Blueshirts were security in those days.Sorry about my earlier post with the very female Colt handing Pike the clipboard. However, we don't know exactly who the clipboard guy on Pike's right side is.
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Blueshirts were security in those days.Sorry about my earlier post with the very female Colt handing Pike the clipboard. However, we don't know exactly who the clipboard guy on Pike's right side is.
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Michelle Paradise actually stated it's supposed to be the same character. The matter is considered so nebulous that the Disco novel set aboard the Enterprise avoided describing Colt in any manner and just left a vague mention to how she had "changed a great deal since the Talos mission."
Yeah the MA articles influenced my understanding of the Disco Colt.MA treats them as two individuals. I dunno, maybe she went to prime universe Altamid and gained alien features like Krall, Kalara and Manas.
Or science or medical, like Spock and Boyce. How much of a uniform color consistency was there in the pilots? Communications officer Alden in WNMHGB also wore blue.Blueshirts were security in those days.
They did, but it wasn't used for security. Yeomen and other ops type did thoughWhy didn't they have red by that point? Even kind of a washed-out dusty burgundy, in keeping with the other colors...
I call it coral, but tan works too.Oh, I thought it was tan, gold, and blue.
Some photos show a reddish tint.If there is a reddish tint to it, that makes more sense.
Any random redshirt handing him a "PADD" could be securitySo, "The Cage" is the first and only time where a member of security hands the captain a clipboard to read and sign? The blueshirt is holding his own clipboard while Pike reviews the one Colot has just handed him. Does Kirk ever get a PADD (or whatever they were known as in TOS) from security in the series itself?
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Nope, the second I read the thread title "Holding Out for a Hero" popped into my head.
Sure, you can split hairs over the exact historical role but as we were discussing, we aren't talking about directly copying a historical concept, just using it for inspiration.
Wikipedia lists the following:
A batman's duties often include:
- acting as a "runner" to convey orders from the officer to subordinates
- maintaining the officer's uniform and personal equipment as a valet
- driving the officer's vehicle, sometimes under combat conditions
- acting as the officer's bodyguard in combat
- digging the officer's foxhole in combat, giving the officer time to direct his unit[3]
- other miscellaneous tasks the officer does not have time or inclination to do
Rand was already seen doing some of that. It sounds more fun storywise that the more administrative duties of TOS.
More to the point, Pike's yeoman was killed doing his job in the Cage and Colt confirms she has the same training when asking to join the search.
You were specific about the historical role you want to incorporate. I've pointed out facts about what that position really entailed. That's not hair-splitting.
Oh well, if someone posted it to Wikipedia... But no citations except for the foxhole, and obviously an officer could order anyone to dig whatever hole they wanted. Driving the vehicle is just wrong, there would be someone assigned whose main job was to drive and maintain vehicles. Having a batman act as a bodyguard is not likely, either, because the batman would have an assigned post in a specific platoon, section, squad etc. They were not "extra" personnel, and taking them away to watch over the officer would not be fair to the rest of their team.
The article doesn't mention the important point that the officer paid the servant privately. It is correct that the older term was "soldier-servant," though. You can read the WW1-era regulations on soldier-servants here, where it is noted that they are permitted as "an indulgence" for officers.
Perhaps some people don't understand, in the navy one's regular assigned job is just one part of their duties. Standing watch is something separate, and battle and quarter stations separate things again. In a WW2-type ship, a yeoman's battle station might be as a "talker" (internal communications), or in a gun crew, or in a damage repair party, or in a medical aid party.
This much is true.I still think you are hair-splitting because the Yeomen were already doing the domestic chore part of the job, including getting out Kirk's uniform (eventually edited out of the episode), serving food, and giving him a back massage, which were probably not part of a historical yeoman's administrative role.
I just realised I've been pronouncing it wrong in my head. I was thinking yee-oh-min.The critical question here is “Where the devil is the Yeoman of the Bowmen?”
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