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I'll repeat I've seen Cash Markman cited in a PhD dissertation on music cues and othering.
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I took his meaning to be you can't research each citation. Which, in practical terms, is true for most of us.
Yes, but we were talking about the level of research that authors invest when compiling their non-fiction works that are in turn sold to consumers. In context, it's a flat-out "nope."
 
See, this is what bugs m about every Trek non-fiction book. With the exception or Lost Scenes, I can't think of one that doesn't repeat some game of telephone fan history or doesn't get some factual details wrong. The recent TMP VFX book does both.

Agreed, the very reason I have not purchased many; too often, the authors either post that same misinformation / myths, or quote uninformed people who contributed agenda or other historically inaccurate information.
 
Part of the problem is the people state things as definitive that are merely speculation. That’s sloppy. “May be” isn’t the same as “is”. That’s something we try not to do. We might address the likelihood of something, but try to steer clear of conflating logical assumption with fact.

And we actually do try to check out sources and compare them to other sources to see if they agree, or why they might disagree. A good example of this is our takedown of Cash Markman‘s account of a horse stunt for “Spectre of the Gun,” wherein we compared multiple internal documents to illustrate fairly conclusively that Cash was full of horse manure.

@Harvey and I actually have a research standard for Fact Trek which I call “the yardstick” by which we rank sources, which, amongst other things, treats temporal and physical proximity to an event as factors.

Finally, it’s important to get our collective heads out of the sand that is Star Trek and look at the broader picture in terms of how TV production worked at the time, and what things were actually happening on television versus the popular conception of what was happening. Context is for kings.
 
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I took his meaning to be you can't research each citation. Which, in practical terms, is true for most of us.

Most of us don't have to. The people who write nonfiction books, though, have a responsibility to do it as much as they can.

And that book's claim that Star Trek inspired the miniskirt trend isn't even a citation. It's an assertion. Indeed, it seems to be an assumption made without evidence, because even the most cursory examination of the facts disproves it.
 
Well, apparently if you wanna grind out these books at a clip, you go for the mass appeal and assume that most fans will just take it as gospel because it's in print. Just spending a mind numbing few minutes on some of the Facebook groups reveals gaggles of fans who don't care. They take it as they heard it and repeat it in posts.

Deep dives into the files and insuring accuracy takes a lot longer than doing internet searches or relying on someone else's due diligence. Cushman would probably still be working on the TOS books if he spent the time and did the work. Or actually figured out how ratings worked.

Trek Fans still got the better deal with his books than Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea fans. Those two volumes are astonishingly lazy and shed no light on the dozens of questions I've had for years. And he still makes assumptions that are glaringly wrong if you know even a little about the show in question. :brickwall:

Now if someone would do a Irwin Allen Fact Check blog, I'd be thrilled. :D
 
Yes, but we were talking about the level of research that authors invest when compiling their non-fiction works that are in turn sold to consumers. In context, it's a flat-out "nope."

I think the point I am trying to make is something a little different. That is, I don't know anyone who checks every citation of a well-researched non-fiction book with an extensive bibliography. Except for a few academics, the overwhelming majority of readers are placing trust in a work (or not) based on something short of absolute personal verification. The level of trust is ultimately a personal decision, but when an author has shown their work at least it's an informed decision.

Most of us don't have to. The people who write nonfiction books, though, have a responsibility to do it as much as they can.

And that book's claim that Star Trek inspired the miniskirt trend isn't even a citation. It's an assertion. Indeed, it seems to be an assumption made without evidence, because even the most cursory examination of the facts disproves it.

Agreed, but plynch said provide a citation for an assertion, so I was taking that as given.
 
See, this is what bugs m about every Trek non-fiction book. With the exception or Lost Scenes, I can't think of one that doesn't repeat some game of telephone fan history or doesn't get some factual details wrong. The recent TMP VFX book does both.

We are literally students who know more than our professors at this point.

But that it were so. Lots of stuff posted on this board shows how much bad information lives.

Part of the problem is people don't bother to look beyond The Usual Suspects as sources, so you get the TMP VFX book repeating erroneous descriptions of proposed films like 1975's Star Trek II (never called The God Thing), etc. etc.
That's not a problem unique to Star Trek reference books, but to lexicography generally -- has been for... well, probably for a good deal longer than there have been bound books. Very few "new" or "revised" reference publications are either completely new or thoroughly revised.

I've personally encountered this a lot in music dictionaries / encyclopedias (Nicolas Slonimsky was one of the few editors to recognize this and take steps to do anything about it with the editions of Baker's which he oversaw).

It's even more rampant in encyclopedias of literary and other quotations. So many misquotations and misattributions are simply copied piecemeal from one to the next to the next, and by the time you get to pop-culture sources like Brainyquotes or GoodReads you can just forget about accuracy altogether. 99% of Star Trek reference sources are on about the same level.

tl;dr :
The phrase you're looking for is "sloppy research."

Or, all too often, none whatsoever.
 
I was reading through the March issue of the Smithsonian Air & Space museum's magazine (ironically, the last year-plus has made me even worse at keeping pace with my magazines, the peril of my reading-time being while I was waiting around for things outside the home), and they had an article on Star Trek and its reception in the real-world space program. There were a few instances of the kind of "folk history" that saturates Star Trek histories, but they mentioned one thing I'd never heard before that I thought was worth lighting the Fact Trek Bat-Signal (Fact-Signal?):

There was even an effort to try to get astronaut Alan Shepard to appear on the show. Shepard, the first American to travel into space during his historic May 5, 1961 suborbital flight and the fifth man to walk on the moon, was asked to play a minor role in the series. Sadly, the deal never materialized.
EDIT, May 2022: I swear I tried Googling this at the time, but I was motivated to check again if any more details had come up on-line about this by the pre-release hype for the new season of For All Mankind. This time, I found there actually was one place this had been mentioned on-line before, in 2013, on the earlier incarnation of the Star Trek Fact Check blog. My bad for asking for a confirmation of something you were the source for.
 
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[…]So many misquotations and misattributions are simply copied piecemeal from one to the next to the next, and by the time you get to pop-culture sources like Brainyquotes or GoodReads you can just forget about accuracy altogether. 99% of Star Trek reference sources are on about the same level.
Plagiarize
Let no one else's work evade your eyes
Remember why the good Lord made your eyes
So don't shade your eyes
But plagiarize, plagiarize, plagiarize
Only be sure always to call it please 'research’

—Tom Lehrer​
 
I just saw the discussion about the captain's chair here.
I am looking for a 1:6 scale model (or a 3D file) of the Galileo space shuttle chair. Any help highly appreciated.
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I just saw the discussion about the captain's chair here.
I am looking for a 1:6 scale model (or a 3D file) of the Galileo space shuttle chair. Any help highly appreciated.
The-Galileo-Seven-237.jpg
The-Galileo-Seven-237.jpg
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Your image links are all sorts of broken.
The-Galileo-Seven-237.jpg


This is much better...
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And you'll probably have more luck asking about furniture and set piece modeling over in Fan Art.
 
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Well, apparently if you wanna grind out these books at a clip, you go for the mass appeal and assume that most fans will just take it as gospel because it's in print. Just spending a mind numbing few minutes on some of the Facebook groups reveals gaggles of fans who don't care. They take it as they heard it and repeat it in posts.
It takes work, sure, but part of it is having good note taking skills and being able to quickly cross-reference your sources.

Deep dives into the files and insuring accuracy takes a lot longer than doing internet searches or relying on someone else's due diligence.
His problems stem from sloppy note taking and a bad habit of seeing connections where none actually exist. He also seems to treat secondary and tertiary sources, like long after-the-fact interviews, etc., as having the same historical weight as primary sources. He literally manufactures narrative of what supposedly happened based on erroneous assumptions.

Cushman would probably still be working on the TOS books if he spent the time and did the work. Or actually figured out how ratings worked.
He doesn't understand how a lot of it works. He treats shooting schedules as equivalent to production reports, when the former is a planning doc subject to change on the shooting day and the latter actually records what happened.
 
I took his meaning to be you can't research each citation. Which, in practical terms, is true for most of us.

This is what I meant, yes. True for most in research, I think. You cite things in reputable journals or published books and trust the gatekeepers there. Cash was published (by himself with a company name -- same as I did, frankly) and it looks . . . real. And all these names endorsed it. It must be real. But it's garbage. Worse than fan speculation-malarkey because it has the sheen of real research to it.

Unfortunately hardly anyone replicates research to see if it is accurate. One gets published (i.e. tenure or promotions) for original research, not replication or refutation nearly as much. Much of what we believe true, based on one study, turns out not to be.

If I'm the PhD student, I cited my source, and then it's up to the reader to check it out (hence the citation) and see if it's trustworthy. That's the game that's afoot.

Edit -- wish I could find that dissertation. It opened my eyes a bit as to a newer way of seeing things. According to PhD student, the Asian-sounding music cues in Trek serve to "other" the aliens. Which I think is the point, to show they are "other." (Hence the term, "alien.") But pointing out otherness is a wrong now, to many. Or some. Not sure. It was interesting to encounter, but I like reading all over the political spectrum too.
 
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This is what I meant, yes. True for most in research, I think. You cite things in reputable journals or published books and trust the gatekeepers there.

Ideally, no, you don't just "trust." You check a source against other, independent sources to try to verify it. If multiple separate sources corroborate it, that makes it credible. If other sources contradict it, then you present that contradiction and let your readers hear every side of the question. It's not about claiming to know the truth, just about reporting the available data complete with an honest accounting of its uncertainties and gaps.


If I'm the PhD student, I cited my source, and then it's up to the reader to check it out (hence the citation) and see if it's trustworthy. That's the game that's afoot.

In that case, it's up to you to cite more than one independent source so that the reader knows where to look for corroboration, and so that the reader knows you've done due diligence and tested your own assertions rather than just taking a single unverified source at face value.


Edit -- wish I could find that dissertation. It opened my eyes a bit as to a newer way of seeing things. According to PhD student, the Asian-sounding music cues in Trek serve to "other" the aliens. Which I think is the point, to show they are "other." (Hence the term, "alien.") But pointing out otherness is a wrong now, to many. Or some. Not sure. It was interesting to encounter, but I like reading all over the political spectrum too.

Oh, definitely. You don't need a Ph.D. to recognize that. Gerald Fried was especially fond of using "ethnic" cues in his music -- the most egregious example being the formulaically "Oriental" motif he gives Sulu in "Catspaw," even though Sulu was never exoticized in the writing. But of course it wasn't just the music, but the writing, costume design, etc. remixing standard Orientalist and "tribal" tropes from '60s TV and dressing them up as alien. The Klingons were "space Mongols," the Argelians were a hash of Middle Eastern tropes complete with belly dancers, the Capellans were a melange of tribal and noble-savage conventions, etc.
 
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