Star
Trek's Gene Roddenberry Was a Big Hippie: And Star Trek Is The Better For It
Will
Stape
September 26, 2007
Gene
Roddenberry defined groovy. Star Trek was born of the 1960's. We'd all do well
to remember that fact.
Despite
psychedelic colors, fashionable go-go boots and Lt. Uhura's groovy mini skirt;
we may forget the most beloved science fiction television show ever debuted in
1966. It's pilot was filmed the year before. Star Trek's core values remain firmly
rooted in that turbulent age of peace, love and hippie sensibilities.
Captain
Kirk may have commanded the Enterprise, but Gene Roddenberry was head hippy in
charge of everything else.
Star
Trek isn't the only sci-fi game now or back in the day. Landmark shows like The
Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, even Lost In Space made space travel intriguing,
if not somewhat bizarre. However when Roddenberry's "Wagon train to the stars."
warped along, that game rose a level or two. As hyperactive chef Emeril Lagasse
might yell, "Bam! Kick it up a notch, Spock!"
I
wince when South Park hellion Eric Cartman screams "Die Hippy!" Cartman
as one of the cuddly, curse belching, video game obsessed nerdy kids of Comedy
Central's funniest show worships Star Trek. If this acerbic kid born of the 90's,
knew Roddenberry was a hippy, he'd change his mind.
"Live
Long & Prosper, Hippy Creator! Screw you other omnipotent deities! I'm going
home!"
Why
care that Star Trek is a product of the 1960's? What does it matter that the United
States was embroiled in the Vietnam war or that civil rights protests raged across
America? It's science fiction. It's about the future. It's about exploring strange
new worlds, cool gizmos - all that speculative stuff. Yeah, but not entirely.
Like
all intellectual sci-fi, Star Trek addresses more. Alien races substitute for
ethnic groups or special interest groups. Those alien worlds stand in for other
parts of our world or other times where slavery was never abolished, or animals
are still slaughtered for sport.
Take
the Klingons. Many think they're based on Samurai of ancient Japan or American
Indians. The truth is they were envisioned as Communists. Roddenberry and his
writing staff pinned real life historic qualities on aliens. China may be a burgeoning
superpower now - friendly, newly democratic or not - but back in the sixties they
were seen as mysterious and possibly warlike and obviously the Russian Iron Curtain
was still drawn over the USSSR. Here again parallels to Romulans and other enemies
of America were written into plotlines.
Star
Trek encompasses a galaxy of issues. It doesn't just examine politics, science,
ethics or conflict that humanity never seems to grow out of despite incredibly
powerful technology. Most importantly because it shows highly advanced races utilizing
highly advanced technology STILL embroiled in the most basic interpersonal conflicts,
it clearly illustrates that science isn't the answer.
Roddenberry's
optimistic universe of high energy, peaceful humans who have thrown away racism,
sexism, ageism and other primitive mindsets is criticized for being Utopian minded.
Certain sci-fi writers go out of their way to mock its place in entertainment
history or as pop culture icon. They bash Star Trek for being simplistic, artificial
or even irrelevant. To each their own. However, these critics lose sight of what
it has accomplished. Perhaps more than any sci-fi entity it compels audiences
to think higher thoughts, to expect more from sci-fi than simple lightsaber fights
or flashy starships. It's graphically illustrated the horrors of war time and
again. It's shown us the waste and illogic of hatred because of skin color or
preferences in mating or religion. Star Trek can't be everything to everyone.
What accomplishes that magic trick? But it sure rises to the challenge.
During
a recent sci-fi convention, a statement was read aloud to fans by long time Gene
Roddenberry assistant Richard Arnold. The message came from JJ Abrams, director
of the forthcoming Star Trek film. Someone told JJ that a former Paramount executive
bashed his own longtime source of vast income for being too "Pollyanna."
Abram's
statement said simply: "I think we can all do with some Pollyanna."