is confident in her sexuality…

Kevin

Do they ever get over the line where that is not smirked at, by the rest of the cast, the rest of the story?

Rob

I believe in the first, there is that moment where they're trapped in the hyper lift, and he has to change his form, and there's this beautiful moment of vulnerability, where he is falling apart and he's gotta maintain control. And she just goes, let yourself go and I will protect you. And it's a beautiful, tender but almost sensual moment as well.

Kevin

They let her be a well rounded character. They let her be…

Rob

And he is vulnerable to her and she is the strength and holds him together. And it's a sensual moment. And they come back to that cuz Odo does start exploring his sexuality and what his… there's so many possibilities with his body, Kevin. And there's a beautiful moment when him and Kira finally get together. When they finally kiss for the first time and you get up and cheer and clap. It's so beautiful.

But there's a moment where he fills her with warmth and light and fills her whole, the whole space with his essence. I think that's a great moment of, it's not purely carnal, it's a sensual thing, which you don't really connect with Star Trek, sensuality. There's beautiful, sensual moments and playful, joyful moments with Riker and Troi in Insurrection, you know, when they're in the bath together and she's shaving him, that's really hot.

Kevin

I'm such in two minds of that because I think, on the one hand they accomplish something there of, they let two adults be intimate, flirty, erotic with each other. And it is fun and it is sexy and it is hot. I was watching it with headphones on earlier this week and Jess, my partner was sitting on the sofa next to me and she was going, this is hot and I can't even hear what they're saying.

Rob

That's a good sign.

Kevin

At the same time, they once again found a way to work around the acknowledgement of the act. Riker and Troi never actually commit the sinful act of having sex. They have a bath together. They shave each other. They giggle about it like school children…

Rob

Well, we don't, we don't, see much of… We don't see much of him shaving her.

Kevin

That's true. Well, you know, I use my imagination.

Rob

It's implied.

Kevin

I can't believe I said that. That's hilarious.

Rob

That's, that's gotta be a deleted scene somewhere.

Kevin

It's in the cut. It's in the cut. I wanted to come back to Data, though, because that episode, The Naked Now, it ends with Yar stepping up to him and blushingly saying "It never happened," and the next time it's acknowledged is after her…

Rob

After her death where the image of her shows up and he, I dunno who he's talking to, but he says we were…

Kevin

We were intimate. This is in The Measure Of A Man where he is, his humanity is on trial. And he's got the little hologram of her, which is the same pose in uniform that she appears in her funeral. So we assume it is a gift to mark her passing, but it is never addressed, this strangeness of the last words on the subject we hear from Yar herself is, I regret it. It never happened. I'm embarrassed. And, suddenly, it becomes a cornerstone of Data's feeling of growing humanity.

It is the closest, most intimate relationship he's had in his life. And on the one hand, it is sweet. But when you lean into it, it is also potentially creepy. I think, we were all young enough once where we were madly in love with someone who did not return our feelings. And there, there is that moment where you grow up enough to let go of it and realize it's not just about your feelings, it's about their feelings as well.

And if I continue to impose myself, what I want on this person who does not want the same thing, there's a line there that shouldn't be crossed and Data seemingly crossing it posthumously is something that I am not entirely comfortable with when I allow myself to look at it up close.

Rob

Yeah, and it's very much a trope of drama that lasted for decades, and it's only start— I think there's even examples of it, I think I can remember, from like The Office in the early noughties, of that whole type of situation, where two characters get intoxicated and the end of the episode, "sting" or "gag", and I'm doing inverted commas, is it never happened.

Kevin

We're never talking about this…

Rob

And that's the full stop gag to end the episode, then we restart the series seven days later with a whole…

Kevin

Yeah, and it can put those two characters into a will-they-won't-they state of, maybe they do re-acknowledge it later. Maybe they realize it was the start of something, it wasn't something shameful. But Tasha Yar never got that opportunity.

Unless we tell ourselves that they figured something out offscreen, like after that moment there was stuff going on off screen between them, that caused her to bequeath a holographic image of herself to him on her death, that allowed him to claim that connection for the rest of his, his life.

Rob

That's a lot of heavy lifting that we have to do as fans.

Kevin

It is. So it's a, another example of the writers going a little skewy when it came to sex, like not tackling it head on and being clear and saying these people enjoyed what they did together. Instead it was like, these people will never speak about it again, because it is shameful, unless one of them is dead, so they can never make that mistake again. And now it's allowed to be sweet.

Rob

Again. Yeah. Again, it's that case of the it's the. The trap that Star Trek is stuck into. It's so procedural, it is so closed off within that televisual follow the 45 minute structure then reset. So that arc of a character growing is denied because we have to be back at square one for next week, so that they can overcome the next scientific challenge, or the next engineering challenge, as opposed to developing this strong, healthy relationship first, and then the other stuff will come.

Kevin

The button on Data's story in my books comes in Star Trek First Contact when he is seduced by the Borg queen. And uh, they again have what could be construed as implied sex off screen, where there is a scene where they end kissing and then they come back and Data is changed for the experience that he has just had.

Rob

And she's blown on his new flesh patch.

Kevin

Exactly. But that's going back to the sinfulness, like the idea that sex is brought by the villain as a temptation.

Rob

And it is definitely played in that way of, come over to the dark side, we have sex and pleasure over here. Where we can shave each other and we can blow each other's patch. They're my two favorite phrases that we have come across tonight.

Kevin

Deep Space Nine, I think, started to get it right when Dax and Worf got together. The episode Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places is when they finally get together.

Rob

Yes.

Kevin

They have sex in the holosuite, and come in all bruised and battered into the infirmary afterwards. And Julian's like, I don't wanna know. I'm just gonna treat you. But it is a celebrated, healthy first step in two people who end up loving each other wholeheartedly getting together. And it feels like, finally, we're here! We can have our heroes have sex and acknowledge it later. And it is okay.

Rob

And then they kill her off

Kevin

They do!

Rob

And then Worf has awkward sex with Ezri, and it back to being weird again.

Kevin

You're right, it does get weird again.

Rob

And then she gets together with Julian and then it's just weird again. The curse of season seven, dropping the eight ball sometimes.

Kevin

Two steps forward. One step back, I…

Rob

Yeah.

Kevin

…on that front.

Rob

Then I go into sort of like stuff like with Voyager— I'm just jumping around, like in Voyager…

Kevin

I'm going to Voyager as well.

Rob

I always refer to, it became a common thing with when I did my binge of Voyager in my past life, it was the reoccurring gag of Chakotay is a dawg.

Kevin

Is he, now?

Rob

Chakotay is always on the prowl, and there are some episodes where it gets awkward. There's an episode where Chakotay and Janeway are trapped on a planet for,

Kevin

Oh yeah. They live out a whole life together.

Rob

And it's implied the whole will they, won't they. But then they get back on the ship, and again we have to reset. Even though we are on this journey to get back, we have to follow that procedural type thing. And then right at the end, they cram in this awkward, oh yeah, and Chakotay and Seven of Nine are doing something. And I'm so glad they haven't followed that up, because it was so hamfisted, and so unconvincing, and you go…

Kevin

Yeah. I can see why— The idea that these people who are trapped together on a ship, they will end up pairing off. It was established like from the very first episode. That promise was there. The fact that it was so awkward in practice,

Rob

Because there was nothing. Because there was nothing between the two of them. It was always like, it was alwa— What I loved about it was Seven of Nine was always paired with either the doctor or Janeway or the young girl.

Kevin

Naomi Wildman.

Rob

That's right, Naomi Wildman. And did you channel your best Jeri Ryan while you—

Kevin

I closed my eyes and I imagined Jeri Ryan saying Naomi Wildman.

Rob

Yeah, so it just was so crowbarred in there going, they have shared like three lines over three years, and now we're expected to believe that these guys are flirting. And no, convincing at all.

Kevin

What's interesting around sex in Voyager for me is Janeway, the woman at the top, who is the first female captain. And she's established as if not married, then at least in a long-term…

Rob

Long-term relationship. I don't think they're married, her and Mark.

Kevin

They have a dog together. So in my books, they're married.

Rob

…a dog and they're sharing coffee.

Kevin

That's right. Yeah. That immediately, they defuse her as a sexual being early on by giving her someone back home that she, as the captain who must be the paragon of virtue, she's trapped in needing to be true to Mark back home.

Rob

And also she is trapped within that hairdo, which is so tightly bunned and up.

Kevin

They get there eventually, though. She has a few awkward flirtations with prime ministers of planets along the way, but…

Rob

The weird holosuite episode where she said you know, the famous line…

Kevin

This is what I'm talking about. Delete the wife. Yeah. Yeah. That's uh, Fair Haven, season six, episode 11. That was definitely on my list. Again, nothing actually happens on screen, but the moment of Janeway claiming her sexuality and saying, what, who am I gonna sleep with? Everyone reports to me. I'm gonna use the holodeck, and I'm gonna like it. And it is great. You can see Kate Mulgrew relish the line reading and going, yeah, we're going there. Get used to it.

Rob

Oh, that whole scene, where she's just looking at the hologram program and just saying, I'm gonna bend this man to my will. I'm gonna make the man that I want.

Kevin

That's right.

Rob

Delete the wife, ah, it's hot. It's weird, but it's hot.

Kevin

Weird. It is good weird. Like, they get to good weird.

Rob

It's very unhealthy obviously. But at that moment, it's yeah.

Kevin

It was the nineties.

Rob

Yeah. So it's just those Lower Deck crew members who have to clean out the holosuites.

Kevin

That was Rom's job on Deep Space.

Rob

Of course. Oh yeah. A holodeck ones that Quark has. Oh god, that would, yeah, that is pure filth. Yeah, that is not a good job.

Kevin

We didn't even talk about Kirk and Spock.

Rob

Oh man. Don't even get me started on all the, the slash fiction out there about so many pairings within that star, oh, we didn't even touch on Bashir and

Kevin

Garak.

Rob

Garak, yeah.

Kevin

The strongest love affair in all of Star Trek.

Rob

Yeah, and so much so like fans have written scripts that have been read by the actual actors where Bashir and Garak are married.

Kevin

I love it.

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