The Orville is more Star Trek than the new Star Trek, and I don't even like Seth MacFuckface. Fuck off.
It's brown female with white male, but yeah.
Altered Cabrón was "multiracial" as well, but again, black female with asian/white protagonist. There was the black side-character that had a white wife and somehow produced a grotesque niggress daughter, but I don't care as much in that case because the show's universe is based on being able to more or less hot-swap bodies whenever you like to, so at that point race is kind of silly anyway. His old girlfriend/back-story negress said she found/"invented" (nigger version of found) the alien technology anyway, and that she had traveled using it, didn't she? So I'm not sure the form we see her in is even the real one, or that if she comes back, she'll still actually be black.
>But she was black in the holo-stuff
First of all, she's black because that's how Kovacs remember her, she's not actually there, and secondly Kovacs himself is white in the holo stuff as well, so clearly they look like whatever they currently want to look like (MINOR SPOILER: he changes his face in a later holo-encounter).
Besides, Martha Higareda is nice enough to watch the show on its own for. It's an interesting universe as well, and it's fairly well detailed. It has a nice atmosphere, and good visuals. The story is interesting enough as well, but I watch it more for the universe anyway.
They never did say she was dead, it's just what Kovacs believed. They were all using the same technology, so it's plausible even in-universe, if a bit unlikely. She could've actually also been backed up, even. Since she supposedly discovered the technology, it'd be odd if that wasn't the case. Who knows.
Nitpicking aside, the main problem with these shows is that they don't know how to properly close major storylines.
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