In San Junipero, is there any significance as to why the bar is named Tucker's?

In San Junipero, is there any significance as to why the bar is named Tucker's? - Man in Black Long Sleeve Shirt Sitting on Chair

In the British anthology series Black Mirror, the season 3 episode, San Junipero, features a nostalgic 80's-inspired reality with a lot of references to many things characteristically and/or pop-culturally 80's. The two main characters spend a good chunk during the first part of the story, getting to know each other at a bar or nightclub called, Tucker's.

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Now maybe Tucker's is just a pun on 'being tucked away', but I was wondering if the name Tuckers was in any other way significant possibly referencing something specific like film, a character, arcade game, a place from the 1980's?



Best Answer

It probably references the name of the VR company that stores their consciousnesses at the end.

In this clip, you can see from an exterior shot showing a sign that the name of the VR company is TCKR. "Tucker's" is probably an extension of that.

In terms of 1980's culture, there is a 1988 movie called "Tucker: the Man and His Dream," a biopic about a 1940s automobile manufacturer. Probably a stretch that it references that. There was also a country singer in the 1980s named Tanya Tucker, though the episode's decidedly non-country soundtrack probably rules that out as a source of inspiration as well.




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What is the message of black mirror San Junipero?

READ MORE. It's then revealed that San Junipero is in fact a simulated world where people who are dying or who have died can live on forever. San Junipero is a place where people don't feel pain unless their choose to and cannot die there.

What is the quagmire in San Junipero?

Indeed, the episode is smart enough to explore some of this Heideggerian territory, both in its portrayal of the Quagmire (a bar where everyone seems a bit creepily nihilistic) and in Kelly's rant to Yorkie after the latter asks her change her mind about passing over to the San Junipero reality after death.

Is San Junipero a real place?

San Junipero is revealed to be a simulated reality where the deceased can live and the elderly can visit, all inhabiting their younger selves' bodies in a time of their choice. In the physical world, the elderly Kelly (Denise Burse) visits Yorkie (Annabel Davis).

Who played Yorkie in San Junipero?

Yorkie is one of the two protagonists of San Junipero, along with Kelly. She is portrayed by Mackenzie Davis, while an older version of Yorkie is portrayed by Annabel Davis.



The Ending Of San Junipero Explained | Black Mirror Season 3 Explained




More answers regarding in San Junipero, is there any significance as to why the bar is named Tucker's?

Answer 2

ruffdove's answer is likely correct that, within the episode's scope, the bar's name is a reference to San Junipero's company's name. But there is more going on here than just that. "Tucker" is a commonly used name in the Black Mirror universe.

  • Playtest - TCKR Systems is mentioned in an article about putting nostalgia in a game.
  • San Junipero - TCKR Systems runs the San Junipero project.
  • Metalhead - Logo seen on a van
  • Black Museum - Most of the stories revolve around TCKR Systems' technologies.
  • Bandersnatch - The company is called Tuckersoft
  • Striking Vipers - TCKR Systems developed the VR technology for the game being played.

Wiki with references to TCKR in many episodes. Second link with more.

While Black Mirror is obviously light on the continuity, since it's an anthology series, there's an implied thread here:

  • Company Tuckersoft, in the 1980s, created Bandersnatch
  • Company Callister Inc, in the future, makes a VR-style game using the technology seen in San Junipero. It is revealed that this technology is new and unfamiliar to people
  • Company TCKR Systems, in the further future, is the company behind San Junipero and similar VR-device experiences. Here, people are commonly aware of the technology.

Given that Callister Inc is creating a video game (of sorts) like Tuckersoft did, and lies at the basis of the VR technology that TCKR Systems later uses. There seems to be a clear progressions here, where the development of games leads to VR technology which in turn leads to non-gaming-related usages of the VR tech.

I'm surprised Callister Inc was not named after something "Tuckery", though since this is the advent of the "white knob" VR technology, it may not have been planned to be such a recurring feature initially.


According to this Reddit comment, "Tucker" is a censoring of the word "Fucker", which Charlie Brooker (the creator of Black Mirror) wanted to name companies in the Black Mirror universe, but wasn't allowed for obvious reasons.

I cannot find further corroboration of this claim, but I have seen several appearances of Charlie Brooker in interviews etc. and I would say it fits with his general attitude. I consider this plausible but not proven.

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