Basically. There was one robot that was supposed to be a saloon girl or a prostitute. Mam didn't really understand the plot. She said something scornful and righteous about the saloon girl, and I said, "She's just a robot," and Mam said haughtily, "Well, a robot ain't nothing but a whore!" At which point I realized my grandmother would now declare until the world ends that robot means whore, no matter what anyone told her, so I just shut up and went back to the movie.
Jossverse 1: Emotional Resonance & Rocket Launchers
TV, movies, web media--this thread is the home for any Joss projects that don't already have their own threads, such as Dr. Horrible.
"A robot ain't nothin' but a whore!" is a terrific piece of dialogue, though.
Isn't it? My grandmother is a great character.
Sounds like something Mal Reynolds would say.
I don't know why people think Joss Whedon made up that down-home dialect in Firefly.
and we're back to topic! All roads lead to Whedon.
That's what I thought, SA. Or someone on Firefly.
Now that I think about, more likely Jayne.
Argggh, just got into it with a poster on another board who doesn't understand why product placement ads wouldn't work on Agent Carter. I mean, I'm sure Ovaltine would be thrilled to have increased brand recognition in today's market, but they're not going to be financing an hour of primetime on ABC every week.
You'd have to pick some well-known brands and show them in their 1940's iterations, at least.
Well, let's see.... Hershey's. Toll House morsels. Cooper Tires. Goodyear? M&M's. Pepsi-cola. Coca-Cola. Aunt Jemima Syrup (although I'm not sure the current company would want people to see the ads of that time.)
It would take some doing, though. Also? I'm not sure many companies want to seem "old" to their current market.
Might fit with Goodyear and Hershey brands. Did quaker oats exist then?
Coke and Hershey both tout their age in advertising, so they might be interested. I know from losing a trivia question on putting the age of several cereals in order that Quaker Oats is the first trade-marked breakfast cereal (1877), followed by Kellogg's cornflakes (1895) and Post Grape-nuts (1898).
M&Ms were created as chocolate that wouldn't melt specifically for the military in WWII and weren't available to the civilian market until after the war.
There are lots of food items that have been around forever: Hershey's cocoa, Gold Medal flour, Calumet baking powder, Arm & Hammer baking soda. Jell-O. Now if we could figure out how Peggy could make a bomb out of them.