Spock Given Devilish Look to Please Women

Tom Goldman

Crying on the inside.
Aug 17, 2009
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Spock Given Devilish Look to Please Women



Spock's look was carefully tailored to bring in the ladies.

The popularity of Star Trek [http://www.amazon.com/Star-Trek-Original-Season-Remastered/dp/B000VDDDY6/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1276362301&sr=1-2] obviously did not fade after the original television series' cancellation in 1969. After this sad occurrence, Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry remained in the demand of thousands of fans. In what was probably one of many, a letter response to what appears to be one of these fans has been uncovered that shows insight into the creation of the character known as Spock.

The vulcan logic master wasn't given pointy ears just to differentiate him from the other races in Star Trek. Those slanted eyebrows weren't only meant to give Spock a stone-cold stare. It turns out that Roddenberry created Spock's look partially to entice women into the show.

In the letter found at Letters of Note [http://www.lettersofnote.com/2010/06/science-fiction-should-be-mainly-about.html] addressed to one Miss Judy Thomases, Roddenberry covers quite a wide range of topics. On Spock, he writes: "We did think Spock became very interesting to fans, I did purposely give him a slight look of the 'devil' because I thought that might be particularly provocative to women, particularly when his nature contrasted so greatly to this."

If you really look at him, Spock does have a look that could have easily fit as Captain Kirk's arch nemesis, but instead he was a happy, helpful "devil." Captain Kirk is often thought of as Star Trek's hunk, but Spock was evidently meant to be a late 1960s bad-boy of television along with him.

Source: SciFiWire [http://www.lettersofnote.com/2010/06/science-fiction-should-be-mainly-about.html]

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Jared

The British Paladin
Jul 14, 2009
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I never thought of it like that before! Gene you sly, sly man lol.

One way to get woman into it I suppose XD
 

ShadowsofHope

Outsider
Nov 1, 2009
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Because we all know Spock doesn't get the women just by himself, anymore!

But I laughed at this. Roddenberry, you sly dog.

Kirk was just a pretentious playboy asshole, I really can't see what attracted.
 

Danpascooch

Zombie Specialist
Apr 16, 2009
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Well if we know one thing about Star Trek, it's that it's just SWIMMING in female fans.
 

Mutie

New member
Feb 2, 2009
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Well, ladies. You'd best hope you can make do with only gettin some once every seven years.
 

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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danpascooch said:
Well if we know one thing about Star Trek, it's that it's just SWIMMING in female fans.
Considering that female Star Trek fans are often credited with popularizing the idea of 'slash' fiction, you'd be surprised.
 

deadguynotyetburied

New member
Jun 3, 2010
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Spock had quite a presence. I do remember reading some of the books of the Star Trek episodes and in a few places they made reference to the reactions of some of the female crew to the mysterious alien. No, not just Nurse Chapel.
 

Swifteye

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Apr 15, 2010
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I thought it was obvious. Women melt at the sight of this fantastic vulcan man meat. Nom nom.
 

Twilight_guy

Sight, Sound, and Mind
Nov 24, 2008
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So, his intended look failed utterly but wound up making Vulcans an icon in popular culture anyways...
Just another item to add to the list of plans that failed so miserably that they were accidentally hugely successful.
 

LiquidGrape

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Sep 10, 2008
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John Funk said:
danpascooch said:
Well if we know one thing about Star Trek, it's that it's just SWIMMING in female fans.
Considering that female Star Trek fans are often credited with popularizing the idea of 'slash' fiction, you'd be surprised.
Beat me to it. The number of female acquaintances I have who've written "Spirk" is rather impressive.
 

Formica Archonis

Anonymous Source
Nov 13, 2009
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John Funk said:
danpascooch said:
Well if we know one thing about Star Trek, it's that it's just SWIMMING in female fans.
Considering that female Star Trek fans are often credited with popularizing the idea of 'slash' fiction, you'd be surprised.
First thing I thought of. Hell, if every etymology of "slash" in this context is to be believed, the term only exists because of Kirk/Spock fiction!

I have friends who've been in the fandom for quite some time, and I've been told stories. In the days before the Internet and easy accessibility to fanfic of all kinds, the occasional fight would break out over who gets to keep a shared copy of a particularly good (but hard to find) piece of slash!
 

Booze Zombie

New member
Dec 8, 2007
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This is one of the stranger facts I have learned in my life, I shall be honest.

danpascooch said:
Well if we know one thing about Star Trek, it's that it's just SWIMMING in female fans.
Apparently, yes.
So either you were being sarcastic or you were making a statement.
 
Feb 13, 2008
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John Funk said:
danpascooch said:
Well if we know one thing about Star Trek, it's that it's just SWIMMING in female fans.
Considering that female Star Trek fans are often credited with popularizing the idea of 'slash' fiction, you'd be surprised.
And more than slightly squicked out. Western Yaoi almost started there.