bugshaw: (Bicycle)
Bridget ([personal profile] bugshaw) wrote2009-08-31 02:45 pm

Popular culture tickybox

I have now watched all of Battlestar Galactica.

[identity profile] bugshaw.livejournal.com 2009-08-31 02:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Bathtub, oh yes :-)

I think "skin job" was coined in Blade Runner?
andrewducker: (Default)

[personal profile] andrewducker 2009-08-31 02:40 pm (UTC)(link)
How on earth did I miss that??
One of the most prominent examples of Replicant-like robots in modern culture are the humanoid Cylons on the Sci-Fi Channel series Battlestar Galactica. Blade Runner was acknowledged as an influence on the series. Actor Edward James Olmos, who stars in the series, also co-starred in Blade Runner. Tricia Helfer, who plays the main humanoid-Cylon character "Number Six" on the series, was having trouble determining how to play a humanoid robot when production began, so co-star Olmos advised her to watch Blade Runner. Helfer has stated that it greatly informed how she approached the role. The human resistance on Cylon-occupied Caprica even referred to the Cylons as "skin jobs," the slang term for Replicants from Blade Runner, in the late season 2 episode "Downloaded". Episode writer Bradley Thompson inserted the line hoping science fiction fans would notice and enjoy the reference: the term met with popular reception by fans, and subsequently many characters in the next two seasons of the series regularly refer to the humanoid Cylons as "skin jobs".