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Editing Podcast:The Battlestar Roundtable

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'''Terry''':  It's self-preservation
'''Terry''':  It's self-preservation


 
'''RDM''':  ...when I was looking at translating the original show.  The traitor was fundamental to the idea of what that show was.  And when I was developing "Galactica", I was saying, OK, take this show and develop it.  Not just throw everything out.  OK, fundamental to that show was the idea that the human race was betrayed by someone from within.  It wasn't just, you know, a bolt from the blue.  There was somebody within mankind that actually helped this to happen.  And why would you do that?  Why would you ever do that?  And I couldn't imagine any reason why he would ever do that.  And it had to be something that he didn't realize he was doing, but he did, and he's still culpable for it, that basically he is responsible for the things that happened in some way, without him ever realizing it but because of an outgrowth of his own weaknesses as a human being, because he is the most human of all the characters in the show.  And it was through this kind of like "oh my G-d, what have I f_king done?  Really?  Oh!  I'd better call my lawyer!"  There's an instinctive pullback...
'''RDM''':  ...when I was looking at translating the original show.  The traitor was fundamental to the idea of what that show was.  And when I was developing "Galactica", I was saying, OK, take this show and develop it.  Not just throw everything out.  OK, fundamental to that show was the idea that the human race was betrayed by someone from within.  It wasn't just, you know, a bolt from the blue.  There was somebody within mankind that actually helped this to happen.  And why would you do that?  Why would you ever do that?  And I couldn't imagine any reason why he would ever do that.  And it had to be something that he didn't realize he was doing, but he did, that he's still culpable for, that basically he is responsible for the things that happened in some way, without him ever realizing it but because of an outgrowth of his own weaknesses as a human being, because he is the most human of all the characters in the show.  And it was through this kind of like "oh my G-d, what have I just f_king done?  Really?  Oh!  I'd better call my lawyer!"  There's an instinctive pullback...
 
[00:49:30]
 
'''Bamber''' or '''Callis'''?:  But the amazing thing is, that three seasons deep, that's still the case.
 
'''RDM''':  That's the character.
 
'''Bamber''':  That I, starting out, thought, well, when is Baltar going to become Baltar?  It's going to be like "the making of..."  And that moment has almost come many times. 
 
'''RDM''':  The show's been about "how close can I take you to that point?"
 
'''Bamber''' or '''Callis'''?:  And the beginning of Season 3 is as close as it will ever get, probably.
 
'''RDM''':  I've always thought about, I wanted to take Baltar as far as I possibly could to the point where you just could never tolerate him again and see if I could always bring him back...
 
'''Bamber''':  Having gone through the first few episodes of Season 3, when you're living them in the moment, you think this man is now irredeemable.  Because everyone's seen those episodes now.  Irredeemable.  And, well, I won't elaborate about what I'm doing right now, but...
 
'''RDM''':  It's something different...
 
'''Bamber''':  But he still didn't fundamentally, black on white, cross that line.  And you have created a show where there is no bad character.
 
'''Callis''':  Where people cross that line every single episode...
 
'''Bamber''': Everyone crosses that line...
 
'''RDM''':  They do it as human beings.
 
'''Bamber''':  But you haven't vilified, given anyone "you're the bad guy" in this show.  There's no evil person in the show.  Everyone has the potential for good and evil.
Everyone has the potential for all the gamut of human responses...
 
'''RDM''':  Because I think that that's true.  And I think it's easier to write the show on some level it's not really...
 
'''Bamber''':  But you must have had pressure from networks and saying "Come on, who's bad and who's good..."  I'm asking you as the good guy, why...
 
'''RDM''':  There's always a general pressure to let the good guys win and the bad guys be defeated.
 
'''Callis''':  Is that a network thing?  Or is that in our psyches?
 
'''RDM''':  It's just a general thing.  Anybody that gives me notes...when I get notes from anybody who's not within the confines of a writers' room, that means when I was coming up through the ranks, before I was a head writer, I never got notes from someone who wasn't a writer that didn't ultimately have a lot to do with basically making it more traditional and basically saying, "you know what?  We want to feel good when the hero triumphs.  And we don't want to sort of, why are we celebrating the bad guys?"
 
'''Terry''':  How many movies do we rewrite because the bad guy doesn't get his in the end?
 
<crosstalk>
 
'''RDM''':  It's just a reflection of any kind of corporate structure.  It tends to go to certain conservative impulses and conservative in terms of storytelling is to make it a little more traditional, a little safer, make it something that's a little more accessible so generally, good executives and bad, there's a general kind of push to make it a little more acceptable.  Now some executives ride that pretty far back and don't give you that impulse very much.  But they will give it to you every once in a while.  And then bad executives just say it to you every f-king phone call, and you want to rip their throats out.  But it's in the nature of the system to sort of do that, to try to make it a little more familiar, because you know I have to sell this.  And people like the familiar.
 
'''Sheppard'''?:  Don't you find that it's a fascinating thing because you've created a microcosm of humanity.  Because with the 30- or 40-thousand people that are left, the stakes are so high in every single thing that happens, that the crossing of the line becomes something that would happen under circumstances that aren't normally -- that humanity is not normally subject to.
 
[00:53:20]
 
 
'''RDM''':  I'm continually fascinated with the aspect of the show that talks about how truly reduced the human population is.  And that they make decisions for 50-thousand people (or 40- or whatever it is now) that they would not make for four billion.  The Laura Roslin "I'm going to ban abortion" decision is born of that idea.  Of, OK, what is the specific response to this circumstance that they're going to make.  And that there's like the real interest you can see how the lines have become and how they get blurred and my whole rationale for the course of the first season, even though they didn't quite go down this road, is, in the bible if you've read the bible, it was, into the first season Adama's going to put Laura in jail.  He's going to institute a military coup.  Because Laura is cracking down on the Fleet to the point where he's had to step in.  And I was fascinated from the beginning with the idea that in this circumstance, people are going to behave differently on some level.  They're going to go to ground a little bit more and they're going to get really sort of primal and sort of make moves, and the show's going to be about whether those moves are appropriate and what that means.  What does it mean as a people if you make those moves, if you do these things, how does it affect who you are.
 
'''Callis''':  I think, myself, that that's the big revelation of our series and our show.  In the sense that looking at the original, that never had any, um, any worry or dramatization between the military and the civilian.  And look at it...
 
'''RDM''':  Well, they did...
 
<crosstalk>
 
'''Callis''':  Look at it, they had the Quorum of Twelve, they were all flunkies... and there was Baltar who was part of it who at that time, everything you did you knew that it was for the Cylons and the Cylon...
 
'''RDM''':  The old show had the superstructure that was interesting.  It was interesting that there was a civilian authority that was in opposition to Adama.  They just never quite ... But they had the structure.
 
[00:55:19]


==Hour Two==
==Hour Two==

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