And ludicrous speed.Plaidjac was the best brother. Really into apparel.
And ludicrous speed.Plaidjac was the best brother. Really into apparel.
Vulcans coming from a far off star system meant we were allowed to pretend Star Trek's future would be like ours for just a little longer. I suppose Vulcans could still be sort of from the Sol system if their planet came through a wormhole from somewhere else and parked itself here permanently some time in the future.
Would he be a WASP?Then there was Yellowjac, who was really into fishing.
Plaidjac wasn't so bad, but Paisleyjac was a bit much...Plaidjac was the best brother. Really into apparel.
I thought he might've been one of the new aliens from season three of SNW between its love of inflicting psychological horror, it's brief creepy takeover of the computer, and the fact that it had a bone to pick with Scotty, specifically. The time-loopiness of it all meant it wouldn't have been an issue for it to have been loose hundreds of years before its escape (and a decade after its defeat).
I wonder if Redjac is the only one of its kind.
Never seen that in any production paperwork. It's possible he just made it up.Even James Blish refers to Spock as a Vulcanite in his first two episode anthologies or so. Could've been residual phrasing from the show's bible, perhaps.
Never seen that in any production paperwork. It's possible he just made it up.
I'd forgotten that memo, which was written on May 6, 1966, as one of several responses to a jokey May 3, 1966 memo penned by Justman, so the term "Vulcanite" might've been his invention?
Interestingly, the Bird himself refers has Spock say "Fire is a Vulcan's element…" in the May 21, 1965 second pilot draft script of "The Omega Glory," so that predates Justman's memo by about a year, and indicates that the final name we got was in play pretty early, even as they went with "Vulcanian" in early series scripts.
Likely. But Spock's referring to volcanoes and fire in that dialog.That would seem to support my suspicion that Roddenberry initially intended Spock to be from the cis-Mercurian Vulcan, which would naturally have been extremely hot.
Glad they went with Vulcanian early on. Easier on the ears during the transitional period where the show was discovering itself.
I'd have had the occasional human in ENT refer to Vulcans as "Vulcanians" just to establish that the term goes back to the first century following First Contact and had to gradually fall into disuse over the coming generations.
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