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AM+A.SciFi+HCI.eBook.17Aug12 - Aaron Marcus and Associates, Inc.

AM+A.SciFi+HCI.eBook.17Aug12 - Aaron Marcus and Associates, Inc.

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<strong>Aaron</strong> <strong>Marcus</strong>, The Past 100 Years of the Future, Page 34<br />

In the 1950s, there appeared several science-fiction themed movies, as well as video<br />

programs with the advent of broadcast television, including Captain Video, Tom Corett<br />

ahd his Space Cadets, <strong>and</strong> Rocketman. All of these featured heroes with “advanced”<br />

technology, heroines or humanity in need of rescue, <strong>and</strong> dramatic technological power.<br />

The control room sets were modest. In one notable episode of Captain Video, I<br />

witnessed an actor accidentally knocking over the entire (cardboard?) rocket-ship<br />

control panel during the live television performance. He quickly <strong>and</strong> easily pushed up the<br />

fallen mechanism against the blank wall space that had been revealed by the mis-hap<br />

<strong>and</strong> uttered the magical ad-hoc line “good thing no wires were damaged, Captain!” Most<br />

of these shows featured renditions of typical cluttered airplane cockpit-controls with<br />

perhaps a dash of blinking lights added for visual impact.<br />

.<br />

34

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