Voltronic Galaxer: Difference between revisions

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==Notes==
==Notes==
*A similarly-named but otherwise totally different weapon, the "Voltronic Galax''idor''", appeared in the 1986 ''[[G.I. Joe (franchise)|G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero]]'' episode "My Brother's Keeper", scripted by ''Joe'' veteran and occasional ''Transformers'' writer, [[Buzz Dixon]]. This wasn't the only apparent ''Transformers'' reference the episode contained: it also featured a television program depicting a robot based on the [[Prowl (G1)|Prowl]]/[[Bluestreak (G1)|Bluestreak]] bodyform, a reference to [[Attack of the Alien Robots|Dash Jordon]] appearing at a sci-fi convention, and in perhaps a more coincidental example, a [[Chip Chase|brown-haired, bespectacled, wheelchair-bound scientific genius]].
*Let's be honest; even by the standards of the cartoon, "Voltronic Galaxer" is a nonsense term has no bearing on the actual function of the device. It was for this reason that it became the subject of some backroom derision at [[Sunbow Productions]], after [[Flint Dille]] and [[Jay Bacal]] reviewed the script for "Blaster Blues" and started making jokes about "Voltronic Galaxatives."<ref name="DilleFB">[https://www.facebook.com/flintdlile/posts/10154593193276095 Flint Dille reminisces about the "Voltronic Galaxiter" on his Facebook]</ref> From there, the term became corrupted into "Voltronic Galaxiter," which went on to be employed behind the scenes at Sunbow as a term not unlike "[[:Category:MacGuffins|MacGuffin]]," used refer to "whatever stupid machine that either [[Cobra]] or the Decepticons were coming up with" in a given episode.<ref>Flint Dille in "Men and Women of Action: Creation the G.I. Joe Animated Series" featurette on [[Shout! Factory]]'s ''G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero'' Season 1.3 DVD box set</ref>  Though these "Galaxiters" would almost always wind up with a different name in finished scripts, [[Buzz Dixon]] used the actual term in the 1986 ''[[G.I. Joe (franchise)|G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero]]'' episode "My Brother's Keeper". It wasn't just about making fun, though; something about the silliness of the whole enterprise gave Dille the impetus to stop and reflect on the types of stories they were telling in the show, and to make changes so that their stories could not be solved by such "bogus plot devices."<ref name="DilleFB" />
*[[Flint Dille]] was not a fan of the "Voltronic Galaxiter".<ref>https://www.facebook.com/flintdlile/posts/10154593193276095</ref>
*Tangentially, the Galaxiter was not the only reference in Dixon's "My Brother's Keeper" to originate with ''The Transformers''. The episode also featured a television program depicting a robot based on the [[Prowl (G1)|Prowl]]/[[Bluestreak (G1)|Bluestreak]] bodyform, and a reference to [[Harold Edsel|Dash Jordon]] from "[[Hoist Goes Hollywood (episode)|Hoist Goes Hollywood]]" appearing at a sci-fi convention.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:57, 19 September 2017

The Voltronic Galaxer is a piece of technology from the cartoon portion of the Generation 1 continuity family.
"Let's go Voltronic Galaxer Force!"

The Voltronic Galaxer encodes audio waves into pulses, which aliens can then easily translate into their own language. It can also intercept and decode transmissions.

Fiction

The Transformers cartoon

Professor Haley attempted to show off the Voltronic Galaxer at Haley Observatory. His demonstration proved to be effective in contacting alien life; however, the alien life it contacted was Megatron, who was standing on the roof of the observatory. The Decepticons blasted their way into the building, with Starscream almost inadvertently destroying the device. Megatron stole the Voltronic Galaxer and spirited it away to the moon. It was installed in the Decepticon lunar dome base as part of a plan to block all of Earth's radio waves, and ransom them for the planet's energy.

Unfortunately for both Megatron and Professor Haley, Blaster and Cosmos injected feedback into the device, destroying it in order to foil Megatron's plan. Blaster Blues

TransTech

In Axiom Nexus, Cybertronian Galactic Systems planed to update their transdimensional radiowave scramblers with voltronic galaxers, allowing them to tap into a beforehand unexplored market, as their memo-streams could now be understood by almost any sentient species in existence. Andromeda - Axiom Nexus News, 2015/05/09

Notes

  • Let's be honest; even by the standards of the cartoon, "Voltronic Galaxer" is a nonsense term has no bearing on the actual function of the device. It was for this reason that it became the subject of some backroom derision at Sunbow Productions, after Flint Dille and Jay Bacal reviewed the script for "Blaster Blues" and started making jokes about "Voltronic Galaxatives."[1] From there, the term became corrupted into "Voltronic Galaxiter," which went on to be employed behind the scenes at Sunbow as a term not unlike "MacGuffin," used refer to "whatever stupid machine that either Cobra or the Decepticons were coming up with" in a given episode.[2] Though these "Galaxiters" would almost always wind up with a different name in finished scripts, Buzz Dixon used the actual term in the 1986 G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero episode "My Brother's Keeper". It wasn't just about making fun, though; something about the silliness of the whole enterprise gave Dille the impetus to stop and reflect on the types of stories they were telling in the show, and to make changes so that their stories could not be solved by such "bogus plot devices."[1]
  • Tangentially, the Galaxiter was not the only reference in Dixon's "My Brother's Keeper" to originate with The Transformers. The episode also featured a television program depicting a robot based on the Prowl/Bluestreak bodyform, and a reference to Dash Jordon from "Hoist Goes Hollywood" appearing at a sci-fi convention.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Flint Dille reminisces about the "Voltronic Galaxiter" on his Facebook
  2. Flint Dille in "Men and Women of Action: Creation the G.I. Joe Animated Series" featurette on Shout! Factory's G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero Season 1.3 DVD box set