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Questioning chirine ba kal

Started by Bren, June 14, 2015, 02:55:18 PM

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chirine ba kal

From AsenRG: How did the "paying for a kid" trick work back in the 50ies, Uncle? (Also, quite un-Tsolyani, I'm sure most of us don't care about the legalities around your heritage - I can certainly guarantee for myself;).

My about-to-be mother was unhappy that all her friends were having babies, and she wasn't. She also didn't want to have to do all that messy stuff, and wanted something 'off the shelf'. My about-to-be dad mentioned this to a friend of his, who was a judge, and who happened to know a young unmarried lady who was 'in a family way' - and with a guy from the wrong side of the tracks, no less. A very specifically-worded contract was drawn up, the judge got $2,500 for fixing the paperwork and legal stuff, and my birth mother got all her medical expenses paid for and a $2,500 payment. All very grey market, and dubiously legal, but they got away with it because the only applicable laws were the old anti-slavery statutes that we're still on the books. The authorities didn't want the enormous scandal that a trial under those statutes would have cause, so here I am.

The Tsolyani don't worry about 'bastardy'; one is born into a clan, and that's pretty much that.

But if we can turn it into game fodder...I have already used Chirine, shortly, in a campaign, and it worked great, so why wouldn't we do it one more time:D?

Feel free! Let me  know if you need anything.

And the taping part is wonderful:)! Consult a lawyer, but I doubt anything can stop you from publishing a list as I suggested...

I follow the state and federal laws on this, and it's saved my bacon on a number of occasions. The phrase, "let's play the tape, then" has an amazing effect on people.

He sounds like a great man to me, FWIW.

Both he and my stepfather were very special people, and I miss them both.

chirine ba kal

Quote from: Gronan of Simmerya;934176Ah.  My deepest and sincerest condolences.  He was quite a man.  God grant that he may rest in peace, and rise in Glory.

And survived the Pacific with an elfin sense of humor intact.  Remember the time we got some firework rockets with bent fins and they proceeded to chase us all over your dad's back yard while he stood there and laughed himself sick at our frantic scramblings for cover?

Agreed!

And yes, it was a very special Fourth of july.

His sense of humor could pop out at the most unexpected moments. When I was signing up for Army ROTC, the FBI was very concerned over my ten identical fingerprints and lack of proper documentation. My dad was 'invited' in so as to prove that I was a real person; they asked him for his ID, and he fixed the captain doing the interview with a stern gaze and asked him what his clearance was. The captain did a double take, and after an exchange of code phrases and hushed phone calls to unlisted phone numbers, my dad finally revealed his US government ID. Which was from the Atomic Energy Commission, and had a clearance level so high you had to have a 'Top Secret' rating just to look at the thing.

So, what was my dad doing? Do a Google search for 'SNAP-25'. My dad helped take us to the moon, and I still have the slide rule and drafting instruments that he used to do it.

Baron

Hmm, the government is quite secret. When I google Snap-25 all I get is something on genetics. Although the suggested search adds the words 'atomic bomb,' when I try that search I still just get the genetics. Well played, government.

My father was in that oxymoronic organization, Army Intelligence, during the Cold War. He was proud to tell me that he had a class Q clearance, and knew where all the silos were.

chirine ba kal

Quote from: Greentongue;934256Do you feel that the high tech as presented in Traveller is too "modern" of a portrayal for Tekumel?
Should there be more knobs, sliders and switches on "high tech" equipment?

What about robots? We have Ru'un and Yeleth as examples.
From your experience, are robots humanoid or more built for a function?
=

Never played Traveller, really, so I'll hazard a guess here. I'd say 'yes', because Phil's view of the technology of the Ancients was a lot more 'Art Deco Streamline Moderne' then anything else. There are not a lot of immediately identifiable controls on his devices, and it a lot of cases we couldn't even begin to figure out what the thing was, much less what it did and how it worked. I think if you go to the website of the Minneapolis Institute of Art you can see a lot of examples of this technology, or look up the 1939 World's Fair. For Phil, that was what the future was going to look like.

Which was, it has to be said, very unsatisfying for a great number of Tekumel fans over the years, who expected that Tekumel's high tech would look like Star Trek, Star Wars, or anime rather then the 1940s and 1950s scientifiction, space opera, or ERB books that Phil had grown up with and been inspired by. In a lot of the games I used to run at conventions and such, I had to graft on a lot of knobs, etc. to keep the punters happy.

Phi's 'robots' range from the mechanical to the humanoid, depending on their function. We ran into and were chased by everything from the very humanoid Yeleth to the very 'mechanoid' combat Ru'un to the simplest of garbage collection robots. Here again, I'd suggest looking at 1940s and 1950s SF publications - the 'pulps', as it were - for the kind of thing that Phil described to us.

Does this help, at all?

Gronan of Simmerya

You should go to GaryCon.  Period.

The rules can\'t cure stupid, and the rules can\'t cure asshole.

crkrueger

Quote from: Baron;934301Hmm, the government is quite secret. When I google Snap-25 all I get is something on genetics. Although the suggested search adds the words 'atomic bomb,' when I try that search I still just get the genetics. Well played, government.

My father was in that oxymoronic organization, Army Intelligence, during the Cold War. He was proud to tell me that he had a class Q clearance, and knew where all the silos were.
Try SNAP 27.
Even the the "cutting edge" storygamers for all their talk of narrative, plot, and drama are fucking obsessed with the god damned rules they use. - Estar

Yes, Sean Connery\'s thumb does indeed do megadamage. - Spinachcat

Isuldur is a badass because he stopped Sauron with a broken sword, but Iluvatar is the badass because he stopped Sauron with a hobbit. -Malleus Arianorum

"Tangency Edition" D&D would have no classes or races, but 17 genders to choose from. -TristramEvans

Greentongue

Quote from: chirine ba kal;934303Does this help, at all?
Certainly
More Flash Gordon then.
=

chirine ba kal

Quote from: Baron;934301Hmm, the government is quite secret. When I google Snap-25 all I get is something on genetics. Although the suggested search adds the words 'atomic bomb,' when I try that search I still just get the genetics. Well played, government.

My father was in that oxymoronic organization, Army Intelligence, during the Cold War. He was proud to tell me that he had a class Q clearance, and knew where all the silos were.

Try "SNAP" Apollo for the search terms - oh, we've already had help on this! The painting of the unit that I have, which he got from NASA, says '25'.

Yep. Dad had the same clearance, but was on the engineering side. His stories about atomic aircraft ("Steam Bird") and open-cycle steam locomotives were both hilarious and terrifying.

chirine ba kal

Quote from: Gronan of Simmerya;9343101:58 in this trailer.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_vEI1GZraAk

Yes, indeed! :D

chirine ba kal

Quote from: CRKrueger;934312Try SNAP 27.

There you are! Thank you! :)

chirine ba kal

#5110
Quote from: Greentongue;934322Certainly
More Flash Gordon then.
=

Very much so! When I sat down and read ERB's "Barsoom" series and watched all of those wonderful black-and-white episodes of the serials, I got a much better feel for what Phil had had in mind - it's what he'd grown up with, and always loved. Phil had no idea how technology actually worked, and just had the devices do what they did - usually with pretty comic consequences for us.

In later years, the 1980s and 1990s, Phil was more then a little put out by fans who took him to task for not knowing exactly how any of the devices of the Ancients worked. (The on and off discussion about the Three-Light Drive is an example of this. Phil's answer: "I dunno. A ship goes into drive, and you get three flashes of light. It gets to where it wants to go, comes out of the drive, and you get three flashes of light. That's why it's called the Three-Light Drive". He was repeatedly told that this was not a good answer, and he needed to come up with something more technical.) He was even less amused when he was told by 'real fans' that Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers, and Barsoom were all passe, and not what counted as SF.

Which I thought was too bad; it was glorious fun...

Shemek hiTankolel

Quote from: chirine ba kal;934424Very much so! When I sat down and read ERB's "Barsoom" series and watched all of those wonderful black-and-white episodes of the serials, I got a much better feel for what Phil had had in mind - it's what he'd grown up with, and always loved. Phil had no idea how technology actually worked, and just had the devices do what they did - usually with pretty comic consequences for us.



Which I thought was too bad; it was glorious fun...

Chirine,

Before finding this thread I had no know idea how heavily influenced Tekumel was by Flash Gordon, Barsoom, et al. Funny enough, when I read MoG and FS for the first time Yul Brynner and Ming the Merciless popped into my head whenever the Baron Ald or Lord Fu Shi'i, respectively, were being discussed.  I still picture Lord Fu Shi'i as Charles Middleton.
I recently went back and watched a lot of the films that you have recommended and tried to spot the influences on Tsolyanu and Tekumel . You are bang on when you say they inspired Phil. The original Thief of Baghdad (1924) could easily be part of  a Tekumel campaign. The same with Haji Baba, Ben Hur, The Ten Commandments and Land of the Pharaohs, as well as parts of the original Mummy and Wizard of Oz. I could easily see Nyelmu's guards in the Garden of the Weeping Snows being inspired by the Winkies (the Wicked Witch of the West's guards). In all of these movies I see stuff that could easily be used in a Tekumel game. An important NPC in my game is heavily modelled on Ahmed (Douglas Fairbanks' character), right down to the gestures and stunts. Great resources to mine for when trying to create a good Tekumel ambience for a campaign, as far as I'm concerned.
I'm currently enjoying a 13 part Flash Gordon serial from 1936 on You Tube: Flash Gordon and the Planet of Terror. Great stuff! Tonnes of inspiration.:p

Shemek.
Don\'t part with your illusions. When they are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live.
Mark Twain

Shemek hiTankolel

Baron Ald in a quiet moment, plotting his next move against Tsolyanu.:D

[ATTACH=CONFIG]596[/ATTACH]

Shemek
Don\'t part with your illusions. When they are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live.
Mark Twain

AsenRG

Quote from: chirine ba kal;934299From AsenRG: How did the "paying for a kid" trick work back in the 50ies, Uncle? (Also, quite un-Tsolyani, I'm sure most of us don't care about the legalities around your heritage - I can certainly guarantee for myself;).

My about-to-be mother was unhappy that all her friends were having babies, and she wasn't. She also didn't want to have to do all that messy stuff, and wanted something 'off the shelf'. My about-to-be dad mentioned this to a friend of his, who was a judge, and who happened to know a young unmarried lady who was 'in a family way' - and with a guy from the wrong side of the tracks, no less. A very specifically-worded contract was drawn up, the judge got $2,500 for fixing the paperwork and legal stuff, and my birth mother got all her medical expenses paid for and a $2,500 payment. All very grey market, and dubiously legal, but they got away with it because the only applicable laws were the old anti-slavery statutes that we're still on the books. The authorities didn't want the enormous scandal that a trial under those statutes would have cause, so here I am.
Oh, my, isn't that a classical reason:D!

QuoteThe Tsolyani don't worry about 'bastardy'; one is born into a clan, and that's pretty much that.
I wanted to say "do they ever care about legalities"...:D (Unlike people around here, I'm lucky to add).
Of course, your father did it right according to the Tsolyani way! In a way, even the circumstances of your birh were Tsolyani-styled...

QuoteBut if we can turn it into game fodder...I have already used Chirine, shortly, in a campaign, and it worked great, so why wouldn't we do it one more time:D?

Feel free! Let me  know if you need anything.
I'll see what I can do, Uncle:).

QuoteAnd the taping part is wonderful:)! Consult a lawyer, but I doubt anything can stop you from publishing a list as I suggested...

I follow the state and federal laws on this, and it's saved my bacon on a number of occasions. The phrase, "let's play the tape, then" has an amazing effect on people.
I can imagine:).

QuoteHe sounds like a great man to me, FWIW.

Both he and my stepfather were very special people, and I miss them both.
As is to be expected. Great people are always missed!

Quote from: chirine ba kal;934300Agreed!

And yes, it was a very special Fourth of july.

His sense of humor could pop out at the most unexpected moments. When I was signing up for Army ROTC, the FBI was very concerned over my ten identical fingerprints and lack of proper documentation. My dad was 'invited' in so as to prove that I was a real person; they asked him for his ID, and he fixed the captain doing the interview with a stern gaze and asked him what his clearance was. The captain did a double take, and after an exchange of code phrases and hushed phone calls to unlisted phone numbers, my dad finally revealed his US government ID. Which was from the Atomic Energy Commission, and had a clearance level so high you had to have a 'Top Secret' rating just to look at the thing.

So, what was my dad doing? Do a Google search for 'SNAP-25'. My dad helped take us to the moon, and I still have the slide rule and drafting instruments that he used to do it.
In a way, that's also totally Tsolyani. Just substitute the captain for an OAL agent;).

Quote from: chirine ba kal;934303Never played Traveller, really, so I'll hazard a guess here. I'd say 'yes', because Phil's view of the technology of the Ancients was a lot more 'Art Deco Streamline Moderne' then anything else. There are not a lot of immediately identifiable controls on his devices, and it a lot of cases we couldn't even begin to figure out what the thing was, much less what it did and how it worked. I think if you go to the website of the Minneapolis Institute of Art you can see a lot of examples of this technology, or look up the 1939 World's Fair. For Phil, that was what the future was going to look like.

Which was, it has to be said, very unsatisfying for a great number of Tekumel fans over the years, who expected that Tekumel's high tech would look like Star Trek, Star Wars, or anime rather then the 1940s and 1950s scientifiction, space opera, or ERB books that Phil had grown up with and been inspired by. In a lot of the games I used to run at conventions and such, I had to graft on a lot of knobs, etc. to keep the punters happy.

Phi's 'robots' range from the mechanical to the humanoid, depending on their function. We ran into and were chased by everything from the very humanoid Yeleth to the very 'mechanoid' combat Ru'un to the simplest of garbage collection robots. Here again, I'd suggest looking at 1940s and 1950s SF publications - the 'pulps', as it were - for the kind of thing that Phil described to us.

Does this help, at all?
I'd suggest, in turn, doing a search for "Art Deco Streamline Moderne".
I just did, and my players are going to hate the next Underworld expedition to an unknown location. Though I was just looking at tables...:D

Quote from: chirine ba kal;934424Very much so! When I sat downb and read ERB's "Barsoom" series and watched all of those wonderful black-and-white episodes of the serials, I got a much better feel for what Phil had had in mind - it's what he'd grown up with, and always loved. Phil had no idea how technology actually worked, and just had the devices do what they did - usually with pretty comic consequences for us.

In later years, the 1980s and 1990s, Phil was more then a little put out by fans who took him to task for not knowing exactly how any of the devices of the Ancients worked. (The on and off discussion about the Three-Light Drive is an example of this. Phil's answer: "I dunno. A ship goes into drive, and you get three flashes of light. It gets to where it wants to go, comes out of the drive, and you get three flashes of light. That's why it's called the Three-Light Drive". He was repeatedly told that this was not a good answer, and he needed to come up with something more technical.) He was even less amused when he was told by 'real fans' that Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers, and Barsoom were all passe, and not what counted as SF.

Which I thought was too bad; it was glorious fun...
Phil, it seems, liked "softer" Sci-Fi, focusing more on what humans do with technology. In a way, he knew what humans do with technology in situations where it's a scarce resource - from his years in South Asia...so it was more or less a story to him, with the PCs as the "wild cards".

The fans, it seems, wanted "harder" Sci-Fi, focusing on how technology works, and what it does to humans. And they had no such background to fall back on, so to them, it was an exploration "what you can do with this".

Two viewpoints, informed by different life experiences, coming into a clash...what more can one say?

Their views on Barsoom and the like, though, were totally outrageous!
What Do You Do In Tekumel? See examples!
"Life is not fair. If the campaign setting is somewhat like life then the setting also is sometimes not fair." - Bren

David Johansen

Science fiction writers and fans spent the late sixties and early seventies trying very hard to be a serious, adult, form of entertainment.  Then Star Wars came along and proved that all sf really needed to be embraced by the general public was Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon with a better special effects budget.  I have mixed feelings about it.  I'm not fond of intellectualism to the exclusion of fun or anti-intellectualism to the exclusion of reason.  But I am a big fan of Isaac Asimov, Larry Niven, and Robert Heinlein.  Clarke's always left me cold for some reason.  I've read a lot of Asimov's essays and I think he makes some good points against Star Wars and Battle Star Galactica, "how do they get people into these one man death traps?"

But there will always be people who struggle with the idea that these things are childish.  There will always be those who try to raise their fun to an art and look down on those who do not.  Really, that might be a strong argument for gaming being an art form.  If it stops being fun it just might be art.
Fantasy Adventure Comic, games, and more http://www.uncouthsavage.com