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Episode Description
In the 1952 television pilot of The Adventures of Superman, the planet Krypton's leading scientist presents evidence to a council of nine that the planet is going to be destroyed. His data is sound. His methods are not in dispute. The council finds his conclusions unsupportable. The vote is nine to one. The planet is destroyed.
The fictional case is the cleanest statement of a structural failure this series has documented across nine real institutions: military intelligence, engineering, medicine, aviation, finance, diplomacy, corporate governance, epistemic authority, and military simulation. The information was present. The voice was present. The structure that would have carried the voice from the one to the nine was missing, or weak, or starved, or overridden.
Episode 10 is the season finale of The Tenth Man. It names the pattern, states the argument the series has been building toward, and acknowledges what the show can and cannot do.
Season 2 begins later this year with a new format: each episode a conversation with someone inside an institution where the question this series has documented is being lived.
Sources Referenced:
- The Adventures of Superman, "Superman on Earth" (CBS, syndication; September 19, 1952). The Council of Nine staging in the Temple of Wisdom. Confirmed by direct review of the broadcast: nine council members visible in the chamber scene, in semicircle formation, robed and uniformed.
- Superman (Donner, 1978). The Vond-Ah line: "It isn't that we question your data. The facts are undeniable. It's your conclusions we find unsupportable." Verified through IMDb's quotes archive and multiple secondary sources citing the screenplay.
- Action Comics #1 (June 1938) and the Superman newspaper comic strip (January 1939). The original published versions of the Krypton origin. Jor-El first appears as "Jor-L" in the strip; named "Jor-el" in the 1942 novel The Adventures of Superman by George Lowther.
- Superman: The Animated Series, "The Last Son of Krypton" (1996). The Brainiac variant, in which the council trusts the planet's AI over Jor-El.
- Man of Steel (Snyder, 2013). The version where Jor-El's data is rejected as politically inconvenient by a council in active political crisis.
- Wikipedia, "Krypton (comics)" for the cross-canon comparison of council scenes.
- Wikipedia, "Jor-El" for the publication history and the stability of the rejection-by-council structure.
- Superman Wiki / Fandom, "Episode 101: Superman on Earth" for the Temple of Wisdom naming and the genealogy from the 1940 radio episode.
- Sanford Allen, "Forgotten Films: Adventures of Superman: Superman on Earth" (2017) for the supplementary description of the council scene.