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{{Podcast Data
{{podcast|author=Steelviper|emailAuthor2=|suffix=|additionalCopyright=|season=2|episode=L}}
|special=
|season=2
|episode=16
|download link= http://media.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/216/bsg_ep216_FULL.mp3
|local=
|posted date=
|transcribed by= [[User:Steelviper|Steelviper]]
|verified by= [[User:strangefreeworld|strangefreeworld]]<br/>[[User:Shane|Shane]]
|length=
|finished= Y
|verified= Y
|scotch=
|smokes=
|wordoftheweek=
|rdm= Y
|mrsron=
}}


==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/216/bsg_ep216_1of5.mp3 Teaser]==
==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/216/bsg_ep216_1of5.mp3 Teaser]==


Hello, and welcome to the podcast of episode sixteen, I believe, this is now ep- "[[Sacrifice]]". [[Season 2 (2005-06)|Season two]]. I'm [[Ronald D. Moore]], executive producer and developer of the new [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|Battlestar Galactica series]]. This is also an episode I had certain issues with. It's not my favorite episode of the season. I don't openly dislike it, though, you may be relieved to know, like I did openly dislike "[[Black Market]]" a couple of weeks ago. My problem with "Black Market" was that I felt that it- ultimately fell short of what the show is about in terms of what type of story we were trying to tell and that ultimately it was just too conventional- for what we we're- what I think the show does best. This- this- this show, I think, works in parts. I think it has a lot of interesting ideas in it. I think there's specific places where I think we stumble and don't quite deliver on all- on all that the show can be, and I'll try to identify those as we go through. But o- overall I think this show works, and there's things about it that I think are quite nice. Maybe a word is- is worth mentioning here about just the nature of these podcasts. I was unaware about how widely these podcasts are listened to within the- the show itself. A lot of people that work on the show do listen to these podcasts, as well as executives, and so on, and it's worth reiterating that flaws and things that I try to point out in these episodes, things that I'm not satisfied with or are not happy with, ultimately re- redown to me. I'm the- I'm the showrunner. (Chuckles.) I'm the executive producer. A lot of these things are decisions I either made myself or decisions I was aware of and signed off on, so none of this is really meant as criticism to my- to my team, who I value immensely.  
Hello, and welcome to the podcast of episode sixteen, I believe, this is now ep- "[[Sacrifice]]". [[Season 2 (2005-06)|Season two]]. I'm [[Ronald D. Moore]], executive producer and developer of the new [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|Battlestar Galactica series]]. This is also an episode I had certain issues with. It's not my favorite episode of the season. I don't openly dislike it, though, you may be relieved to know, like I did openly dislike "[[Black Market]]" a couple of weeks ago. My problem with "Black Market" was that I felt that it- ultimately fell short of what the show is about in terms of what type of story we were trying to tell and that ultimately it was just to conventional- for what we we're- what I think the show does best. This- this- this show, I think, works in parts. I think it has a lot of interesting ideas in it. I think there's specific places where I think we stumble and don't quite deliver on all- on all that the show can be, and I'll try to identify those as we go through. But o- overall I think this show works, and there's things about it that I think are quite nice. Maybe a word is- is worth mentioning here about just the nature of these podcasts. I was unaware about how widely these podcasts are listened to within the- the show itself. A lot of people that work on the show do listen to these podcasts, as well as executives, and so on, and it's worth reiterating that flaws and things that I try to point out in these episodes, things that I'm not satisfied with or are not happy with, ultimately re- redown to me. I'm the- I'm the showrunner. (Chuckles.) I'm the executive producer. A lot of these things are decisions I either made myself or decisions I was aware of and signed off on, so none of this is really meant as criticism to my- to my team, who I value immensely.  


Okay. Here in the open. In the scripted version and in the original cut we opened this sequence with an open scene. That is, a scene that takes you someplace other than what the main characters and you're just starting in mid-story, and that was the sequence, this sequence, right here that you're watching with [[Sesha Abinell|Sesha]]'s [[Ray Abinell|husband]]. It opened with him working in that corridor, finishing up some repair duty, getting on the phone, telling his wife that he was going to be home very soon, and then suddenly the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylon]] attack breaks out and he's- the ship, the [[Greenleaf|freighter]] is damage and he's pulled out into space. It di- it wasn't that satisfying an opening, and I think it's always been a problematic aspect of this particular episode for, for again, what are script reasons. Here's a guy who we kill in the opening moments who we have no- no connection to and the only thing that really matters about him is that he's her husband, in that it drives her obsession and radicalization through the course of the episode. But, the- the pro- it doesn't quite work because it happens so quickly, you don't know who he is, you don't really care, then he's gone, and then we're- we're building a lot on your identi- identification with her emotional trauma, trying to make that the basis for what drives her into taking these extreme actions. And it doesn't quite work. We- we salvage it a little bit by concentrating more on [[Dana Delany|Dana]] in those opening shots where you're really more with her and you realize that she has a backstory, that somebody mattered to her, that died, but you're really a little bit more with that character than you are with him. And that helps a little bit. It's still not a perfect- a perfect solution. We probably should have tried to work in a different- either a different motivation for her or really gotten a little bit more in depth to what that relationship was about, made us care a little bit more for- to what she lost.  
Okay. Here in the open. In the scripted version and in the original cut we opened this sequence with an open scene. That is, a scene that takes you someplace other than what the main characters and you're just starting in mid-story, and that was the sequence, this sequence, right here that you're watching with [[Sesha Abinell|Sesha]]'s [[Ray Abinell|husband]]. It opened with him working in that corridor, finishing up some repair duty, getting on the phone, telling his wife that he was going to be home very soon, and then suddenly the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylon]] attack breaks out and he's- the ship, the [[Greenleaf|freighter]] is damage and he's pulled out into space. It di- it wasn't that satisfying an opening, and I think it's always been a problematic aspect of this particular episode for, for again, what are script reasons. Here's a guy who we kill in the opening moments who we have no- no connection to and the only thing that really matters about him is that he's her husband, in that it drives her obsession and radicalization through the course of the episode. But, the- the pro- it doesn't quite work because it happens so quickly, you don't know who he is, you don't really care, then he's gone, and then we're- we're building a lot on your identi- identification with her emotional trauma, trying to make that the basis for what drives her into taking these extreme actions. And it doesn't quite work. We- we salvage it a little bit by concentrating more on [[Dana Delany|Dana]] in those opening shots where you're really more with her and you realize that she has a backstory, that somebody mattered to her, that died, but you're really a little bit more with that character than you are with him. And that helps a little bit. It's still not a perfect- a perfect solution. We probably should have tried to work in a different- either a different motivation for her or really gotten a little bit more in depth to what that relationship was about, made us care a little bit more for- to what she lost.  
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==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/216/bsg_ep216_3of5.mp3 Act 2]==
==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/216/bsg_ep216_3of5.mp3 Act 2]==


[[David Eick]] is actually responsible for getting [[Dana Delany|Dana]] on the show. He knew Dana personally and had approached her- approached her actually, I think, last season and started talking to her about doing an appearance on the show and then this season sh- we managed to to- to actually work out her schedule and ours and get her interested in material, and she agreed to do it, which was a delight. I'm just so happy that we had her on the show. It was a thrill to meet her. I'd been a fan of hers- her work for many  years. "[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094433/ China Beach]", obviously. She was also fantastic in a- in a- in a movie called "[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108358/ Tombstone]" which is one of my personal favorites where i just think she is ravishing and just charming and amazing and all this. And when this show was beeing shot- when this particular episode was being shot my children had just discovered a film called, oh shoot, now I'm going to blank on the name of the stupid film. It's the film where Dan- it's a film about the little girl that- her and her father, who is played by [https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001099/ Jeff Daniels], construct a lighter than air- lighter than air- a small aircraft, and they guide these Canadian Geese south from Canada on to do a migration. What is the name of that movie? Well, you'll all figure it out. [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0116329/ Go look it up online]. But she- Dana Delany is in that movie as the mother, and while this episode was being film my kids were becoming obsessed with that movie, watching it over and over again. So I was watching Dana dailies and watching- and then she was also, like, on this other movie at home.
[[David Eick]] is actually responsible for getting [[Dana Delany|Dana]] on the show. He knew Dana personally and had approached her- approached her actually, I think, last season and started talking to her about doing an appearance on the show and then this season sh- we managed to to- to actually work out her schedule and ours and get her interested in material, and she agreed to do it, which was a delight. I'm just so happy that we had her on the show. It was a thrill to meet her. I'd been a fan of hers- her work for many  years. "[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094433/ China Beach]", obviously. She was also fantastic in a- in a- in a movie called "[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108358/ Tombstone]" which is one of my personal favorites where i just think she is ravishing and just charming and amazing and all this. And when this show was beeing shot- when this particular episode was being shot my children had just discovered a film called, oh shoot, now I'm going to blank on the name of the stupid film. It's the film where Dan- it's a film about the little girl that- her and her father, who is played by [http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0001099/ Jeff Daniels], construct a lighter than air- lighter than air- a small aircraft, and they guide these Canadian Geese south from Canada on to do a migration. What is the name of that movie? Well, you'll all figure it out. [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0116329/ Go look it up online]. But she- Dana Delany is in that movie as the mother, and while this episode was being film my kids were becoming obsessed with that movie, watching it over and over again. So I was watching Dana dailies and watching- and then she was also, like, on this other movie at home.


This whole subplot, or not even subplot, this whole little thing here with [[Lee Adama|Lee]] and the O<sub>2</sub> sensor is a classic bit of Trek-like [[technobabble]] that we tried to keep to a bare minimum. It's- it's a notion that is- is and again this is an imperfect piece in the show. The idea being that, okay, they've closed the pressure door to the- to the bar. If anyone's going to have a hope of getting inside that pressure door, without blowing it up and potentially killing everyone inside, what they need to do is get that pressure door opened. And so Lee comes up with a method of having them open the door himself, which is, he takes- he takes the drink, he puts the- has dry ice in in it. The CO<sub>2</sub> triggers the sensor and they think that they're losing oxygen. That's- it's kind of okay. It doesn't make entirely a lot of sense but it kind of works as you go through it.
This whole subplot, or not even subplot, this whole little thing here with [[Lee Adama|Lee]] and the O<sub>2</sub> sensor is a classic bit of Trek-like [[technobabble]] that we tried to keep to a bare minimum. It's- it's a notion that is- is and again this is an imperfect piece in the show. The idea being that, okay, they've closed the pressure door to the- to the bar. If anyone's going to have a hope of getting inside that pressure door, without blowing it up and potentially killing everyone inside, what they need to do is get that pressure door opened. And so Lee comes up with a method of having them open the door himself, which is, he takes- he takes the drink, he puts the- has dry ice in in it. The CO<sub>2</sub> triggers the sensor and they think that they're losing oxygen. That's- it's kind of okay. It doesn't make entirely a lot of sense but it kind of works as you go through it.
Line 93: Line 76:


And then back to [[Sharon Valerii (Caprica copy)|Sharon]]. And, yet, what is Sharon's motivation? What is she doing? What does she want? Can we trust her? Can we not? I think it's a- I'm glad that we end the episode on her 'cause it goes back to the- the- those fundamental questions the whole episode's predicated on. The episode is all about Sharon in some- in some measure because even though she's off camera for most of it all the events are driven by- by her presence and what's she's about. So that is "[[Sacrifice]]". Like I said, a decent episode. Not- not my favorite but I don't think a disaster. Next week's episode is "[[The Captain's Hand]]" which I- is very cool and very interesting and I - I think there's a lot of- going to be a lot of controversial things in "Captain's Hand" that I think are intriguing for the series and I will talk to you next, next week. Thank you very much, and goodnight.
And then back to [[Sharon Valerii (Caprica copy)|Sharon]]. And, yet, what is Sharon's motivation? What is she doing? What does she want? Can we trust her? Can we not? I think it's a- I'm glad that we end the episode on her 'cause it goes back to the- the- those fundamental questions the whole episode's predicated on. The episode is all about Sharon in some- in some measure because even though she's off camera for most of it all the events are driven by- by her presence and what's she's about. So that is "[[Sacrifice]]". Like I said, a decent episode. Not- not my favorite but I don't think a disaster. Next week's episode is "[[The Captain's Hand]]" which I- is very cool and very interesting and I - I think there's a lot of- going to be a lot of controversial things in "Captain's Hand" that I think are intriguing for the series and I will talk to you next, next week. Thank you very much, and goodnight.
{{Podcast list (RDM season 2)}}

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