That's what they look like to me http://www.boston.com/metrodesk/201...e-and-black/cfNELM0YW9bh51qyfbHn6J/story.html
Wow, really. For 40 years I've been saying it would have been more believable with a division that wasn't so straight and sharp, or maybe patches of black and patches of white. Looks like I was mistaken!
So what about the retaliatory invasion force from the planet MeltedButter? Edit: Wait a mesquite-grilled minute here...the lobster is orange and black. So does that mean orange is the NEW black, or the reverse?
What I found interesting was how the Cheron people defined their differences. "I am black on the right side. Lokai is white on the right side." I don't know if they ever say "left side" to anything, it seems to always be "right side". Lokai and [red-acted] therefore imply that if you are not exactly the same color as themselves, you are on the "wrong" side. The viewer is beaten over the head with the racial angle, but their arguments equally apply to enmity that occurs between political parties as well as between different religious groups.
I'd really like to see the scientific basis for lifeforms that have facial colors that split RIGHT DOWN THE MIDDLE like that.
it gets better (or worse): https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?...98921.367116489976035&type=1&relevant_count=1
That bit of dialogue occurs exactly once in the episode. Bele mentions his and Lokai's coloration on the right side because most people are right-handed. I'm sure the double meaning of "right," in this case, is simply a coincidence. You mean they're not going to eat it? What a waste of good seafood.
Not so sure about that, I've always seen it as Bele saying that he was black on the "correct side," and the implication is that Lokai was black on the "wrong side" of his body, as determined by the planet's dominate culture.
Very cool pic ... amazing how the color split right down the middle in a straight line! LOL So has Star Trek given us cellphones, sliding doors, hand held computers and ... twotone lobsters, :-)