The Weaker Sex (Sliders)
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Sliders episode | |
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“The Weaker Sex” | |
Quinn and Arturo |
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Episode no. | 1-8 |
Guest star(s) | Teresa Barnwell Sara Botsford Peg Christopherson Robert Curtis Brown Liza Huget Alfred E. Humphreys Peter Kelamis Joe Maffei Leigh Morrow Tamara Stanners Jill Teed Andrew Wheeler Douglas Sills |
Writer(s) | Dawn Presrwich Nicole Yorkin |
Director | Vern Gillum |
Production no. | 70406 |
Original airdate | 1995-05-03 |
List of all Sliders episodes |
"The Weaker Sex" is the eighth episode of the science fiction television show Sliders. It originally aired on May 3, 1995. In the episode, the sliders land on a world where traditional gender roles are reversed.
[edit] Plot
The group arrives on a world where women hold public office, play professional sports, fly planes, and are captains of industry while men cook, clean, and stay home to take care of the kids. Over the centuries, men had gradually come to believe there is a benefit to female leadership. There is no war, social issues are handled quickly and crime is almost non-existent. However, it is definitely a caste system; men have little avenues of employment aside from modeling, secretarial work and nannying. Hillary Clinton is the president of the United States of America, and Jane Pauley is the Pope. Maximillian Arturo runs against San Francisco mayor Anita Ross.
Since the sliders have six and a half weeks on this earth, they realize they need to get jobs. Initially, Quinn is only able to find employment as a nanny and a nude model. Rembrandt attempts to sing on the street in the hopes that people will leave him change. Unfortunately, he only makes enough to afford crackers and cheese whiz. Wade finds a job working in the mayor's office and announces that she might be able to get jobs for Quinn, Rembrandt and Arturo.
While waiting to be interviewed, Arturo expresses annoyance at a female dominated society. A journalist for a men's magazine overhears Arturo and suggests that Arturo has a very radical outlook. He gives Arturo his business card and asks him to call if the job at the mayor's office does not work out. Quinn is given a job, but he feels that the person who interviewed him was sizing him up like a piece of meat. Arturo is rejected; he says they have no use for a middle-aged physics professor. The journalist runs into Arturo as he exits the office, and takes Arturo out to dinner along with several other men's rights activists. They say that they think a man can do just as good of a job as a woman and announce that they want Arturo to be the next mayor of San Francisco.
Arturo tells Quinna and Wade that he plans to run for office, and they point out that Arturo has been discouraging the others from interfering with the society of alternate earths since they started their journey. Arturo feels strongly about the cause of the men's rights advocates on this earth, and he runs for mayor anyway. He justifies this by saying that his principles of non-interference are subject to a process of evolution.
While singing for money in public, Rembrandt meets a woman who says she is a record producer. Rembrandt goes to her place and tells him she has met the man of her dreams. The two begin a romantic relationship.
Meanwhile, in Arturo's campaign office, a brick is thrown through the window. Arturo receives a phone call stating that next time it will be a bomb.
The campaigners at Anita Ross's office ask Quinn to see an ad that they made discouraging the voters from voting for Arturo. In the ad, it was mentioned that Arturo did not provide an employment history to prove that he is a physics professor. Quinn and Wade get into an argument about the ad; Quinn says that the part about his university credentials could only have come from Wade, but she says it could have also come from an article in the New York Times. Quinn quits his job, and attempts to get Arturo to drop out of the election. Arturo responds by stating that he feels like Martin Luther King, Jr. and he wants to allow young boys on this world to dream of being an astronaut or a professional baseball player. A few minutes later, there is an attempt on his life.
Rembrandt's girlfriend's ex-boyfriend comes by and mentions to Rembrandt that she is not a record producer as she had claimed. Later that day, she tells Rembrandt that she has a business dinner and cannot eat with him. Rembrandt is hurt and states that he worked hard on preparing dinner, and that his needs are being neglected. The relationship ends.
At the hotel, Arturo expresses surprise that it was a man who tried to kill him. Wade is not surprised, and Quinn suggests that people are worried that if men regain power, war will start again. Wade tells Arturo that he should not blame society for reacting that way, and that he is attempting to force his values on a world that is not ready for them. Arturo decides that it was a mistake to run for mayor, but that it is too late to drop out because it would prevent men from being able to run for a long time. Arturo attempts to throw the election by crying at a televised debate with his opponent, but the plan ends up backfiring, and he gains sympathy from voters for his display of emotion.
On election night, the group is preparing to slide a few minutes before the final results are made public. Wade and Arturo wager a bet about the election results, and CNN announces that Anita Ross has won. The sliders enter the vortex believing that Arturo has lost, but a minute later NBC and ABC state that CNN was wrong and declare Arturo the winner. However, the sliders have already left for their next world.
[edit] Trivia
- Several first season episodes were originally shown out of order on FOX. This episode was intended to be aired sixth (as indicated by the production number) but was instead shown eighth.
[edit] External links
Preceded by: "Eggheads" |
Sliders episodes | Followed by: "The King Is Back" |