Editing Podcast:Black Market
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==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/214/bsg_ep214_2of5.mp3 Act 1]== | ==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/214/bsg_ep214_2of5.mp3 Act 1]== | ||
In our case, I don't think that comfort and familiarity really work for us. I don't think it's helpful or useful that the audience knows where this story is going from the opening moments. I don't think it really is in keeping with what the show tries to do- it tries to be. Now, that said, we struggled mightily to try to bring a lot of unexpected quality to this show. Part of that struggle was to give Lee a more complex personality, to delve into darker waters with [[Lee Adama|Lee]] using the escape sequence, rather, the ejection sequence from "[[Resurrection Ship, Part II|Resurrection Ship]]" and his experience there as the jumping off point into his own journey, and to discover things like Lee has [[Shevon|this girl]]. That was in the teaser and I love, I do like the idea that Lee is with this girl, and you're playing, he's got the girl, and she has [[Paya|a daughter]], and it seems very sweet, and then he pays her at the end. And the idea that there's this- there prostitution is very common in [[The Fleet (RDM)|the Fleet]], and that it was probably legal back in [[The Twelve Colonies | In our case, I don't think that comfort and familiarity really work for us. I don't think it's helpful or useful that the audience knows where this story is going from the opening moments. I don't think it really is in keeping with what the show tries to do- it tries to be. Now, that said, we struggled mightily to try to bring a lot of unexpected quality to this show. Part of that struggle was to give Lee a more complex personality, to delve into darker waters with [[Lee Adama|Lee]] using the escape sequence, rather, the ejection sequence from "[[Resurrection Ship, Part II|Resurrection Ship]]" and his experience there as the jumping off point into his own journey, and to discover things like Lee has [[Shevon|this girl]]. That was in the teaser and I love, I do like the idea that Lee is with this girl, and you're playing, he's got the girl, and she has [[Paya|a daughter]], and it seems very sweet, and then he pays her at the end. And the idea that there's this- there prostitution is very common in [[The Fleet (RDM)|the Fleet]], and that it was probably legal back in [[The Twelve Colonies (RDM)|the Colonies]], before the attack, and that it's not a big- it's not a major deal. It's not like, "Oh my God! Lee is seeing a hooker." It's just dealt with. | ||
In some sense it goes to, actually, ironically enough, an element of the [[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)|original ''Battlestar Galactica'' series]]. There was a character named [[Cassiopeia]] or Casssiopeia, depending on how you like to pronounce it, played by [[Laurette Spang-McCook|Laurette Sprang]], who, of course, every adolescent boy that watched it in 1978, including me, had the hots for her, and she was what was called a [[socialator]], which was essentially a prostitute, and it was legal on one colony and wasn't legal on another, and then she came aboard [[Galactica (TOS)|''Galactica'']] and became [[Starbuck (TOS)|Starbuck]]'s girlfriend. So we used that as a jumping off point, that ok, it's legal. It's something interesting about that in the world, and that Lee, the classic clean-cut good guy, is actually seeing this hooker on the side, and has been for a while. The implication is that he's gotten caught up with her, is having a relationship with her that he did not anticipate and is actually getting emotionally involved, and that becomes a vulnerability within the episode. That all seemed interesting. And what made it even more interesting, conceptually, was the idea that through this story there would be flashbacks not just with her, but that would actually delineate a relationship in Lee's backstory that we hadn't even hinted at. That there was [[Gianne|a girl]]. That before the attack Lee was a man and Lee had relationships and why is that a surprise? That there was a girl that we didn't know about and that we would get hints of that and there would be images of her and (clears throat) there would be this whole other tale that would start to come up and we'd realize that Lee actually left somebody behind. That there was this tragic story of Lee and this woman and she got pregnant and he wasn't ready and kinda panicked in the moment or didn't react well when she told him and she left and he has all these regrets because then the world ended, quite literally, and that relationship was never resolved and is a hanging- it's a thread of Lee's life that hang- that dangles there and tortures him on a certain level and is informing his relationship with the girl in the present. | In some sense it goes to, actually, ironically enough, an element of the [[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)|original ''Battlestar Galactica'' series]]. There was a character named [[Cassiopeia]] or Casssiopeia, depending on how you like to pronounce it, played by [[Laurette Spang-McCook|Laurette Sprang]], who, of course, every adolescent boy that watched it in 1978, including me, had the hots for her, and she was what was called a [[socialator]], which was essentially a prostitute, and it was legal on one colony and wasn't legal on another, and then she came aboard [[Galactica (TOS)|''Galactica'']] and became [[Starbuck (TOS)|Starbuck]]'s girlfriend. So we used that as a jumping off point, that ok, it's legal. It's something interesting about that in the world, and that Lee, the classic clean-cut good guy, is actually seeing this hooker on the side, and has been for a while. The implication is that he's gotten caught up with her, is having a relationship with her that he did not anticipate and is actually getting emotionally involved, and that becomes a vulnerability within the episode. That all seemed interesting. And what made it even more interesting, conceptually, was the idea that through this story there would be flashbacks not just with her, but that would actually delineate a relationship in Lee's backstory that we hadn't even hinted at. That there was [[Gianne|a girl]]. That before the attack Lee was a man and Lee had relationships and why is that a surprise? That there was a girl that we didn't know about and that we would get hints of that and there would be images of her and (clears throat) there would be this whole other tale that would start to come up and we'd realize that Lee actually left somebody behind. That there was this tragic story of Lee and this woman and she got pregnant and he wasn't ready and kinda panicked in the moment or didn't react well when she told him and she left and he has all these regrets because then the world ended, quite literally, and that relationship was never resolved and is a hanging- it's a thread of Lee's life that hang- that dangles there and tortures him on a certain level and is informing his relationship with the girl in the present. | ||
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And I should also just say, again, being critical of the show- [[:Category:Cast|the cast]] never lets you down. The cast delivers. The cast takes the material, elevates the material. The cast is right there for you. So it's really, again, all the things we're talking about go back to the script and why the script isn't working. | And I should also just say, again, being critical of the show- [[:Category:Cast|the cast]] never lets you down. The cast delivers. The cast takes the material, elevates the material. The cast is right there for you. So it's really, again, all the things we're talking about go back to the script and why the script isn't working. | ||
This scene comes out of nowhere a little bit, but there was another scene that we cut where [[Anastasia Dualla|Dualla]] was following Lee out of the [[Raptor]] and Lee arrived back on ''Galactica'' earlier and they had a similar conversation in that she's hinting that there was something going on between them. He didn't want to talk about it. He was caught up in his own thing, his own demons about the girl that he left behind, literally, and the girl he left behind back on [[The Twelve Colonies | This scene comes out of nowhere a little bit, but there was another scene that we cut where [[Anastasia Dualla|Dualla]] was following Lee out of the [[Raptor]] and Lee arrived back on ''Galactica'' earlier and they had a similar conversation in that she's hinting that there was something going on between them. He didn't want to talk about it. He was caught up in his own thing, his own demons about the girl that he left behind, literally, and the girl he left behind back on [[The Twelve Colonies (RDM)#Caprica|Caprica]] and we started to repeat scenes in a bad way. | ||
This is interesting in that Dualla says, puts her cards on the table to an extent and says, "What's the deal, Captain- Major? What do you really want here?"(whispers) Oh, I didn't mean to say Major because that'll be a (raises voice) surprise later. Whatever. We cut and recut this scene to give- there was a lot more dialogue here where Lee explained himself more, talked more in general terms about themselves, but ultimately got to the same place where he didn't know what to say and we chopped all of that dialogue and stripped the scene down to its emotional essence. You're not quite clear what's going on with these two, neither are they, that kinda works. But again, it's not really getting deep enough. It's not really getting to a place where we're explaining, or at least hinting, or making you think about what is the nature of the relationship between Dualla and Lee. Why is Lee interested in her and vice versa? What does it mean to him as a character? We had conversations in the writers' room that dealt with things like, "Well, Lee's got the girl he left behind on Caprica, he's seeing the prostitute, and then there's Dualla." So there's the classic- there's three women in Lee's life. One dead, two not. What does Dualla represent in that? What is- what is Dualla to Lee in juxtaposition to the dead woman and to the hooker with the little girl? Is she the hope? Is she the future? Is she something more realistic? Is the hooker the hope? There's a lot of ways you can just sit and talk about it endlessly about what it all represents, and it was all facinating conversation. Unfortunately it just doesn't quite sync-in to what we have. You don't ever- you never quite get to a place where you're rooting for Lee and Dualla. I think that's might be the central problem with it. You're never quite rooting for her. | This is interesting in that Dualla says, puts her cards on the table to an extent and says, "What's the deal, Captain- Major? What do you really want here?"(whispers) Oh, I didn't mean to say Major because that'll be a (raises voice) surprise later. Whatever. We cut and recut this scene to give- there was a lot more dialogue here where Lee explained himself more, talked more in general terms about themselves, but ultimately got to the same place where he didn't know what to say and we chopped all of that dialogue and stripped the scene down to its emotional essence. You're not quite clear what's going on with these two, neither are they, that kinda works. But again, it's not really getting deep enough. It's not really getting to a place where we're explaining, or at least hinting, or making you think about what is the nature of the relationship between Dualla and Lee. Why is Lee interested in her and vice versa? What does it mean to him as a character? We had conversations in the writers' room that dealt with things like, "Well, Lee's got the girl he left behind on Caprica, he's seeing the prostitute, and then there's Dualla." So there's the classic- there's three women in Lee's life. One dead, two not. What does Dualla represent in that? What is- what is Dualla to Lee in juxtaposition to the dead woman and to the hooker with the little girl? Is she the hope? Is she the future? Is she something more realistic? Is the hooker the hope? There's a lot of ways you can just sit and talk about it endlessly about what it all represents, and it was all facinating conversation. Unfortunately it just doesn't quite sync-in to what we have. You don't ever- you never quite get to a place where you're rooting for Lee and Dualla. I think that's might be the central problem with it. You're never quite rooting for her. | ||
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This scene works well. This scene with [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] and [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] is nice. I like the fact that it's following up on the end revelation of "[[Epiphanies]]" that Laura knows Baltar's secret, or at least knows in her gut even if she doesn't have a shred of evidence and there's not a single thing that she could do to actually out Baltar. I mean, what could she really say? She can't really go around and say, "Well, you know when I was dying and you were pumping my body with the [[Hera|Cylon baby]]'s blood and I was- I had all those drugs, and I was pretty much out of it? In that moment I kind of remembered this detail that I hadn't mentioned for the past couple months and, oh yeah, Baltar's working with the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]]." She can't really do that. I mean, they'd say she's crazy. There's nothing to back it up. It's his word versus her word. It's also nice in that we've inoculated Baltar from that particular charge in [[Season 1 (2004-05)|Season One]], during "[[Six Degrees of Separation]]", the episode where the other [[Number Six|Six]], the [[Shelly Godfrey]] character, shows up and accuses him of just that thing and is ultimately exonerated. It's- if Laura came out and started accusing him of the exact same charge that would be a sense of, "Been there, done that," and I don't think she would get anywhere and just- she would a needlessly provoked confrontation with her vice president. Nevertheless, she doesn't trust him. Doesn't like him. Wants him to go away. So this is Laura's tack is to go to him one-on-one and try to get him quietly to go do something else and try to play the fact that she knows he doesn't like being vice preseident. But it pricks Baltar's ego. That's the thing, I think, anyone and everyone probably underestimates about Gaius Baltar is the truly astonishing size of the man's ego. And in a s- there's a very straight line that can be drawn from here to the season finale, from this moment. From Baltar, starting as a disinterested political player, who just fell into the vice presidency for other reasons, to the point where he's going to be seriously considering a presidential run himself. Kinda begins here with this moment, where the character just cannot be insulted. The character cannot be told that, "You're not up to the job or maybe you should do something else." Any implication that maybe he's not capable of doing something, the man can react in extraordinary ways. You saw this at the end of "Epiphanies", that the criticism in- from in Laura's letter to him prompting this reaction. Give a nuclear weapon to terrorists. I mean the man is a dangerous man because of the incredibly fragile nature of his ego combined with the amazing breadth of his intellect. | This scene works well. This scene with [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] and [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] is nice. I like the fact that it's following up on the end revelation of "[[Epiphanies]]" that Laura knows Baltar's secret, or at least knows in her gut even if she doesn't have a shred of evidence and there's not a single thing that she could do to actually out Baltar. I mean, what could she really say? She can't really go around and say, "Well, you know when I was dying and you were pumping my body with the [[Hera|Cylon baby]]'s blood and I was- I had all those drugs, and I was pretty much out of it? In that moment I kind of remembered this detail that I hadn't mentioned for the past couple months and, oh yeah, Baltar's working with the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]]." She can't really do that. I mean, they'd say she's crazy. There's nothing to back it up. It's his word versus her word. It's also nice in that we've inoculated Baltar from that particular charge in [[Season 1 (2004-05)|Season One]], during "[[Six Degrees of Separation]]", the episode where the other [[Number Six|Six]], the [[Shelly Godfrey]] character, shows up and accuses him of just that thing and is ultimately exonerated. It's- if Laura came out and started accusing him of the exact same charge that would be a sense of, "Been there, done that," and I don't think she would get anywhere and just- she would a needlessly provoked confrontation with her vice president. Nevertheless, she doesn't trust him. Doesn't like him. Wants him to go away. So this is Laura's tack is to go to him one-on-one and try to get him quietly to go do something else and try to play the fact that she knows he doesn't like being vice preseident. But it pricks Baltar's ego. That's the thing, I think, anyone and everyone probably underestimates about Gaius Baltar is the truly astonishing size of the man's ego. And in a s- there's a very straight line that can be drawn from here to the season finale, from this moment. From Baltar, starting as a disinterested political player, who just fell into the vice presidency for other reasons, to the point where he's going to be seriously considering a presidential run himself. Kinda begins here with this moment, where the character just cannot be insulted. The character cannot be told that, "You're not up to the job or maybe you should do something else." Any implication that maybe he's not capable of doing something, the man can react in extraordinary ways. You saw this at the end of "Epiphanies", that the criticism in- from in Laura's letter to him prompting this reaction. Give a nuclear weapon to terrorists. I mean the man is a dangerous man because of the incredibly fragile nature of his ego combined with the amazing breadth of his intellect. | ||
This is an interesting little scene because it brings [[Tom Zarek|Zarek]] back into the mix. It has Zarek say things that, I think, need to be said in the episode. It's interesting to play Zarek as the realist, the guy that's way ahead of the curve that knows how these things work and operate. That the [[Black market (organization)|black market]] is going to happen, and you're foolish to try to stop it and he's-. I like the fact that Zarek knows what [[Lee Adama|Lee]] was doing here, that he has his people all over the place. It's always good to put him and Lee into confrontation, which has been something we've been doing since "[[Bastille Day]]". It's ver- it's a nice little beat. And again Richard comes through for us and gives us a needed jolt right when we- right when we wanted it. Unfortunately it just doesn't quite go far enough. It doesn't- he's not involved enough and he's not disinterested enough. It's a complicated, somewhat complicated, backstory having to do with logs, [[Jack Fisk|Fisk]] went to see Zarek, there was talk that happened, Zarek's not involved with the black market because Fisk was asking for too much of his cut, but he sends Lee on the road to the ship that every- see, it's a contradiction. It's like- we're playing that Zarek needs to tell Lee about Phelan and about [[Prometheus | This is an interesting little scene because it brings [[Tom Zarek|Zarek]] back into the mix. It has Zarek say things that, I think, need to be said in the episode. It's interesting to play Zarek as the realist, the guy that's way ahead of the curve that knows how these things work and operate. That the [[Black market (organization)|black market]] is going to happen, and you're foolish to try to stop it and he's-. I like the fact that Zarek knows what [[Lee Adama|Lee]] was doing here, that he has his people all over the place. It's always good to put him and Lee into confrontation, which has been something we've been doing since "[[Bastille Day]]". It's ver- it's a nice little beat. And again Richard comes through for us and gives us a needed jolt right when we- right when we wanted it. Unfortunately it just doesn't quite go far enough. It doesn't- he's not involved enough and he's not disinterested enough. It's a complicated, somewhat complicated, backstory having to do with logs, [[Jack Fisk|Fisk]] went to see Zarek, there was talk that happened, Zarek's not involved with the black market because Fisk was asking for too much of his cut, but he sends Lee on the road to the ship that every- see, it's a contradiction. It's like- we're playing that Zarek needs to tell Lee about Phelan and about [[Prometheus|this ship]] out there where you can get anything you want that's the hub or the nexus of the black market. And yet everybody else seems to know about it. It's clearly the place where all this activity is going, but somehow Lee needs to be told by Zarek that it even exists, which tends to undercut Lee's role as an investigator and the procedural aspect starts to feel a bit weak because you feel like he should've- Lee should've known all that on his own and again, it's an element that doesn't work and it's not a- it's not a result of the director or the cast, it's a problem with the script. | ||
Generally speaking, while there have certainly been exceptions, things that don't work usually can be traced back to something that doesn't work on the page. Especially when you're looking at an episode in a larger sense, when you're looking at an overall sweep of an episode and why things work and they don't work. Generally, it's something to do with the script. Sometimes it's a director who doesn't get an episode or get the show or an actor who doesn't- can't quite deliver on the material that you've given them. That happens. Sure, it happens. People- there's people that don't do exactly what they need to do in all categories all the time. That's just, that's life. But, usually, in television at least, it's more result of the material. It's more result of- you didn't give them the building blocks to create the thing that you're trying to create. You didn't provide the right raw materials. You didn't give them a good blueprint for this house and then they go out and they build a house and the house is leaning to one side. You say, "Oh. Well. The idiotic carpenters didn't do it right." Well, might be that the blueprint was off. That's probably more in keeping than the carpenter (phone rings) doesn't know how to- oh, and there's the phone. I'm sure everyone's very happy about that. I'll try to- (phone rings) (unintelligable) as best I can. Sorry folks. Anyway. | Generally speaking, while there have certainly been exceptions, things that don't work usually can be traced back to something that doesn't work on the page. Especially when you're looking at an episode in a larger sense, when you're looking at an overall sweep of an episode and why things work and they don't work. Generally, it's something to do with the script. Sometimes it's a director who doesn't get an episode or get the show or an actor who doesn't- can't quite deliver on the material that you've given them. That happens. Sure, it happens. People- there's people that don't do exactly what they need to do in all categories all the time. That's just, that's life. But, usually, in television at least, it's more result of the material. It's more result of- you didn't give them the building blocks to create the thing that you're trying to create. You didn't provide the right raw materials. You didn't give them a good blueprint for this house and then they go out and they build a house and the house is leaning to one side. You say, "Oh. Well. The idiotic carpenters didn't do it right." Well, might be that the blueprint was off. That's probably more in keeping than the carpenter (phone rings) doesn't know how to- oh, and there's the phone. I'm sure everyone's very happy about that. I'll try to- (phone rings) (unintelligable) as best I can. Sorry folks. Anyway. | ||
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Ok. Now we're with [[Lee Adama|Lee]]. There's also a subplot here that got dropped that I wish had not been dropped, which was that Lee- Lee there in that [[Raptor]] is actually flying for the first time since the ejection sequence, since his experience in "[[Resurrection Ship, Part II|Resurrection Ship]]", and that texture got lost and his return to flight status and the fact that he was avoiding it or maybe deliberately avoiding- deliberately failing some of the flight physicals 'cause he was on a some level afraid, on some level he just didn't want to get back in the cockpit. That all kind of got dropped along the way. Which is unfortunate. | Ok. Now we're with [[Lee Adama|Lee]]. There's also a subplot here that got dropped that I wish had not been dropped, which was that Lee- Lee there in that [[Raptor]] is actually flying for the first time since the ejection sequence, since his experience in "[[Resurrection Ship, Part II|Resurrection Ship]]", and that texture got lost and his return to flight status and the fact that he was avoiding it or maybe deliberately avoiding- deliberately failing some of the flight physicals 'cause he was on a some level afraid, on some level he just didn't want to get back in the cockpit. That all kind of got dropped along the way. Which is unfortunate. | ||
''[[ | ''[[Prometheus]]'' is the ship I was talking about earlier. The ship where you can get everything you need. It felt realistic that a ship like this, and probably several ships, would exist. I mean, these people are out on their own and they ha- and some ships have more goods than others. There's certainly gonna be high-value trade in things that people want. Where does [[Cottle]] get his cigarettes? He probably gets his cigarettes from here. I like that shot of the [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']] guys are there getting their own things too. The problem, again, I talked about this earlier. You're not quite sure why this is all a problem. Why is any of this raising an eyebrow? Why is this illegal? People need things. The entire economic structure has been shattered. Of course they're going to barter. Of course they're going to be there, trying to deal things. And it's no shock that they're dealing drugs. I mean, yeah, ok, no kidding. Maybe the authorities want to try to discourage that as much as possible, but it's crazy to think it's not going to exist. | ||
This tips us into a different territory. Now there's, like, kids being handed around and now there's like kids being bought and sold, is the implication. This is the only place that you kind of get to, "Oh. Now I see why the [[Black market (organization)|black market]]'s a bad deal. Because we've got kiddies being traded back and forth." I don't think that's quite fair, I think, to the audience or to the characters. It's somewhat of a cheap shot that we've gone for here that it's- it's the kids. I always hesitate to- when you start doing it. When you do something like that in order to really undergird the point it's because you haven't really established the rest of it as clearly being bad enough. It's almost a desperation, "Well, it's about the kids." The kid gets caught up in it. You kind of wish you didn't need to do that. | This tips us into a different territory. Now there's, like, kids being handed around and now there's like kids being bought and sold, is the implication. This is the only place that you kind of get to, "Oh. Now I see why the [[Black market (organization)|black market]]'s a bad deal. Because we've got kiddies being traded back and forth." I don't think that's quite fair, I think, to the audience or to the characters. It's somewhat of a cheap shot that we've gone for here that it's- it's the kids. I always hesitate to- when you start doing it. When you do something like that in order to really undergird the point it's because you haven't really established the rest of it as clearly being bad enough. It's almost a desperation, "Well, it's about the kids." The kid gets caught up in it. You kind of wish you didn't need to do that. | ||