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#288778 04/18/21 03:51 PM
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Was there a moment in the show where Clark told Lois that he was adopted, or was it one of those things that just happened off-screen?


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I think the closest he comes is strongly hinting at in in the GGGoH. Lois did not pick up on that hint, though.

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Originally Posted by Queen of the Capes
Was there a moment in the show where Clark told Lois that he was adopted, or was it one of those things that just happened off-screen?

In the episode 1-02 Strange Visitor From Another Planet the opening scene has Clark talking about the pain of being adopted; however, in the series, there was no on-screen reveal of this.


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Oops. Of course -- I had been thinking of the conversation from SV, not GGGoH. I think it's time for a re-watch of the series... Thanks for the correction.

I'll take this opportunity (after I have wiped the egg off of my face) to say that the phrase "strange visitor from another planet" has always bothered me. I know it goes back a long way, but it never seemed to me to be appropriate. The word "visitor" implies that the individual is planning to stay only for a possibly long, possibly undefined, but finite length of time, after which s/he intends to leave. It is Clark's intention to call Earth his home for the rest of his life; therefore, a phrase such as "strange resident from another planet" or "strange immigrant from another planet" would be much more fitting.

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Maybe that is because the Phrase is from an early time where the Background Story for Clark wasn't that fleshed out. I believe to have read that a recurring Topic of early superman stories was that he didn't fell as he belonged to earth citizens or so, maybe he thus saw himself as a "Visitor" instead. I also rerember to having read that in the Radio series from the 1940 Clark landed not as a child but as a fully-adult Kryptonian instead... Or it was just one of These phrases that had a good Sound but no one bothered to much about deeper implications...


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BlindPassenger. you make some very good points about the phrase's possible origin; it could be similar to "able to leap tall buildings in a single bound" -- a phrase that seems a silly understatement now, but made perfect sense before Superman had been able to fly. But I wish both phrases were treated the same way phone-booth-changing typically is these days -- as a humorous nod to Superman's past.


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