

While experimenting on the nanites, they almost breached containment and Major General George S. When Colonel Jack O'Neill was infected with nanites on the planet Argos, she discovered the nanites in his blood. When the real Colonel Jack O'Neill returned from P3X-562, she determined he was indeed the real O'Neill. After Teal'c managed to secure a blood sample from the Untouched, she realized that she and Daniel were immune because of their use of Antihistamine for allergies. When Fraiser was first assigned to Stargate Command, she had to deal with the Touched virus to which she, Teal'c, and Dr. (SG1: "Hathor", "Crystal Skull", "Upgrades", "The Curse", "Entity", "Threshold", "Heroes, Part 1") Her use of such authority once led SG-1 team leader, Colonel Jack O'Neill to call her a "Napoleonic power monger". She used this to get the SGC's main flagship team SG-1, into the infirmary on multiple occasions and ceasing experimental tests on SG team members. Fraiser had the authority to overrule those of any rank whatsoever when it came to medical issue. As the Chief Medical Officer of Stargate Command, Dr. In her seven and a half years at the SGC she became one of the foremost experts on Goa'uld symbiotes, having created a symbiote tank to keep Junior in, and having had opportunities to dissect dead symbiotes. They were no longer together as of 1997 and, apparently, they never had any children. I’m really bothered about the baby thing.Fraiser was once married to a man who discouraged her from joining the United States Air Force. Honestly, if they’d been sharing a bed the last three months and just settling in to a really happy simple-life together, that’d be more poignant, and more believable than ‘put a baby in me and that will be The Sign that you have given up on being rescued, just days before rescue finally comes!’ They don’t have to cut out Laira as a character, just…don’t make whether or not she and O’Neill are having sex (and MAKIN’ BABIES!!!) a plot point of any description. Probably they should have focused more on O’Neill making peace with his circumstances, and on the team back home working to rescue him, and cut out the babymaker thing. This is super weird and trite and I feel kinda gross about it.


#Sg1 a hundred days series#
Laira knows the dude for three months, they aren’t having sex yet, and then she’s like ‘do me a favour: sex me and make a baby happen’ and it’s like, whoa, girl, three months in and you want to jump straight past everything else to ‘knock me up’? And then at the end of the episode she watches him leave, holding a hand to her belly as he goes as if to imply that Jack O’Neill, who has Kid Issues on account of the previous child he had who DIED, just like, sowed some wild oats and now he’s peacing out like no biggie? It’s all very fucking weird and awkward, guys, and whoever decided that adding in this whole MAKE ME A BABY thing to what is otherwise a very standard and understandable series of situations should…not do that again.
#Sg1 a hundred days code#
So, I’m gonna assume that ‘give me a child’ is code for ‘let’s have sex’ since it’s not like O’Neill can just…will a child to be made, and like, ok, this is all really very queasy. Fraiser passes briefly with Carter at the SGC before the conversation turns to O’Neill. MORE INFO (and potential spoilers) UNDER THE CUT:Ĭarter explains orbits to Laira. How many male characters (with names and lines) are there? How many female characters (with names and lines) are there? Since you could theoretically pass the Bechdel eight times over and still be churning out the most misogynistic content ever encountered, this blog will also endeavour to evaluate that content when and where possible, offering a positive content rating out of five (five being excellent, one being atrocious, and three being the baseline standard from which so few episodes dare to deviate), and details of these observations and others under the spoiler-cut. Within the context of this blog, it remains a bare minimum - even if the episode gives me nothing else worth talking about, I can at least note whether or not it passes the B. We all know the Bechdel is not (and was never intended to be) the be-all-and-end-all for judging the feminist content of a text, it's supposed to represent a bare-minimum hurdle that all-too-many things still completely fail to step over.
#Sg1 a hundred days tv#
In which I watch tv shows and write posts about whether or not each episode passes the Bechdel, along with other observations on the quality (or lack thereof) of their female representation (as well as anything else that feels important to me, and hey, a little about the quality of the episodes themselves, because I'm just a big damn fan of tv).
