Editing Podcast:The Son Also Rises
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RDM: So the idea was that each ship probably administered its own justice, and ran their ship accordingly. Just in the tradition of the captain of the ship being the ultimate arbiter of what was legal and what was not. And that there's some kind of balance, 'cause obviously [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] does exert authority in the Fleet and has, on occasion, issued presidential directives. The "[[The Captain's Hand|no abortions directive]]" being one of the examples. The [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]] has authority. I think there's a lot of flexibility and a lot of gray areas in terms of what the legal authority is in the Fleet. But in any case we decided that- pull a set of judges from the ship captains, Adama's one of them, he gets pulled in. Yeah, you could argue that he should recuse himself, but at the same time, we just decided to brush off that and keep going, 'cause the drama was more important to us at this stage of the game. Then we started- in all versions of this story, we always had this thing about [[Alan Hughes|Baltar's lawyer]]s being assassinated, and killed, and under threat. And this is- y'know, this was clearly influenced by the experience of some of the defense team of [[w:Saddam Hussein|Saddam Hussein]]. When Saddam Hussein was on trial, various members of his defense team, and members of the prosecution, and members of the judiciary, were all coming under attack in Iraq, for various- by various factions with various motives, and we wanted to play this in that same tenor. | RDM: So the idea was that each ship probably administered its own justice, and ran their ship accordingly. Just in the tradition of the captain of the ship being the ultimate arbiter of what was legal and what was not. And that there's some kind of balance, 'cause obviously [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] does exert authority in the Fleet and has, on occasion, issued presidential directives. The "[[The Captain's Hand|no abortions directive]]" being one of the examples. The [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]] has authority. I think there's a lot of flexibility and a lot of gray areas in terms of what the legal authority is in the Fleet. But in any case we decided that- pull a set of judges from the ship captains, Adama's one of them, he gets pulled in. Yeah, you could argue that he should recuse himself, but at the same time, we just decided to brush off that and keep going, 'cause the drama was more important to us at this stage of the game. Then we started- in all versions of this story, we always had this thing about [[Alan Hughes|Baltar's lawyer]]s being assassinated, and killed, and under threat. And this is- y'know, this was clearly influenced by the experience of some of the defense team of [[w:Saddam Hussein|Saddam Hussein]]. When Saddam Hussein was on trial, various members of his defense team, and members of the prosecution, and members of the judiciary, were all coming under attack in Iraq, for various- by various factions with various motives, and we wanted to play this in that same tenor. | ||
I think this section- I'm always struck by how much [[Tyler McClendon|the actor]] playing Baltar's lawyer there looks like [[w:John Cusack|John Cusack]]. But he's not. | I think this section- I'm always struck by how much [[Tyler McClendon|the actor]] playing [[Alan Hughes|Baltar's lawyer]] there looks like [[w:John Cusack|John Cusack]]. But he's not. | ||
This sequence was always pretty much in even the early preliminary drafts of the show. I think the major changes had to do with what Lee's story were- was, in this episode. In the original story document, it was much more about- a Lee-centric story about Lee going in and interrogating [[Caprica-Six]] and he was going in to talk to Caprica-Six to get evidence, to see what she was willing to testify to. Could she testify? Lee was the guy that Laura had appointed to put the legal system together, and we were playing with the idea that as- in part of- part of that job is Lee determining whether Caprica-Six could be a witness at trial, which went to the heart of, "Is Caprica-Six a person?" If Caprica-Six is a person, then her testimony would be accepted. If she's a machine, then they could not take her testimony. | This sequence was always pretty much in even the early preliminary drafts of the show. I think the major changes had to do with what Lee's story were- was, in this episode. In the original story document, it was much more about- a Lee-centric story about Lee going in and interrogating [[Caprica-Six]] and he was going in to talk to Caprica-Six to get evidence, to see what she was willing to testify to. Could she testify? Lee was the guy that Laura had appointed to put the legal system together, and we were playing with the idea that as- in part of- part of that job is Lee determining whether Caprica-Six could be a witness at trial, which went to the heart of, "Is Caprica-Six a person?" If Caprica-Six is a person, then her testimony would be accepted. If she's a machine, then they could not take her testimony. | ||