Editing Podcast:The Hand of God
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To get back to the plot here for a second - [[Crashdown]] and [[Number Eight|Sharon]] are out hunting for [[Tylium]] fuel. Tylium fuel is lifted directly from the [[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)|original Battlestar Galactica series]]. Unlike [[Memoryalpha:Star Trek: The Next Generation|Star Trek]] and other futuristic sort of space operas, which sort of posit in Star Trek's case the [[Memoryalpha:USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D)|''Enterprise'']] runs on matter/antimatter engines and there are books and reams of material and technical data that you can find that tell you exactly how the Enterprise engines work but essentially it's like this - the collision of matter and antimatter creates such an enormous release of energy that it drives the ''Enterprise'' forward. | To get back to the plot here for a second - [[Crashdown]] and [[Number Eight|Sharon]] are out hunting for [[Tylium]] fuel. Tylium fuel is lifted directly from the [[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)|original Battlestar Galactica series]]. Unlike [[Memoryalpha:Star Trek: The Next Generation|Star Trek]] and other futuristic sort of space operas, which sort of posit in Star Trek's case the [[Memoryalpha:USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D)|''Enterprise'']] runs on matter/antimatter engines and there are books and reams of material and technical data that you can find that tell you exactly how the Enterprise engines work but essentially it's like this - the collision of matter and antimatter creates such an enormous release of energy that it drives the ''Enterprise'' forward. | ||
The original Battlestar Galactica simply said that they had fuel. It was something called tylium fuel. And you had to find it, you had to refine it, and you had to put it in your gas tank to go. I liked that idea; I thought it was - it fit well within the sort of the retro-technology point of view that I was taking in this version of the series. So I kept it as opposed to simply giving the [[The Twelve Colonies | The original Battlestar Galactica simply said that they had fuel. It was something called tylium fuel. And you had to find it, you had to refine it, and you had to put it in your gas tank to go. I liked that idea; I thought it was - it fit well within the sort of the retro-technology point of view that I was taking in this version of the series. So I kept it as opposed to simply giving the [[The Twelve Colonies (RDM)|Colonials]] and the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] some vers - some variant of nuclear energy or again matter/antimatter or some out there sounding sort of space notions of what would drive these ships. Fuel is a good thing. I think it's a limitation; it's something that you can - you can run out of periodically, your supplies can be threatened, it gives you a need to go do things, ships have to be refueled; it's just sort of an interesting bit of texture in the series and it's sort of another way we tend to depart from what sort of has become the contemporary accepted conventions of science fiction. I think I've spoken about this sequence in previous podcasts but once again this is our upcoming shots of tonight's episode which is really an homage to [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072564/ Space: 1999]. And I will save the rest of my comments back to the show to the other side of the main title. | ||
==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/110/bsg_ep110_2of5.mp3 Act 1]== | ==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/110/bsg_ep110_2of5.mp3 Act 1]== | ||
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==[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]== | ||
And it's raining on the hangar deck - '''no''' it's not, we're back on [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylon]]-occupied [[The Twelve Colonies | And it's raining on the hangar deck - '''no''' it's not, we're back on [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylon]]-occupied [[The Twelve Colonies (RDM)#Caprica|Caprica]]. One of the things that became troublesome, of course, was the worry that the audience was going to get confused about where was [[Number Eight|Sharon]]? Which is Sharon? Why is Sharon on the planet? Why is she also on the [[Galactica type battlestar|battlestar]]? There were countless, countless, countless discussions of this idea - how to differentiate the two and the audience confusion factor was always something that was like uppermost in a lot of executive's minds. And, fortunately we overcame that and I think we split the difference and we were able to sort of compromise in a lot of areas that it was ok to compromise in to spell out the difference. This comes up just because she's beaten and sort of had some scarring going on which started to help differenterate-differentiate the two visually to the audience, which is always the sort of the fundamental idea. It's like OK at a glance you want to know this is not the same Sharon that you're watching back on the [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']]. Even if you don't know all the reasons why. And, I guess they're going to run and get on a horse and fly away. No they're not. | ||
So here we go with the plan. I like that we didn't tell you everything that goes on in the tactical plan, that there are hidden secrets within it, some things that are hidden even from [[Laura Roslin|the President]], which I think dramatically is interesting because it gives the audience a sense of fun and a sense of excitement and a sense that something could change at any moment. It's a bit of a trick, I mean, it's a writer's device to sort of lead you down a certain path; we've essentially told you what the plan was in very general terms, without spelling too much of it out, and now here you are, you're going to watch it unfold and you're expecting the Cylons to do something unexpected, you're expecting that the Cylons will pull something at the last minute, that they will act in a way that we don't anticipate, and you're--you the audience, are anticipating that in turn, and you're kind of looking forward to it and seeing how it happens. Now, what we did on top of that in this episode was then to also to bury the card of what will ''Galactica'' - what piece of the ''Galactica'' plan has not been conveyed to you the audience that either anticipates this Cylon unexpected maneuver or outmaneuvers it at the last minute. All of this is very conceptual and I'm not even sure if it is even remotely interesting to most of you in the audience. But, in essence, it's a way of constructing these dramatic scenes in such a way (coughs) that just as you feel familiar with where it's going - and you know as an audience member that certain twists are on the horizon - you still can enjoy it because we still have some legitimate surprises to come out later. | So here we go with the plan. I like that we didn't tell you everything that goes on in the tactical plan, that there are hidden secrets within it, some things that are hidden even from [[Laura Roslin|the President]], which I think dramatically is interesting because it gives the audience a sense of fun and a sense of excitement and a sense that something could change at any moment. It's a bit of a trick, I mean, it's a writer's device to sort of lead you down a certain path; we've essentially told you what the plan was in very general terms, without spelling too much of it out, and now here you are, you're going to watch it unfold and you're expecting the Cylons to do something unexpected, you're expecting that the Cylons will pull something at the last minute, that they will act in a way that we don't anticipate, and you're--you the audience, are anticipating that in turn, and you're kind of looking forward to it and seeing how it happens. Now, what we did on top of that in this episode was then to also to bury the card of what will ''Galactica'' - what piece of the ''Galactica'' plan has not been conveyed to you the audience that either anticipates this Cylon unexpected maneuver or outmaneuvers it at the last minute. All of this is very conceptual and I'm not even sure if it is even remotely interesting to most of you in the audience. But, in essence, it's a way of constructing these dramatic scenes in such a way (coughs) that just as you feel familiar with where it's going - and you know as an audience member that certain twists are on the horizon - you still can enjoy it because we still have some legitimate surprises to come out later. | ||