Originally posted by astrogeologist


-from the scifi angle, I had a hard time ‘catching on to liking Stargate’… the whole Goa’uld and Jaffa angles weren’t appealing at all. Didn’t like the original Stargate movie either.


-I wasn’t an RDA fan (have never seen a whole episode of MacGyver) – not that I didn’t like him, but rather that I didn’t have feelings one way or the other




And that's why it's hard for me to say at what point in the show any of the characters really hit me first. I started watching full eps about the time season 7 new eps started showing. (although I really didn't realize that they were showing new eps until many months later. I assumed I was watching a show that had started out on premium cable that had a boatload of episodes and Skiffy was just rotating the heck out of them in syndication.) When I finally decided I needed to start watching in order (and that meant finding a list of these eps), it was 10 months later (Spring '04). SciFi's rotation was wonderful for luring people in, though the order they were (and are) showed in can be hell for keeping continuity straight in your head.
*grins* And that's when AT's changing hairstyles came in - if you weren't checking out the program listings in the newspaper, you still knew it was from a different season because the hair was different!

-But I do like scifi. A lot.
-Even more, as the years have passed, I really like shows that portray women in competent roles. Where the women are truly equal to the men – so that the male/female status doesn’t even enter into most of the plot-driven dialogue.
-and so I would catch pieces of Stargate here and there over the years. And then, when Stargate was in it’s Seventh Season, I caught a piece of an older episode in reruns. It was an episode where SG-1, and some other military personnel were in a heated battle with some bad-guys (Jaffa). And I was blown away to see the female member of the team… simply handling everything and dealing with everything just like the guys were. Simple and clean – no difference made for the sexes. No lewd comments. No damsel in distress. She wasn’t simply dealing with the manly-men’s injuries while ducking behind a rock or tree.
-so I watched a bit more.
-so I watched a bit more.

-and I was amazed at the wonderful role that was Samantha Carter.
a soldier, an air force officer
a scientist – brilliant… and I love the bright, wide-eyed enthusiasm displayed by AT – I love how she portrayed Carter as actually liking her science – and enjoying it
a soldier, an air force officer
a scientist – brilliant… and I love the bright, wide-eyed enthusiasm displayed by AT – I love how she portrayed Carter as actually liking her science – and enjoying it
I really appreciated how Carter was a brilliant scientist, but was not portrayed as the socially inept geek (with pocket protectors and/or clueless around men)… although I did like how Carter was portrayed as not conceited about her intellect, nor her beauty – and I love how she is unaware of her affect on the opposite sex!
-after watching a few of the reruns, I (like Chopingal) went and ordered the Season 1 DVD’s.

-from there, what caught my attention about Sam Carter was that she was that she had the scifi role that I think is the coolest on Stargate… That being, that she was the only one of the four major characters whose canon backstory was that she originally wanted to be an astronaut. You Go Girl!
-as I watched Season 1 (and then 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6), I was impressed by the times when an episode would either feature Carter or where she would be allowed to handle things that aren’t often given to someone who isn’t the lead male (and that was obviously RDA). Examples are in Hathor (an episode that didn’t turn me on, but), Carter was allowed to pull the trigger on Hathor in the final scene – and much more often, that would have been given over to one of the guys in more typical scenes. Another example was 2010 – where Carter was allowed to be the final hero dying and the one who actually tosses the note through the ‘Gate. Again, it was unusual for me to see the lead male not getting that role. Jack got that role most of the time… but not every time – and it was very cool to see those heroics go to Carter.
Getting back to your original question. What initially caught my attention about Sam Carter? That she was a competent, solid member of the team of heroes – without undue references to her sex. As I watched the series episodes, I found so much more to her character…!
All in all, I love that AT has portrayed Carter as a human being – and not as a stereotype. Carter’s not just a woman. Carter’s not a stereotypical geek with no social graces and no knowledge of how to dress correctly. Carter’s not an egotistical geek (another annoying stereotype for ‘eggheads’). Carter is well-rounded – she’s a person. She has a fun-loving side to go with her brainier side. She can handle physical activities well – another way that she’s not the stereotypical geek (who is usually portrayed as completely inept with respect to sports or physical talents).
I loved and LOL at the ‘can’t cook, spin, weave or dye’ line… and the ‘don’t look at me’ when the alien woman is going into labor. Love the portrayal of women in non-traditional roles. Love the portrayal of women in non-traditional roles – as women who aren’t *****y or butch or just generally cranky.
Uh, oh… I’m going on and on, so I’ll stop for now.
For now
-as I watched Season 1 (and then 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6), I was impressed by the times when an episode would either feature Carter or where she would be allowed to handle things that aren’t often given to someone who isn’t the lead male (and that was obviously RDA). Examples are in Hathor (an episode that didn’t turn me on, but), Carter was allowed to pull the trigger on Hathor in the final scene – and much more often, that would have been given over to one of the guys in more typical scenes. Another example was 2010 – where Carter was allowed to be the final hero dying and the one who actually tosses the note through the ‘Gate. Again, it was unusual for me to see the lead male not getting that role. Jack got that role most of the time… but not every time – and it was very cool to see those heroics go to Carter.
Getting back to your original question. What initially caught my attention about Sam Carter? That she was a competent, solid member of the team of heroes – without undue references to her sex. As I watched the series episodes, I found so much more to her character…!
All in all, I love that AT has portrayed Carter as a human being – and not as a stereotype. Carter’s not just a woman. Carter’s not a stereotypical geek with no social graces and no knowledge of how to dress correctly. Carter’s not an egotistical geek (another annoying stereotype for ‘eggheads’). Carter is well-rounded – she’s a person. She has a fun-loving side to go with her brainier side. She can handle physical activities well – another way that she’s not the stereotypical geek (who is usually portrayed as completely inept with respect to sports or physical talents).
I loved and LOL at the ‘can’t cook, spin, weave or dye’ line… and the ‘don’t look at me’ when the alien woman is going into labor. Love the portrayal of women in non-traditional roles. Love the portrayal of women in non-traditional roles – as women who aren’t *****y or butch or just generally cranky.
Uh, oh… I’m going on and on, so I’ll stop for now.
For now



I think that second to last paragraph (where I underlined and 'pinkened' it) about sums it up.

Comment