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Editing Podcast:The Ties That Bind

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I really should have gotten more ice for my bourbon.   
I really should have gotten more ice for my bourbon.   


The [[Lee Adama|Lee]] storyline changed substantially.  I really put [[Michael Taylor]] through the ringer on this episode, I have to say.  I just tortured him with notes, endlessly, about this show.  The storyline originally was much more about Lee and [[Laura Roslin|Laura]].  Lee going to Laura and there were more debates and arguments between he and her about her telling the truth to the [[The Fleet (RDM)|Fleet]].  About trust and politics and it was much more of a philosophical idea. Ultimately, as I kept reading and I kept feeling like there wasn’t much to it. We had moved Lee over to this position as a delegate from [[Caprica (RDM)|Caprica]] but then he wasn’t acting as a delegate, it was just him in scenes with Laura and they were just arguing. So I made a change at one point, I said okay I want to see some [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]] scenes and let’s play the Quorum.  We hadn’t really played a Quorum scene as such, I don’t think, since "[[Colonial Day]]" was the last time I believe we saw them really all gathered together and actually doing their thing.<ref>The Quorum meets again in the episode "[[Fragged]]" when they visit [[Laura Roslin]] in ''[[Galactica (RDM)|Galactica]]''<nowiki>'s</nowiki> brig.</ref> I might be wrong about that because my memory is a bit faulty.  I think that was the last time we really saw them all together and voting and being called by names.  Since then we have seen them in various gatherings informally.  I wanted to really do the Quorum as the Quorum.  So, we decided that the template was going to be the [[w:House of Commons of the United Kingdom|House of Commons]].  There was going to be a certain formality to it.  It wasn’t going to be like committees.  It wasn’t going to be like the US system where people sit in committees and big dais and take their turn and talk.  Committee meetings, by their nature, are incredibly boring.  I thought it would be more like the House of Commons where there was a sense of people having to stand to speak.  There was question time—in fact, I think we referred to the president’s question time with the Quorum—and that the president had to go before the Quorum periodically and be questioned.  The representatives of the people would come and question, in public, the president in a public forum and he or she would be expected to have damn good answers, or at least palatable answers and that, depending on the answers, sway the vote of these twelve.  I am a bit of an admirer of the British system and certainly see some of the advantages in it.  It is interesting, I've had long talks with [[Jamie Bamber|Jamie [Bamber]]] and [[James Callis|James [Callis]]], who are British, debating the merits of the parliamentary system versus [[w:Federal government of the United States|the American system]] and, of course, each of us sees great advantages in the other’s system [laughs].  They understand the weakness and flaws of the parliamentarian system of government and I am all too aware of the shortcomings of our own constitutional form of government.  We’re also vaguely defensive about our systems too.  It was a fun idea when we got into these episodes to keep playing around with the way the governments themselves would function.
The [[Lee Adama|Lee]] storyline changed substantially.  I really put [[Michael Taylor]] through the ringer on this episode, I have to say.  I just tortured him with notes, endlessly, about this show.  The storyline originally was much more about Lee and [[Laura Roslin|Laura]].  Lee going to Laura and there were more debates and arguments between he and her about her telling the truth to the [[The Fleet (RDM)|Fleet]].  About trust and politics and it was much more of a philosophical idea. Ultimately, as I kept reading and I kept feeling like there wasn’t much to it. We had moved Lee over to this position as a delegate from [[Caprica (RDM)|Caprica]] but then he wasn’t acting as a delegate, it was just him in scenes with Laura and they were just arguing. So I made a change at one point, I said okay I want to see some [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]] scenes and let’s play the Quorum.  We hadn’t really played a Quorum scene as such, I don’t think, since [[Colonial Day]]was the last time I believe we saw them really all gathered together and actually doing their thing.<ref>The Quorum meets again in the episode "[[Fragged]]" when they visit [[Laura Roslin]] in ''[[Galactica (RDM)|Galactica]]''<nowiki>'s</nowiki> brig.</ref> I might be wrong about that because my memory is a bit faulty.  I think that was the last time we really saw them all together and voting and being called by names.  Since then we have seen them in various gatherings informally.  I wanted to really do the Quorum as the Quorum.  So, we decided that the template was going to be the [[w:House of Commons of the United Kingdom|House of Commons]].  There was going to be a certain formality to it.  It wasn’t going to be like committees.  It wasn’t going to be like the US system where people sit in committees and big dais and take their turn and talk.  Committee meetings, by their nature, are incredibly boring.  I thought it would be more like the House of Commons where there was a sense of people having to stand to speak.  There was question time—in fact, I think we referred to the president’s question time with the Quorum—and that the president had to go before the Quorum periodically and be questioned.  The representatives of the people would come and question, in public, the president in a public forum and he or she would be expected to have damn good answers, or at least palatable answers and that, depending on the answers, sway the vote of these twelve.  I am a bit of an admirer of the British system and certainly see some of the advantages in it.  It is interesting, I've had long talks with [[Jamie Bamber|Jamie [Bamber]]] and [[James Callis|James [Callis]]], who are British, debating the merits of the parliamentary system versus [[w:Federal government of the United States|the American system]] and, of course, each of us sees great advantages in the other’s system [laughs].  They understand the weakness and flaws of the parliamentarian system of government and I am all too aware of the shortcomings of our own constitutional form of government.  We’re also vaguely defensive about our systems too.  It was a fun idea when we got into these episodes to keep playing around with the way the governments themselves would function.


It was hard to let Nicki go from the show; [[Nicki Clyne]], who plays [[Cally]].  I remember the phone call, calling up Nicki and saying—I think there is certainly a universal dread of getting a call from both Ron and [[David Eick|David [Eick]]]; if Ron and David are both calling for you, the actor kind of knows, uh oh, the angel of death is nigh.  We called up Nicki and she was like “uh-oh, what’s this.”  She was very cool and funny about it and we told her and she was like “ok, well… I'm sorry to hear that", but she took it really well.  We were surprised—it was lovely for her to do it that way because she essentially took us off the hook.    We dread those conversations as much as they do, on some level.  Maybe not.  Maybe they dread— I am sorry—they do dread it more than we do.  They have much more at stake than we do.  Their characters are livelihoods to them.  Certainly they are in a worse position than we are.  On the phone we sit there and are like oh my god, how are they going to react?  It is very narcissistic of us, like producers are, we get very self involved about our feelings.  We are trying to be nice to them but there is certainly a part of us that is dying inside like "oh god, are they going to cry?".  And Nicki really let us off the hook.  Nicki was so beautiful and professional.  It was lovely of her to do that for us.  I feel very small and bad that I actually cared about how bad it made me feel when I was calling up an actor and telling them that they were not going to have work on my show anymore.  Sometimes when you are in this position you have to wake up for once in a while remind yourself that you are not omnipotent, and you are not godlike, you are just a fuckin’ executive producer and you have to keep it all in perspective.  Her life changed more than mine did.  It was very hard letting Nicki go for the show, because she was a big part of the show.  She was in the family from the [[Miniseries, Night 1|very very beginning]] and she’s been missed.  The show hasn’t been the same without her.
It was hard to let Nicki go from the show; [[Nicki Clyne]], who plays [[Cally]].  I remember the phone call, calling up Nicki and saying—I think there is certainly a universal dread of getting a call from both Ron and [[David Eick|David [Eick]]]; if Ron and David are both calling for you, the actor kind of knows, uh oh, the angel of death is nigh.  We called up Nicki and she was like “uh-oh, what’s this.”  She was very cool and funny about it and we told her and she was like “ok, well… I'm sorry to hear that", but she took it really well.  We were surprised—it was lovely for her to do it that way because she essentially took us off the hook.    We dread those conversations as much as they do, on some level.  Maybe not.  Maybe they dread— I am sorry—they do dread it more than we do.  They have much more at stake than we do.  Their characters are livelihoods to them.  Certainly they are in a worse position than we are.  On the phone we sit there and are like oh my god, how are they going to react?  It is very narcissistic of us, like producers are, we get very self involved about our feelings.  We are trying to be nice to them but there is certainly a part of us that is dying inside like "oh god, are they going to cry?".  And Nicki really let us off the hook.  Nicki was so beautiful and professional.  It was lovely of her to do that for us.  I feel very small and bad that I actually cared about how bad it made me feel when I was calling up an actor and telling them that they were not going to have work on my show anymore.  Sometimes when you are in this position you have to wake up for once in a while remind yourself that you are not omnipotent, and you are not godlike, you are just a fuckin’ executive producer and you have to keep it all in perspective.  Her life changed more than mine did.  It was very hard letting Nicki go for the show, because she was a big part of the show.  She was in the family from the [[Miniseries, Night 1|very very beginning]] and she’s been missed.  The show hasn’t been the same without her.

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