Hey guys, I've been a fan of QC for some time now, and I thought I'd check out the forums.
Personally, I'm a big fan of Firefly. I can't really say I'm a fan of shows like Buffy or Angel. I did have a Buffy phase when the series was brand new, but in the long run I felt the shows were unconvincing. Vampires weren't very well developed overall, Spike was an interesting character but his character arc made no sense, etc. Regardless, I respect what it did as an artform. When it was made, it was still unexpected to have a romance plot between a vampire and a human. It generated a massive fandom based not just around the strong female lead, but around the dynamics between the characters. I haven't really seen much of Whedon's newer stuff, but I'm willing to give it a shot when I can get around to it.
I understand some of you don't enjoy Firefly, but geez, lay off the hyperbole. Why spend all this energy hating Firefly when you could spend it hating something worthwhile, like Two and a Half Men?
He writes a lot of strong female characters, and no female strong characters (see: http://www.overthinkingit.com/2008/08/18/why-strong-female-characters-are-bad-for-women/).
Um... Yeah. Marge Simpson? Lucille Ball? Belle from Beauty and the Beast? The definition seems kind of subjective. Realistically, it feels like you're arguing that Whedon writes "female weak characters", when your point is that he writes weak characters in general. That's definitely not a point I agree with.
the only reason anyone still thinks the show is good is because it was canceled long before the normal idiocy
It is definitely true that one of the things I like about Firefly is that it ended. I would have liked for it to have lasted longer, but one of the main reasons I've tended to prefer anime over American TV shows is that they tend to have an ending. American TV shows either get cancelled half way through an arc, or they just keep on going for so long that they jump the shark and I just stop caring. I remember enjoying the first season of Heroes, but due to their poor planning, the subsequent seasons have been so awful that I just can't stand to watch any of it anymore.
Regardless, Whedon's general skill as a writer is irrelevant. Some of the best parts of Firefly were actually put in thanks to executive meddling (the prostitute Inara is an example). Writers don't exist in a vacuum. If he eventually releases a second season, then we can judge that second season for what it is. As it stands, we have a bunch of episodes that were to a standard much higher than much of what I have seen produced for television, even though it still has plenty of flaws.
Yes, I am prejudiced by Firefly's neo-colonialist (to put it generously) attitude that "stuff" from China, Japan etc. is cool (though not so much that they get it right of course), but the people are not.
You're really reading too much into it. Watch some foreign films and you'll find a mirror image of the same problem. Evangelion has Nerv, an organisation with deep international ties, including close ties to the US. It's tasked with protecting the entire planet from attack and yet all the key personnel are Japanese. Foreign (especially German) references abound but the closest they get to a foreign character is someone who's 1/4 German played by an actress who couldn't pronounce German to save her life. I don't think that means we should accuse it of racism, even though it could certainly do better.
Actually, one TV series I thought was really interesting was Legend of the Seeker. It was an American TV series, but like Hercules it was made in New Zealand. While the main character were played by Americans, practically every other actor was drawn from the local pool of actors. This meant it had a high proportion of Maori actors, and most of the actors had New Zealand accents. I loved that about the show. But my point is, when working to a budget, you have to consider whether your priority is to get actors who can perform well in the role, or actors who "look" right for the role.
Most of the actors in Firefly were actors who'd worked with Whedon in Buffy or Angel in the past and had demonstrated themselves to be capable actors. Personally, I think this show was more progressive to show an interest in Chinese culture than Charlie's Angels was for casting an actress of Asian descent.