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42

 42
type
TVTItem
 42
label
42
 42
page
FortyTwo
 42
comment
42 is a 2013 sports drama film that stars Chadwick Boseman, Harrison Ford, and Nicole Beharie.The movie focuses on the early years of Real Life baseball legend Jackie Robinson (Boseman), who gets recruited by Brooklyn Dodgers general manager Branch Rickey (Ford) to become the first African-American player of a major league team (or, at least, since Moses Fleetwood Walker played for the Toledo Bluestockings in the 1880s). After proving himself in the minor leagues, Robinson works his way onto the Brooklyn Dodgers; along the way, he must struggle not only against the rampant racism and segregation of the time, but also the notoriety of breaking baseball's color barrier and the backlash from his own teammates. Fortunately, he has the support of his wife Rachel (Beharie), but that still doesn't make it easy...No relation to the answer to the great question of life, the universe, and everything. At least, as far as anyone knows...
 42
fetched
2023-10-11T20:22:40Z
 42
parsed
2023-10-11T20:22:40Z
 42
isPartOf
DBTropes
 42 / int_1439161f
type
Heroic BSoD
 42 / int_1439161f
comment
Heroic BSoD: Robinson gets one after Philadelphia Phillies coach Ben Chapman throws a nonstop barrage of racial epithets at him during a game.
 42 / int_1439161f
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_1439161f
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_1439161f
 42 / int_1cc2ea8d
type
Villain Ball
 42 / int_1cc2ea8d
comment
Villain Ball: As a baseball player, Robinson was known for his ability to steal bases. The standard penalty in baseball for hitting a batter with a pitch (whether deliberate or accidental) is for the batter to advance to first base automatically. So, when racist pitchers deliberately hit Robinson, they were putting one of the best base-stealers in the major leagues in a position to steal bases (his base-stealing talent is noted as one of the reasons for picking him, and was likely something Rickey looked for in order to counter racially-motivated bean-ball throwers).
 42 / int_1cc2ea8d
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_1cc2ea8d
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_1cc2ea8d
 42 / int_1effdd6b
type
White Man's Burden
 42 / int_1effdd6b
comment
White Man's Burden: Played with. While the movie focuses on Robinson's struggles, Rickey is never far behind, either to support Robinson or to shoot down all objections to Robinson's integration into the league.
 42 / int_1effdd6b
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_1effdd6b
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1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_1effdd6b
 42 / int_1f250372
type
I Need a Freaking Drink
 42 / int_1f250372
comment
I Need a Freaking Drink: When Jackie asks Harold if the latter's been drinking after he tells Jackie that Ben Chapman wants a photo with him, Harold admits that he wish he was.
 42 / int_1f250372
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_1f250372
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_1f250372
 42 / int_1fb947b6
type
Just Train Wrong
 42 / int_1fb947b6
comment
Just Train Wrong: A number of anachronisms, such as modern signals in the background when Jackie leaves for New York, and modern freight cars behind the ballfield in Florida.
 42 / int_1fb947b6
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_1fb947b6
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_1fb947b6
 42 / int_2484396e
type
Know-Nothing Know-It-All
 42 / int_2484396e
comment
Know-Nothing Know-It-All: Invoked by one sports announcer, who declares that African-Americans will prove to be superior at baseball because they're born with a longer heelbone that enables them to run faster than Anglo players. He gets mocked by his peers when Robinson hits a home run soon afterwards.
 42 / int_2484396e
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_2484396e
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
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42 / int_2484396e
 42 / int_25a19aa5
type
Turn the Other Cheek
 42 / int_25a19aa5
comment
Turn the Other Cheek:
 42 / int_25a19aa5
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1.0
 42 / int_25a19aa5
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1.0
 42
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42 / int_25a19aa5
 42 / int_3036294e
type
Scary Black Man
 42 / int_3036294e
comment
Scary Black Man: Discussed by Rickey, who insists that the hot-headed Robinson must keep calm despite the inevitable racial taunts and threats that his integration is sure to attract.
 42 / int_3036294e
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_3036294e
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_3036294e
 42 / int_32cb267a
type
Magical Negro
 42 / int_32cb267a
comment
Magical Negro: Inverted. Robinson is portrayed rather realistically, and his race is only brought up by the racist characters. Ironically enough, the character who seems to act according to this trope is Rickey, a white man. (See White Man's Burden below.)
 42 / int_32cb267a
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_32cb267a
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1.0
 42
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42 / int_32cb267a
 42 / int_36135fb0
type
Official Couple
 42 / int_36135fb0
comment
Official Couple: Jackie and Rachel Robinson. The real Rachel Robinson was heavily involved in vetting the script.
 42 / int_36135fb0
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_36135fb0
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1.0
 42
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42 / int_36135fb0
 42 / int_3d5377e5
type
First-Person Peripheral Narrator
 42 / int_3d5377e5
comment
First-Person Peripheral Narrator: Wendell Smith, the African-American sportswriter hired by Rickey to accompany Robinson.
 42 / int_3d5377e5
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1.0
 42 / int_3d5377e5
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1.0
 42
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42 / int_3d5377e5
 42 / int_3dcc914f
type
Took a Level in Kindness
 42 / int_3dcc914f
comment
Took a Level in Kindness: Clay Hopper starts off as a racist Southern gentleman who barely tolerates having Jackie on his minor league team. After a few weeks, he's willing to take on the Sanford, Florida police on Jackie's behalf after an officer threatens to arrest Jack for playing with white players.
 42 / int_3dcc914f
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_3dcc914f
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_3dcc914f
 42 / int_40582f4b
type
Guttural Growler
 42 / int_40582f4b
comment
Guttural Growler: Branch Rickey was a famous real life one, and Ford goes to town with it.
 42 / int_40582f4b
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_40582f4b
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_40582f4b
 42 / int_4781adbb
type
Jerk with a Heart of Gold
 42 / int_4781adbb
comment
Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Leo Durocher. His gambling and womanizing, not to mention his outright belligerent attitude towards just about everyone is offset by the fact that he is an early supporter of Robinson joining the team when very few were.
 42 / int_4781adbb
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_4781adbb
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_4781adbb
 42 / int_47b6a1e5
type
"Just Joking" Justification
 42 / int_47b6a1e5
comment
"Just Joking" Justification: This is Chapman's defense after he receives backlash for his racist barbs at Jackie — that it's a longstanding tradition to use derogatory slurs to distract opposing players (as the Jerkass Has a Point and Deliberate Values Dissonance entries show, this is not untrue; but Chapman clearly takes it much further and more cruelly).
 42 / int_47b6a1e5
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_47b6a1e5
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1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_47b6a1e5
 42 / int_561dab6b
type
Mistaken for Gay
 42 / int_561dab6b
comment
Mistaken for Gay: Ralph Branca gets this when he encourages Jackie Robinson to shower with the other Dodger players, instead of waiting for them to finish first.
 42 / int_561dab6b
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_561dab6b
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
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42 / int_561dab6b
 42 / int_56515a39
type
Artistic License – History
 42 / int_56515a39
comment
Artistic License – History: Despite being repeatedly described as such, even to this day, Jackie Robinson was not the first black man to play in the Major Leagues. That would be Moses Fleetwood Walker. Walker played catcher for the Toledo Blue Stockings from 1884 until 1889, when Major League Baseball officially erected its color barrier. Its more accurate to say that Robinson was the first black man to play Major League baseball in the modern age.
 42 / int_56515a39
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_56515a39
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_56515a39
 42 / int_680bb6b1
type
Hot-Blooded
 42 / int_680bb6b1
comment
Hot-Blooded: Robinson and Leo Durocher, although the latter doesn't even try to hold his temper back.
 42 / int_680bb6b1
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_680bb6b1
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_680bb6b1
 42 / int_696db795
type
Taught to Hate
 42 / int_696db795
comment
Taught to Hate: Illustrated by a scene with a young boy attending a game with his father; when Jackie Robinson takes the field, the father begins shouting slurs. The boy seems taken aback at first but, upon observing his father and the rest of the crowd shouting racial abuse, soon joins in.
 42 / int_696db795
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_696db795
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
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42 / int_696db795
 42 / int_6b05b601
type
Jerkass Has a Point
 42 / int_6b05b601
comment
Jerkass Has a Point: After Chapman receives backlash for his racist barbs at Jackie, he defends himself by telling the press that it's a longstanding tradition to use derogatory slurs for all ethnic groups to distract opposing players. Several other scenes in the film show that he's not wrong, but he's still very much a racist jerkass.
 42 / int_6b05b601
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_6b05b601
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_6b05b601
 42 / int_6ee10e0
type
My Greatest Failure
 42 / int_6ee10e0
comment
My Greatest Failure: This is Rickey's real reason for adding Jackie Robinson to the Dodgers — his lifelong love of baseball was spoiled when, forty years prior, he was unable to recruit a talented African-American player due to segregation. His refusal to ignore the issue after World War II drives him for the entire movie.
 42 / int_6ee10e0
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_6ee10e0
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_6ee10e0
 42 / int_7815ba15
type
N-Word Privileges
 42 / int_7815ba15
comment
N-Word Privileges: In accurately reflecting the social mores of the time, white characters rudely toss out the N-word without hesitation. Most of the characters who do so tend to be obviously antagonistic jerkasses, though Rickey does it once to test whether Robinson can control his anger.
 42 / int_7815ba15
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_7815ba15
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_7815ba15
 42 / int_796bffea
type
Mistaken for Racist
 42 / int_796bffea
comment
Mistaken for Racist: In racially-tense Florida, the Robinsons are merrily walking down the street when a gruff-looking (white) man approaches them. Jackie prepares for a fight, only for the man to sternly say that he's a supporter who thinks Jackie should be allowed to play if he has the talent.
 42 / int_796bffea
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_796bffea
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_796bffea
 42 / int_7a97b7f4
type
Morning Sickness
 42 / int_7a97b7f4
comment
Morning Sickness: Rachel Robinson discovers she's pregnant when she gets sick in the middle of a game.
 42 / int_7a97b7f4
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_7a97b7f4
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_7a97b7f4
 42 / int_80ed013b
type
The Chooser of the One
 42 / int_80ed013b
comment
The Chooser of the One: Branch Rickey, who announces to his staff that somehow he's going to recruit an African-American player for the Brooklyn Dodgers. He winds up choosing Jackie for his high batting average and base stealing abilities, as well as the fact he previously played with white players at UCLA.
 42 / int_80ed013b
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_80ed013b
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_80ed013b
 42 / int_813f4eec
type
Humble Pie
 42 / int_813f4eec
comment
Humble Pie: Done to racist coach Ben Chapman in the movie's "Where Are They Now?" Epilogue.
 42 / int_813f4eec
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_813f4eec
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_813f4eec
 42 / int_823c6e3e
type
Large Ham
 42 / int_823c6e3e
comment
Large Ham: Branch Rickey is a Real Life example. According to baseball historians, Ford's portrayal in the film is rather subdued by comparison.
 42 / int_823c6e3e
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_823c6e3e
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_823c6e3e
 42 / int_895ec17
type
Only in It for the Money
 42 / int_895ec17
comment
Only in It for the Money: This is the explanation Branch Rickey gives when he's asked why he's so determined to include an African-American player in the Dodgers. He's lying. Pee Wee Reese gives this as a reason for not signing the team's anti-Robinson boycott petition stating he couldn't afford to do it as he had a family to feed.
 42 / int_895ec17
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_895ec17
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_895ec17
 42 / int_927289f5
type
Cathartic Scream
 42 / int_927289f5
comment
Cathartic Scream: Jackie is brutally verbally harassed by the racist Ben Chapman on the opposing Phillies. You will want to punch the guy in the face, and maybe a few other places as well. After five straight minutes of this and batting badly because of him, he goes down to the dugout hallway, and screams his lungs out while slamming his bat into the walls so hard it breaks, and even after that, he keeps hitting it.
 42 / int_927289f5
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_927289f5
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_927289f5
 42 / int_a8a5e4ed
type
Christianity Is Catholic
 42 / int_a8a5e4ed
comment
Christianity is Catholic: Averted; the clearly religious Rickey is Methodist, and cites Robinson's Methodist faith as one (more) reason to recruit him.
 42 / int_a8a5e4ed
featureApplicability
-1.0
 42 / int_a8a5e4ed
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_a8a5e4ed
 42 / int_a90fff3
type
Based on a True Story
 42 / int_a90fff3
comment
Based on a True Story: The movie is historically accurate for the most part (Robinson's widow extensively reviewed the script), though there are a few liberties taken with Real Life events, most notably Jackie's Heroic BSoD in the game against Philadelphia. Similarly, while Fritz Ostermueller never threw at Robinson's head (he did hit Robinson on the wrist with a brushback pitch, most likely by accident), there were numerous other pitchers who did.
 42 / int_a90fff3
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_a90fff3
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_a90fff3
 42 / int_a9645365
type
Man Hug
 42 / int_a9645365
comment
Man Hug: Rickey gives one to Robinson to help him recover from his Heroic BSoD.
 42 / int_a9645365
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_a9645365
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_a9645365
 42 / int_aabe2fb
type
Deliberate Values Dissonance
 42 / int_aabe2fb
comment
Deliberate Values Dissonance: Aside from the reactions to a black man playing Major League Baseball, Leo Durocher gets suspended for the year because he was seen cheating on his wife and associating with gamblers while in Havana. Additionally, the players and managers regularly use other ethnic slurs to insult their opponents.
 42 / int_aabe2fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_aabe2fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_aabe2fb
 42 / int_af8a9084
type
Black Is Bigger in Bed
 42 / int_af8a9084
comment
Black Is Bigger in Bed: This is one of the slurs Chapman throws out at Robinson.
 42 / int_af8a9084
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_af8a9084
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_af8a9084
 42 / int_b474c23f
type
Misery Poker
 42 / int_b474c23f
comment
Misery Poker: After receiving a threatening letter for his association with Robinson, Pee Wee Reese asks Mr. Rickey if he can be excused from the game at Cincinnati. In response, Rickey opens a filing cabinet and produces three bulging folders full of death threats sent to Jackie.
 42 / int_b474c23f
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_b474c23f
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_b474c23f
 42 / int_ba0ff694
type
You Have GOT to Be Kidding Me!
 42 / int_ba0ff694
comment
You Have GOT to Be Kidding Me!: When Harold tells Jackie that Chapman wants to take a photograph with him, Jackie asks Harold if he's been drinking.
 42 / int_ba0ff694
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_ba0ff694
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_ba0ff694
 42 / int_c335b9ec
type
Irony
 42 / int_c335b9ec
comment
Irony: Here's Harold (one of Rickey's aides) speaking to Rickey wanting to bring Robinson to the Dodgers before Chapman in 1946. Now here's Harold after Chapman goes on his racist tirade against Jackie in 1947
 42 / int_c335b9ec
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_c335b9ec
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_c335b9ec
 42 / int_c41a5bac
type
Neutral No Longer
 42 / int_c41a5bac
comment
Neutral No Longer: Happens with Dodgers player Eddie Stanky, who starts off quietly indifferent to Robinson's presence on the team, but angrily confronts Ben Chapman during his racist barrage at the Phillies-Dodgers game.
 42 / int_c41a5bac
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_c41a5bac
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_c41a5bac
 42 / int_c98b7916
type
Messianic Archetype
 42 / int_c98b7916
comment
Messianic Archetype: During Jackie's Heroic BSoD, Branch tells Jackie that he is this trope.
 42 / int_c98b7916
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_c98b7916
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_c98b7916
 42 / int_d1affec1
type
That Came Out Wrong
 42 / int_d1affec1
comment
That Came Out Wrong: At one point, one of Jackie's teammates asks him why he waits for everyone else to leave the showers before he goes in. Not satisfied with the answer, said teammate says "Take a shower with me, Jackie." He then proceeds to dig himself deeper until an amused Jackie just tells him to stop.
 42 / int_d1affec1
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_d1affec1
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_d1affec1
 42 / int_d5b06fbb
type
It Has Only Just Begun
 42 / int_d5b06fbb
comment
It Has Only Just Begun: After learning about the players' petition against Jackie playing, Leo Durocher not only tells them that Jackie will be playing with them whether they like it or not, but that he's also just the first of the black ballplayers that will coming into the league soon. So if the players don't want to lose their spots to the fresh crop of talent, they better focus on honing their skills instead of complaining.
 42 / int_d5b06fbb
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_d5b06fbb
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_d5b06fbb
 42 / int_e16217f8
type
Historical Villain Upgrade
 42 / int_e16217f8
comment
Historical Villain Upgrade: Dixie Walker. Reportedly, he was much more civil to Robinson and by the end of the season he was one of the players that had gained respect towards him. The ending seems to imply that he was traded because he signed the petition (which he indeed did, but did so under pressure of his teammates and later claimed was one of the biggest regrets of his life). The likely cause for his trade more likely had to do with his age; he was in his late thirties, and near the end of his career. Fritz Ostermueller was also more civil and never beaned Robinson in the head. In real life, he hit him in the wrist, which he claimed was an accident as he was trying to pitch him inside. His daughter criticized the filmmakers for portraying him this way.
 42 / int_e16217f8
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_e16217f8
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_e16217f8
 42 / int_e462893a
type
Artistic License – Sports
 42 / int_e462893a
comment
Artistic License – Sports: Averted; some moviegoers believe the movie made an error when Robinson hits a walk-off home run that beats Pittsburgh and wins the pennant, but because the scene took place in Pittsburgh, the Pirates should have gotten another at bat. In actuality, it wasn't a walk-off, as the radio announcer explicitly said that barring a miracle comeback by the Pirates, Robinson's homer would send the Dodgers to the World Series.
 42 / int_e462893a
featureApplicability
-1.0
 42 / int_e462893a
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_e462893a
 42 / int_e567510d
type
Determinator
 42 / int_e567510d
comment
Determinator: Nothing is going to stop Branch Rickey from getting an African-American player into Major League Baseball. If you're an employee or player who objects to having Jackie around, he'll fire you without a second thought. If you're an opposing team who refuses to play against Robinson, he'll damn your eternal soul.
 42 / int_e567510d
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_e567510d
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_e567510d
 42 / int_e5c64f3f
type
Shame If Something Happened
 42 / int_e5c64f3f
comment
Shame If Something Happened: After Jackie gets beaned by Fritz Ostermueller, a furious Branca reminds the pitcher that he has to bat this game too.
 42 / int_e5c64f3f
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_e5c64f3f
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_e5c64f3f
 42 / int_e9e35e8f
type
Exact Words
 42 / int_e9e35e8f
comment
Exact Words: Burt Shotton declines the offer to become the Dodgers' manager stating that he made a promise to his wife. Rickey responds that he only promised never to wear a team uniform again, not to quit being a manager.
 42 / int_e9e35e8f
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_e9e35e8f
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_e9e35e8f
 42 / int_ec255e86
type
Slouch of Villainy
 42 / int_ec255e86
comment
Slouch of Villainy: Chapman manages to pull this off while standing up.
 42 / int_ec255e86
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_ec255e86
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_ec255e86
 42 / int_f6f2ff1
type
Insult Backfire
 42 / int_f6f2ff1
comment
Insult Backfire: This hilarious gem.
 42 / int_f6f2ff1
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_f6f2ff1
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_f6f2ff1
 42 / int_ff41780
type
Young Future Famous People
 42 / int_ff41780
comment
Young Future Famous People: The epilogue reveals that Ed, the kid who Jackie gave a ball to after leaving spring training, was Ed Charles, a major leaguer who won the 1969 World Series with the "Miracle Mets".
 42 / int_ff41780
featureApplicability
1.0
 42 / int_ff41780
featureConfidence
1.0
 42
hasFeature
42 / int_ff41780
 42 / int_name
type
ItemName
 42 / int_name
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 42 / int_name
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 42 / int_name
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 42
hasFeature
42 / int_name
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42

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

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African-American Media / int_7aa9bbd8
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Artistic License – Sports / int_7aa9bbd8
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Biopic / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Cathartic Scream / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Christianity Is Catholic / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Films of 2010–2014 / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
First-Person Peripheral Narrator / int_7aa9bbd8
 FortyTwo
seeAlso
42
 42
hasFeature
Jackie Robinson Story / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Know-Nothing Know-It-All / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Man Hug / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Meaningful Release Date / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Misery Poker / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Mistaken for Gay / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Mistaken for Racist / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Neutral No Longer / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Only in It for the Money / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Place Worse Than Death / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Stereotype Flip / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Still Fighting the Civil War / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Taught to Hate / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
The '40s / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
The Chooser of the One / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
The Foreign Subtitle / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
Title by Number / int_7aa9bbd8
 42
hasFeature
White Man's Burden / int_7aa9bbd8