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Context Recap / TheOrvilleS1E07MajorityRule

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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/john_lamarr_willks_social_correction_final_vote_sargus_4.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:[=LaMarr=] learns what a ''true'' cancel culture is.]]
3The ''Orville'' has to rescue two Union anthropologists from a planet similar to 21st century Earth, where punishment is doled out based on public voting.
4----
5!!Tropes in this episode include:
6* AbsentMindedProfessor: Claire comments that the anthropologist they retrieved would usually be so buried in his studies that he wouldn't notice the world around him. This was why he failed to give up his seat to a pregnant woman, because he didn't notice her.
7* AnAesop: Democracy can be dangerous if taken too far and public opinion shouldn't be given too much weight. Or, as Bortus puts it:
8-->'''Bortus:''' A voice should be earned, not given away.
9* AndIMustScream: The fate of the Union anthropologist that is lobotomized. Claire says that the resulting brain damage is so extensive that even 25th century Union medicine is unable to do anything for him, and he'll basically be a vegetable for the rest of his life.
10* AlienNonInterferenceClause: The Union doesn't engage with civilizations that lack interstellar travel capability. Mercer has to use LoopholeAbuse to help [=LaMarr=].
11* BittersweetEnding: Sargus 4 isn't changing its ways any time soon, one of the anthropologists is dead, and the other is lobotomized. But at least Lysella has learned to be a better person thanks to her interactions with the crew, turning off the latest apology tour instead of voting on it with insufficient information.
12* {{Bookends}}: The episode begins and ends with Lysella waking up in bed and going through her morning routine, except the last one has her wiser from her experience with the crew of the Orville, and with a new distaste for the Master Feed.
13* CassandraTruth: When [=LaMarr=] is informed of his potential fate if he gets 10 million downvotes, he becomes so scared that he immediately confesses to being an offworlder. No one pays him any mind. He does it again after he is barely acquitted, again to disbelief.
14* ConvictedByPublicOpinion: Quite literally in this case. At the age of 18, everyone is given a badge with an upvote and downvote tally. Anything and everything you do is worth one vote or another. One viral video can get you arrested and sent on an apology tour. If you fail to convince the public you're sorry, the downvotes accumulate exponentially. 10 million downvotes gets you lobotomized into a perpetually happy vegetable.
15* CrapsaccharineWorld: Sargus 4 is very similar to 21st century Earth and appears to be pleasant on the surface, but it's a world where any act of rudeness (even if unintentional) can get you condemned to an effective lobotomy. This "correction" is apparently the only punishment this society has, and it turns people into smiling, contented shells of themselves.
16* CulturePolice: This episode is an example of the Cancel Culture taken to the extreme. The only punishment for "wrong thinking" is effectively brain damaging the subject in the mistaken belief that total conformity to the group is the only way to have a civilized society. Also, the points, or "Down Votes" that one might accumulate during a "rebel phase" in youth stay with the person throughout their entire life. Accumulate a lot and they haunt you for the rest of your life.
17* DemocracyIsFlawed: Sargus 4 runs on direct e-democracy. Everything is voted on by public opinion and facts are what the majority considers true. Essentially, conviction by social media. Of course, the [[AnAesop Aesop]] seems to be that DemocracyIsBad only when taken up to eleven and not grounded in the rule of law, as Mercer extols the representative democracy of the Planetary Union.
18* DisproportionateRetribution:
19** [=LaMarr=] is arrested for getting filmed dry-humping a statue, and faces a forced lobotomy if he can't convince the public to change their minds.
20** We eventually find out why the two anthropologists were corrected: they refused to give up their seats on the Sargun equivalent of a subway train to a pregnant woman. Claire speculates that this was merely the result of them being too distracted by their work to notice her, but as Lysella points out, their reasons don't matter; public opinion is all that matters.
21** Alara nearly ends up subjected to the Sargun justice system herself because her hat happens to be that of a culture to which she doesn't belong, which angers a native of said culture and attracts the attention of the public. Fortunately, Claire manages to defuse the situation.
22* DramaticIrony: The viewer knows (or at least suspects) the anthropologists the ''Orville'' is looking for are beyond help, but the crew doesn't figure this out until about halfway through the episode.
23* EasyEvangelism: Lysella is convinced rather easily about the problems a civilization ruled by total democracy has. While the crew of the ''Orville'' do talk about such issues a little, they don't really go into how they do things. In the end it seems like she is won over more by their jaw dropping technology and being quite nice than anything deeper.
24* EasilySwayedPopulation: No one On Sargus 4 has thought to question the inherent problems with their "absolute democracy" system, and will latch onto being offended at anything at the drop of a hat, even if someone tries to clean up their image.
25* EstablishingCharacterMoment: A few scenes towards the beginning of the episode show how Sargus IV's culture compares with Earth's: two business men greet and compliment each other by giving each other upvotes, a little girl gives her grandmother an upvote for buying her a sundae, and a man gets a downvote for accidentally spilling coffee on a stranger. Lysella herself gets one at the start of the episode, showing her as an average woman who sees nothing wrong with her culture.
26* ExactWords: The admiral shoots down sending in any armed intervention, but he never says they can't bring anyone out. Mercer decides to bring Lysella up to the ''Orville'' to get her help in swinging the vote in John's favor.
27** The jumpsuits for the penal system is labelled "Department of Correction," since the goal is to "correct" the thinking of the subject.
28* FantasticRacism: On Sargus 4, people with too many downvotes are looked upon with scorn, with many establishments refusing to serve those with more than 500 thousand downvotes.
29* FateWorseThanDeath: Undergoing the "correction", which is the Sargun equivalent of a lobotomy. One of the anthropologists tries to flee upon seeing the chair and is promptly shot by a guard. Claire determines that even Union medicine is incapable of reversing the brain damage.
30* ForgottenPhlebotinum: Alara being a RubberForeheadAlien would be a non-issue if someone had handed her one of the personal holographic generators Isaac made for Ed and Gordon in the previous episode.
31* FormerlyFat: A photoshopped image of [=LaMarr=] being a fat child is used to garner sympathy for him when the final voting begins.
32* GettingSmiliesPaintedOnYourSoul: If citizens get 10 million downvotes, they are subjected to "correction," which involves electroshock therapy designed to remove all negative thought. In practice, however, it's effectively a lobotomy that reduces the victim to a childlike state they will never recover from.
33* HumanAliens: Sarguns are nearly identical to humans. Their planet is commented on as being very much like Earth. Their culture, clothing, and technology are pretty much at the level of 21st century Earth. Isaac even acknowledges the unusual similarity, calling it an extreme example of parallel evolution. The only major difference are names, as seen when a public servant finds the name "John" exotic. This is, of course, an homage to ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'', where such worlds were common.
34* {{Hypocrite}}: The talk show hosts of Sargus 4 seem to be the real power players of the planet, and seem to not take kindly to having their own opinion superseded. Early on, one smugly declares that "facts are whatever the people believe," yet they directly chastise their own audience at the end for not allowing ''their'' opinion to become the majority this one time.
35* IdiotBall:
36** Five minutes upon arriving on an unknown world, [=LaMarr=] decides to draw attention to himself in the worst way possible by grinding on a local monument. And this was ''after'' Mercer had specifically ordered the team not to call any needless attention to themselves.
37** [=LaMarr's=] publicist's job is to make [=LaMarr=] appear as sympathetic, apologetic, and remorseful as possible. He never bothers to explain to [=LaMarr=] who is depicted in the statue that [=LaMarr=] disrespected, nor what made her famous. Of course, [=LaMarr=] himself never asks, either. (They might have covered it after the first show, but by that point the damage was already done.)
38* INeedAFreakingDrink: After Lysella stumbles onto Claire and Alara with the latter in full RubberForeheadAliens glory, they stop her from leaving and offer to buy her a drink. Cut to Lysella gulping down a wine glass like she hasn't seen water in days.
39* InvisibilityCloak: The shuttle has a cloaking device so they can land on the planet undetected.
40* JaywalkingWillRuinYourLife: If the public downvotes you enough for it. The two Union anthropologists wind up with one dead and the other lobotomized for being oblivious to a pregnant woman on the bus.
41* JustInTime: [=LaMarr's=] downvotes stop just four shy of 10 million when the voting ends.
42* KangarooCourt: Downplayed. When [=LaMarr=] starts his apology tour, one of the hosts personally downvotes him, thus skewing the public's perception of him right off the bat. However, [=LaMarr=] comes off as insincere and ignorant since he has no idea who the monument depicts, so his public perception issues are largely of his own making.
43* LoopholeAbuse: Mercer is ordered not to send a party to retrieve [=LaMarr=]. Mercer decides that the order never specified that they couldn't bring someone ''up'', so he has Alara and Claire bring Lysella to the ''Orville'' so she can help them save [=LaMarr=].
44* MildlyMilitary: The Union's somewhat laid-back command structure bites [=LaMarr=] in the ass hard in this episode: if he'd listened to Kelly (who is literally ''ordering him'' to stop grinding on the statue) he might not have ended up getting arrested.
45* MistakenForRacist: Alara's choice of hat turns out to belong to a certain country which she is clearly not from, which is taken as cultural appropriation by a native. Since it's hiding her obvious alien features, taking it off isn't an option and she nearly winds up in the same boat as [=LaMarr=]. Fortunately, Claire quickly rushes her to the bathroom to improvise a replacement.
46* NippleAndDimed: Played with; during the scene of Lysella waking up at the end of the episode, her left nipple is clearly visible in outline under her top.
47* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed:
48** One of the talk show hosts is clearly made up to look like Creator/EllenDeGeneres.
49** Said talk show is of a format similar to "The View" or "The Talk".
50* OffendingAForeignCountry: [=LaMarr=] does this by humping the statue.
51* OhCrap: Alara and Finn, when Lysella walks in on them and sees that Alara is a RubberForeheadAlien. It's also Lysella's reaction to meeting an alien.
52* TheOneGuy: [=LaMarr=] is the only male crew member who accompanies Grayson, Alara and Claire on Sargus 4.
53* PhonyVeteran: To evoke sympathy for [=LaMarr=], Isaac creates a video depicting him as a war veteran coming home to meet his dog.
54* PoliticalOvercorrectness: On Sargus 4, failing to be polite enough to others or one lewd act in public can get you arrested and lobotomized.
55* PreciousPuppy: In order to evoke sympathy for [=LaMarr=], Isaac manufactures a "military guy reunites with dog" video featuring [=LaMarr=].
56* RayOfHopeEnding: Lysella turning off the latest apology tour rather than voting, a hopeful sign that one day, the planet will come to its senses.
57* SociallyScoredSociety: The residents of the planet Sargun have Reddit-esque "Vote Badges" where others can upvote or downvote them based off how they come across. A low enough ranking and you lose certain privileges such as access to establishments. One million downvotes mean you need to go on an 'apology tour' to win back public approval. Refuse and die, fail and you can get lobotomized. This can be easily manipulated, as mob mentality leads to an execution that is only circumvented through fake news.
58* SocialMediaIsBad: The episode centers around a planet where the entire society is rooted in social media, to the point where they vote on what is considered facts (such as which medicines work, what products are healthy etc.) with what is most popular being considered the truth, and that people can be turned down from services if they receive too many downvotes (for which the count is never reset, so people who acquire a lot in their youth have to carry them for the rest of their life). This extends to the justice system, with guilty/innocent verdicts being rendered by "likes" and "dislikes". Get a few million dislikes, and you get a lobotomy. Lt. John Lamarr runs afoul of this when someone video tapes him dancing on a statue of one of the planet's beloved public figures.
59* SureLetsGoWithThat: When [=LaMarr's=] public relations officer finds the name "John" exotic and assumes he's from another country, [=LaMarr=] just rolls with it.
60* TakeThat:
61** Gordon compares the planet's social media law to ''Series/AmericanIdol'', describing it as a dark time in Earth's history.
62** Social media in general is lampooned. No one bothers checking sources or thinking about context. They just instinctively react to whatever they see. Isaac even points out to Lysella that her people are confusing opinion with knowledge, and when Claire asks if people won't fact-check whether all the fabricated positive posts and videos about [=LaMarr=] are actually true, Lysella states matter-of-factly "don't worry, they won't".
63** A background news show has a scientist explaining how a certain area is contaminated, only for the host to point out that more than 70% of the public doesn't believe it and hence it must not be true, similar to how climate change is still denied despite all the evidence in its favor.
64** A jab is taken at the furor that erupts at times over cultural appropriation in the frame of public opinion democracy gone amok, over Alara's hat. A ''hat''.
65* ThisCannotBe: Lysella's reaction to Isaac casually hacking into her planet's social network and flooding it with posts designed to evoke sympathy for [=LaMarr=]. Gordon merely points out that she's on a spaceship.
66* TheWholeWorldIsWatching: While on the landing party, [=LaMarr=] unwittingly earns the displeasure of a world similar to the 21st century, with ubiquitous cell-phone devices, and legal judgments rendered by social media voting. A video of him dry-humping a statue of an important historical figure goes viral, and seemingly the entire world starts giving him downvotes, which in this society leads to him being arrested. After the trial, his fate is once again up to the whims of the social media public, though the Orville crew start fabricating stories to make him more sympathetic and swing the vote in his favor. They manage to get him off, just barely.
67* TheWorldIsJustAwesome: Lysella is awestruck at being in space and coming aboard the ''Orville''.
68* YouAreTooLate: The ''Orville'' is dispatched to rescue two Union anthropologists on Sargus 4, but they were sentenced a month ago. One is dead, while Claire's friend has been lobotomized and is beyond treatment.

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