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#16 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
It reminds me of the old TV series The Avengers, which was co-produced by an American TV studio who demanded the show include such British colloquialisms and iconic imagery (bowler hats and quaint backstreet storefronts, etc) to satisfy the image of England to American audiences... |
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#17 | |
Arctic Warrior
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Anchorage, Alaska
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Quote:
The whole show Northern Exposure back in the 90's was shot entirely BC, a thousand miles south of Alaska. Lots of folks came up here because of that TV series only to be very dissapointed that to find Alaska a bit more severe than they anticipated. |
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#18 |
Arctic Warrior
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Anchorage, Alaska
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In addition to writing I am an audiobook narrator. As I read your excerpt I found myself reading with an American southeast (something between Louisiana & Oklahoma) voice. If that's what you intended I think you did it well.
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#19 | |
Sci-Fi Author
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Michigan
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Quote:
![]() Case in point, I've got character in a book series I'm working on who's British SAS, and still uses or displays many of his old British slang and mannerisms he had 40 years earlier when he arrived on the planet. But since he's been away from his nature culture for so long, much of his hard core "British-ness" has faded, and you instead see a man who has become a melting pot of words and mannerisms that he's picked up from the many other travelers he's meet along the way, even using a few "Americanisms" he's run across. Some might think that's wrong, but it's no different than taking someone from one culture and plopping him squarely into another. Over time he'll pick up a lot of cultural elements from the other society as well, making him somewhat of a social hybrid. |
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#20 |
neilmarr
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Location: Monaco-Menton, France
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Actually, Steven and Steve, those Old School Tie terms are still widely used -- but only ironically, and in the True Blue Brit sense of joking against themselves and their image elsewhere. The Scots do it too -- I sometimes use (for similar fun): 'Hoots Toots the Noo' in signing off posts here. Nobody in Scotland would ever use the term other than in jest. It's a play on stereotyping. Toodlepip, Old Beans. Neil
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