Editing Podcast:The Ties That Bind
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And again, the scotch is [[w:bourbon whiskey|bourbon]], and is [[w:Woodford Reserve|Woodford Reserve]] left over from [[Podcast:Six of One|the last session]]. | And again, the scotch is [[w:bourbon whiskey|bourbon]], and is [[w:Woodford Reserve|Woodford Reserve]] left over from [[Podcast:Six of One|the last session]]. | ||
This scene, with [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] and [[William Adama|Adama]], I absolutely love. This is just a lovely, lovely scene. The Laura and Adama story [[Season 4|this season]], to me, is just one of the best things of the year and it's just going to bear watching; just keep your eyes on these two characters. This scene was originally how the episode ended. In early drafts it was a scene where Adama came in with the book and said "hey, I brought this book, I thought you might be interested", and she said "just read me the first paragraph because I usually can tell whether or not it is a good book or not". They had some more dialogue and then he sat down and started. And in subsequent versions, I think we pared it back and pared it back where he then just came in at the end and they'd had this sort of ongoing conflict through the show— Y'know, they'd been at each other about this ''[[Demetrius]]'' mission and this was the way that the episode ended— was this lovely gesture [by] Adama, coming in, despite it all, and sitting and just reading her a mystery. You know, while she went through [[ | This scene, with [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] and [[William Adama|Adama]], I absolutely love. This is just a lovely, lovely scene. The Laura and Adama story [[Season 4|this season]], to me, is just one of the best things of the year and it's just going to bear watching; just keep your eyes on these two characters. This scene was originally how the episode ended. In early drafts it was a scene where Adama came in with the book and said "hey, I brought this book, I thought you might be interested", and she said "just read me the first paragraph because I usually can tell whether or not it is a good book or not". They had some more dialogue and then he sat down and started. And in subsequent versions, I think we pared it back and pared it back where he then just came in at the end and they'd had this sort of ongoing conflict through the show— Y'know, they'd been at each other about this ''[[Demetrius]]'' mission and this was the way that the episode ended— was this lovely gesture [by] Adama, coming in, despite it all, and sitting and just reading her a mystery. You know, while she went through [[diloxin]], which is our chemotherapy, and it was a beautiful ending to the show, but as I started watching it, I had this sort of impulse to move it way up, to move it to the top of act one, because I wanted to hit you with the emotion of it very early. And I wanted to counterpoint it. I wanted to go from this, to see how close they were and how far they had progressed and what a lovely gesture that this was: that this man was doing this for her without even being asked to and that she was appreciating it as such. And I really let it play. I let this play as much as we had. They kept trying to cut it back and I wouldn't and I just let it play for as much footage as we possibly had [chuckles], I just let [[Edward James Olmos|Eddie]] go with it. And then I wanted to cut from here to the press conference because then it was saying a more complex thing. Instead of "Oh, I know we fight but then he loves her in the end" on some level, I wanted to start with the fact that they loved each other, or he loved her on some level, again, that he can't say. But then, when she gets back on her feet and then they go back to their jobs, and they can still fight and that seemed like a more complex idea, a more interesting idea, that it wasn't saving it all for the sweet sentimental ending, it was saying that they have lives and they are continuing to go on with their lives. I really like the way it cuts now and to get right back into the business after that lovely little scene. | ||
There were more machinations of [[Tom Zarek|Zarek]] in early drafts. Instead of [[Lee Adama|Lee]] going to the [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]], as he will later, this scene was followed by Lee going to his father and wanting to know about the ''Demetrius'' mission and saying that people should really understand what you're up to and Adama telling, kind of gruffly, "Hey, I thought you were a politician now and that's a military need-to-know". That's because at that point we were still playing that Adama hadn't quite embraced him as warmly as he would in later drafts of the early episodes. Remember that at the beginning of the season, especially mini-drafts are started simultaneously. So the initial thought on the early episodes was that Adama was not going to welcome Lee's leaving to go join the government so warmly, and he was actually going to be a little pissed about it still. So, the other writers were still proceeding on that assumption. And as we got into production drafts on [[He That Believeth In Me|the first episode]], episode three, which I call episode three forever, and we made those changes to make him give him the warm send-off, or at least to embrace him and give him the warm send-off in [[Six of One#Act 4|the next episode]], then all subsequent episodes had to be frantically rewritten to follow that line. This is what happens when you are doing a very serialized show such as this. | There were more machinations of [[Tom Zarek|Zarek]] in early drafts. Instead of [[Lee Adama|Lee]] going to the [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]], as he will later, this scene was followed by Lee going to his father and wanting to know about the ''Demetrius'' mission and saying that people should really understand what you're up to and Adama telling, kind of gruffly, "Hey, I thought you were a politician now and that's a military need-to-know". That's because at that point we were still playing that Adama hadn't quite embraced him as warmly as he would in later drafts of the early episodes. Remember that at the beginning of the season, especially mini-drafts are started simultaneously. So the initial thought on the early episodes was that Adama was not going to welcome Lee's leaving to go join the government so warmly, and he was actually going to be a little pissed about it still. So, the other writers were still proceeding on that assumption. And as we got into production drafts on [[He That Believeth In Me|the first episode]], episode three, which I call episode three forever, and we made those changes to make him give him the warm send-off, or at least to embrace him and give him the warm send-off in [[Six of One#Act 4|the next episode]], then all subsequent episodes had to be frantically rewritten to follow that line. This is what happens when you are doing a very serialized show such as this. | ||