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== Summary == | == Summary == | ||
*Reporter [[D'anna Biers]] is preparing a special report on what she's hyped as the "''[[Gideon]]'' massacre, | *Reporter [[D'anna Biers]] is preparing a special report on what she's hyped as the "''[[Gideon]]'' massacre", when she is escorted by [[Colonial Marine Corps|Marines]] to ''[[Colonial One]]''. | ||
*President [[Laura Roslin]] and Commander [[William Adama]] meet her, and she complains that all of her requests to interview Marines involved with the ''Gideon'' incident have been denied. Roslin and Adama tell her that all that is about to change: they want to mend the relationship between the military and the civilian fleet by allowing Biers to shoot a documentary on life on ''Galactica'', with unrestricted access. | *President [[Laura Roslin]] and Commander [[William Adama]] meet her, and she complains that all of her requests to interview Marines involved with the ''Gideon'' incident have been denied. Roslin and Adama tell her that all that is about to change: they want to mend the relationship between the military and the civilian fleet by allowing Biers to shoot a documentary on life on ''Galactica'', with unrestricted access. | ||
*Biers and her cameraman [[Bell]] are flown to ''Galactica'' with Adama in [[Margaret Edmondson|Margaret "Racetrack" Edmondson]]'s Raptor. On ''Galactica'', Petty Officer [[Anastasia Dualla]] is given the task of showing them around, pointing out fairly everyday things like carbon dioxide scrubbers for atmosphere and vegetable refrigeration units--information that Biers writes off as trivial. | *Biers and her cameraman [[Bell]] are flown to ''Galactica'' with Adama in [[Margaret Edmondson|Margaret "Racetrack" Edmondson]]'s Raptor. On ''Galactica'', Petty Officer [[Anastasia Dualla]] is given the task of showing them around, pointing out fairly everyday things like carbon dioxide scrubbers for atmosphere and vegetable refrigeration units--information that Biers writes off as trivial. | ||
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== Notes == | == Notes == | ||
*The population count is now 47,853, a loss of two since "[[Home, Part II]], | *The population count is now 47,853, a loss of two since "[[Home, Part II]]", to account for the two [[Tom Zarek]] henchmen killed in that episode. | ||
*D'Anna Biers makes the same comment about Baltar that Roslin made in "[[33]]". | *D'Anna Biers makes the same comment about Baltar that Roslin made in "[[33]]". | ||
*We finally learn [[Anastasia Dualla|Dualla]]'s first name as she is interviewed by Biers: ''Anastasia''. | *We finally learn [[Anastasia Dualla|Dualla]]'s first name as she is interviewed by Biers: ''Anastasia''. | ||
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*Roslin and Adama have not only buried the hatchet by this episode, but are working jointly and appear to have developed a camaraderie. | *Roslin and Adama have not only buried the hatchet by this episode, but are working jointly and appear to have developed a camaraderie. | ||
*This episode contains the first scene on ''Colonial One'' since "[[Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part II]]". | *This episode contains the first scene on ''Colonial One'' since "[[Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part II]]". | ||
*Cultural/linguistic oddity: Apollo refers to Kat and Hot Dog as "tweedledum and tweedledee, | *Cultural/linguistic oddity: Apollo refers to Kat and Hot Dog as "tweedledum and tweedledee", a reference to [[Wikipedia:Lewis Carroll|Lewis Carroll]]. | ||
*In Helo's interview with D'Anna Biers, the caption reads "Karl C. Agathon, Lieutenant, CF". This is not just a clipped writing of "Lieutenant, Junior Grade": according to an [http://scifibrain.ign.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3165&Itemid=0 interview] with [[Tahmoh Penikett]], when Helo returned to ''Galactica'' after being stranded on Caprica for months he was promoted to full Lieutenant. However he had been wearing full Lieutenant rank insignia from the beginning of the series. | *In Helo's interview with D'Anna Biers, the caption reads "Karl C. Agathon, Lieutenant, CF". This is not just a clipped writing of "Lieutenant, Junior Grade": according to an [http://scifibrain.ign.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3165&Itemid=0 interview] with [[Tahmoh Penikett]], when Helo returned to ''Galactica'' after being stranded on Caprica for months he was promoted to full Lieutenant. However he had been wearing full Lieutenant rank insignia from the beginning of the series. | ||
*The original airdate was to be September 2nd, 2005. However, SciFi Channel ran a ''Stargate SG-1'' Viewers Choice Marathon for the [[Wikipedia:Labor Day|Labor Day]] Weekend. | *The original airdate was to be September 2nd, 2005. However, SciFi Channel ran a ''Stargate SG-1'' Viewers Choice Marathon for the [[Wikipedia:Labor Day|Labor Day]] Weekend. | ||
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*Dualla states that ''Galactica'''s carbon dioxide scrubbers run "24 hours a day"; this would seem to establish that the Colonial Fleet operates on a 24-hour day. This could possibly be based on {{RDM|Caprica}}'s orbital rotation (where the seat of the [[government]] was located). Yet, all 12 Colonies couldn't possibly have the same axial rotation time. This 24 hour day might seem an automatic assumption, but other science fiction series sometimes depart from the convention: For example, on ''[[memoryalpha:Star Trek:Deep Space Nine|Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'', the titular space station actually runs on a 26 hour day, because it follows Bajor's local time (which has a 26 hour rotation period). | *Dualla states that ''Galactica'''s carbon dioxide scrubbers run "24 hours a day"; this would seem to establish that the Colonial Fleet operates on a 24-hour day. This could possibly be based on {{RDM|Caprica}}'s orbital rotation (where the seat of the [[government]] was located). Yet, all 12 Colonies couldn't possibly have the same axial rotation time. This 24 hour day might seem an automatic assumption, but other science fiction series sometimes depart from the convention: For example, on ''[[memoryalpha:Star Trek:Deep Space Nine|Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'', the titular space station actually runs on a 26 hour day, because it follows Bajor's local time (which has a 26 hour rotation period). | ||
*On ''[[Colonial One]]'', Roslin is no longer surrounded by her [[Presidential Security Service]] agents, but rather by ''Galactica'' Marines - Adama's insurance against any more misbehavior? Perhaps they were only there to escort Commander Adama while he was off of ''Galactica''. | *On ''[[Colonial One]]'', Roslin is no longer surrounded by her [[Presidential Security Service]] agents, but rather by ''Galactica'' Marines - Adama's insurance against any more misbehavior? Perhaps they were only there to escort Commander Adama while he was off of ''Galactica''. | ||
*As aired, it appears that Biers gets a free reign to produce whatever she wants. While Adama's agreement to broadcast it throughout the Fleet could mean that he might also have rejected the documentary if necessary, this is not made clear. A [[List of Deleted Scenes - Season 2 (RDM)#Final Cut|deleted scene]] clarifies that Roslin gives Adama the right to the "final cut, | *As aired, it appears that Biers gets a free reign to produce whatever she wants. While Adama's agreement to broadcast it throughout the Fleet could mean that he might also have rejected the documentary if necessary, this is not made clear. A [[List of Deleted Scenes - Season 2 (RDM)#Final Cut|deleted scene]] clarifies that Roslin gives Adama the right to the "final cut", and thus the power to censor the documentary if he feels that it presents ''Galactica'' in an unfavorable light. (This explains the origin of the episode title.) | ||
*The "documentary episode" is a storytelling device that has been used on many series in the past, in which an outsider—usually a journalist—arrives and proceeds to profile the characters and setting, often incorporating interviews with the characters that provide backstory and character motivation in a way standard narrative cannot. The form was popularized in an [[w:Emmy Awards|Emmy]]-winning early episode of ''[[w:M*A*S*H (TV series)|M*A*S*H]]''—which featured the scenario of interviewing officers under pressure of war, much like ''Final Cut''. Other notable TV programs utilizing the format include the ''[[w:Babylon 5|Babylon 5]]'' episode "And Now a Word" and an episode of the medical drama ''[[w:ER (TV series)|ER]]'', "Ambush, | *The "documentary episode" is a storytelling device that has been used on many series in the past, in which an outsider—usually a journalist—arrives and proceeds to profile the characters and setting, often incorporating interviews with the characters that provide backstory and character motivation in a way standard narrative cannot. The form was popularized in an [[w:Emmy Awards|Emmy]]-winning early episode of ''[[w:M*A*S*H (TV series)|M*A*S*H]]''—which featured the scenario of interviewing officers under pressure of war, much like ''Final Cut''. Other notable TV programs utilizing the format include the ''[[w:Babylon 5|Babylon 5]]'' episode "And Now a Word" and an episode of the medical drama ''[[w:ER (TV series)|ER]]'', "Ambush", which was broadcast live. "Final Cut" is unusual in that it includes narrative storytelling, whereas the form usually does not "break character". | ||
== Questions == | == Questions == | ||