I'd seen a reference to "Nicole Janeway," but I somehow missed the part about that being an intermediate name, because of a collision with the name of a famous person.
“The Real McCoys” was a family comedy series in 1963
By the way, you can use one post to quote and reply to everybody.![]()
That's got nothing to do with it. My whole point was that it happens throughout English-language fiction and can't be narrowed down to any single category of writers. I mean, Gene Roddenberry was raised Southern Baptist.
Hi, this is something that's crossed my mind in the past, mostly about TOS though....Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Christine, Chekov, and Scotty. The one connection that makes sense to me is that Roddenberry was part Jewish, and Shatner, Nimoy, Koenig, Barrett as well as Gene Coon and many of the TOS writers were also Jews. The Jewish language seems to feature that consonant rather strongly. I could be totally wrong, it's just an impression.
Oh, you mean the old claim that "Bruce" was considered a gay/effeminate name? Apparently Stan Lee and Lou Ferrigno claimed that was a network concern, but Kenneth Johnson says he just didn't want the show to seem comic-booky, and chose the name in honor of his son David.
Please use the multi-quote function, rather than posting 7 times in a row.
Like this.
Thanks.
![]()
I was just going by what Trekker09 said in post #9...
I don't know about effeminate, but I do remember people saying that the name Bruce was an epithet for a gay male and that is why the show didn't use it.
Actually, Archer was originally going to be named Jackson Archer. However, since there was only one or two with that name, legal told Berman and Braga they couldn't use that name. When a large number of people have the same name as a character, say 20 or more, it's apparently fine legally speaking. Fewer, however, means possible legal troubles. Which is why we got Jonathan Archer.
Had the lawyers not stepped in, even ENTERPRISE would be included in your list.
Apparently the letters k, p, t are called fortis consonants, they require more muscle tension / energy than lenis consonants.
Wonder if Roddenberry ever gave a reason for changing the original captain’s name he pitched, Robert April, to Christopher Pike (then James Kirk).
Coming up with lead character names is a delicate task. Sometimes a great one hits you right away, but other times you have to try out a lot of possibilities before hitting on the right one, or at least one you can live with.
Wow...
I'm astonished.
Honestly....I really doubt it means anything beyond a weird coincidence.
LOLSo a Captain Karen Crickle-Crack would be sure to do well in Starfleet...
And Janeway was originally Elizabeth Janeway, if memory serves correctly. Played by Geneviève Bujold. She didn't last more than a day and a half of shooting. Kate Mulgrew requested the change to Kathryn Janeway. Then again, she'd been playing characters named Kate at least as far back as "Mrs. Columbo."
Yes and no. She was originally Elizabeth, but...
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Kathryn_Janeway#Background_information
"Due to legal aspects (specifically, that a prominent person, an actual American feminist writer, named "Elizabeth Janeway" existed), the name had to be changed. At Bujold's request, the character was renamed "Nicole Janeway"."
The traditional stereotype of gay men prior to modern times was that they were effeminate. The presumption was that anyone attracted to men must therefore be feminine in personality, which of course is not how being gay works, but the people who believed in the stereotype didn't know that.
Out of the ten VGR main characters an astonishing six to eight had a "k" sound (depending on how you count the ending of Neelix' name and Seven's birth name), two of which were the CO/XO, however out of the other four to six characters all but one had command ambitions/experiences (Neelix was captain of his ship in the pilot, Seven seemed to be kind of important in the war against species 8472, IIRC [although that seemed conceptually weird for the Borg, what whatever], Kim had the nightshift and the nightingale and the Doctor had the whole Emergency Command Hologram thingie going on.
LOL
Well, I'm glad she did because Kathryn sounds more regal, Plus, it reminds me of the actress Kathryn Hepburn, and I think that Janeway had some elements of Kathryn Hepburn in that character.
Interesting. But there goes that "K" sound pattern again.![]()
I see. Also, that reminds me of what Mel Brooks did at the end of Blazing Saddles. lolSo, I guess you're right.
![]()
Don't forget that Tuvok (with a "K" sound) was Janeway's original first officer/second in command before Chakotay took over.![]()
That stereotype also fits hand-in-glove with a mindset and worldview derived from a pure "strict-father" family model, in which it is considered not merely a man's right to (1) father children and (2) to seek dominance at all times, but his duty.The traditional stereotype of gay men prior to modern times was that they were effeminate. The presumption was that anyone attracted to men must therefore be feminine in personality, which of course is not how being gay works, but the people who believed in the stereotype didn't know that.
Don't forget that Tuvok (with a "K" sound) was Janeway's original first officer/second in command before Chakotay took over.![]()
No, he was her security chief. Her first officer was Commander Cavit, who was killed in "Caretaker." That's why she appointed a former enemy, Chakotay, as her first officer. She would've had no reason to do that if Tuvok had been her XO -- which would have been unlikely given that his rank at the time was lieutenant.
I think initially the notion was probably just the simple fact that names with Ks in them are literally striking. You have to physically strike the roof of your mouth to make that sound. It's so appealing for your protagonist that all but 2 of the TOS central crew had it in their name, the only exceptions being names they clearly wanted to deliberately sound unusually foreign, & went with long U sounds, for Sulu & Uhura, because of the rarity of western names with long U sounds featured as prominently
The knack for it was so commonplace, I'm pretty sure that it's one of the reasons that the parody film Airplane made its main character's name Ted Stryker, as a way to ridicule that
I don't really think about that as phonics isn't really...something I consider when I come up with names...Writers often give a lot of thought as to their characters' names. Alliteration is important, even if more subliminal to most readers. And a "K" sound is strong. (Both Pike and then Kirk were chosen over Winter and April in earlier drafts.) IIRC, "The Making of Star Trek" by Whitfield & Roddenberry has several memos about character names, including alternate Vulcan names.
With Uhura I can accept that before the advent of the internet it might have been difficult for somebody living in America to get hold of knowledge of what actual African family names are like, especially since they probably didn't have a precise culture/country of origin for her character. And at least it's based on an actual Swahili word that apparently is used as a given name.
But I don't think that it would have been that difficult on the West Coast of the United States, in the 1960s to get hold of a name that's actually from an Asian language/country. Probably all you needed was opening up a phone book.
And what is "Pan Asian" even supposed to mean? What? In the 23d century all of East Asia became a melting pot and decided to invent new family names? Yes the Sulu Sea, but still.
No, they knew perfectly well that Uhuru was the proper form of the name, since, again, Roddenberry specifically got the idea from the book called Uhuru that Nichelle Nichols was reading at the time. But they agreed that the name would sound harsh to American ears and "softened" it by changing it to Uhura. It wasn't ignorance, it was a conscious choice to Anglicize a well-known Swahili name (used as both a given name and a surname).
I don't deny that "representation" might have been the point, but it just comes off as stupid to me.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.