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Re: ACs on TV?

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" Iris M. Gray " wrote:

> I was watching an old

> episode of " Star Trek: The Next Generation " recently, and I saw many signs

> that the character Barclay could be AC. He has no visible social skills,

> he prefers to work on his own, and the other characters make fun of him.

> He can't look people in the face when he talks to them.

Barclay seems to have been invented for comic relief, so that other

characters and viewers could make fun of him. That seems unfortunate; I

think if they'd consciously invented an ASD character, s/he would have

been presented much more sympathetically. That said, he seems more a

case of social anxiety disorder to me. He's *nervous* when interacting

with people. In my experience, Aspies are, instead, blunt because we

either don't know or don't care what vibes we're giving off.

Doug

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At 01:34 PM 1/10/03 -0800, Iris M. Gray wrote:

>I was watching an old

>episode of " Star Trek: The Next Generation " recently, and I saw many signs

>that the character Barclay could be AC.

Data. Definitely Data.

And ... oh, whats-her-name... Six of Nine? On that other Star Trek show.

>Any opinions?

Anya on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I've mentioned her before on this list.

She's always very blunt and people get insulted or hurt by the things she

says because she doesn't understand human emotions and social graces. But

she's very clever with money and was able to triple her money by investing

it. The most aspie show with her is the one where Buffy's mother dies and

Anya keeps trying to get people to explain what's going on.

Another TV character I've been following who is not AC but has some

interesting shadow characteristics is the lead character of the show "

Doe. " For those who aren't familiar with the show, he woke up on an island

off the coast near Seattle one day with total amnesia...well, almost total.

He knows everything. Except who he is.

The reason I say he has shadow characteristics is because whenever he gets

nervous, he starts spouting off random trivial facts like " the human

fingernail grows 3.8 times faster than the human toenail. " When he tries to

socialize with women, he ends up getting funny looks from them because

he'll engage in " light social banter " on the level of explaining the

chemical processes of their perfume to them. One woman, a

super-intelligent, geekly, possibly aspie, woman who works in the police

force has repeatedly tried to get his romantic attention but he's oblivious

to her intent.

I'm very into the show Doe right now. A new episode comes on tonight.

I can't get enough of it.

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> Anya on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I've mentioned her before on this

> list. She's always very blunt and people get insulted or hurt by the

> things she says because she doesn't understand human emotions and social

> graces. But she's very clever with money and was able to triple her

> money by investing it. The most aspie show with her is the one where

> Buffy's mother dies and Anya keeps trying to get people to explain

> what's going on.

Duh! I totally forgot about Anya. Of course. She is classic, and I adore

her for her bluntness.

Iris Gray, Puff, Calli and Munchkin

Proud to be Canuckistanian

Personal website: http://victoria.tc.ca/~rainbow/

Toastmasters website: http://victoria.tc.ca/Community/Bb/

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Iris wrote:

>Sometimes I see discussions of famous people who are suspected of being on

>the spectrum. I was wondering if any of you have seen characters on TV

>shows who have signs of being on the spectrum.

Seems to me that I watch a lot of TV, yet I never seem to know

what people are talking about when they talk about TV shows.

I guess I just don't watch the right stuff.

Jane

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Would have to agree re Barclay. I have often thought that. But I haven't

seen Gil Grissom specifically. CSI is on this week, so I will watch with

that in mind.

sandi

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I don't have a TV, so only know what I hear from other people. I had

thought that a character on CSI was actually supposed to be autistic, and

that there had been a story line about in one of the shows or something.

Maybe I misunderstood though.

Norah

>

> Reply-To: AutisticSpectrumTreeHouse

> Date: Sat, 11 Jan 2003 11:47:20 +0800

> To: <AutisticSpectrumTreeHouse >

> Subject: Re: ACs on TV?

>

> Would have to agree re Barclay. I have often thought that. But I haven't

> seen Gil Grissom specifically. CSI is on this week, so I will watch with

> that in mind.

> sandi

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Norah Willett wrote:

> I don't have a TV, so only know what I hear from other people. I had

> thought that a character on CSI was actually supposed to be autistic, and

> that there had been a story line about in one of the shows or something.

> Maybe I misunderstood though.

No, that was accurate. On one episode, there was a character that was autistic.

His

acute sense of touch was key in solving the crime, once the investigators quit

looking at

him as a suspect. His character, though, was not a recurring one in the series.

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> I don't have a TV, so only know what I hear from other people. I had

> thought that a character on CSI was actually supposed to be autistic, and

> that there had been a story line about in one of the shows or something.

> Maybe I misunderstood though.

There was an autistic character in one episode. That was all. He was

suspected of the crime for awhile, because he was " different. " But he had

a photographic memory, and that helped solve it.

Iris

Iris Gray, Puff, Calli and Munchkin

Proud to be Canuckistanian

Personal website: http://victoria.tc.ca/~rainbow/

Toastmasters website: http://victoria.tc.ca/Community/Bb/

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First, my operating system seems to have allocated limited memory for exact

names. I've even forgotten the names of authors whose books I've read, let

alone remember the names of all but the most oft-repeated celebs.

I may be wrong, but it seems to me that worshipping movie stars, pop stars,

TV presenters, footballers etc. epitmosises NTdom, but many aspies feel a

need to somehow believe in someone. Maybe these remote self-confident stars,

earning at least 1 US$ million per annum, really do care! After all they can

afford it. Some may even deserve their reputation, others were just in the

right place at the right time with the right attitude and above all

charisma.

Some aspie-like individuals may occasionally strike it lucky, but remember

they're just acting. Anyway, I'll get back to re-reading " Amusing Ourselves

to Death " by Neil Postman. I just got from the library and can now view many

things in a different light. More on that later. Several points in the book,

written back in 1988, relate to the power of nonverbal communication. Yes,

it really does matter how the person advertising toothpaste smiles and

conveys confidence and authority. Companies spend millions on new

logos...... yet they don't make an iota of difference to the quality of

their products...

Neil

ACs on TV?

> Sometimes I see discussions of famous people who are suspected of being on

> the spectrum. I was wondering if any of you have seen characters on TV

> shows who have signs of being on the spectrum. I was watching an old

> episode of " Star Trek: The Next Generation " recently, and I saw many signs

> that the character Barclay could be AC. He has no visible social skills,

> he prefers to work on his own, and the other characters make fun of him.

> He can't look people in the face when he talks to them.

>

> Another character from a current TV show is Gil Grissom from CSI. He has

> great problems interacting with people on anything but a professional

> level. For example, he had no clue one of the people he worked with was a

> vegetarian, because it didn't affect her work. His few attempts at

> romantic relationships have ended in disaster. He has a perseveration

> about insects.

>

> Any opinions?

>

> Iris

>

> Iris Gray, Puff, Calli and Munchkin

> Proud to be Canuckistanian

> Personal website: http://victoria.tc.ca/~rainbow/

> Toastmasters website: http://victoria.tc.ca/Community/Bb/

>

>

>

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--- Neil Gardner wrote:

> First, my operating system seems to have allocated

> limited memory for exact

> names. I've even forgotten the names of authors

> whose books I've read, let

> alone remember the names of all but the most

> oft-repeated celebs.

>

> I may be wrong, but it seems to me that worshipping

> movie stars, pop stars,

> TV presenters, footballers etc. epitmosises NTdom,

> but many aspies feel a

> need to somehow believe in someone.

-------Hey Neil; You've mentioned this in a similar

thread before, and I'll say again, that I hardly think

knowing the names of some authors and actors

automatically means " worship " . Thats a huge leap.

Some of us enjoy/like creative people, whether they be

artists, authors, actors, whatever. I dont know why

you always have to be so insulting about this.

Nanne

=====

" Instead of going to an office and working, he went for long walks inside

himself using his body as a map. " --- Ianthe Brautigan, on her father

Brautigan

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Neil wrote:

>First, my operating system seems to have allocated limited memory for exact

>names. I've even forgotten the names of authors whose books I've read, let

>alone remember the names of all but the most oft-repeated celebs.

I have a hard time with names, period, and that definitely

includes authors whose books I've read. I just responded to

a post from Iris with a book recommendation. I was able to

give her the title and author because I happened to know

which shelf that book was on. (And because I bought that

book back before I forced myself to stop buying books and

switch to the library.) I rely on lists at lot, and if I

don't put the thing/name-to-be-remembered on a list (and

keep the list where I can find it), it's gone.

>Some aspie-like individuals may occasionally strike it lucky, but remember

>they're just acting. Anyway, I'll get back to re-reading " Amusing Ourselves

>to Death " by Neil Postman. I just got from the library and can now view many

>things in a different light.

I found that book fascinating.

Jane

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At 08:50 AM 1/11/03 -0800, Jane Meyerding wrote:

>I have a hard time with names, period, and that definitely

>includes authors whose books I've read. I just responded to

>a post from Iris with a book recommendation. I was able to

>give her the title and author because I happened to know

>which shelf that book was on.

I was able to give the name of the author of " Guns of the South " because I

looked it up on Amazon.com as I was posting. :-) I'm rarely able to

remember names of authos I've read once and I often find myself struggling

for the names of my very favorite authors that I've read many times!

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