In the fictional Star Trek universe, the Vulcannerve pinch is a technique used mainly by Vulcans to render unconsciousness by pinching a pressure point at the base of the victim's neck.
Origin
, who portrayed the Vulcan, Spock, conceived the technique in the early days of the original ' series. The script for "The Enemy Within |The Enemy Within" stated that Spock "kayoes" Captain Kirk 's duplicate, but Nimoy, who opposed the Vietnam War and supported Eugene McCarthy, felt that such a brutal action would be unnecessarily violent for a Vulcan. He therefore invented an alternative by suggesting that Vulcans may know enough about human anatomy, or they may have the ability to project telepathic energy from their fingertips, that they could render a human unconscious. Allegedly, the director of the episode did not understand the idea when Nimoy explained it to him, but William Shatner understood immediately and reacted in exactly the way Nimoy had hoped when they executed the move during filming, explaining that it would be similar to "feeling an electrical charge." From then on, the pinch was referred to as the "FSNP", for "Famous Spock Nerve Pinch", in ''Star Treks scripts.
Physiology
Although entirely fictional, fans and critics of the show have tried to explain how the pinch may work. It has been compared to the fictional "karate chop", which was used in other 1960s television series to render opponents unconscious. Nimoy's theory that the pinch may be linked to telepathy is shown not to be true when two non-telepathic entities, the androidData, and Voyager's holographicDoctor, use the pinch in later Star Trek television shows. The book The Making of Star Trek by Stephen E. Whitfield and Gene Roddenberry offers a simple explanation: the pinch blocks blood and nerve responses from reaching the brain, leading to unconsciousness. How this might lead to instantaneous unconsciousness is not explained. In this earliest of Star Trekreference books, the pinch is referred to as the "Spock Pinch." In the Star Trek: Voyager episode "Cathexis |Cathexis", the Doctor inspects a crewmember who was found unconscious and observes an extreme trauma to the trapezius neck bundle, "as though her nerve fibers have been ruptured"; and it is later revealed that the person was the victim of a nerve pinch.
Along with Spock, various other characters in the Star Trek franchise have used the technique. Notably, the above-mentioned instances with Data and the holographic Doctor, ""s Changeling, Odo, ""s Jean-Luc Picard, ""s Seven of Nine. ""s T'Pol, and ""s Michael Burnham. However, it is not an easy technique to master. After Spock uses the pinch in the episode "The Omega Glory", Kirk says to Spock, "Pity you can't teach me that", and Spock replies, "I have tried, Captain." In the film ', Dr. McCoy was unable to use the nerve pinch despite being in possession of Spock's katra. The nerve pinch has been shown being used on animals. In the episode "Yesteryear |Yesteryear", Spock uses the nerve pinch on a Le-matya to save the life of his younger self. In the 1989 film', Spock uses the pinch to subdue a horse during a battle.
Popular culture
The Vulcan nerve pinch has been referred to, and parodied, in a wide variety of television, film, and other media.
In television
In a fourth-season episode of Soap, Jodie Dallas, is surprised when he successfully uses the "Vulcan neck pinch" and thanks Star Trek.
In the Stephen King mini-series The Langoliers a character says, "You ever watch Mr. Spock on Star Trek?", "'Cause if you don't shut your cakehole, you bloody idiot, I'll be happy to demonstrate his Vulcan sleeper-hold for you."
In film
In Mel Brooks' film Spaceballs, Lone Starr tries to use it on a henchman, initially unsuccessfully, but the henchman points out Lone Starr's mistakes—he gripped where the head meets the neck, when he should have gripped where the neck meets the shoulders—and is used again, successfully this time.
In other media and contexts
In March 2010, politician Mitt Romney was accused of using it on rapper SkyBlu of the group LMFAO during an airplane altercation.
Death grip
The Star Trek episode "The Enterprise Incident" includes a scene in which Spock administers the "Vulcan death grip" to Kirk to convince Romulan onlookers, apparently unfamiliar with Vulcan techniques, that Kirk had been killed. In fact, Spock had merely used a powerful nerve pinch to put Kirk into a deep unconsciousness that closely resembled death. Kirk awoke later with head and neck pain, but no lasting injury. The "death grip" differs from the "nerve pinch" in that the death grip was administered to Kirk's face. Nurse Chapel remarks in the same episode, "There's no such thing as a Vulcan death grip."