I agree strongly with the points you raise. And that's something we have been working toward in the series. We try to fill out background, security details, business folks, travelers, and all the other divisions on B5 with an equal measure of ethnic backgrounds, and we strive to make the show 50/50 male/female. If you also look at our roster of regular and recurring characters, that too is about 50/50 male/female. We've also worked to keep that ratio *behind* the scenes as well...50% of our writers, directors and crew are female, many in the latter category holding jobs not traditionally open to women. And it's only served to make the show better. Our casting director has strict marching orders that, unless a script specifically calls for a particular ethnic background for a part, that part is to be open to *all* backgrounds. So we see a mix for just about every major and minor role. And yes, there are some people with hot-buttons about caucasian male/ ethnic female relationships, and some with hot-buttons about ethnic male/ caucasian female relationships. I say a pox on *both* their houses. So we're doing both. The Sinclair/Sakai relationship is an example of the former, and we cast a dynamite black actor in a relationship story opposite Andrea Thompson. The only thing a responsible producer can do, I believe, is cast what's right for the story, for whoever is the best performer, and if somebody doesn't like it, screw 'em. As someone at the BBC once said, "There are some people we *want* to offend." What astonishes me most is that, 25-30 years after Trek gave us the first inter-racial kiss on TV, we're still discussing this and working on this. We're headed for the 21st century in 6 years (well, 7 if you count 2001 as actually the first year of the 21st century) people...*deal* with it. jms |
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