Saturday, July 26, 2025
Bones
A couple weeks ago, I realized that the title of the show Bones has a sort of dual meaning. Primarily, it refers to the physical remains that the scientists examine in the lab in order to solve murders (and it also signifies Dr. Temperance Brennan, whom Special Agent Seeley Booth calls Bones because she deals with these remains), but it could also have a more figurative application. In an-other sense, bones can mean "the basic design or framework," and this matches the aim of the characters in a crime procedural: they sift through the evidence and suspects, eliminate irrelevant data, and ultimately discover the bare truth.
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Bones
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Star Trek: The Next Generation - S1E3 - "Code of Honor"
Recently, I watched the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Code of Honor" (S1E3). The next day, I was thinking about the names of a couple of the characters and realized that in a small way, they mirror how the characters relate to each other.
As Captain Picard explains at the beginning of the episode, the Enterprise has come to Ligon II to negotiate a treaty to receive a vaccine from its ruler Lutan. During a tour of the vessel, Lutan becomes impressed by Lieutenant Natasha Yar, the security officer, and when he leaves, he abducts her. The Enterprise crew are wary of doing anything to insult the Ligonians or jeopardize the exchange of the vaccine, but when Captain Picard does ask for the return of Lieutenant Yar, Lutan refuses, explaining that he loves Yar and wants her to become his "first one." Lutan's wife Yareena takes offense at this and challenges Yar to "a struggle to the death," which is the primary concern during the second half of the episode.
The names Yar and Yareena resemble each other, drawing attention to the somewhat parallel positions of the two women in the same way that the plot has narrowed its focus to the conflict between them. There's a significant difference, however, in that Yareena seems to be a diminutive form of Yar (using something like the Italian suffix -ina, audibly, if not orthographically). This indicates an inequality between the two. In a meeting with Yareena prior to the fight, Yar tells her that "there is no physical training anywhere that matches Starfleet, especially its security people," and she eventually does best Yareena in combat.
Saturday, July 12, 2025
The Music Man
I was recently reminded of The Music Man and remembered a number of realizations I'd previously had about Harold Hill's character.
It's clear from Hill's interactions with his friend Marcellus Washburn that the name Harold Hill is actually a pseudonym that he uses as a fraudulent salesman (Washburn calls him Gregory or just Greg a number of times). Significantly, the name Harold Hill alliterates. This quality illustrates his artifice and also draws attention to him, almost acting like a lure. The "Hill" part may even be meant to evoke a sort of beacon to which people are drawn.
Near the end of "Ya Got Trouble," Hill stands in front of a statue of Henry Madison, an important philanthropist for the town, and exhorts the crowd, "Remember, my friends: listen to me because I pass this way but once." When he says that he "pass[es] this way but once," he means it genuinely, unlike some of his other claims, but even this is twisted to his own advantage. By the time he leaves, the townspeople will know he's a fake, so he wouldn't dare return, but he casts his temporary presence in a positive light and advertises it as a valuable exclusivity instead.
At the end of his address, he winds up in nearly the same posture as the statue of Madison:
Here's a video from Turner Classic Movies of the full song:
It's a great visual gag, but it may also indicate an-other facet of Hill's savvy. Possibly, he's hoping that mirroring Madison's pose will transfer some of Madison's influence to him, making it easier for him to deceive the citizens of River City.
---&---
When I re-watched the movie earlier this week, I also noticed some specific elements that seem to attract Marian Paroo to Hill. In "Being in Love," Paroo describes her ideal man, and one characteristic is an interest in the classics, specifically Shakespeare and Beethoven: "And if occasionally he'd ponder / What makes Shakespeare and Beethoven great, / Him I could love till I die." While Hill is far from meeting her ideal in most respects, he does demonstrate at least a passing familiarity with both Shakespeare and Beethoven. In the candy kitchen, after Marian tells him, "I think it was wonderful of you sticking up for Tommy Djilas the way you did," he replies, "Well, a man can't go back on his principles merely because a little personal risk is involved. What does the poet say? 'A coward dies a thousand deaths; a brave man only five hundred.'" He seems to be referencing lines from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar: "Cowards die many times before their deaths; / The valiant never taste of death but once" (II.ii.32-33). Meanwhile, as per Hill's instructions, the band is practicing Beethoven's Minuet in G (WoO 10, No. 2) using his "think system." While Hill's interest in Shakespeare and Beethoven may not be quite as Paroo had envisioned, it does exist.
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The Music Man
Saturday, July 5, 2025
Star Wars: Rebels - S1E6 - "Breaking Ranks"
Recently, I lookt at the trivia for the Star Wars: Rebels episode "The Occupation" (S4E5). The earlier episode "Breaking Ranks" (S1E6), specifically the Imperial cadet Oleg, is referenced, and I had a few realizations about it.
In "Breaking Ranks," Ezra poses as cadet Dev Morgan in order to infiltrate the Imperial facility on Lothal and acquire a device that will allow The Ghost crew to locate an Imperial shipment containing a Kyber crystal. During his time there, he befriends fellow cadets Jai Kell and Zare Leonis. These three contrast with Oleg in superficial ways that mirror deeper differences in their characters.
Ezra Bridger (even undercover as Dev Morgan), Jai Kell, and Zare Leonis all have first and last names, and their last names highlight their familial connections: although he's separated from them, Ezra has a strong attachment to his parents, and he recently joined his Rebels family; Jai mentions that his family consists of just him and his mother; and Zare is looking for his sister, who disappeared from the academy. Oleg's single name seems to indicate that he lacks a family; all he has is the Empire.
Throughout the episode, Ezra, Jai, and Zare frequently take off their helmets or at least open the face panel, but Oleg is never seen without his. That Oleg remains faceless illustrates that his individuality is being subsumed as he becomes part of the standardized Empire.
Both of these contrasts also match the difference in the characters' ties to the Empire. Ezra was never truly a cadet; he was only working undercover at the academy. Jai defects at the end of the episode, after Ezra and Zare explain the true nature of the Empire to him. While Zare does stay at the academy, he does so only to continue searching for his sister, not because of any true allegiance. Oleg, on the other hand, was always loyal to the Empire.
---&---
In re-watching the episode, I noticed some small significance in one of the Inquisitor's statements. Upon reviewing the events at the academy, he looks at images of Jai and Ezra and says, "I do not know this boy [Jai], but this one [Ezra] I know." His comment has a chiastic structure, which emphasizes these opposites:
I do not knowthis boy,
but this oneI know.
[A couple years ago, I wrote a post about the opening shot of this episode.]
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