Tuesday, October 30, 2007
| Book ‘em Dan(n)o! Misspelling!
I was going to write a blog on the meaning of life…however pressing and important news has suddenly surfaced. News that may very well shake the foundations of crossword makers everywhere! And it doesn't just start there. Oh no. You think they let you off that easy and then next thing you know they'll take your children and behead them like some crazed executioner. They'll rape your wife. They'll even kick your dog! Yes, it's the ever growing problem of whether, in the Now a good place to start would be to look at the cold hard facts. So I went straight to the source. Google. I furiously typed the ten or 11 luminescent letters (save for the space bar, which I pressed a total of two times, and I decided to leave out the apostrophe to encompass more results) into the text bar. And the results I found were, indeed, quite shocking. For "Book em Dano" Google identified 132,000 results in the space of 0.22 secs. For "Book em Danno" Google identified only 56,100 results in the space of 0.16 secs. A whole 75,900 results less than the aforementioned search. You can't argue with the cold hard facts. It seems we could scientifically deduct that the phrase, if written down on say…a crossword puzzle…is Book 'em Dano. But due to the unreliability of scientific induction, are we simply assuming too much by these results? Let's have a look at the teams representing the 'Danno' side and the teams representing the 'Dano' side. I will nominate a captain of both teams. On team 'A' (the 'Danno' team) the lineup consists of Ayer, William Shakespeare, Ben Cousins, Stravinsky, Michael Schumacher, James Williams, Beethoven (the dog) and Daniel Dennett as captain. On team 'B' (the 'Dano' team) we have Andrew Johns, Alfred Hitchcock, Danny Carey, Aristotle, Skippy, Johnny Depp, Tom (from Myspace) and David Chalmers as captain. Captain Chalmers has decided to settle this debate by comparing certain websites considered reliable sources of television knowledge to see how they have the name in question spelt. Immediately, Chalmers points to the website 'Total Television' which references the quote as "Book 'em Dano." Chalmers also points to tv.com which lists both Dano and Danno but the majority of the spelling is 'Dano.' Chalmers passes the baton over to team 'A' captain Daniel Dennett. Captain Dennett has decided to against the grain and claim that the spelling of the name is not the main problem. The real problem is how the quote has been misinterpreted. Dennett further explains that the character Steve-o from the television show Captain Chalmers immediately questions the relevance of Daniel Dennett's theory and dismisses it as "Dano explained away" and "Dano ignored." Chalmers declares an ultimatum, "if there is no further evidence to suggest any other spelling of the name, then it should be made official that the spelling of the popular quote should be indeed, "Book 'em Dano." The baton is passed and Beethoven proceeds to bark with ferocity. Captain Dennett claims that Chalmers is ignoring the problem he has raised. However Captain Chalmers interrupts and states that Dennett's problem is in fact irrelevant to the topic discussed. One of the creators of Wikipedia, James Wales, interjected and stated his case. "The character's name was Danny Williams. We have listed on my online Encyclopedia that the popular catch phrase uttered by the character Steve-o is indeed "Book 'em Danno." There are a lot of credible websites online that have referenced the name Danno in reference to Danny Williams. Credibility comes from credible websites, rather than the majority of websites. Websites such as the official Captain Chalmers still states that suppose the official website made a typo – we would still need to see the script in order to find out whether it is indeed spelt 'Danno' or 'Dano.' William Shakespeare stands up and asks "What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet." Both teams engage in a heated discussion amongst themselves. Shakespeare makes a solid philosophical point. Captain Chalmers' analyses this and adds that it does not matter whether Dan(n)o is spelt 'Dano' or 'Danno.' The point is that the character is still the same however his nickname is spelt. However I find this conclusion irrelevant to the whole argument in question. The idea that the character would still be the same despite how his nickname is spelt does not help the crossword makers who want to slot the quote into one of their morning crosswords directly underneath the television guide for the day. We need to go for the jugular here. So I decided to do a little more sleuthing. I wrote to Leonard Freeman, the creator of In conclusion I feel that the evidence for the spelling of the phrase is "Book 'em Danno" seems much more credible than the other offering despite the majority of findings from Google page searches. However Daniel Dennett has brought up a new argument questioning the spelling of 'em and 'im stating that "It seems more of a problem cause it determines how the phrase is said much more than the spelling of the nickname of the character." Perhaps in my next Philosophical Essay I will argue against this new theory. But until then, I'll keep you posted on how his nickname is spelt (if I ever get a reply from the actor himself). Even then you could debate the diachronic identity – but let's just leave that for a personal identity debate, rather than a television debate. Feel free to post your theories or attack mine. Or at least post 'The Truth.' Take it easy. |
pessimistic