Niota Ukola. Lieutenant Sulu played by George Takei is a USS Enterprise helmet. To make Japanese Americans acquire an important position is, of course, a major step forward. The hostility of Japanese Americans during the Second World War greatly decreased, but some uneasy people are still worried about whether the role of Japanese Americans places a burden on Indonesian viewers. Gene Roddenberry has never considered Lieutenant Sulu as "a symbolic Asian," but everyone seems to be opposed to him and playing an important role for ethnic minorities.
Anyone who has seen the original TV series "Star Trek" will recognize the similarity between the mobile phone (StarTac) and the show communicator. This is a device that Starfleet staff can use to talk wirelessly wirelessly. The first version of the phone turned over from bottom to top, and it was adjusted to be exactly the same as the series communicator before finalizing. If you see the original Star Trek series now, you may not be able to think about the team's cultural diversity twice. However, the diversity at that time was unprecedented, including Lieutenant Uhur (African), Lieutenant Sul (Asian), and Ensign Chekov (Russian). At this time, the civil rights movement came into full swing, the United States was also in the middle of the Vietnam War and the Cold War.
When I was young I saw Star Trek from a young age. I have seen many SF TV programs since I was a child, but "Star Trek" is different. Star Wars is a magnificent story of aliens and spacecraft that are very different from each other, and Star Trek is close to home. It represents a future version of mankind who has abandoned war and savage to explore and discover the universe, in order for us to gain more benefit. As a famous Star Trek actor, Leonardo Nimoi, passed away, many of us would like to know whether the Star Trek heritage will continue to maintain that standard. I can not express Paramount about this issue, but the ideas and techniques of the Star Trek setting standards can be said to be close to reality everyday. Even the communicator, computer mat, and even the universal translator that Star Trek originally thought, is similar to the technology we see everyday.
Gene Roddenberry, the creator of Asimov and Star Trek, has established a unique relationship during the first release of the late 1960s. Asimov wrote a review article on the scientific accuracy of the Star Trek TV Guide magazine. Roddenberry dismissed a private letter explaining the limit of writing a weekly episode. Asimov corrected the article on the follow guide to "TV guide", despite its inaccuracy, claimed that "Star Trek" was a totally new challenging SF TV program. These two are still friends, Asimov served as a consultant for the Star Trek Project.