Today, we look at why the rookies on ABC’s The Rookie are called “boots.”
In Pop Culture Questions Answered, I answer whatever questions you folks might have about movies, TV, music or whatever (feel free to e-mail questions to me at brian@pop culture references.com).
This is the second of two questions that reader Bob M. sent in about The Rookie, the ABC police drama starring Nathan Fillion as a man in his 40s who decides to become a cop in Los Angeles (the first one was whether the show was based on a true story).
He wanted to know why the instructors call their cop trainees “boots.”
It has to do with the fact that the police, over the years, has become more and more militarized with its language and training, and so the police have adopted the military term for training new recruits, which is “boot camp,” with the individuals being trained being called “boots.”
As to why the military calls recruits “boots,” the term was popularized during World War I for the U.S. Navy and U.S Marine Corps before being adopted by the rest of the U.S. military during World War II and it seems like the term originated before World War I as meaning “recruit.”
The best answer seems to come from William Morris’ 1962 newspaper column, Words, Wit and Wisdom (shared by Michael Quinion’s World Wide Words website), where he had a letter from C E Reynolds, a retired Navy radio chief:
“When I entered the Navy in 1911 an old-timer called me a ‘rubber-boot sailor.’ When I asked for an explanation, he told me that prior to about 1890 all the men prided themselves on getting out on deck and scrubbing down barefooted in the coldest weather. Then there was an influx of kids from the midwest. They didn’t intend to act foolish, so they went ashore and bought boots to wear when it was cold. The older hands sneered and called them ‘rubber boot sailors.’ By the time I came on the scene, they had shortened the nickname for recruits to ‘rubber boots.’ That gradually was shortened and by World War I we just said ‘boots.’”
Obviously that’s just anecdotal, but it’s so specific and first hand in its knowledge and the timing works so well, I think it’s believable enough as an explanation.
Thanks for the question, Bob! If anyone else has a pop culture question, drop me a line at brian@popculturereferences.com
I feel so embarrassed!!! This whole time I thought that they were calling them their “Boo”!!! Hahaha!!! I had to look it up because I wondered why they were calling them by an affectionate term!
Well, Bradford and Chen might be using the term “Boo” soon, so there’s that!
Hi! Sorry to wake this up, just a quick question: why are they using the wrong logos and fonts on their shops? The real LAPD uses the city’s logo and a yellow font. The show uses a modernized version of the logo and the font (the font is now a gradient from white to metallic grey). Also the squad’s ID is wrongly placed on the roof and again, wrong typo and size… Why did they change all of that if they clearly state that the show takes place in the LAPD?
Mike G.
Could it be that they are intentionally avoiding any possibility of a charge of “impersonating a police officer”?