Numerically speaking, the vast majority of Ferengi we see on screen are sporting what have sometimes been called ā€œheadskirtsā€. Virtually every Ferengi we see on-screen ā€” from the marauder crewmen in Next Generation to Quarkā€™s waiters to various Ferengi businessmen seen in the background ā€” is wearing one. Rom and Nog even wear color-coordinated versions of them once they join the Bajoran militia and Starfleet, respectively.

However, there are a few conspicuous exceptions to this otherwise apparently universal practice, most notably among them being Quark, the only Ferengi character billed as a series lead. This is particularly jarring, as Quark otherwise frames himself as the most Ferengi Ferengi around.

From a real-world perspective, I suspect that the headskirts were originally created to avoid creating a full head prosthetic for guest actors. Once the character of Quark was created, the cost of a reusable full head prosthetic would have been less prohibitive.

In universe, after reviewing which Ferengi are shown with and without headskirts, I believe I have a theory that fits what weā€™re shown on-screen, and gives us some grounds to infer a few extra bits about certain characters.

First, I propose that the ā€œdefaultā€ practice for Ferengi is to wear a headskirt. That would explain why we see them worn so frequently. However, I suggest that it is an option to abstain from a headskirt ā€” under certain conditions.

Fundamentally, I propose that the absence of a headskirt indicates that a Ferengi believes he is a ā€œtop dogā€ ā€” in that he has no one above him who could be considered his ā€œboss.ā€ However, I also suggest that there is some subjectivity and risk in this. (Note that ā€œtop dogā€ is not a coincidental choice of words on my part: the Ferengi logo is said to have been drawn to describe the ā€œdog eat dog eat dogā€ mentality of a capitalist society.)

Zek and Gint are the clearest examples of this: as Grand Nagus, they are the pinnacle ā€œtop dog.ā€

Quark would also fit this criterion: Odo, Kira and Sisko aside, there basically is no one whom Quark answers to (unlike his waiters, who answer to him). Rom and Nog do not fit this criterion, for a few different reasons. Nog is a child at the series start before starting essentially an apprenticeship on his way to joining Starfleet; and obviously once he joins Starfleet, he continues to have those who outrank him. Rom answers to his brother before joining the stationā€™s maintenance crew, at which point he ultimately answers to Oā€™Brien.

There are several other Ferengi who do not wear headskirts, and it definitely is not a clean and tidy division between the bosses and the workers. However, that is where some subjectivity comes in. Rather than being a hard-and-fast rule, the absence (or presence) of a headskirt may be an assertion: ā€œIā€™m a top dog and I dare you to say otherwise.ā€ It then turns to oneā€™s peers to decide if the claim is justified; if you make the claim but then donā€™t have the status to back it up, then you lose credibility and standing. So removing oneā€™s headskirt is not without its risk.

Who else have we seen without headskirts?

Galia: as an arms merchant who can purchase his own moon, he would likely be seen as a ā€œdeserving top dogā€ ā€” perfectly reasonable for him to abandon the headskirt.

Brunt: an FCA liquidator, his bare head takes on some new significance in this framework. The FCA is described as ā€œanswering to no oneā€ ā€” if that is true, then Bruntā€™s bare head would serve to reinforce that idea to all those misfortunate enough to cross his path. Itā€™s also possible that liquidators are supposed to answer to someone ā€” a manager or the like ā€” but that Brunt goes bald anyway, just to flaunt his de facto latitude.

Nilva: as the chairman of a large Ferengi company, he likewise probably enjoys ā€œdeserving top dogā€ status.

Reyga: a Ferengi scientist and a bit of a maverick; we might interpret his bare head as indicating some level of rejection of Ferengi norms; if my proposed framework is true, then it is a louder act of protest than we would otherwise realize

Prak: though I doubt this was an intentional choice on the part of the showrunners (I suspect his bare head is the result of extra prosthetics being available from the concurrent production of DS9), Prak does give us an interesting example of someone who perhaps is ā€œtoo big for his britchesā€ ā€” it is rare to see a DaiMon without a headskirt (presumably because they must answer to some sort of Ferengi admiral), but itā€™s easy to imagine a DaiMon who is cocky enough to flaunt their bare head ā€” and is probably ridiculed by all his underlings for it. (Recall how Starfleet Captain Styles in The Search For Spock has been mocked for his swagger stick.)

There are several Ferengi whom we might expect to go bare under this framework who still wear the headskirt. Chief among these is Lek, who by his own admission works alone. Lek probably could justify ā€œtop dogā€ status if he wanted to. But the default is to wear a headskirt: to go bare is to make an active statement, and thereby draw attention to oneself. I imagine there are more than a few Ferengi who could justify their own ā€œtop dogā€ status but who would rather keep a lower profile (Rule of Acquisition 168: ā€œWhisper your way to successā€).

~ ~ ~

What do you think? Are there any good counter-examples to this? (I admit, I did not check the appearance of every Ferengi in every episode. So itā€™s possible that I missed someone!) Is this consistent with other things weā€™ve seen in Ferengi society? Are there any other possible explanations for the pattern of skirted vs bare heads?

  • buckykat@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    This is an interesting observation. In hew-mons the size and elaborateness of head coverings usually correlates positively with status