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| * Baltar nearly collides with Count Iblis on the astral plane following his work to save the fleet from the plague, an encounter that would have been "most inopportune" had it occurred.<ref name="RED198" /> | | * Baltar nearly collides with Count Iblis on the astral plane following his work to save the fleet from the plague, an encounter that would have been "most inopportune" had it occurred.<ref name="RED198" /> |
| * His ability to navigate the astral plane, discover the cure's location, and communicate across the barrier between life and death suggests that death has not diminished his exceptional intellect and willpower, but rather freed them from mortal limitations.<ref name="RED196" /> | | * His ability to navigate the astral plane, discover the cure's location, and communicate across the barrier between life and death suggests that death has not diminished his exceptional intellect and willpower, but rather freed them from mortal limitations.<ref name="RED196" /> |
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| ==Behind the Scenes==
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| ===Author's Approach to the Character===
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| Co-author [[Brad Linaweaver]] brought a distinctive perspective to writing Baltar that [[Richard Hatch]] particularly praised. According to Linaweaver, Hatch told him that "no one did Baltar as well as yours truly," expanding that "by no one, he included every writer on the original TV series."<ref group="commentary" name="linaweaver_mondocult_baltar_praise">{{cite web|url=http://www.mondocult.com/articles/Linaweaver/Hatch/hatch.html#:~:text=Richard%20happily%20informed%20me%20that%20no%20one%20did%20Baltar%20as%20well%20as%20yours%20truly.%20He%20expanded%20on%20this%20point.%20By%20no%20one%2C%20he%20included%20every%20writer%20on%20the%20original%20TV%20series|title=A Man for All Reasons: A Personal Tribute to Richard Hatch|author=Brad Linaweaver|publisher=Mondo Cult|date=November 2009|accessdate=November 2, 2025}}</ref> Linaweaver stated that Hatch had "never seen anyone get inside the head of the series' human villain the way I comfortably took up residence in a malignant mind."<ref group="commentary" name="linaweaver_mondocult_baltar_praise"/>
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| Linaweaver's approach to Baltar emphasized the villain's internal perspective and philosophical worldview. In ''[[Destiny (book)|Destiny]]'', he portrayed Baltar as viewing himself as "an attentive listener, even if the droning lecture was the product of his own fevered imagination," and having him assert that "one monster's morality is a free man's bad joke."<ref group="commentary" name="linaweaver_mondocult_destiny_baltar">{{cite web|url=http://www.mondocult.com/articles/Linaweaver/Hatch/hatch.html#:~:text=Baltar%20prided%20himself%20on%20being%20an%20attentive%20listener%2C%20even%20if%20the%20droning%20lecture%20was%20the%20product%20of%20his%20own%20fevered%20imagination|title=A Man for All Reasons|author=Brad Linaweaver|publisher=Mondo Cult|date=November 2009|accessdate=November 2, 2025}}</ref>
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| The characterization explored Baltar as a representative of individualistic evil in contrast to the Cylons' collectivistic evil, with Linaweaver noting that "exceptional humans of either kind are a mystery to Imperious Leader."<ref group="commentary" name="linaweaver_mondocult_baltar_philosophy">{{cite web|url=http://www.mondocult.com/articles/Linaweaver/Hatch/hatch.html#:~:text=The%20Cylons%20are%20collectivistic%20evil.%20Baltar%20is%20individualistic%20evil%2C%20the%20counterpart%20to%20Apollo%E2%80%99s%20individualistic%20good.%20Exceptional%20humans%20of%20either%20kind%20are%20a%20mystery%20to%20Imperious%20Leader|title=A Man for All Reasons|author=Brad Linaweaver|publisher=Mondo Cult|date=November 2009|accessdate=November 2, 2025}}</ref> This philosophical framework positioned Baltar as the individualistic counterpart to Apollo's individualistic good, creating a thematic mirror that explored the nature of choice and morality.
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| Linaweaver and Hatch believed that their depiction of Baltar in the novels may have influenced the writers of the [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|reimagined series]]' approach to the character.<ref group="commentary" name="linaweaver_mondocult_rdm_influence">{{cite web|url=http://www.mondocult.com/articles/Linaweaver/Hatch/hatch.html#:~:text=When%20Universal%20relaunched%2C%20rebooted%20and%20reimagined%20Battlestar%20Galactica%2C%20Richard%20and%20I%20thought%20it%20possible%20the%20new%20writers%20of%20the%20show%20might%20have%20read%20his%20books.%20If%20so%2C%20they%20might%20have%20been%20influenced%20by%20our%20take%20on%20Baltar|title=A Man for All Reasons|author=Brad Linaweaver|publisher=Mondo Cult|date=November 2009|accessdate=November 2, 2025}}</ref>
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| The cover art for ''Destiny'' by Bob Larkin captured what Linaweaver described as "the essence of the book—and unbeknownst to the artist, certain aspects of the collaboration," featuring "a true meeting of minds between Apollo and Baltar."<ref group="commentary" name="linaweaver_mondocult_destiny_cover">{{cite web|url=http://www.mondocult.com/articles/Linaweaver/Hatch/hatch.html#:~:text=The%20cover%20art%20on%20Destiny%20(by%20Bob%20Larkin)%20captures%20the%20essence%20of%20the%20book%20%E2%80%93%20and%20unbeknownst%20to%20the%20artist%2C%20certain%20aspects%20of%20the%20collaboration.%20After%20so%20many%20stories%20over%20the%20years%20here%2C%20at%20last%2C%20was%20a%20true%20meeting%20of%20minds%20between%20Apollo%20and%20Baltar|title=A Man for All Reasons|author=Brad Linaweaver|publisher=Mondo Cult|date=November 2009|accessdate=November 2, 2025}}</ref> This artistic representation reflected how the melodramatic confrontations between Apollo and Baltar allowed the authors to explore their own different ideological perspectives in a productive way, with Linaweaver noting that "friends can discuss politics and religion" through such fictional dialogues.<ref group="commentary" name="linaweaver_mondocult_political_debates">{{cite web|url=http://www.mondocult.com/articles/Linaweaver/Hatch/hatch.html#:~:text=The%20mind%2Dmeld%20offered%20unexpected%20benefits.%20Given%20that%20Richard%20and%20I%20had%20somewhat%20different%20ideologies%20(without%20being%20humorless%20ideologues%20ourselves)%20the%20melodramatic%20confrontations%20in%20the%20story%20allowed%20us%20to%20navigate%20treacherous%20currents.%20In%20other%20words%2C%20friends%20can%20discuss%20politics%20and%20religion%20in%20a%20productive%20way|title=A Man for All Reasons|author=Brad Linaweaver|publisher=Mondo Cult|date=November 2009|accessdate=November 2, 2025}}</ref>
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| ==References== | | ==References== |
| <references /> | | <references /> |
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| ===Commentary and Interviews===
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| {{reflist|group=commentary}}
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| [[Category:Characters (TOS)]] | | [[Category:Characters (TOS)]] |