In the episode Kirk and Spock are being humilated and degraded ( being forced to sing, have a little man ride Kirk, and
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timmytony80 — 9 years ago(October 08, 2016 03:55 PM)
Sherman Demetrius et al; Caucasian women were also encouraged 2 abort their unborn mulatto babies, as well! Even though abortion was illegal! See also Margaret Sanger's The Negro Program! A little something I learned of watching The Catholic Channel.
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WyldeGoose — 9 years ago(October 06, 2016 06:37 PM)
As others have said, this was all meant to break Kirk into getting him to allow Bones to remain with these people. But, as Alexander said, they are not going to let them all leave. They are going to destroy them all. But they needed Kirk to give Bones his permission to stay so that Bones is a bit more cooperative (though I can't understand why he would be, since by breaking Kirk's will in this fashion all they'd be doing is antagonizing him even further - you don't want to piss off someone who may one day have to operate on you).
However, I think this "first interracial kiss on television" gets way too much applause. It was contrived, not romantic, in that the two characters may respect one another as colleagues, but they were forced into this act. I believe it was All in the Family that had the first true romantic interracial kiss, and that probably did more to break social barriers than Star Trek's did. -
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timmytony80 — 9 years ago(October 08, 2016 04:33 PM)
Satan 2016; No. Lucille Ball was a Swedish (White ?) Caucasian American. Desi Arnez was an Hispanic (Ethno) Caucasian. With almost certainly some pre-Columbian blood. And possibly Black blood in him. Nordics may have not been considered White in the 50's/early 60's. Thus the ? inside the parentheses.
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McCartney42 — 9 years ago(October 06, 2016 07:52 PM)
I don't think it was "All in the Family" that had the first interracial kiss actually. There's a movie named "One Potato,Two Potato" that was made in 1964 that had the first kiss I believe. It starred Barbara Barrie and Bernie Hamilton who fall in love. It was a good movie.
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doug65oh — 9 years ago(October 06, 2016 09:05 PM)
You're correct about "One Potato, Two Potato." However, that was a
feature film
rather than a television program - that's where the distinction lies.
The first interracial kiss on American network television was in the episode "Plato's Stepchildren," which aired on November 22, 1968 when Captain Kirk kissed Lieutenant Uhura. -
doug65oh — 9 years ago(October 08, 2016 01:42 PM)
No, they did not kiss. Petula merely
touched
his arm. Here's a little article what talks about the whole thing, from
http://www.emmytvlegends.org/blog/?p=1086 -
grizzledgeezer — 9 years ago(October 08, 2016 09:17 AM)
Julia
was fairly revolutionary. It was only the second American series to star a black woman.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julia_(TV_series)
It was difficult to locate this article, it having somehow fallen through the Wikipedia indexing cracks. I found it only by entering "Julia Baker", then rejecting Wikipedia's attempt to replace the search with "
Julian
Baker".