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Geordi La Forge

Geordi La Forge[a] (/ˈɔːrdi lə ˈfɔːr/ JOR-dee lə FORJ) is a fictional character who appeared in all seven seasons of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation and its four feature films as well as the third season of Star Trek: Picard. Portrayed by LeVar Burton, he served as helmsman of the USS Enterprise-D in the first season of The Next Generation, then occupied the role of the chief engineer for the rest of the series and in the films before appearing as a commodore in Picard. La Forge has been blind since his birth and uses technological devices that allow him to see – a VISOR in the series and the first film, replaced by ocular prosthetic implants in the last three films and in Picard.

Geordi La Forge
LeVar Burton as Lieutenant Commander Geordi La Forge
First appearance
Created byGene Roddenberry
D. C. Fontana
Portrayed byLeVar Burton
In-universe information
SpeciesHuman
GenderMale
TitleCommodore
(PIC: Season 3)
Lieutenant Commander
(TNG: Seasons 3–7, Movies)
Lieutenant
(TNG: Season 2)
Lieutenant, Junior Grade
(TNG: Season 1)
PositionHead Curator
(Starfleet Museum – PIC Season 3)
Chief Engineer
(USS Enterprise-E,
USS Enterprise-D – TNG Seasons 2–7, Movies)
Helmsman
(USS Enterprise-D – TNG Season 1)
AffiliationUnited Federation of Planets
Starfleet
FamilyEdward La Forge (father)
Silva La Forge (mother)
Ariana La Forge (sister)
Alandra La Forge (daughter)
Sidney La Forge (daughter)
OriginMogadishu, Somalia, Earth

Concept and development Edit

Lt. (J.G.) Geordi La Forge
An away-mission regular who is racially black and birth-defect blind – although with prosthetic super-high tech artificial "eyes" which can detect electromagnetic waves from all the way from raw heat to high frequency ultra-violet, making other crewpersons seem hopelessly "blind" by comparison. His closest friend is Data, and the two of them are particularly efficient when working together on away missions. Because of his "eyes", Geordi can also perform some of the functions of a tricorder.

Gene Roddenberry, Geordi La Forge's description, Star Trek: The Next Generation Writer/Director's Guide, March 23, 1987.[2]

Gene Roddenberry created the character in honor of George La Forge, a quadriplegic fan of the original Star Trek series, who died in 1975.[3] He was not the first to honor La Forge in the Star Trek franchise; a character directly named for George La Forge was written into the 1980 Star Trek novel The Galactic Whirlpool by David Gerrold.

A casting call was placed with agencies for the role, which described him as friends with Data, and specified that La Forge should have "perfect diction and might even have a Jamaican accent" and instructed those agencies not to submit "any 'street' types."[4]

LeVar Burton auditioned for the role in 1986.[4] He had previously appeared in Roots and other major network shows. He stated that "years ago I was doing a TV movie called Emergency Room and it was a fairly miserable experience. But there was a producer on that show, a man named Bob Justman.... six, seven years later, I get this call from Bob Justman and he's working at Paramount on this new Star Trek series and he said I remember your love of the show, we've got this character, would you be interested in coming in and seeing us? And I said was [franchise creator] Gene Roddenberry involved? He said he is. And I said I'll be right there."[5] Roddenberry was very pleased with Burton at his first audition.[6] Among the other actors considered for the role were Wesley Snipes, Reggie Jackson, Kevin Peter Hall, Clarence Gilyard, and Tim Russ, who would later play Tuvok on Star Trek: Voyager.[7]

Burton also commented that he was anxious about his role, because he feared that The Next Generation was going to flop: "At the beginning, you know, there was a lot of conversation in the press at what a bad idea this was [but] I thought that since Gene was involved we had a real good shot of making a good show that would carry on in that tradition of Star Trek."[5]

Throughout the series, Burton was equipped with Geordi La Forge's trademark VISOR, which he found extremely unpleasant to wear:

It's pretty much a living hell. 85 to 90% of my vision is taken away when the VISOR goes on. I bumped into everything the first season—light stands, overhead microphones, cables at my feet—I tripped over it all. So it's a sort of conundrum. The blind man, who puts on the VISOR and sees much more than everyone else around him, when the actor actually does that he's turned into a blind person. Then there was the pain. In the second season, we re-designed the VISOR and made it heavier and the way we actually affixed it was that we screwed it, we literally screwed it into my head and so there were screws that we would turn and there were flanges on the inside that would press into my temples and so after fifteen or twenty minutes of that I got headaches. So I had a daily headache for about six years. Which was also no fun.[8]

During the series, Burton's character was Chief Engineering Officer, and thus was often portrayed repairing machines or discovering new scientific phenomena. Burton commented how hard it sometimes was to deliver the technobabble used by La Forge in these scenes with a straight face: "Technobabble brings with it its own challenge. I'm not an engineer, I just played one on TV. The methodology that I found most successful was to really spit it out as fast as I possibly could. Giving the illusion that I knew what I was talking about when, in fact, I really didn't."[9]

Asked about his favorite scenes, Burton answered that he especially liked holodeck adventures: "The Holmes and Watson episodes for Data and Geordi, the Robin Hood episode, you know, those were a lot of fun for us. I think the holodeck was a very cool concept, you know. You can create a three dimensional reality. I mean, how cool is that?"[10]

Following the end of the series, Burton has stated how much he gained from The Next Generation; "When I got married my best man was Brent (Spiner, who portrayed the series character Lieutenant Commander Data) and my groomsmen were Michael (Dorn, Lieutenant Worf) and Jonathan (Frakes, Commander Riker) and Patrick (Stewart, Captain Picard). No matter what, we will always be family to each other. I mean in every respect. There have been times when there have been feuds within the family, when it hasn't been all hugs and kisses. But we have stuck together."[11]

VISOR Edit

In universe Edit

In the Star Trek fictional universe, a VISOR is a device used by the blind to artificially provide them with a sense of sight. A thin, curved device worn over the face like a pair of sunglasses, the VISOR scans the electromagnetic spectrum, creating visual input, and transmits it into the brain of the wearer via the optic nerves.[12][13] The sensors are located on the convex side, that covers the eyes and attaches at small input jacks implanted in the temples. The only VISOR seen on screen was used by Geordi La Forge, who was blind from birth.[14] VISOR is an acronym for "Visual Instrument and Sight Organ Replacement";[15] however, the complete term never appeared in the series, but only in novelizations and other written tie-in products.

The VISOR also caused LaForge some persistent pain, which could not be treated without interfering with the device.[12] Beverly Crusher and Katherine Pulaski, the two high-ranking doctors who served on the ship, were unfamiliar with the device when first meeting La Forge.[episode needed]

The device does not reproduce normal human vision, but does allow the character to "see" energy phenomena visible to the naked human eye while expanding the wearer's full perceived spectrum to 1 Hz — 100 PHz. This also allowed the character to see human vital signs such as heart rate and temperature, giving him the ability to monitor moods and even detect lies in humans (but not aliens).[16] In the episode "Heart of Glory", Captain Picard keys the main viewer to Geordi's visor allowing him to see the way he does. Seeing all the overlapping and different wavelengths was highly confusing to the Captain, prompting him to ask Geordi how he was able to differentiate between them all. Geordi's response made the comparison of a child hearing many different sounds at once and eventually being able to pick out what they needed; it is a learned talent.

In the episode "The Mind's Eye", the access to Geordi's brain through the interface makes him a target of Romulan brainwashing.

In the episode "Interface", Geordi uses an experimental interface to his VISOR. In an environment too dangerous for humans to be in, Geordi sees, hears, feels and acts through a robot.

Twice in the series, Geordi refused to be granted natural vision, first by Commander Riker, who had been given extraordinary amounts of power by Q, because it would have come at the cost of Riker's humanity,[17] and later by Doctor Katherine Pulaski.[18]

Sometime between 2371 and 2373, before the time of the film Star Trek: First Contact, Geordi's VISOR was replaced by cybernetic eyes, performing the same functions. On film, they are depicted using a combination of cosmetic contact lenses and CGI.[citation needed]

There was a short time period in Star Trek: Insurrection where Geordi gained actual eyesight, due to the effects of fictional metaphasic radiation, in the atmosphere of the planet Ba'ku. However, the effects of the metaphasic radiation wore off after leaving the planet, and the cybernetic eyes were once again used in the film Star Trek: Nemesis.

Reality Edit

New Scientist magazine reported on research as to whether a device similar to a VISOR can actually be created for blind or visually impaired people. Partial sight has been successfully restored to blind rats by installing an implant behind the retina.[19]

Several types of visual prosthesis are in development or trials in humans, and one device has been approved for sale in the European market. As of 2006, 16 blind people worldwide have had sight partially restored in a procedure where electrodes implanted in their brains take impulses from a camera to allow patients to see lights and outlines of objects.[20] There is a device developed by NASA called a Joint Optical Reflective Display, or JORDY, that is presumably named for Geordi La Forge.

On August 14, 2012, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published an article stating the encoding of image information by the retina into patterns of action potentials has been replicated successfully by a prosthetic device and scientists have successfully restored full vision to blind mice. Scientists were able to mimic this ocular response using glasses, and speculate that a similar pair of glasses may be available for human use within two years.[21]

LeVar Burton, who played the character of Geordi La Forge, disliked the VISOR prop because it restricted his peripheral vision – albeit less than its prototypes – and the constant pressure of the prop's arms on his temples caused headaches. In commentary for Star Trek Generations, film writers Ronald D. Moore and Brannon Braga noted Burton also felt the prop limited him as an actor, as it denied him the use of his eyes in conveying emotion. The original prop was inspired by a one-piece women's hair clip brought to production by Michael Okuda during the initial conceptual development of the VISOR prop.

Fictional character biography Edit

In the series, we learn that Geordi was born blind and wears a VISOR, an arc-shaped prosthetic attached at the temples that provides him with vision. Interfacing directly with his brain, the device enables him to "see" much of the electromagnetic spectrumradio waves, infrared, ultraviolet, and beyond, but not normal light perception, though it does allow Geordi to see the visible light section of the EM spectrum.[22]

La Forge was born February 16, 2335, in Mogadishu, Somalia of the African Confederation on Earth to Silva La Forge, a Starfleet command track officer and eventual Captain of the USS Hera (NCC-62006) and Edward M. La Forge, a Starfleet exozoologist.[23] He has also mentioned having a sister, Arianna. La Forge stated that with two parents in Starfleet he was an "army brat", frequently moving homes depending on where his parents were stationed around Earth (or other planets), which mirrors Burton's own youth (he was born on an American base in Germany). He attended Zefram Cochrane High School[24] and then Starfleet Academy from 2353 to 2357.[25] In 2357, he was assigned as an ensign aboard the USS Victory under Captain Zimbata.[26] After his first cruise, he was transferred to the USS Hood serving with then Lt. Commander William Riker for her 2361-64 cruise, during which he was promoted to lieutenant junior grade.[27]

La Forge once impressed Captain Jean-Luc Picard by staying up all night to fix a shuttle craft that Picard mentioned had a superficial problem. Upon learning this, Picard decided he wanted Geordi on his next command[28] which ended up being the USS Enterprise-D where Geordi was assigned to him as a helmsman. At the beginning of Season 2, he was promoted to Lieutenant and named Chief Engineer; in Season 3, he rose to Lieutenant Commander, a rank that he held for the duration of the series and movies; he finds a best friend in the android Data.

In 2372, Geordi is transferred to the new Sovereign-class starship Enterprise-E. When the ship travels back in time to the 21st century, he works alongside Dr. Zefram Cochrane and helps him successfully launch Earth's first warp-capable vessel and achieve first contact with the Vulcans.[24]

During the Ba'ku incident, La Forge began to experience pain in his eyes after sojourning on the planet. Doctor Beverly Crusher removes his ocular implants to discover that his optic nerves have regenerated and he has gained normal sight. This effect is caused by the healing properties of the Ba'ku ring system and, at the time, it is speculated that the effect will fade after La Forge leaves Ba'ku.[29] This diagnosis proved correct; La Forge again wears the implants in Star Trek: Nemesis.

In the third season of the sequel series Star Trek: Picard, La Forge is revealed to have fathered two daughters, Alandra and Sidney, who have joined Starfleet by 2401. Like their father, Alandra has become an engineer while Sidney has become a pilot. Alandra serves alongside Geordi while Sidney serves aboard the USS Titan; he has become overprotective of them nonetheless. La Forge has become a Commodore and is the head curator of the Starfleet Museum, wherein he has been working on a secret project for twenty years. Picard, Crusher, their son Jack, and the Titan crew, on the run from a Changeling conspiracy in Starfleet, seek La Forge's help to try to clone the ship's signals, but La Forge points out that Starfleet has upgraded their ships to "talk" to each other. However, when his daughters and Jack steal a cloaking device from the Museum and install it on the Titan, La Forge reluctantly goes along with them, whereupon he is reunited with an altered form of Data, fighting with his "evil twin" Lore for control of their common android body.[30] La Forge helps Data overcome Lore's dominance of the body, which allows Data to kill the main antagonist of the season.[31] La Forge is reunited with the rest of the Enterprise crew; he helps Data and Crusher find the true nature of Picard's neurological disorder and loses his daughters to it, forcing La Forge to reveal his secret project: the full reconstruction of the Enterprise-D.[32] Picard uses the Enterprise to infiltrate the antagonists' collaborators' base; La Forge assumes temporary command, letting Crusher destroy the base's power source with the Enterprise's torpedoes, eliminating the collaborators' threat once and for all, and oversees Picard's rescue. La Forge greets his daughters, who have been returned to normal, on the Titan over video; he is last seen playing poker with his Enterprise crewmates at the Ten Forward bar in Los Angeles, content with his life.

Alternate timelines Edit

In one of the alternate universes experienced by Worf in the Season 7 episode "Parallels (Star Trek: The Next Generation)", Geordi is killed in an Cardassian attack on the Enterprise when Worf is suddenly confronted with unfamiliar tactical controls and cannot raise the shields in time. Geordi's VISOR is revealed to be the trigger of Worf's unplanned shifts through the timelines.

In the alternate timeline of The Next Generation series finale "All Good Things...", La Forge has, by 2395, married "Leah" and had three children (Alandra, Brett, and Sydney) with her. He left Starfleet and became a novelist. However, these events may never happen because of the divergence of the time line at the episode's end.

In the alternate 2390 future in Star Trek: Voyager's "Timeless", La Forge is a captain and the commanding officer of the USS Challenger, doing his best to stop Harry Kim and Chakotay from altering the time line. He had micro-implants in his eyes, allowing him to see without wearing his visor. However, Kim and Chakotay succeed in their mission, erasing the alternate time line. Despite trying his best to stop them, La Forge is sympathetic to their actions and even offers a full pardon if they stop. When they refuse, La Forge is forced to attack, but wishes them good luck and says that in their place, he would probably do the same. When the group's ship suffers a warp core breach and is going to explode, he offers to beam them aboard his ship so that they can survive, but they refuse and tell him to move off to a safe distance which he does.

In the holographic alternate history depicted in "Future Imperfect", a fictitious La Forge had cloned eye implants and had no need of his VISOR.

During the non-canon events of the comic book mini-series Star Trek: Countdown (a prequel to the 2009 Star Trek film), Geordi (now a civilian) is reunited with Data and Picard during an effort to stop a massive supernova that threatens all of existence. Geordi ultimately designs the Jellyfish, the advanced spacecraft that is piloted by Ambassador Spock in the film.[33]

Reception Edit

Critics and fans have responded favorably to the character. Burton himself has complained on DVD featurettes about the lack of romantic interests for his character. At least one scholar, however, states that out of seven principal black characters across the Star Trek series, only La Forge and Tuvok "really qualify as nerds, and neither of them compares with the extraordinary geekiness of the teenaged Wesley Crusher." According to Dr. Ron Eglash, the construction of the La Forge character stands up to the standards of Afrofuturism.[34]

In David Greven's book Gender and Sexuality in Star Trek (2009), he described the use of the VISOR as a means to obscure the face of the character, describing it as a "surprisingly clunky symbol of blindness". However, he felt that the bionic eyes used in the film series were an improvement but followed a pattern of African American eye modifications in fantasy and science fiction films such as Halle Berry as Storm in X-Men (2000). Greven suggested that these changes were to create the impression that the wearer was alien in nature and to highlight the difference between that character/actor and the others in the film.[35]

In 2018, TheWrap ranked Geordi as the 11th best main cast character of Star Trek shows, noting his ability to come up with technical solutions on short notice and his friendship with Data.[36] In 2016, the character of Geordi was ranked as the 21st most important character of Starfleet within the Star Trek science fiction universe by Wired magazine.[37] In 2016, The Hollywood Reporter ranked "Relics" as the 62nd greatest of the Star Trek franchise up to that time, noting that LeVar Burton has many great scenes with original cast veteran James Doohan reprising his famous character Scotty.[38]

In 2017, IndieWire rated Geordi as the 8th best character on Star Trek: The Next Generation.[39] CBR ranked La Forge as the 13th best Starfleet character of Star Trek, in 2018.[40]

In 2017, Screen Rant ranked La Forge the 9th most attractive person in the Star Trek universe.[41] In 2018, The Wrap placed La Forge as 11th out 39 in a ranking of main cast characters of the Star Trek franchise prior to Star Trek: Discovery.[42]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Also spelled LaForge.[1]

References Edit

  1. ^ http://www.st-minutiae.com/resources/scripts/269.txt LaForge
  2. ^ Roddenberry (1987): p. 7
  3. ^ Nemecek (2003): p. 15
  4. ^ a b Shrager (1997): p. 75
  5. ^ a b . BBC Cult. Archived from the original on October 28, 2015. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  6. ^ Schrager (1997). p. 76
  7. ^ "Letters of Note: STAR TREK/Casting". Retrieved March 25, 2010.
  8. ^ . BBC Cult. Archived from the original on December 21, 2016. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  9. ^ . BBC Cult. Archived from the original on April 30, 2012. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  10. ^ . BBC Cult. Archived from the original on April 22, 2012. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  11. ^ . BBC Cult. Archived from the original on June 10, 2011. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  12. ^ a b "Encounter at Farpoint". Star Trek: The Next Generation. Season 1, Episodes 1 and 2. September 28, 1987
  13. ^ "The Masterpiece Society". Star Trek: The Next Generation. Season 5, Episode 13. February 10, 1992
  14. ^ "The Enemy". Star Trek: The Next Generation. Season 3, Episode 7. November 6, 1989
  15. ^ Okuda, Mike; Okuda, Denise (1997). The Star Trek Encyclopedia (Second ed.). Pocket Books. p. 546.
  16. ^ "Up the Long Ladder". Star Trek: The Next Generation. Season 2, Episode 18. May 22, 1989,
  17. ^ "Hide and Q". Star Trek: The Next Generation. Season 1, Episode 10. November 23, 1987
  18. ^ "Loud as a Whisper". Star Trek: The Next Generation. Season 2, Episode 5. January 9, 1989
  19. ^ "'Bionic eye' may help reverse blindness". New Scientist. March 31, 2005. Retrieved September 15, 2020.
  20. ^ . News 14 Carolina. March 31, 2008. Archived from the original on May 22, 2006. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  21. ^ Nirenberg, Sheila; Pandarinath, Chethan (August 13, 2012). "Retinal prosthetic strategy with the capacity to restore normal vision". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 109 (37): 15012–15017. Bibcode:2012PNAS..10915012N. doi:10.1073/pnas.1207035109. PMC 3443127. PMID 22891310.
  22. ^ Lasbury, Mark E. (2016) [August 24], "7 Geordi's Visor: A Vision of the Future", The Realization of Star Trek Technologies The Science, Not Fiction, Behind Brain Implants, Plasma Shields, Quantum Computing, and More, Springer International Publishing, pp. 199–228, ISBN 9783319409146
  23. ^ (TNG: "Interface")
  24. ^ a b (Star Trek: First Contact)
  25. ^ (TNG: "Conundrum")
  26. ^ (TNG: "Elementary, Dear Data")
  27. ^ (TNG: "Conundrum")
  28. ^ (TNG: "The Next Phase")
  29. ^ (Star Trek: Insurrection)
  30. ^ (Picard: "The Bounty")
  31. ^ (Picard: "Dominion", "Surrender")
  32. ^ (Picard: "Võx")
  33. ^ Star Trek: Countdown #3–4
  34. ^ Eglash, Ron (Summer 2002). . Social Text. 20 (2): 49–64. doi:10.1215/01642472-20-2_71-49. S2CID 73590826. Archived from the original on December 9, 2013. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  35. ^ Greven (2009): p. 100
  36. ^ "All 39 'Star Trek' Main Characters Ranked, from Spock to Wesley (Photos)". March 21, 2018.
  37. ^ McMillan, Graeme (September 5, 2016). "Star Trek's 100 Most Important Crew Members, Ranked". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
  38. ^ Aaron Couch and Graeme McMillan (August 9, 2016). "'Star Trek': 100 Greatest Episodes". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  39. ^ Miller, Liz Shannon (September 30, 2017). "'Star Trek: The Next Generation': Ranking the Crew, From Picard to Pulaski". IndieWire. Retrieved March 21, 2019.
  40. ^ "Star Trek: The 25 Best Members Of Starfleet, Ranked". CBR. October 27, 2018. Retrieved June 20, 2019.
  41. ^ . ScreenRant. December 15, 2017. Archived from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved July 12, 2019.
  42. ^ "All 39 'Star Trek' Main Characters Ranked". TheWrap. March 21, 2018. Retrieved June 22, 2019.

Bibliography Edit

  • Greven, David (2009). Gender and Sexuality in Star Trek: Allegories of Desire in the Television Series and Films. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co. ISBN 978-0-786-44413-7.
  • Gross, Edward; Altman, Mark A. (1995). Captains' Logs: The Unauthorized Complete Trek Voyages. Boston: Little Brown & Co. ISBN 978-0-316-32957-6.
  • Nemecek, Larry (2003). Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion (3rd ed.). New York: Pocket Books. ISBN 0-7434-5798-6.
  • Reeves-Stevens, Judith; Reeves-Stevens, Judith (1998). Star Trek: The Next Generation: The Continuing Mission (2nd ed.). New York: Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-02559-5.
  • Roddenberry, Gene (1987). Star Trek: The Next Generation Writer/Director's Guide (PDF). Hollywood, CA: Paramount Domestic Television.
  • Shrager, Adam (1997). The Finest Crew In The Fleet: The Next Generation Cast On Screen And Off. New York: Wolf Valley Books. ISBN 978-1-888-14903-6.

External links Edit

geordi, forge, geordi, redirects, here, similarly, named, regional, culture, england, geordie, visor, redirects, here, other, uses, visor, disambiguation, ɔːr, ɔːr, forj, fictional, character, appeared, seven, seasons, american, science, fiction, television, s. Geordi redirects here For a similarly named regional culture in England see Geordie VISOR redirects here For other uses see visor disambiguation Geordi La Forge a ˈ dʒ ɔːr d i l e ˈ f ɔːr dʒ JOR dee le FORJ is a fictional character who appeared in all seven seasons of the American science fiction television series Star Trek The Next Generation and its four feature films as well as the third season of Star Trek Picard Portrayed by LeVar Burton he served as helmsman of the USS Enterprise D in the first season of The Next Generation then occupied the role of the chief engineer for the rest of the series and in the films before appearing as a commodore in Picard La Forge has been blind since his birth and uses technological devices that allow him to see a VISOR in the series and the first film replaced by ocular prosthetic implants in the last three films and in Picard Geordi La ForgeLeVar Burton as Lieutenant Commander Geordi La ForgeFirst appearance Encounter at Farpoint 1987 The Next Generation Created byGene Roddenberry D C FontanaPortrayed byLeVar BurtonIn universe informationSpeciesHumanGenderMaleTitleCommodore PIC Season 3 Lieutenant Commander TNG Seasons 3 7 Movies Lieutenant TNG Season 2 Lieutenant Junior Grade TNG Season 1 PositionHead Curator Starfleet Museum PIC Season 3 Chief Engineer USS Enterprise E USS Enterprise D TNG Seasons 2 7 Movies Helmsman USS Enterprise D TNG Season 1 AffiliationUnited Federation of PlanetsStarfleetFamilyEdward La Forge father Silva La Forge mother Ariana La Forge sister Alandra La Forge daughter Sidney La Forge daughter OriginMogadishu Somalia Earth Contents 1 Concept and development 2 VISOR 2 1 In universe 2 2 Reality 3 Fictional character biography 3 1 Alternate timelines 4 Reception 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksConcept and development EditLt J G Geordi La ForgeAn away mission regular who is racially black and birth defect blind although with prosthetic super high tech artificial eyes which can detect electromagnetic waves from all the way from raw heat to high frequency ultra violet making other crewpersons seem hopelessly blind by comparison His closest friend is Data and the two of them are particularly efficient when working together on away missions Because of his eyes Geordi can also perform some of the functions of a tricorder Gene Roddenberry Geordi La Forge s description Star Trek The Next Generation Writer Director s Guide March 23 1987 2 Gene Roddenberry created the character in honor of George La Forge a quadriplegic fan of the original Star Trek series who died in 1975 3 He was not the first to honor La Forge in the Star Trek franchise a character directly named for George La Forge was written into the 1980 Star Trek novel The Galactic Whirlpool by David Gerrold A casting call was placed with agencies for the role which described him as friends with Data and specified that La Forge should have perfect diction and might even have a Jamaican accent and instructed those agencies not to submit any street types 4 LeVar Burton auditioned for the role in 1986 4 He had previously appeared in Roots and other major network shows He stated that years ago I was doing a TV movie called Emergency Room and it was a fairly miserable experience But there was a producer on that show a man named Bob Justman six seven years later I get this call from Bob Justman and he s working at Paramount on this new Star Trek series and he said I remember your love of the show we ve got this character would you be interested in coming in and seeing us And I said was franchise creator Gene Roddenberry involved He said he is And I said I ll be right there 5 Roddenberry was very pleased with Burton at his first audition 6 Among the other actors considered for the role were Wesley Snipes Reggie Jackson Kevin Peter Hall Clarence Gilyard and Tim Russ who would later play Tuvok on Star Trek Voyager 7 Burton also commented that he was anxious about his role because he feared that The Next Generation was going to flop At the beginning you know there was a lot of conversation in the press at what a bad idea this was but I thought that since Gene was involved we had a real good shot of making a good show that would carry on in that tradition of Star Trek 5 Throughout the series Burton was equipped with Geordi La Forge s trademark VISOR which he found extremely unpleasant to wear It s pretty much a living hell 85 to 90 of my vision is taken away when the VISOR goes on I bumped into everything the first season light stands overhead microphones cables at my feet I tripped over it all So it s a sort of conundrum The blind man who puts on the VISOR and sees much more than everyone else around him when the actor actually does that he s turned into a blind person Then there was the pain In the second season we re designed the VISOR and made it heavier and the way we actually affixed it was that we screwed it we literally screwed it into my head and so there were screws that we would turn and there were flanges on the inside that would press into my temples and so after fifteen or twenty minutes of that I got headaches So I had a daily headache for about six years Which was also no fun 8 During the series Burton s character was Chief Engineering Officer and thus was often portrayed repairing machines or discovering new scientific phenomena Burton commented how hard it sometimes was to deliver the technobabble used by La Forge in these scenes with a straight face Technobabble brings with it its own challenge I m not an engineer I just played one on TV The methodology that I found most successful was to really spit it out as fast as I possibly could Giving the illusion that I knew what I was talking about when in fact I really didn t 9 Asked about his favorite scenes Burton answered that he especially liked holodeck adventures The Holmes and Watson episodes for Data and Geordi the Robin Hood episode you know those were a lot of fun for us I think the holodeck was a very cool concept you know You can create a three dimensional reality I mean how cool is that 10 Following the end of the series Burton has stated how much he gained from The Next Generation When I got married my best man was Brent Spiner who portrayed the series character Lieutenant Commander Data and my groomsmen were Michael Dorn Lieutenant Worf and Jonathan Frakes Commander Riker and Patrick Stewart Captain Picard No matter what we will always be family to each other I mean in every respect There have been times when there have been feuds within the family when it hasn t been all hugs and kisses But we have stuck together 11 VISOR EditIn universe Edit In the Star Trek fictional universe a VISOR is a device used by the blind to artificially provide them with a sense of sight A thin curved device worn over the face like a pair of sunglasses the VISOR scans the electromagnetic spectrum creating visual input and transmits it into the brain of the wearer via the optic nerves 12 13 The sensors are located on the convex side that covers the eyes and attaches at small input jacks implanted in the temples The only VISOR seen on screen was used by Geordi La Forge who was blind from birth 14 VISOR is an acronym for Visual Instrument and Sight Organ Replacement 15 however the complete term never appeared in the series but only in novelizations and other written tie in products The VISOR also caused LaForge some persistent pain which could not be treated without interfering with the device 12 Beverly Crusher and Katherine Pulaski the two high ranking doctors who served on the ship were unfamiliar with the device when first meeting La Forge episode needed The device does not reproduce normal human vision but does allow the character to see energy phenomena visible to the naked human eye while expanding the wearer s full perceived spectrum to 1 Hz 100 PHz This also allowed the character to see human vital signs such as heart rate and temperature giving him the ability to monitor moods and even detect lies in humans but not aliens 16 In the episode Heart of Glory Captain Picard keys the main viewer to Geordi s visor allowing him to see the way he does Seeing all the overlapping and different wavelengths was highly confusing to the Captain prompting him to ask Geordi how he was able to differentiate between them all Geordi s response made the comparison of a child hearing many different sounds at once and eventually being able to pick out what they needed it is a learned talent In the episode The Mind s Eye the access to Geordi s brain through the interface makes him a target of Romulan brainwashing In the episode Interface Geordi uses an experimental interface to his VISOR In an environment too dangerous for humans to be in Geordi sees hears feels and acts through a robot Twice in the series Geordi refused to be granted natural vision first by Commander Riker who had been given extraordinary amounts of power by Q because it would have come at the cost of Riker s humanity 17 and later by Doctor Katherine Pulaski 18 Sometime between 2371 and 2373 before the time of the film Star Trek First Contact Geordi s VISOR was replaced by cybernetic eyes performing the same functions On film they are depicted using a combination of cosmetic contact lenses and CGI citation needed There was a short time period in Star Trek Insurrection where Geordi gained actual eyesight due to the effects of fictional metaphasic radiation in the atmosphere of the planet Ba ku However the effects of the metaphasic radiation wore off after leaving the planet and the cybernetic eyes were once again used in the film Star Trek Nemesis Reality Edit New Scientist magazine reported on research as to whether a device similar to a VISOR can actually be created for blind or visually impaired people Partial sight has been successfully restored to blind rats by installing an implant behind the retina 19 Several types of visual prosthesis are in development or trials in humans and one device has been approved for sale in the European market As of 2006 update 16 blind people worldwide have had sight partially restored in a procedure where electrodes implanted in their brains take impulses from a camera to allow patients to see lights and outlines of objects 20 There is a device developed by NASA called a Joint Optical Reflective Display or JORDY that is presumably named for Geordi La Forge On August 14 2012 the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published an article stating the encoding of image information by the retina into patterns of action potentials has been replicated successfully by a prosthetic device and scientists have successfully restored full vision to blind mice Scientists were able to mimic this ocular response using glasses and speculate that a similar pair of glasses may be available for human use within two years 21 LeVar Burton who played the character of Geordi La Forge disliked the VISOR prop because it restricted his peripheral vision albeit less than its prototypes and the constant pressure of the prop s arms on his temples caused headaches In commentary for Star Trek Generations film writers Ronald D Moore and Brannon Braga noted Burton also felt the prop limited him as an actor as it denied him the use of his eyes in conveying emotion The original prop was inspired by a one piece women s hair clip brought to production by Michael Okuda during the initial conceptual development of the VISOR prop Fictional character biography EditIn the series we learn that Geordi was born blind and wears a VISOR an arc shaped prosthetic attached at the temples that provides him with vision Interfacing directly with his brain the device enables him to see much of the electromagnetic spectrum radio waves infrared ultraviolet and beyond but not normal light perception though it does allow Geordi to see the visible light section of the EM spectrum 22 La Forge was born February 16 2335 in Mogadishu Somalia of the African Confederation on Earth to Silva La Forge a Starfleet command track officer and eventual Captain of the USS Hera NCC 62006 and Edward M La Forge a Starfleet exozoologist 23 He has also mentioned having a sister Arianna La Forge stated that with two parents in Starfleet he was an army brat frequently moving homes depending on where his parents were stationed around Earth or other planets which mirrors Burton s own youth he was born on an American base in Germany He attended Zefram Cochrane High School 24 and then Starfleet Academy from 2353 to 2357 25 In 2357 he was assigned as an ensign aboard the USS Victory under Captain Zimbata 26 After his first cruise he was transferred to the USS Hood serving with then Lt Commander William Riker for her 2361 64 cruise during which he was promoted to lieutenant junior grade 27 La Forge once impressed Captain Jean Luc Picard by staying up all night to fix a shuttle craft that Picard mentioned had a superficial problem Upon learning this Picard decided he wanted Geordi on his next command 28 which ended up being the USS Enterprise D where Geordi was assigned to him as a helmsman At the beginning of Season 2 he was promoted to Lieutenant and named Chief Engineer in Season 3 he rose to Lieutenant Commander a rank that he held for the duration of the series and movies he finds a best friend in the android Data In 2372 Geordi is transferred to the new Sovereign class starship Enterprise E When the ship travels back in time to the 21st century he works alongside Dr Zefram Cochrane and helps him successfully launch Earth s first warp capable vessel and achieve first contact with the Vulcans 24 During the Ba ku incident La Forge began to experience pain in his eyes after sojourning on the planet Doctor Beverly Crusher removes his ocular implants to discover that his optic nerves have regenerated and he has gained normal sight This effect is caused by the healing properties of the Ba ku ring system and at the time it is speculated that the effect will fade after La Forge leaves Ba ku 29 This diagnosis proved correct La Forge again wears the implants in Star Trek Nemesis In the third season of the sequel series Star Trek Picard La Forge is revealed to have fathered two daughters Alandra and Sidney who have joined Starfleet by 2401 Like their father Alandra has become an engineer while Sidney has become a pilot Alandra serves alongside Geordi while Sidney serves aboard the USS Titan he has become overprotective of them nonetheless La Forge has become a Commodore and is the head curator of the Starfleet Museum wherein he has been working on a secret project for twenty years Picard Crusher their son Jack and the Titan crew on the run from a Changeling conspiracy in Starfleet seek La Forge s help to try to clone the ship s signals but La Forge points out that Starfleet has upgraded their ships to talk to each other However when his daughters and Jack steal a cloaking device from the Museum and install it on the Titan La Forge reluctantly goes along with them whereupon he is reunited with an altered form of Data fighting with his evil twin Lore for control of their common android body 30 La Forge helps Data overcome Lore s dominance of the body which allows Data to kill the main antagonist of the season 31 La Forge is reunited with the rest of the Enterprise crew he helps Data and Crusher find the true nature of Picard s neurological disorder and loses his daughters to it forcing La Forge to reveal his secret project the full reconstruction of the Enterprise D 32 Picard uses the Enterprise to infiltrate the antagonists collaborators base La Forge assumes temporary command letting Crusher destroy the base s power source with the Enterprise s torpedoes eliminating the collaborators threat once and for all and oversees Picard s rescue La Forge greets his daughters who have been returned to normal on the Titan over video he is last seen playing poker with his Enterprise crewmates at the Ten Forward bar in Los Angeles content with his life Alternate timelines Edit In one of the alternate universes experienced by Worf in the Season 7 episode Parallels Star Trek The Next Generation Geordi is killed in an Cardassian attack on the Enterprise when Worf is suddenly confronted with unfamiliar tactical controls and cannot raise the shields in time Geordi s VISOR is revealed to be the trigger of Worf s unplanned shifts through the timelines In the alternate timeline of The Next Generation series finale All Good Things La Forge has by 2395 married Leah and had three children Alandra Brett and Sydney with her He left Starfleet and became a novelist However these events may never happen because of the divergence of the time line at the episode s end In the alternate 2390 future in Star Trek Voyager s Timeless La Forge is a captain and the commanding officer of the USS Challenger doing his best to stop Harry Kim and Chakotay from altering the time line He had micro implants in his eyes allowing him to see without wearing his visor However Kim and Chakotay succeed in their mission erasing the alternate time line Despite trying his best to stop them La Forge is sympathetic to their actions and even offers a full pardon if they stop When they refuse La Forge is forced to attack but wishes them good luck and says that in their place he would probably do the same When the group s ship suffers a warp core breach and is going to explode he offers to beam them aboard his ship so that they can survive but they refuse and tell him to move off to a safe distance which he does In the holographic alternate history depicted in Future Imperfect a fictitious La Forge had cloned eye implants and had no need of his VISOR During the non canon events of the comic book mini series Star Trek Countdown a prequel to the 2009 Star Trek film Geordi now a civilian is reunited with Data and Picard during an effort to stop a massive supernova that threatens all of existence Geordi ultimately designs the Jellyfish the advanced spacecraft that is piloted by Ambassador Spock in the film 33 Reception EditCritics and fans have responded favorably to the character Burton himself has complained on DVD featurettes about the lack of romantic interests for his character At least one scholar however states that out of seven principal black characters across the Star Trek series only La Forge and Tuvok really qualify as nerds and neither of them compares with the extraordinary geekiness of the teenaged Wesley Crusher According to Dr Ron Eglash the construction of the La Forge character stands up to the standards of Afrofuturism 34 In David Greven s book Gender and Sexuality in Star Trek 2009 he described the use of the VISOR as a means to obscure the face of the character describing it as a surprisingly clunky symbol of blindness However he felt that the bionic eyes used in the film series were an improvement but followed a pattern of African American eye modifications in fantasy and science fiction films such as Halle Berry as Storm in X Men 2000 Greven suggested that these changes were to create the impression that the wearer was alien in nature and to highlight the difference between that character actor and the others in the film 35 In 2018 TheWrap ranked Geordi as the 11th best main cast character of Star Trek shows noting his ability to come up with technical solutions on short notice and his friendship with Data 36 In 2016 the character of Geordi was ranked as the 21st most important character of Starfleet within the Star Trek science fiction universe by Wired magazine 37 In 2016 The Hollywood Reporter ranked Relics as the 62nd greatest of the Star Trek franchise up to that time noting that LeVar Burton has many great scenes with original cast veteran James Doohan reprising his famous character Scotty 38 In 2017 IndieWire rated Geordi as the 8th best character on Star Trek The Next Generation 39 CBR ranked La Forge as the 13th best Starfleet character of Star Trek in 2018 40 In 2017 Screen Rant ranked La Forge the 9th most attractive person in the Star Trek universe 41 In 2018 The Wrap placed La Forge as 11th out 39 in a ranking of main cast characters of the Star Trek franchise prior to Star Trek Discovery 42 See also Edit nbsp Speculative fiction portal nbsp Television portalArtificial eye Human echolocationNotes Edit Also spelled LaForge 1 References Edit http www st minutiae com resources scripts 269 txt LaForge Roddenberry 1987 p 7 Nemecek 2003 p 15 a b Shrager 1997 p 75 a b Interviews LeVar Burton Auditioning for Geordi BBC Cult Archived from the original on October 28 2015 Retrieved August 30 2013 Schrager 1997 p 76 Letters of Note STAR TREK Casting Retrieved March 25 2010 Interviews LeVar Burton VISOR Pain BBC Cult Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved August 30 2013 Interviews LeVar Burton Technobabble BBC Cult Archived from the original on April 30 2012 Retrieved August 30 2013 Interviews LeVar Burton The Acting of Science BBC Cult Archived from the original on April 22 2012 Retrieved August 30 2013 Interviews LeVar Burton A Friendly Crew BBC Cult Archived from the original on June 10 2011 Retrieved August 30 2013 a b Encounter at Farpoint Star Trek The Next Generation Season 1 Episodes 1 and 2 September 28 1987 The Masterpiece Society Star Trek The Next Generation Season 5 Episode 13 February 10 1992 The Enemy Star Trek The Next Generation Season 3 Episode 7 November 6 1989 Okuda Mike Okuda Denise 1997 The Star Trek Encyclopedia Second ed Pocket Books p 546 Up the Long Ladder Star Trek The Next Generation Season 2 Episode 18 May 22 1989 Hide and Q Star Trek The Next Generation Season 1 Episode 10 November 23 1987 Loud as a Whisper Star Trek The Next Generation Season 2 Episode 5 January 9 1989 Bionic eye may help reverse blindness New Scientist March 31 2005 Retrieved September 15 2020 New device allows woman to see even without eyes News 14 Carolina March 31 2008 Archived from the original on May 22 2006 Retrieved August 30 2013 Nirenberg Sheila Pandarinath Chethan August 13 2012 Retinal prosthetic strategy with the capacity to restore normal vision Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 37 15012 15017 Bibcode 2012PNAS 10915012N doi 10 1073 pnas 1207035109 PMC 3443127 PMID 22891310 Lasbury Mark E 2016 August 24 7 Geordi s Visor A Vision of the Future The Realization of Star Trek Technologies The Science Not Fiction Behind Brain Implants Plasma Shields Quantum Computing and More Springer International Publishing pp 199 228 ISBN 9783319409146 TNG Interface a b Star Trek First Contact TNG Conundrum TNG Elementary Dear Data TNG Conundrum TNG The Next Phase Star Trek Insurrection Picard The Bounty Picard Dominion Surrender Picard Vox Star Trek Countdown 3 4 Eglash Ron Summer 2002 Race Sex and Nerds from Black Geeks to Asian American Hipsters Social Text 20 2 49 64 doi 10 1215 01642472 20 2 71 49 S2CID 73590826 Archived from the original on December 9 2013 Retrieved August 30 2013 Greven 2009 p 100 All 39 Star Trek Main Characters Ranked from Spock to Wesley Photos March 21 2018 McMillan Graeme September 5 2016 Star Trek s 100 Most Important Crew Members Ranked Wired ISSN 1059 1028 Retrieved March 20 2019 Aaron Couch and Graeme McMillan August 9 2016 Star Trek 100 Greatest Episodes The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved January 26 2021 Miller Liz Shannon September 30 2017 Star Trek The Next Generation Ranking the Crew From Picard to Pulaski IndieWire Retrieved March 21 2019 Star Trek The 25 Best Members Of Starfleet Ranked CBR October 27 2018 Retrieved June 20 2019 Star Trek 20 Most Attractive Characters ScreenRant December 15 2017 Archived from the original on April 16 2021 Retrieved July 12 2019 All 39 Star Trek Main Characters Ranked TheWrap March 21 2018 Retrieved June 22 2019 Bibliography Edit Greven David 2009 Gender and Sexuality in Star Trek Allegories of Desire in the Television Series and Films Jefferson N C McFarland amp Co ISBN 978 0 786 44413 7 Gross Edward Altman Mark A 1995 Captains Logs The Unauthorized Complete Trek Voyages Boston Little Brown amp Co ISBN 978 0 316 32957 6 Nemecek Larry 2003 Star Trek The Next Generation Companion 3rd ed New York Pocket Books ISBN 0 7434 5798 6 Reeves Stevens Judith Reeves Stevens Judith 1998 Star Trek The Next Generation The Continuing Mission 2nd ed New York Pocket Books ISBN 978 0 671 02559 5 Roddenberry Gene 1987 Star Trek The Next Generation Writer Director s Guide PDF Hollywood CA Paramount Domestic Television Shrager Adam 1997 The Finest Crew In The Fleet The Next Generation Cast On Screen And Off New York Wolf Valley Books ISBN 978 1 888 14903 6 External links EditGeordi La Forge Archived July 12 2010 at the Wayback Machine at the official Star Trek website Geordi La Forge at Memory Alpha Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Geordi La Forge amp oldid 1178980078, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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