Just watched the trailer. The number is definitely there. Though it appears after a clip of the main character describing his childhood as ‘unusual’ then showing his father, (one of the main Neo Nazi characters from the series Oz, Lee Tergesen) being paranoid abusive and reclusive.
So I’m supposing that the main character is raised by a White Nationalist Prepper and that’s the reason 1488 appears over his name. Spending the series trying to help people and deal with the indoctrination.
That’s definitely plausible, though I don’t think it’s the most likely scenario. Intentionally choosing that extremely hateful Nazi code without any other context or understanding would only serve to grab the attention of Nazis or people who know that it’s a code used by Nazis. Using this thread as anecdotal evidence, it’s not mainstream and many people don’t know it exists/think that is a big deal. I don’t see CBS advertising their new show which otherwise makes zero reference to white supremacy or Nazis by using a Nazi code.
I find the most likely reasoning to be that it way placed there intentionally but with plausible deniability to the graphic artist. “I just used a picture of an elevation map because he goes and finds people in the wilderness!”
Was Beecher ever actually a nazi in the show? It’s been ages since I’ve watched it, but memory says he was only briefly involved with Simmons’ character in that regard, never actually a member of their gang.
Which is beside the point, but it took me a minute to parse the sentence; it looked like this new show had Beecher as the father of the main character rather than the actor playing the character’s father, so it made me wonder.
Which, thank you for providing context :)!
That means that the post is inaccurate, which is fine, but people be trippin sometimes lol.
Gods! That scene! I remember watching it with my best friend, turning to him and saying “holy shit! Did you see that?” Without even realizing what I was saying.
I’d I hadn’t lived through the last 8 years, I would absolutely agree.
Unfortunately, Nazis and white supremacists have felt more emboldened and accepted than they have since WWII. Their talking points and ideologies are becoming “just another opinion” instead of a poison that must be excized. Their codes - like 1488 - are becoming more mainstream so that real Nazis and edgy teens alike blast it everywhere.
Sure, it’s not impossible that it’s a random number on a elevation map that shows no other elevations and displays the elevation prominently right above the lead actor’s name. At the very best that’s a huge oversight by a graphic designer and anyone else charged with reviewing the ad before it’s played across the country.
I find it to be more likely that it’s intentional and someone slipped it in to a part of the ad that flashes in the screen for less than a second to promote and strengthen their movement.
That’s a big leap without context for why it’s there
Just watched the trailer. The number is definitely there. Though it appears after a clip of the main character describing his childhood as ‘unusual’ then showing his father, (one of the main Neo Nazi characters from the series Oz, Lee Tergesen) being paranoid abusive and reclusive.
So I’m supposing that the main character is raised by a White Nationalist Prepper and that’s the reason 1488 appears over his name. Spending the series trying to help people and deal with the indoctrination.
Just a wild hopeful guess though.
That’s definitely plausible, though I don’t think it’s the most likely scenario. Intentionally choosing that extremely hateful Nazi code without any other context or understanding would only serve to grab the attention of Nazis or people who know that it’s a code used by Nazis. Using this thread as anecdotal evidence, it’s not mainstream and many people don’t know it exists/think that is a big deal. I don’t see CBS advertising their new show which otherwise makes zero reference to white supremacy or Nazis by using a Nazi code.
I find the most likely reasoning to be that it way placed there intentionally but with plausible deniability to the graphic artist. “I just used a picture of an elevation map because he goes and finds people in the wilderness!”
Was Beecher ever actually a nazi in the show? It’s been ages since I’ve watched it, but memory says he was only briefly involved with Simmons’ character in that regard, never actually a member of their gang.
Which is beside the point, but it took me a minute to parse the sentence; it looked like this new show had Beecher as the father of the main character rather than the actor playing the character’s father, so it made me wonder.
Which, thank you for providing context :)!
That means that the post is inaccurate, which is fine, but people be trippin sometimes lol.
Sorry about the mushed sentences. I blame lack of caffeine.
I had, ‘It’s probably because his dad is a Neo Nazi in the series’ typed out but decided against it. ha
As far as Beecher goes, he was being protected by AB/Nazis, so adjacent I guess.
Later on of course he literally shits on Nazis.
Gods! That scene! I remember watching it with my best friend, turning to him and saying “holy shit! Did you see that?” Without even realizing what I was saying.
I gotta rewatch the show
I’d I hadn’t lived through the last 8 years, I would absolutely agree.
Unfortunately, Nazis and white supremacists have felt more emboldened and accepted than they have since WWII. Their talking points and ideologies are becoming “just another opinion” instead of a poison that must be excized. Their codes - like 1488 - are becoming more mainstream so that real Nazis and edgy teens alike blast it everywhere.
Sure, it’s not impossible that it’s a random number on a elevation map that shows no other elevations and displays the elevation prominently right above the lead actor’s name. At the very best that’s a huge oversight by a graphic designer and anyone else charged with reviewing the ad before it’s played across the country.
I find it to be more likely that it’s intentional and someone slipped it in to a part of the ad that flashes in the screen for less than a second to promote and strengthen their movement.