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Editing Podcast:Black Market

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Ok. Here we are at the top of the show. This particular opening was not scripted this way. This was the ending. And it is- it's a flash-forward to the end of the show, with [[Lee Adama|Lee]] facing down [[Bill Duke]]'s character <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Phelan]]] and the question of whether he's going to shoot him or not and then this provides, essentially, the frame for the entire episode. But this was not as scripted. This came out- this move of putting the confrontation of Lee pointing the gun at Phelan came out of desperation, more than anything else. I saw the cut of "Black Market" initially and I was depressed. I wasn't happy. I was really disappointed in the show and myself and what we had done and didn't feel like the episode really had anything going for it. That it started too slowly, that the initial scenes were not engaging, the story wasn't grabbing me and so one of the ways that we set out to try to fix the episode and to get the best episode that we could. I came up with this idea of, "Well let's take..." It's a classic device. This is not rocket science. It's take the end and put a piece of the end at the head of the episode so that you tease the drama. You're essentially setting up a jeopardy situation that's intriguing and compelling, one would hope, and let that pull the audience into the show so that they will then hang on- "Well, what was that confrontation about? Who was the Bill Duke character? Why is Lee pointing that gun? Is he gonna shoot him?" And that kind of tension undergirds the rest of the episode. I think the theory works, surprisingly. (Chuckles). It does provide a certain amount of tension throughout the episode. In fact it's one of the few things the episode has going for it, in my opinion, is that we do have that underlying question of, "What is that confrontation about and when are we going to get to it?"
Ok. Here we are at the top of the show. This particular opening was not scripted this way. This was the ending. And it is- it's a flash-forward to the end of the show, with [[Lee Adama|Lee]] facing down [[Bill Duke]]'s character <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Phelan]]] and the question of whether he's going to shoot him or not and then this provides, essentially, the frame for the entire episode. But this was not as scripted. This came out- this move of putting the confrontation of Lee pointing the gun at Phelan came out of desperation, more than anything else. I saw the cut of "Black Market" initially and I was depressed. I wasn't happy. I was really disappointed in the show and myself and what we had done and didn't feel like the episode really had anything going for it. That it started too slowly, that the initial scenes were not engaging, the story wasn't grabbing me and so one of the ways that we set out to try to fix the episode and to get the best episode that we could. I came up with this idea of, "Well let's take..." It's a classic device. This is not rocket science. It's take the end and put a piece of the end at the head of the episode so that you tease the drama. You're essentially setting up a jeopardy situation that's intriguing and compelling, one would hope, and let that pull the audience into the show so that they will then hang on- "Well, what was that confrontation about? Who was the Bill Duke character? Why is Lee pointing that gun? Is he gonna shoot him?" And that kind of tension undergirds the rest of the episode. I think the theory works, surprisingly. (Chuckles). It does provide a certain amount of tension throughout the episode. In fact it's one of the few things the episode has going for it, in my opinion, is that we do have that underlying question of, "What is that confrontation about and when are we going to get to it?"


The storyline came out of a lot of pretty interesting discussions in the writers' room about the [[Black market (organization)|black market]] and what would be happening in [[The Fleet (RDM)|the Fleet]]. Our discussions centered around the notion of, "What is really happening out there economically? Where are people getting things? Who are they turning to? What criminal elements crop up at some point, if not well before now, at least it could be acknowledged now? And how do the people, and the [[government]], and in [[Colonial Fleet (RDM)|the military]] deal with these kinds of problems? There is no (quote-unquote) "police force" that's been established in the Rag Tag Fleet and it doesn't seem realistic that there could've been a police force established in the Rag Tag Fleet to date. So [[William Adama|Adama]] and the ''[[Galactica (RDM)|Galactica]]'' and now ''[[Pegasus (RDM)|Pegasus]]'' are really the only enforcement that they have. And what happens when people on- the new arrivals on ''Pegasus'' having their own agendas, their own backstories, their own motivations, what happens when you move them into this mix and maybe the new man at the top gets involved with the black market?
The storyline came out of a lot of pretty interesting discussions in the writers' room about the [[Black market (organization)|black market]] and what would be happening in [[The Fleet (RDM)|the Fleet]]. Our discussions centered around the notion of, "What is really happening out there economically? Where are people getting things? Who are they turning to? What criminal elements crop up at some point, if not well before now, at least it could be acknowledged now? And how do the people, and the [[government]], and in [[Colonial Fleet|the military]] deal with these kinds of problems? There is no (quote-unquote) "police force" that's been established in the Rag Tag Fleet and it doesn't seem realistic that there could've been a police force established in the Rag Tag Fleet to date. So [[William Adama|Adama]] and the ''[[Galactica (RDM)|Galactica]]'' and now ''[[Pegasus (RDM)|Pegasus]]'' are really the only enforcement that they have. And what happens when people on- the new arrivals on ''Pegasus'' having their own agendas, their own backstories, their own motivations, what happens when you move them into this mix and maybe the new man at the top gets involved with the black market?


I think one of the difficulties of the show, conceptually, is that the black market is a difficult concept, in this particular world, to get your mind around. In a world of ''Galactica'' where the Rag Tag Fleet is out on its own, there is no [[wikipedia:Socioeconomics|socioeconomic]] structure beyond the Rag Tag Fleet. There's no government. There's no social system. There's no nothing. Other than these particular [[:Category:Colonial Craft|ships]]. Isn't everything black market? Isn't everything to be bartered? One starts to wonder what the distinctions are that [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] is upset about. We gravitate towards place where we said, "Well the criminal element and the black market is essentially taking essential goods and holding them hostage and extorting other goods from other people and some kind of system of distribution for rations and for goods is being upset because people are starting to exert undue pressures in certain directions." It's a heady, intellectual argument. It doesn't have the visceral nature of, "Well, there's the thriving drug trade," or "There's a white slavery ring," or something like that. Which isn't really where we wanted to go. It was supposed to delineate forth the socioeconomic difficulties that the Rag Tag Fleet is dealing with while also at its core focusing, of course, on Lee Adama. This is a "Lee story". And the insp- the place that the "Lee story" starts from in this telling is from Lee classicly going up the river. That's an allusion to [[wikipedia:Joseph Conrad|Joseph Conrad]]'s ''[[wikipedia:Heart of Darkness|Heart of Darkness]]'' which is the basis for "[[wikipedia:Apocalypse Now|Apocalypse Now]]". It's a model that is tossed about a lot in writers' rooms in a lot of industry of discussion has to do with... My apologies. You're probably picking up a great deal of gardening noise today and sorry, that's the risk you run with these podcasts. Anyway, ''Heart of Darkness'' is one of those archetypes that is tossed about a lot in writers' rooms where you're taking a character and he is either literally or metaphorically going up a river of darkness, getting darker and darker and going to places that the character never really thought that he would go. And so this is Lee's journey up the river, ultimately finding [[wikipedia:Kurtz (Heart of Darkness)|Kurtz]], as it were, the Bill Duke character. I think we were all in love with the notion on a character level, well, I'll get back to that. I was gonna talk about Lee and [[Shevon|the prostitute]].
I think one of the difficulties of the show, conceptually, is that the black market is a difficult concept, in this particular world, to get your mind around. In a world of ''Galactica'' where the Rag Tag Fleet is out on its own, there is no [[wikipedia:Socioeconomics|socioeconomic]] structure beyond the Rag Tag Fleet. There's no government. There's no social system. There's no nothing. Other than these particular [[:Category:Colonial Craft|ships]]. Isn't everything black market? Isn't everything to be bartered? One starts to wonder what the distinctions are that [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] is upset about. We gravitate towards place where we said, "Well the criminal element and the black market is essentially taking essential goods and holding them hostage and extorting other goods from other people and some kind of system of distribution for rations and for goods is being upset because people are starting to exert undue pressures in certain directions." It's a heady, intellectual argument. It doesn't have the visceral nature of, "Well, there's the thriving drug trade," or "There's a white slavery ring," or something like that. Which isn't really where we wanted to go. It was supposed to delineate forth the socioeconomic difficulties that the Rag Tag Fleet is dealing with while also at its core focusing, of course, on Lee Adama. This is a "Lee story". And the insp- the place that the "Lee story" starts from in this telling is from Lee classicly going up the river. That's an allusion to [[wikipedia:Joseph Conrad|Joseph Conrad]]'s ''[[wikipedia:Heart of Darkness|Heart of Darkness]]'' which is the basis for "[[wikipedia:Apocalypse Now|Apocalypse Now]]". It's a model that is tossed about a lot in writers' rooms in a lot of industry of discussion has to do with... My apologies. You're probably picking up a great deal of gardening noise today and sorry, that's the risk you run with these podcasts. Anyway, ''Heart of Darkness'' is one of those archetypes that is tossed about a lot in writers' rooms where you're taking a character and he is either literally or metaphorically going up a river of darkness, getting darker and darker and going to places that the character never really thought that he would go. And so this is Lee's journey up the river, ultimately finding [[wikipedia:Kurtz (Heart of Darkness)|Kurtz]], as it were, the Bill Duke character. I think we were all in love with the notion on a character level, well, I'll get back to that. I was gonna talk about Lee and [[Shevon|the prostitute]].

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