![For All Mankind For All Mankind](https://m5.paperblog.com/i/222/2227978/for-all-mankind-L-JUQANM.jpeg)
It’s a turning point for NASA as well as the show, which up to then has threatened to be solely about thwarted male ambition and identity tethered to heroic acts. While Russia has sent a woman to the moon, NASA is still debating if Margo (Wrenn Schmidt) is capable of working on the floor of Mission Command. The sole previous attempt to recruit female pilots as astronauts has been a private one, and eventually failed. Nixon, desperate to distract the public from his scandals, decides that NASA’s mission is to send a woman to space – and one more photogenic than the Russian cosmonaut. This sexist mission statement, made exclusively for publicity and by a failing presidency, reveals the heart of the show. What if women had been trained to go to space in the 1970s? What if that great ambition to be part of the race for discovery had included women from the beginning? It is unclear still where and how far For All Mankind can go – how far would humanity have come in its travel into space if the Apollo programme had continued, if the Cold War had continued to be fought in the realm of space flight? And in all of this, the balance between discovery and scientific curiosity and the militarisation of space discovery is palpable, and dangerous. Early on, the President dreams of a military base on the moon. Early on, because a military base requires different kind of resources than occasional forays onto the moon do, ice is discovered on the moon – by the first American woman to walk on it, in a hazardous but glorious display of stubbornness, of making the right call between being cautionary and forging on. This moment comes after a harrowing period of time in which a group of highly trained and qualified female pilots undergo the vigorous training at NASA, a training that ends in disaster for one of them. These women compete with each other, and yet, the first sign of how this version of history may be qualitatively different from how ours has played out is when Gordo’s wife Tracy (Sarah Jones), who has been hand-picked by the President for the headlines about astronaut couples, decides to help Ellen (Jodi Balfour, from Bomb Girls) in an endurance exercise instead of pushing for a win. What if the future here is cooperation, not competition? In the end, the most qualified among them makes it to the moon, in defiance of the President’s command that she must be the most photogenic, and conventionally feminine. Sonya Walger’s Molly Cobb makes a great heroine.
While political wars wage about the Equal Rights Amendment, while Ted Kennedy becomes President becomes the scandal that ended his ambitions never happened, each of these women – Margo, Ellen, Tracy, Danielle (Krys Marshall) face the sexism and limitations of their time, only to overcome it. Subtly, a different world emerges, even when good old boys complain about the changes, and the qualifications of female mission commanders are questioned over and over again. For All Mankind isn’t as much about national ambition as it paints a picture of progress driven both by individual ambition and a collective spirit of cooperation, which becomes absolutely necessary (for example, when Gordo, Ed and Danielle have to work and live together for over 100 days on the US’ first base on the moon, Jamestown). Progress here doesn’t happen because of a progressive country or a progressive presidency, it happens because of the stubbornness (and sometimes, morally questionable decisions, as with Margo’s advance at NASA). It happens in spite of bureaucratic barriers, like when Ellen, who has low-key been dating the bartender of the NSA dive bar ever since beginning her training finds out that she will have to marry her beard to get rid of an FBI-agent who encapsulates the rampant homophobia of the era. She gives up love for her career, and she gives up being herself, for being the first female mission commander. These are impossible choices, and yet, we hope they somehow lead to a better future, or at least a future where it becomes easier for a female astronaut to love another woman earlier than it has in our timeline.
Beyond all of this, the marvel and horror of being on the moon, of living in what should be an uninhabitable environment. Where will this show go? Where will its youngest main character, curious Mexican immigrant Aleida (Olivia Trujillo), who dreams of the stars, be able to go in a few years? Or maybe that specter of a Cold War threatening to become hot fought over resources in space looms too large for any of this to end well.
2019-, created by Ronald D. Moore, Ben Nedivi, Matt Wolpert, starring Joel Kinnaman, Michael Dorman, Jodi Balfour, Wrenn Schmidt, Sarah Jones, Shantel VanSanten, Chris Bauer, Krys Marshall, Olivia Trujillo.