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Why Family-Friendly Stargate Has One Raunchy, NSFW, Extremely Hard-R Episode

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Why Family-Friendly Stargate Has One Raunchy, NSFW, Extremely Hard-R Episode

By Joshua Tyler
| Published

The making of Stargate SG-1’s pilot, “Children of the Gods,” is remembered less for launching a 10-season sci-fi empire and more for the one thing the rest of the franchise immediately ran away from: the nudity. The pilot is a strange artifact of a moment when the creative team wanted to honor the tone of the 1994 Stargate movie, adventurous, PG-13, family-accessible, while the network funding the series demanded something edgier, more adult, and more shocking than anyone on the writing staff wanted.

The conflict began as soon as MGM sold the series to the pay-cable network Showtime. Syndicated sci-fi in the ’90s was already crowded, and Showtime was known for edgy sex and violence shows. The top-rated show on the network was The Red Shoe Diaries, which was basically full-on softcore.

Vaitiare Bandera in the Stargate SG-1 pilot episode

They didn’t want another family-friendly space adventure competing with Star Trek: Voyager and Babylon 5. They wanted something that made subscribers feel like they were getting something they couldn’t find on broadcast television. Their mandate to the producers was blunt: add sex, add violence, and push boundaries.

Brad Wright and Jonathan Glassner, who were hired to create the show, had no interest in turning Stargate into a mature-audience series. In their early drafts, the pilot followed the movie’s tone with adventure, mythology, and military realism, but nothing salacious.

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Vaitiare Bandera as Sha’re

Showtime rejected that version and pushed hard for scenes that would allow the episode to be marketed as “adult sci-fi.” The nude scene involving Sha’re and the other abductees wasn’t written for artistic reasons; it was a network requirement. Showtime insisted that a premium series needed premium content, and in the 90s, that often translated to nudity, whether it fit the story or not.

The production team was uncomfortable with the mandate. Actors Michael Shanks and Vaitiare Bandera (Sha’re) later spoke about how awkward the shoot was. Even Christopher Judge recalled that many on set felt the nudity contradicted what Stargate was supposed to be. The scene wasn’t filmed like a sensual moment. It was shot to be clinical, abrupt, and focused on Shau’ri’s possession by Amonet, but it still introduced an adult tone that clashed with everything the show would become.

Amonet possesses Sha’re

Once filming wrapped, Wright and Glassner immediately worried the pilot had drifted too dark and too gratuitous. Even Showtime executives later admitted that going “edgy” for the sake of edginess may not have been the right call.

When the series moved past the pilot, the creators shifted the tone back toward the spirit of the original movie: military adventure, alien mythology, and approachable sci-fi storytelling. Nothing like the pilot’s nudity ever appeared again, and the writers avoided similar scenes throughout the show’s run. From episode two onward, SG-1 adopted a tone that made it accessible to teens, families, and weekend syndication audiences.

Another extreme scene from the original Stargate SG-1 pilot episode

The issue lingered for years. By the mid-2000s, the SG-1 team openly disliked the original cut. In 2009, Brad Wright personally oversaw a new version: “Children of the Gods: Final Cut.” His first decision was removing the nudity entirely.

He also recut performances, replaced early CGI, tightened pacing, and rewrote or re-shot small moments to fit the show’s long-term tone. Wright described the restored version as the pilot they had originally intended to make before Showtime forced the content shift.

Today, the original pilot is remembered as an odd aberration: the only moment when Stargate SG-1 wasn’t family-friendly. It was a product of network pressure, not creative ambition, and everything that followed worked hard to course-correct back to the tone that made the franchise thrive.

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