Those pearls aren’t gonna clutch themselves, you know.You'd think it was an episode Deadwood featuring only Al Swearengen they way people react.![]()
Those pearls aren’t gonna clutch themselves, you know.You'd think it was an episode Deadwood featuring only Al Swearengen they way people react.![]()
It wasn't renamed, but rather removed from the US Army and turned into a whole separate branch of the US military, complete with a new division within the Department of Defense, the Department of the Air Force run by the newly appointed Secretary of the Air Force or SECAF. Just like in recent years US Space Command was from the USAF turned into the US Space Force. Granted, in that case, the Space Force is still part of the Department of the Air Force and still answers to SECAF.Just like the US Army Air Corps got renamed into the USAF.
Not even. In 1966, “family oriented” meant Lost in Space or Gilligan’s Island — inane shit for the kiddies. Star Trek was aimed at adults. The fact it also appealed to lots of kids (like 6 year old me) who couldn’t stomach the kiddie garbage only points out how out of touch producers like Allen and Schwartz were.all throughout its history, Star Trek has more or less been family oriented.
If it were dropped in every episode I might agree about the verbal tone of the series, but as rarely as the F-bomb was used in streaming Trek I just view it as one of those things to cringe at and just ignore or just plain overlook as a human being being a human being, no matter the century. The technobabble can annoy me more than using modern slang or obscenities, since the technobabble is usually at the heart of resolving an episode or story arc plot.
Not even. In 1966, “family oriented” meant Lost in Space or Gilligan’s Island — inane shit for the kiddies. Star Trek was aimed at adults. The fact it also appealed to lots of kids (like 6 year old me) who couldn’t stomach the kiddie garbage only points out how out of touch producers like Allen and Schwartz were.
If it were dropped in every episode I might agree about the verbal tone of the series, but as rarely as the F-bomb was used in streaming Trek
One evening, going out to dinner with my father to a local Marie Callenders franchise (where we've known the owner since she was the kid out front, seating the guests), we were waiting to be seating, and there were three young ladies (late teens or early 20s) sitting next to us, who made it abundantly obvious that they were extremely fluent in "Army Creole."I swear, I never swore when I was a kid and into my teens. Then I dated a girl who swore constantly.
It still is.You could say it elevated the bar of what was possible with Sci-fi. And I think in general, it's been important for the franchise to remain accessible.
I have not seen that show and I don't even know which you're referring to.All this pearl clutching about "people don't swear in professional settings." How do y'all cope with that other sci-fi show in which the Secretary General of the UN uses profanity extremely liberally, even while on the job and in a "professional setting"?
Because it's not sacred or special like Star Trek.All this pearl clutching about "people don't swear in professional settings." How do y'all cope with that other sci-fi show in which the Secretary General of the UN uses profanity extremely liberally, even while on the job and in a "professional setting"?
1960s, not 1860s.![]()
It was very dated by then. The ballpoint was popularized in the late 1940s.That'd explain an old coworker/friend of mine from when I worked at NIH. He went there.
And was girls' pig tails in inkwells a 60s slang or was it already dated by then?
O'BRIEN: Try it now. Re-route the damned gyrodyne to the damned thruster array.
NOG: Got it.
SISKO: Garak, where are those ships now?
GARAK: Bearing three one zero mark two one five. Still closing.
O'BRIEN: Nog, did you re-route the damned gyrodyne?
NOG: I'm trying, but the damned thruster array won't take the input.
O'BRIEN: Try the lateral impulse thrusters and watch your mouth. (to Dax) Access the auxiliary core through the starboard engineering console.
Around 5th or 6th grade, in the early 1970s, I had a student desk that had an indentation where a bottle of ink could sit. Those desks had probably been used for 20 years.I know it was outdated by then. I didn't see any inkwells in those school nuclear blast drills videos.![]()
So swearing is ok outside of Star Trek and only specific words?Because it's notsacred or special likeStar Trek.
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