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Editing Podcast:The Hand of God

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==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/110/bsg_ep110_3of5.mp3 Act 2]==
==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/110/bsg_ep110_3of5.mp3 Act 2]==


Two ships going at each other - I'll come back to the I'm sure intriguing discussion of graphics and tactics in a moment.  This scene is one of my favorites in the show and one of my favorites in the series.  I love it for several reasons - there's the actors involved, who I adore, there's the material of it, and there's the continuity of it.  The continuity element was something that is very important to me in the series; that is to maintain a sense of reality from show to show to say that events that happen in one show impact things that happen in the other show that we don't essentially push the reset button at the end of the episode and everybody's back exactly the way they were.  On ''[[Galactica (RDM)|Galactica]]'', we don't have a magical sickbay which sort of wipes away all your wounds and makes everything - makes your body just like it was at the beginning of the show.  People have -- people suffer, people go through surgery, people have to go through rehab, like [[Kara Thrace|Starbuck]] does.  And that the notion that Starbuck would sustain such a terrible knee injury that she - that actually, in her backstory, she had injured it once already - I don't know if we've ever said this in the series yet, but part of Starbuck's backstory is that she was a [[pyramid (RDM)|pyramid]] player - which is a physical game - again an homage to the original - it came to sort of a racketball/handball/basketball type game we haven't seen yet.  She wanted to be a pyramid player, she blew out her knee, was not then - basically could not be scouted by the pros, her career was over or so she thought, and so she decided to become a Viper pilot.  Sorry to back up - she was in the Academy - she had joined the Colonial Fleet Academy on some kind of athletic scholarship primarily to play pyramid and she saw it as a means to an ends when she was there she blew out her knee and had to find other employment and when she got in the cockpit or flew for the first time she realized she had found her true calling.  In any case, someone with that kind of backstory who suffers another injury shouldn't just get up and walk away from it and I wanted to play out the ramifications and the impacts of that over the course of many episodes, and then the great thing was in this episode it gave us a chance to make her stay '''behind''' - make our best pilot stay behind when we have the big 'Big Mac' mission to go on.
Two ships going at each other - I'll come back to the I'm sure intriguing discussion of graphics and tactics in a moment.  This scene is one of my favorites in the show and one of my favorites in the series.  I love it for several reasons - there's the actors involved, who I adore, there's the material of it, and there's the continuity of it.  The continuity element was something that is very important to me in the series; that is to maintain a sense of reality from show to show to say that events that happen in one show impact things that happen in the other show that we don't essentially push the reset button at the end of the episode and everybody's back exactly the way they were.  On ''[[Galactica (RDM)|Galactica]]'', we don't have a magical sickbay which sort of wipes away all your wounds and makes everything - makes your body just like it was at the beginning of the show.  People have -- people suffer, people go through surgery, people have to go through rehab, like [[Kara Thrace|Starbuck]] does.  And that the notion that Starbuck would sustain such a terrible knee injury that she - that actually, in her backstory, she had injured it once already - I don't know if we've ever said this in the series yet, but part of Starbuck's backstory is that she was a [[pyramid (RDM)|pyramid]] player - which is a physical game - again an homage to the original - it came to sort of a racketball/handball/basketball type game we haven't seen yet.  She wanted to be a pyramid player, she blew out her knee, was not then - basically could not be scouted by the pros, her career was over or so she thought, and so she decided to become a [[Viper (RDM)|Viper]] pilot.  Sorry to back up - she was in the Academy - she had joined the Colonial Fleet Academy on some kind of athletic scholarship primarily to play pyramid and she saw it as a means to an ends when she was there she blew out her knee and had to find other employment and when she got in the cockpit or flew for the first time she realized she had found her true calling.  In any case, someone with that kind of backstory who suffers another injury shouldn't just get up and walk away from it and I wanted to play out the ramifications and the impacts of that over the course of many episodes, and then the great thing was in this episode it gave us a chance to make her stay '''behind''' - make our best pilot stay behind when we have the big 'Big Mac' mission to go on.


Which gives us this lovely scene between Starbuck and [[Lee Adama|Apollo]] where Starbuck calls her on the fact that she doesn't think he's up to the mission.  Which I thought was really interesting; it wasn't just sort of the easy surface 'Attaboy, you can do it without me' and Lee saying 'Oh, come on, I'm not up to you and I wish you were with us' and each of them sort of golly-geeing the other one and '''holding their fears deep inside''' which is sort of the standard way you do these scenes.  I '''like''' the fact that they're at each other again, that she really doesn't think he's up to it.  That's what comes through.  And that he's pissed about it, and he doesn't like it, he thinks he is up to it.  Or at least wants a chance to prove it.  I like the conflict of the two characters more than I like the sort of false and easy going camaraderie that is so often the case in these shows.
Which gives us this lovely scene between Starbuck and [[Lee Adama|Apollo]] where Starbuck calls her on the fact that she doesn't think he's up to the mission.  Which I thought was really interesting; it wasn't just sort of the easy surface 'Attaboy, you can do it without me' and Lee saying 'Oh, come on, I'm not up to you and I wish you were with us' and each of them sort of golly-geeing the other one and '''holding their fears deep inside''' which is sort of the standard way you do these scenes.  I '''like''' the fact that they're at each other again, that she really doesn't think he's up to it.  That's what comes through.  And that he's pissed about it, and he doesn't like it, he thinks he is up to it.  Or at least wants a chance to prove it.  I like the conflict of the two characters more than I like the sort of false and easy going comraderie that is so often the case in these shows.


Cylon occupied [[Caprica (RDM)|Caprica]] - Origin- the only big change to happen in this show, really, and its development, really - originally this show was going - was slated to be episode 8 -excuse me, it was slated to be episode 9 - and it became episode 10.  At the last minute I decided to split the two episodes in production order because I realized that the end of Flesh and Bone - where [[Leoben Conoy|Leoben]] whispers into [[Laura Roslin|Laura Roslin's]] ear that (whispers) '[[William Adama|Adama]] is a Cylon' - was the perfect way to springboard us into the episode that was all about paranoia and all about who's a Cylon and could Adama be a Cylon?  Which became "[[Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down]]".  So at the last minute, I pulled a fast one and sent everybody scrambling to sort of switch the order so that it could be episode ten, and that Tigh Me Up could be episode 9.  The only thing that then had to change substantially in the two episodes was this Cylon occupied Caprica story.  These were the scenes that were originally targeted to be in "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down" and then the scenes that you saw in "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down" - the scenes of them running through the sewers and [[Number Five|Doral]] and [[Number Six|Six]] walking down into the vast underground chamber - all those little pieces were originally going to be in "Hand of God", because would've been in episode 9.  And these sequences would have all been in episode 10.
[[Cylons (RDM)|Cylon]] occupied [[The Twelve Colonies (RDM)#Caprica|Caprica]] - Origin- the only big change to happen in this show, really, and its development, really - originally this show was going - was slated to be episode 8 -excuse me, it was slated to be episode 9 - and it became episode 10.  At the last minute I decided to split the two episodes in production order because I realized that the end of Flesh and Bone - where [[Leoben Conoy|Leoben]] whispers into [[Laura Roslin|Laura Roslin's]] ear that (whispers) '[[William Adama|Adama]] is a Cylon' - was the perfect way to springboard us into the episode that was all about paranoia and all about who's a Cylon and could Adama be a Cylon?  Which became "[[Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down]]".  So at the last minute, I pulled a fast one and sent everybody scrambling to sort of switch the order so that it could be episode ten, and that Tigh Me Up could be episode 9.  The only thing that then had to change substantially in the two episodes was this Cylon occupied Caprica story.  These were the scenes that were originally targeted to be in "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down" and then the scenes that you saw in "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down" - the scenes of them running through the sewers and [[Number Five|Doral]] and [[Number Six|Six]] walking down into the vast underground chamber - all those little pieces were originally going to be in "[[The Hand of God (RDM)|Hand of God]]", because would've been in episode 9.  And these sequences would have all been in episode 10.


This - in this story, this is maybe the first hint '''that maybe something is up with Sharon''', in case you haven't been paying attention. [[Karl Agathon|Helo]] doesn't see it because hey, he wasn't looking at the television monitor like you were.  And this story is again is developing slowly over time, we've taken our time with it all season long. I think it's been a bit of a challenge to the traditional audience because they're very used to these episodes being -particularly science fiction in particular as being very standalone, very episodic, you don't have to see last week in order to understand this week.  And I've been very pleased so far with the response of the audience and ratings - that the audience is willing to be patient, they are willing to invest themselves in a sci-fi show that asks its audience to remember things that happened, or if they missed last week's episode to at least take the leap of faith and get into it and not worry about the fact that they may have missed something.
This - in this story, this is maybe the first hint '''that maybe something is up with Sharon''', in case you haven't been paying attention. [[Karl Agathon|Helo]] doesn't see it because hey, he wasn't looking at the television monitor like you were.  And this story is again is developing slowly over time, we've taken our time with it all season long. I think it's been a bit of a challenge to the traditional audience because they're very used to these episodes being -particularly science fiction in particular as being very standalone, very episodic, you don't have to see last week in order to understand this week.  And I've been very pleased so far with the response of the audience and ratings - that the audience is willing to be patient, they are willing to invest themselves in a sci-fi show that asks its audience to remember things that happened, or if they missed last week's episode to at least take the leap of faith and get into it and not worry about the fact that they may have missed something.


This scene is an interesting scene between Adama and Lee.  It's been interesting to sort of watch the evolution of their father/son dynamic since the [[Miniseries]] where it began -for those of you have seen the miniseries - and I'm sure all of you have - in the original miniseries, Lee has a huge chip on his shoulder vis-a-vis his father.  His father has tremendous feelings of guilt and anger of his own - both, both relating to -- both of their feelings relating to the death of Adama's other son, [[Zak Adama|Zak]].  And it took us a while to sort of move the relationship past that - in many ways, the death of Zak and the hard feelings between father and son over that really colored and defined their relationship for quite some time. What's good about this is that it's really a separate idea; it's really about Adama's belief or non-belief in his son -- and it's -- it's again, it's Lee realizing what the people around him think of him, which I think is an interesting way of going at this - that here's this handsome, heroic lead pilot character in the drama, who starts to realize that the people around him - his own father, his best friend - don't really think he's up to snuff, that his dad doesn't - thinks that he might not come back and gives him a lucky charm (laugh) to guide him back and to get him to kind of spunk him up and that Starbuck has to stand in rooms and sort of walk him through all the tactics.  And it kinda -  I think it's a weight that the character carries with him. And it's the determination - (right here) it's the determination in Lee that I think is most telling.  He's tenacious, he is not somebody who gives up easily and I think that in probably throughout his life I think many people have underestimated Lee Adama.
This scene is an interesting scene between Adama and Lee.  It's been interesting to sort of watch the evolution of their father/son dynamic since the [[miniseries]] where it began -for those of you have seen the miniseries - and I'm sure all of you have - in the original miniseries, Lee has a huge chip on his shoulder vis-a-vis his father.  His father has tremendous feelings of guilt and anger of his own - both, both relating to -- both of their feelings relating to the death of Adama's other son, [[Zak Adama|Zak]].  And it took us a while to sort of move the relationship past that - in many ways, the death of Zak and the hard feelings between father and son over that really colored and defined their relationship for quite some time. What's good about this is that it's really a separate idea; it's really about Adama's belief or non-belief in his son -- and it's -- it's again, it's Lee realizing what the people around him think of him, which I think is an interesting way of going at this - that here's this handsome, heroic lead pilot character in the drama, who starts to realize that the people around him - his own father, his best friend - don't really think he's up to snuff, that his dad doesn't - thinks that he might not come back and gives him a lucky charm (laugh) to guide him back and to get him to kind of spunk him up and that Starbuck has to stand in rooms and sort of walk him through all the tactics.  And it kinda -  I think it's a weight that the character carries with him. And it's the determination - (right here) it's the determination in Lee that I think is most telling.  He's tenacious, he is not somebody who gives up easily and I think that in probably throughout his life I think many people have underestimated Lee Adama.


==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/110/bsg_ep110_4of5.mp3 Act 3]==
==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/110/bsg_ep110_4of5.mp3 Act 3]==

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