I can follow most of your posts but that one bamboozled me!
It's not just a grey wall, though! Watching "Babel" last night I noticed something peeking out at the top of the grey wall:... the nondescript grey background can also be excused as being what the space doors of the landing bay look like when off focus...
That was my first thought as well, possibly a backdrop roller? However, as the 2nd pic shows the object doesn't extend all the way across, so it can't be supporting the wall, at least not entirely. This is why I wondered where the actual set was constructed (in relation to the rest of the standing sets). Unfortunately none of the set plans I have show this. I wonder; is the shuttebay wall actually one of the studio walls, or freestanding like the big engineering one? They seem to be about the same height (20')...One is almost tempted to think that the strange beam wasn't supposed to be seen, and was merely part of the studio riggings...
Yet the subtitle gnomes of nautical adventures readily give us spellings such as "Anchors away!" or "We are underway, Sir!". If "weigh" in those cases is allowed to corrode into "way", perhaps the same development is due for "weighing in"? Just like in the above two cases, the new, false etymology makes perfect sense: "Anybody want a way in(to the discussion)?" is actually even more intuitive than "Anybody want to have their weight felt in the discussion?"...
Timo Saloniemi
I checked and they did! Clearly the remastered chaps felt that this was the observation gallery and pasted in the appropriate graphics:...One also wonders why the remastering team didn't try and work their magic on this background...
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