This show was the best show on television.
I am not kidding. Or exaggerating. At all.
One of the many, many reasons that BSG was such a stellar example of what television can be when done correctly is it presented a vision of gender relations that, while idealized in that it was better than what we've got now, was still realistic and believable. You watched it and thought that we *could* get to this point, that it was possible. You watched it and thought, "This is the way it should be, warts and all."
Because there were warts. Human nature being what it is, there will always, always be ugly spots. And Battlestar Galactica acknowledged that.
Exhibit A: Coed Barracks.
Ah, yes. The Coed Barracks. Nothing says "gender equality" like stripping down and sleeping in a room with 20 other people, of both genders. Nothing gets you more used to the idea of the opposite sex as your equal than sharing a bathroom with them. I know. I went to a college that had nothing but coed dorms. With coed bathrooms.
When no one bats an eyelash over bodies like that, you know you're onto something. Sexual politics is the arguably the largest single obstacle to true gender equality. We are always sizing up anyone of the opposite sex that we meet; we are always thinking about them in sexual terms, and this prevents us from seeing them as human.
Also, it's pretty obvious that living with someone decreases this propensity towards viewing another as a sexual object- just think about all those failed marriages. And sexless marriages.
Exhibit B: The Coed Boxing Match
And then there's this. Men and women, equally pummeling the shit out of each other. A girl can take her hits, and dish them out, too. And she wins as often as she loses. (Actually, in Starbuck's case, she wins way more often than she loses, but we're going with generalities here.)
When two people of the opposite gender can beat the living shit out of each other, you know gender equality has been achieved. The End.
But, on the flip side, there were examples of gender relations that the producers opted not to bend. For example, the only Cylon prisoners that endured rape as an interrogation tactic were female models.
It was also only the female characters in the show that used sexual manipulation- from Six to Ellen. None of the male characters ever did, not even Baltar, who was the ultimate manwhore of television. He was manipulated by sex, but he never used it to manipulate.
So it was ugly. But it was still better than where we're at.
I love the show, also. I can't believe I missed the final episode and now have to hope they re-air it someday. I thought they took where Starship Troopers left off and did wonderful things with showing how we can coexist.
ReplyDeleteOf course, Heinlein's heroines were always shown to be the equals (if not betters) of their male counterparts, so the treatment in that show was exactly how he would have done it, I think. But BG, you are right, is the finest television I have seen and it raised the bar for years to come.
And I will never stoop to calling it SyFy, either. How could they forget their roots like that? And it kills their ability to us the 'if' that appears in the middle, which they used to make some of the best commercials ever.
I will confess I never actually read Heinlein; I've only seen the incredibly campy film version with Caspar Van Dien and that chick that married Charlie Sheen. I can never remember her name.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, there was so much sarcasm and camp and overblown everything in the movie that the gender stuff was hard-pressed to come to the surface.
BSG was more serious in tone, I think, even though it had things to say on a lot of subject, as well, and so it was easier to get the message.
Also, those promos with the iF were so awesome. I'm going to miss them immensely.
"wait for a re-air" For fuck sake they had torrents in 2009.
ReplyDeleteWait now.....who own that coed boxing match? ?
ReplyDeleteChris