There's a land to burn out everything that you've learned
Internet! I am looking for a good database and/or personal recommendations of science fiction media foregrounding characters of color. My father was expressing his disappointment in the latest season of Doctor Who tonight and he is quite right (among other complaints) that reverse-fridging a male character reads much less cleverly and much more sketchily when the male character is black. I should like to be able to recommend him some antidotes.1 More than one person of color in the cast preferred—who are not the canaries in the coal mine or the sacrifices on behalf of the white characters, if there are any white characters; there don't need to be. Bonus points from my perspective if there are women with agency and queer characters. (I should just hand him Janelle Monáe's back catalogue, right?) He is a hard sell on animation and does not play games, but enjoys things that are not in English. I can do this a lot more easily with books.
1. It is not like my father has never seen science fiction with protagonists of color; he followed Eureka for a while just because it contained Joe Morton. I just know there's always room for more. A lot of room.
1. It is not like my father has never seen science fiction with protagonists of color; he followed Eureka for a while just because it contained Joe Morton. I just know there's always room for more. A lot of room.

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And it works! He reappears and has a perfectly legitimate excuse for not having been running a space station for the last [x] seasons! It is a tribute to the show's structural skills that while I missed some of the impact because I had seen him for maybe one episode before then, his absence (and the mystery surrounding his reappearance) was sufficiently built up by that point that I still understood the importance of the reveal
I remain genuinely impressed by the amount of long-range planning and payoff JMS was able to pull off given the normal exigencies of television and his show in specific being yanked around by its funding. Some of the subplots that were patched in on the fly are brilliant. Third season and first half of the fourth season are still the best, in terms of intensity, pacing, and character work; second half of the fourth season and all of the fifth season were badly affected by the rapid-fire cancellation/de-cancellation of the series and both pull out some wonderful moments, but story-wise there's a lot of disjointed compression and the fifth season especially is marred for me by some wait, seriously? character moments. Nonetheless, I still recommend the entire thing. Either you'll turn out to be allergic to JMS' style—and you'll know once you've watched a couple of the good episodes; if it's not taking, it's not taking—or I'll look forward to your LJ-recaps. I hope it's the latter. I have not actually discussed Babylon 5 with that many people since high school, and even then, I didn't belong to a fan community: I found one person on the internet and we e-mailed feverishly until I left for college and she moved on to a fandom I was completely indifferent to.
And I'm pretty sure I have the potential to fall in love with Ivanova and Delenn; it's a matter of time and motivation.
I did not fall in love with Delenn, but I am unreasoningly fond of Londo Mollari, despite the fact that he is canonically a terrible idea.
I am also unreasoningly fond of Vir Cotto, but he is canonically actually a pretty decent person, even if he occasionally overestimates his capacity to process human fast food.
Ivanova is awesome and that's all there is to it.
[edit] I have never made anything resembling a formal study of it, but I wonder sometimes if there is an actual generational thing with Ivanova. I cannot be the only person who found it valuable, especially in high school, to have a queer woman—a queer Russian-Jewish woman—front and center in a science fiction story airing on a major network. There are ways in which I didn't even think about it at the time, and then I looked back and, you know, it actually mattered.