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View Full Version : feldercarb/felgercarb ???


Darth Marley
January 26th, 2004, 06:48 AM
Does anyone have an authoritative spelling?

When did the alternate spelling appear? Is it a difference between the writer's guide referenced at Sheba's Galaxy, and some of the novels?

BST
January 26th, 2004, 07:36 AM
I believe the proper term is "felgercarb". I'm not sure how it evolved to "feldercarb" but, knowing our penchant for "corrupting" the English language, anything is possible.

:laugh:

BST

jewels
January 26th, 2004, 08:40 AM
I know that Dirk always said felgercarb (I think he was the term's heaviest user). Terry said it in one episode for sure as feldercarb (only time I remember him resorting to it). Since both actors have good diction, I'm guessing Terry was handed a hastily retyped script with a typo. Only other character I can remember using the term clearly (and I forget which pronunciation they used) was Lucifer (I do remember Jonathan Harris relished wickedly in the line it was in. :) )

I took it as a potential thing where a dialect difference could have developed between the various colonies/tribes.

there's a couple of theories for you. :)

Darth Marley
January 26th, 2004, 08:48 AM
Is there any evidence to dispute the authenticity of the "writer's guide" posted at Sheba's?

I have seen some interesting speculation about alleged 2nd season script briefs. Curious if someone has reason to disbelieve the source of the document at Sheba's.

larocque6689
January 26th, 2004, 08:51 AM
Both spellings are acceptable, although the scripts spelled it as felgercarb. Susan Paxton's Concordance (which heavily relied on the script spellings) uses felgercarb.

My guess is that the actor's sometimes found the alternate spelling easier to to pronounce. Fans sometimes used this spelling as well. Example: Feldercarb was the name of a fan magazine by Laura Michaels.

I don't consider feldercarb "wrong" - simply an alternate variant.

The Second Season bible is authentic as well as the Writer's Guide. The source of the second season bible is Chris Larson. When I finally found out it was the real deal, I made this comment at Cylon Alliance: "Thank God Battlestar Galactica was cancelled."

Sheba's Galaxy is a great source.

Here's two other favorite links of mine:
http://www.kobol.com/archives/index.html
http://www.geocities.com/sjpaxton/concord.html

Aeneas
January 26th, 2004, 05:20 PM
(taken from glossary of terms)

f-e-l-g-e-r-c-a-r-b
felgercarb- bulls**t
( Hatch, Richard : "Battlestar Galactica: Armaggeddon"
c.1997 MCA Books, Inc.)

from Apollo's pen to thine screen--but the varying dialect explanation
makes sense:salute: .

Dogface
January 27th, 2004, 06:26 AM
Originally posted by larocque6689

The Second Season bible is authentic as well as the Writer's Guide. The source of the second season bible is Chris Larson. When I finally found out it was the real deal, I made this comment at Cylon Alliance: "Thank God Battlestar Galactica was cancelled."


Aaaaand THAT is why Larson should always be taken off the helm once he gets a project started. That precis presented a Galactica that was even worse than the Buck Rogers revamp. Larson suffers from having too many ideas, so when he gets one rolling, he has this compulsion to diddle with it. In essence, he did not want to continue Galactica but merely slap the Galactica name on an entirely new series that happened to have a few of the same names and actors. (For those who didn't suffer through reading the excerpts, he wanted to kill off Sheba and turn Apollo into a thoroughly irresponsible fratboy in the name of attracting more female viewers--but a cute little "cabin-boy" was going to be added.)

In the visual arts, that's called "over-working", and it can ruin many a promising piece irretrievably.

Darth Marley
January 27th, 2004, 08:34 AM
I had thought the writer's guide spelled it "feldergarb." Guess I'll have to revisit the site.

The second season ideas gave me many worries. I am also glad such a push never came to pass. I wondered after reading it why so many would prefer a Larson involvment in any modern effort at BSG. Seems the Larson second season would have irritated many fans.

Dawg
January 27th, 2004, 08:49 AM
Frankly, since there never was a second season of TOS, it doesn't matter how legitimate the "bible", as reported, was. It didn't happen. There is nothing to say that it would have been produced faithfully to the "bible's" final word, there is nothing to say that this "bible" wouldn't have been scrapped in preproduction for something completely different.

It's useless to speculate. Season Two didn't happen, except in fanfic.

I am
Dawg
:warrior:

Darth Marley
January 27th, 2004, 08:55 AM
Dawg, just to clarify, I am thinking of 2 separate documents.
One was the guide for the first season, and I recall the "feldercarb" spelling from it. It was either the real deal, or it wasn't.
The second season speculation comes from a different document. Larocque vouches for its authenticity, and that adds some weight as far as I am concerned.
True, since it was never produced (2nd season) this is all purely speculative. If it did in fact come from Larson, it raises questions and doubts in my mind regarding the direction he would have taken the show.

Dogface
January 27th, 2004, 11:44 AM
Originally posted by Dawg
[B]Frankly, since there never was a second season of TOS, it doesn't matter how legitimate the "bible", as reported, was. It didn't happen. There is nothing to say that it would have been produced faithfully to the "bible's" final word, there is nothing to say that this "bible" wouldn't have been scrapped in preproduction for something completely different.

It's useless to speculate. Season Two didn't happen, except in fanfic.


Therefore, it is also, according to you "useless to speculate" on what a Hatch- or Larson-connected revival would have been, since "It didn't happen" applies equally to them, too...

Dawg
January 27th, 2004, 12:54 PM
Originally posted by Dogface
Therefore, it is also, according to you "useless to speculate" on what a Hatch- or Larson-connected revival would have been, since "It didn't happen" applies equally to them, too...

Hatch created the proof of concept trailer that shows what a revival under his leadership would have looked like. There's no speculation there. Same with DeSanto; we have enough information now to know what his revival would have been like. We would have liked either, but they did not happen. We bemoan that fact, but that is not speculation.

Glen Larson has only stated his desire to bring back the BSG universe on the big screen; he owns the movie rights. There haven't been details about what he definitely would or definitely wouldn't do. Our comments regarding that come under the heading of "wouldn't it be nice if," rather than speculation on what would, could or did happen.

Speculation requires some factual basis to spring from. In talking about whether or not the mini will go to series, both the pro and con in the debate are taking established facts and speculating on whether they mean go or no. In talking about the second season of TOS, since there was no production, preproduction, or anything, speculation on whether the "bible" would have been used in whole, part, or not at all is meaningless speculation because there are no facts to extrapolate from.

OK?

I am
Dawg
:warrior:

jewels
January 27th, 2004, 01:29 PM
Factoid about the 2nd season documents:
they were prepared for outlining a proposed 2nd season for BSG to pitch to the network. (they wanted a smaller cast, lower costs, etc.)

Darth Marley
January 27th, 2004, 01:36 PM
Yes, and if they are to be accepted as legitamate, then I think they can be discussed as a "factual basis" of what Larson would have done in a year 2 BSG.
Much like, if the RDM series does not happen, leaked scripts for ep 1 might give us "factual basis" of what it would have looked like.
In my view, it is a good thing that these Larson ideas were not implemented.

Dawg
January 27th, 2004, 02:33 PM
Originally posted by Darth Marley
Yes, and if they are to be accepted as legitamate, then I think they can be discussed as a "factual basis" of what Larson would have done in a year 2 BSG.
Much like, if the RDM series does not happen, leaked scripts for ep 1 might give us "factual basis" of what it would have looked like.
In my view, it is a good thing that these Larson ideas were not implemented.

True, and I agree with that last sentiment. However, an episode 1 script based on the mini is much harder evidence of what something looks like than what is admittedly a proposal "bible" that never had one word written for an actual production. My whole point is that we cannot know, for certain, what Season 2 of TOS would have "looked like" (i.e. where the stories would go). It is useless to speculate because there is no factual basis on which to stand, except for a proposal document which may or may not have been used at all had a second season ultimately been green-lighted.

With the mini-to-series debate, we have the production of the mini, finished and aired. Factual basis for conjecture. Valid speculation.

See the difference?

Now, I'm going back to work before I get fired. 'Later, all.

I am
Dawg
:warrior:

Dawg
January 27th, 2004, 02:36 PM
Oops. Double post.

Darth Marley
January 27th, 2004, 02:48 PM
I get you. I think I am not making the point about the 2 documents though.
One is the alleged series bible for BSG season one. It is from that document I get the spelling of "feldercarb." If what is presented as this writer's guide for season one is authentic, then I think it should be looked to as the first word on things like spelling and such.

Sure, I'll grant the season 2 Larson document might have been tossed aside by some semi-sane exec.

Dawg
January 27th, 2004, 03:02 PM
Ah. OK, I gotcha. Yes, we agree.

I am
Dawg
:warrior:

Darth Marley
January 27th, 2004, 03:28 PM
And I still dread the thought of the Larson doc actually coming to pass as proposed.

Terra
January 28th, 2004, 04:17 AM
As anyone ever tried to activate subtitles????
Maybe the answer is there!??!!:)

Darth Marley
January 28th, 2004, 04:21 AM
Ha, great idea!
I use that to get what Kenny says in Southpark, and what Boomhauer says in King of the Hill.