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Editing Podcast:Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part II

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And as far as the story on Kobol, that went through several iterations, and many changes. From going from two ground survey teams to just consolidating it into one, and also the decision not to put [[Lee Adama|Lee]] down there. Where was Lee's role in this drama was something that took a lot of wrangling. If Lee is down on the planet surface, it required a different kind of story down there. He's in charge. It's his command. It's his mission. It's all about Lee. And- we were talking about some conflict between him [[Galen Tyrol|Tyrol]], him and crew chief, and Tyrol questioning him in some ways, and Lee's leadership and growth. And ultimately it wasn't quite as satisfying that he wasn't back aboard [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']] when his father is shot and when the [[Government_of_the_Twelve_Colonies#Executive_Branch_2|President]] is deposed from power. It seemed like he should be back here and dealing with this story and by making that key change it allowed the Caprica s- the, sorry, the Kobol story to take on a different complexion. And as we, as you'll see, [[Alex Quartararo|Crashdown]] is in charge down on the surface of Kobol, but he may not be the best man, the best leader, for that situation. And doubt starts to creep in about who they're- who's command they're under. And what will Tyrol do? You couldn't play that, really, if it was Lee, 'cause it's- he's just a more capable, more competent leader and he's expected to fill that role every week. But by making it Crashdown it becomes a legitimate like, "Ok. Wait a minute. Who's in charge here?" kind of a thing. And it also meant that if Lee is aboard ''Colonial'' or- if he's aboard ''Galactica'' and ''[[Colonial One]]'' in this- on this storyline, when they try to take down the President, it forces him to have to make a choice and it meant that he could have to pick [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] over his father, and that he would go down for that, and he would be in [[brig|jail]], and that he would be there in the room in han-, literally, in handcuffs, when the final moments of the episode went down, which I though was much stronger. And moving forward, it meant that Lee is with us aboard ''Galactica'' in this world at the beginning of [[Season 2 (2005-06)|season two]], as opposed to being somewhere else that he has to be rescued and on a completely different story and having no idea what's even happening to his father, which didn't seem as satisfying.
And as far as the story on Kobol, that went through several iterations, and many changes. From going from two ground survey teams to just consolidating it into one, and also the decision not to put [[Lee Adama|Lee]] down there. Where was Lee's role in this drama was something that took a lot of wrangling. If Lee is down on the planet surface, it required a different kind of story down there. He's in charge. It's his command. It's his mission. It's all about Lee. And- we were talking about some conflict between him [[Galen Tyrol|Tyrol]], him and crew chief, and Tyrol questioning him in some ways, and Lee's leadership and growth. And ultimately it wasn't quite as satisfying that he wasn't back aboard [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']] when his father is shot and when the [[Government_of_the_Twelve_Colonies#Executive_Branch_2|President]] is deposed from power. It seemed like he should be back here and dealing with this story and by making that key change it allowed the Caprica s- the, sorry, the Kobol story to take on a different complexion. And as we, as you'll see, [[Alex Quartararo|Crashdown]] is in charge down on the surface of Kobol, but he may not be the best man, the best leader, for that situation. And doubt starts to creep in about who they're- who's command they're under. And what will Tyrol do? You couldn't play that, really, if it was Lee, 'cause it's- he's just a more capable, more competent leader and he's expected to fill that role every week. But by making it Crashdown it becomes a legitimate like, "Ok. Wait a minute. Who's in charge here?" kind of a thing. And it also meant that if Lee is aboard ''Colonial'' or- if he's aboard ''Galactica'' and ''[[Colonial One]]'' in this- on this storyline, when they try to take down the President, it forces him to have to make a choice and it meant that he could have to pick [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] over his father, and that he would go down for that, and he would be in [[brig|jail]], and that he would be there in the room in han-, literally, in handcuffs, when the final moments of the episode went down, which I though was much stronger. And moving forward, it meant that Lee is with us aboard ''Galactica'' in this world at the beginning of [[Season 2 (2005-06)|season two]], as opposed to being somewhere else that he has to be rescued and on a completely different story and having no idea what's even happening to his father, which didn't seem as satisfying.


This storyline of ''Galactica'' starting to move toward deposing the President and staging a military coups is something that had been on the drawing board from the beginning. My initial story proposals for the [[Season 1 (2004-05)|first season]] as contained in the [[Series bible|bible]] and some other documents I wrote for the network, I always saw, initially, that the arc of the two characters of Laura and [[William Adama|Adama]] was going to be, ok you think at first that she's dove and he's the hawk, but in truth she's capable of far tougher things than he is capable of and he's much more civil libertarian-minded, for lack of a better phrase, than she is. That the each of them has elements of both hawk and dove and that they're driven by character things not- they're not just archetypes that you push around. He's not always gonna do the military thing. She's not always gonna do the soft and touchy-feely thing. And that the arc for the season initially was that Laura was gonna go too far. Laura was gonna get caught up in the need to maintain security in a sit- in a Flee- in a situations such as this and that would force her to crackdown harder and harder on dissent and she would winnow away basic freedoms one by one. Adama was gonna be essentially the one tasked to carry out those orders. He was gonna become more, and more, and more uncomfortable with it as the season went on. And ultimately she would go too far and he would step in and he would institute a coups and by the end of season on she was gonna be in jail. He would have taken over as the military commander and declared [[w:martial law|martial law]]. Which is exactly what neither of them wanted at the beginning. That's still where we end up. I mean, the journey along the way changed. Laura didn't really crackdown so much as she did was show teeth, show an ability to be pragmatic, show a willingness to cut- to stab [[Wallace Gray|her friend]] in the back, to shove a [[Leoben Conoy|Cylon]] out an airlock. You started to realize that she's capable of taking strong measures. But we didn't have to paint her quite so starkly as I was thinking initially, as being a badass and really going after people. It also didn't fit with [[Mary McDonnell|Mary]]'s portrayal of Laura. So what did happen is you started to see that she's perfectly capable of doing what she thinks need to be done if she thinks she's right. She's gonna do it. And the more funda- the fundamental agreement of the civilian and the military leadership in [[The Fleet (RDM)|the Fleet]] wa- seemed like the right place to play the conflict. That essentially if she breaks the vow she made in the [[miniseries]], the vow to let him have control over military decisions, that that would be the point where he would step in. He- you don't break your word to Adama. You just don't. And she did. And his a- his reaction to that is resolute and with a bit of sadness. I don't think he- he definitely doesn't want it. He doesn't want the command of the Fleet. He doesn't want to have to deal with the civilians. He doesn't want to do any of these things. But she broke her word to him. She got- she got [[Kara Thrace]], of all people, to turn against him and take a military asset away from the ''Galactica'' at the very moment that they were working on a plan to attack a Cylo- I mean. The reas- there's just so many reasons. He had to do it. He has to act against her. And she knows full well that he's gonna do that. That is also part of the story is that when she made that decision she- it was in- with her eyes wide open. She knew what it was going to mean. That he was coming for her. Which is the reason why she had the [[Colonial Press|Press]] on board, was she wanted it to be public. She didn't- she wanted people to know what was really at stake.
This storyline of ''Galactica'' starting to move toward deposing the President and staging a military coups is something that had been on the drawing board from the beginning. My initial story proposals for the [[Season 1 (2004-05|first season]] as contained in the [[Series bible|bible]] and some other documents I wrote for the network, I always saw, initially, that the arc of the two characters of Laura and [[William Adama|Adama]] was going to be, ok you think at first that she's dove and he's the hawk, but in truth she's capable of far tougher things than he is capable of and he's much more civil libertarian-minded, for lack of a better phrase, than she is. That the each of them has elements of both hawk and dove and that they're driven by character things not- they're not just archetypes that you push around. He's not always gonna do the military thing. She's not always gonna do the soft and touchy-feely thing. And that the arc for the season initially was that Laura was gonna go too far. Laura was gonna get caught up in the need to maintain security in a sit- in a Flee- in a situations such as this and that would force her to crackdown harder and harder on dissent and she would winnow away basic freedoms one by one. Adama was gonna be essentially the one tasked to carry out those orders. He was gonna become more, and more, and more uncomfortable with it as the season went on. And ultimately she would go too far and he would step in and he would institute a coups and by the end of season on she was gonna be in jail. He would have taken over as the military commander and declared [[w:martial law|martial law]]. Which is exactly what neither of them wanted at the beginning. That's still where we end up. I mean, the journey along the way changed. Laura didn't really crackdown so much as she did was show teeth, show an ability to be pragmatic, show a willingness to cut- to stab [[Wallace Gray|her friend]] in the back, to shove a [[Leoben Conoy|Cylon]] out an airlock. You started to realize that she's capable of taking strong measures. But we didn't have to paint her quite so starkly as I was thinking initially, as being a badass and really going after people. It also didn't fit with [[Mary McDonnel|Mary]]'s portrayal of Laura. So what did happen is you started to see that she's perfectly capable of doing what she thinks need to be done if she thinks she's right. She's gonna do it. And the more funda- the fundamental agreement of the civilian and the military leadership in [[The Fleet (RDM)|the Fleet]] wa- seemed like the right place to play the conflict. That essentially if she breaks the vow she made in the [[miniseries]], the vow to let him have control over military decisions, that that would be the point where he would step in. He- you don't break your word to Adama. You just don't. And she did. And his a- his reaction to that is resolute and with a bit of sadness. I don't think he- he definitely doesn't want it. He doesn't want the command of the Fleet. He doesn't want to have to deal with the civilians. He doesn't want to do any of these things. But she broke her word to him. She got- she got [[Kara Thrace]], of all people, to turn against him and take a military asset away from the ''Galactica'' at the very moment that they were working on a plan to attack a Cylo- I mean. The reas- there's just so many reasons. He had to do it. He has to act against her. And she knows full well that he's gonna do that. That is also part of the story is that when she made that decision she- it was in- with her eyes wide open. She knew what it was going to mean. That he was coming for her. Which is the reason why she had the [[Colonial Press|Press]] on board, was she wanted it to be public. She didn't- she wanted people to know what was really at stake.


== [http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/113/bsg_ep113_3of5.mp3 Act 2] ==
== [http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/113/bsg_ep113_3of5.mp3 Act 2] ==

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