Originally posted by scarimor
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Sam Carter/Amanda Tapping Discussion/Appreciation
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Originally posted by fishyone
But Amanda did act the AU Sam very well in my opinion. I like the geek walk she does.
sig by starlover1990
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Originally posted by the dancer of spazWe have to ask ourselves: Why are we putting substantially more pressure on female characters than on males?
I honestly think it's because male characters have always been a dime a dozen. It's their inherent expendability and interchangeability that perhaps means their place on the food chain isn't quite as at risk as a woman's, their worth is not in question. If you have to really search to find a good female character in a cast, and it looks like she's there to provide the demographic grabber and/or the love interest, that means there's at least 1000% more pressure on the actor who plays her to make that character count, to give her depth, to fight for the integrity of that character, so she can move beyond that creative rut.
and offer green jelly
oh, and blue!scarimor
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Originally posted by minigeekIt's funny, I never questioned that she was going back for him (to either save him or kill him, but I always thought the former). The first time I saw that episode, I never considered she might not have had that intention. So I'm pretty sure it was the intended implication the writers had going. Because I wasn't analyzing back then (as I do now), and it was my "average viewer" POV. That "don't leave anyone behind" schtick.
later i had the thought that she had the idea of either rescuing or terminating him
and still later i wondered 'damn, makepeace might be pissed if he ever finds out how close she came to screwing up her mission to rescue jack'
simple math, good of the many. if sam was cold and calculating, she should have noted jack's position, blew the shield then went back for jack, thus insuring the most lives saved as possible.
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Originally posted by Skydiversimple math, good of the many. if sam was cold and calculating, she should have noted jack's position, blew the shield then went back for jack, thus insuring the most lives saved as possible.
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Originally posted by minigeekYep, I know. Which is why I thought that scene was such a great one for Sam overall, character-wise. She wasn't thinking entirely with her rational head. She was thinking with her heart (no shipper innuendo meant here), she wasn't about to leave one of her own behind, and the sheild excuse was a cover-up she thought of to make good on her plan (it was incidentally a great idea, but I think rescuing her team-mate was the reason she came up with it, and not the other way around).
Sig courtesy of RepliCartertje
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Originally posted by ReganXI like that while it mightn't have been the soundest military decision, it was a very human choice.
Following Jack around, she never really had to make many of those choices because he was in the leadership role anyway. When she was on her own (as in the aforementioned episode) and of course once she took her own command, she DID have to make those choices and she grappled with them. That made her all the more interesting (to me).
I read a piece of fanfiction recently (Rebecca Ratliff's Gates of War Series) where the author has Jack say something SO GREAT to Sam with respect to her learship role within SG-1. She had been discussing with him a decision she'd made. One that she felt she shouldn't have made, in hindsight. Because she was trying to be fair, and (in hindsight) she felt she should have been less fair and more calculating.
Jack (being Jack) says this to her:
"Sam, when you get out there--you can't afford to be fair and open
minded. You got Daniel for that. Trust me, he'll keep you on the straight
and narrow. But if he isn't preaching at you and annoying the crap out of
you, you're doing something wrong. *You* need to be the most suspicious,
mistrustful cynical ***** you can. There are zillions of ways things can
go right, but when it's your mission, you gotta be on the lookout for the
ways they could go wrong and kill all three of you. You have to think
about worst-case scenarios when it comes to making command decisions."
It's a neat topic to kick around, isn't it?
geek
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Originally posted by minigeek<snip>
I loved that, because it made ME think about all the ways Sam would have to be different than, well, Sam. How being a leader would necessarily change her, in the eyes of her friends as well as those under her command.
It's a neat topic to kick around, isn't it?
geek
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Originally posted by minigeekI loved that, because it made ME think about all the ways Sam would have to be different than, well, Sam. How being a leader would necessarily change her, in the eyes of her friends as well as those under her command.
It's a neat topic to kick around, isn't it?
geek
Sig courtesy of RepliCartertje
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Yes, precisely. And that's what I think is so neat about the topic. Her character changed, necessarily, and that fact is a neat thing to watch and to build on (in fanfiction and in discussion). By extrapolation of concept, we can also infer that there's more to Jack (the "not a team leader" version of him) than we ever saw, too.
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Originally posted by minigeekI read a piece of fanfiction recently (Rebecca Ratliff's Gates of War Series) where the author has Jack say something SO GREAT to Sam with respect to her learship role within SG-1. She had been discussing with him a decision she'd made. One that she felt she shouldn't have made, in hindsight. Because she was trying to be fair, and (in hindsight) she felt she should have been less fair and more calculating.
Sig courtesy of RepliCartertje
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Originally posted by ReganXHave you a link to the story?
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EDIT: POST 1600 baby!!
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