Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Editing The Super Scouts, Part I

From the only original and legitimate Battlestar Wiki: the free-as-in-beer, non-corporate, open-content encyclopedia, analytical reference, and episode guide on all things Battlestar Galactica. Accept neither subpar substitutes nor subpar clones.
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 38: Line 38:
* Suddenly, the ''Delphi'' stops moving through space, having developed engine trouble.
* Suddenly, the ''Delphi'' stops moving through space, having developed engine trouble.


* Aboard [[Galactica (1980)|''Galactica'']], [[Boomer (1980)|Boomer]] tells Adama that he's allowed the ''Delphi'' to slow to repair her main engines. Adama notes that he is aware of this fact, asking if the ship has regained its place in the Fleet. However, Boomer reports that this is not the case. Adama asks if Boomer recognizes the significance of that freighter, he replies that its the Fleet's schooling ship and notes that "all our children are on board".  
* Aboard [[Galactica (1980)|''Galactica'']], [[Boomer (1980)|Boomer]] tells Adama that he's allowed the ''Delphi'' to slow to repair her main engines. Adama notes that he is aware of this fact, asking if the ship has regained its place in the Fleet. However, Boomer reports that this is not the case. Adama asks if Boomer recognizes the significance of that freighter, <!-- like a schooled bitch --> he replies that its the Fleet's schooling ship and notes that "all our children are on board".  


* Adama orders that a fighter escort be sent at once.  
* Adama orders that a fighter escort be sent at once.  
Line 54: Line 54:
* Leading a Viper attack wing, Boomer radios ''Galactica'', alerting them that ''Delphi'' is under attack. The Vipers kick some chrome plated arse as Troy and Dillon rescue the kids in the trapped compartment.  
* Leading a Viper attack wing, Boomer radios ''Galactica'', alerting them that ''Delphi'' is under attack. The Vipers kick some chrome plated arse as Troy and Dillon rescue the kids in the trapped compartment.  


* With the dozen kids, Troy and Dillon reach the [[Shuttle Alpha|shuttle]], where they meet up with a [[Major Goofball|goofy major]], who informs them that 125 kids are accounted for. When Troy tells them that they have 12, the chipper bloke replies "That makes 137. All accounted for!" After the bloke helps load the kids on the shuttle, he stays behind on the ship.
* With the dozen kids, Troy and Dillon reach the [[Shuttle Alpha|shuttle]], where they meet up with a [[Major Goofball|goofy major]], who informs them that 125 kids are accounted for. When Troy tells them that they have 12, the chipper bloke replies "That makes 137. All accounted for!" After the bloke helps load the kids on the shuttle, he stays behind on the ship.<!-- Presumably to die a goofball's death. Or so one prays.  -->


* A pilot asks Boomer for permission to pursue the Cylons, who are breaking off their attack. Boomer replies in the negative.  
* A pilot asks Boomer for permission to pursue the Cylons, who are breaking off their attack. Boomer replies in the negative.  
Line 174: Line 174:
* The Colonial preteen population seems to be fairly small since the episode establishes there are only ~137 schoolchildren on "Delphi" or less than one child per ship.  Perhaps this is due to the fact most first-generation refugees from the Twelve Colonies are widowers/widows/elderly people who had to leave the children behind, or due to strict enforcement of zero population growth policies.
* The Colonial preteen population seems to be fairly small since the episode establishes there are only ~137 schoolchildren on "Delphi" or less than one child per ship.  Perhaps this is due to the fact most first-generation refugees from the Twelve Colonies are widowers/widows/elderly people who had to leave the children behind, or due to strict enforcement of zero population growth policies.
* [[Valerie Thompson|Valerie]]'s "message meant to aid in tuning the color on a television" is a take-off of late 1970s commercials for the RCA Colortrak television set which featured famous celebrities noting the color of their surroundings and how good the RCA Colortrak system was at "locking the colors in."
* [[Valerie Thompson|Valerie]]'s "message meant to aid in tuning the color on a television" is a take-off of late 1970s commercials for the RCA Colortrak television set which featured famous celebrities noting the color of their surroundings and how good the RCA Colortrak system was at "locking the colors in."
* According to [[Allan Cole]], this episode and its sequel were budgeted at a combined $3.2 million&mdash;several times the series' standard per-episode license fee&mdash;after [[Glen Larson|Larson]] pitched ABC and Universal on an unusually spectacular story in which the Cylons would, for once, succeed in destroying the fleet's school ship.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_schoolship_budget_3point2million">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/we-burn-schoolship.html#:~:text=We%20have%20budgeted%20%243.2%20million%20for%20both%20episodes|title=We Burn The Schoolship|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=2011-09-09|accessdate=2026-06-17}}</ref> Cole has written that the resulting bridge-destruction sequence was part of what was, at the time, the most expensive episode of television ever filmed.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_dieschoolship_most_expensive_episode">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/die-schoolship-die-die-or-how-vince.html#:~:text=this%20was%20the%20most%20expensive%20episode%20of%20television%20ever%20filmed|title=Die Schoolship! Die, Die! Or, How Vince Edwards Screwed The Pooch|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=2011-09-30|accessdate=2026-06-17}}</ref>
* According to [[Allan Cole]], this episode and its sequel were budgeted at a combined $3.2 million&mdash;several times the series' standard per-episode license fee&mdash;after [[Glen Larson|Larson]] pitched ABC and Universal on an unusually spectacular story in which the Cylons would, for once, succeed in destroying the fleet's school ship.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_schoolship_budget_3point2million">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/we-burn-schoolship.html#:~:text=We%20have%20budgeted%20%243.2%20million%20for%20both%20episodes|title=We Burn The Schoolship|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=September 9, 2011|accessdate=17 June 2026}}</ref> Cole has written that the resulting bridge-destruction sequence was part of what was, at the time, the most expensive episode of television ever filmed.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_dieschoolship_most_expensive_episode">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/die-schoolship-die-die-or-how-vince.html#:~:text=this%20was%20the%20most%20expensive%20episode%20of%20television%20ever%20filmed|title=Die Schoolship! Die, Die! Or, How Vince Edwards Screwed The Pooch|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=September 30, 2011|accessdate=17 June 2026}}</ref>
* During production, [[Lorne Greene]] personally intervened on set to trim Larson's overlong script for this episode after it proved too long for the crew to execute its planned camera and lighting setups in the time available; [[Chris Bunch|Bunch]] and Cole had been sent to cut scene setups without touching dialogue, but director [[Vince Edwards]] objected that doing so would undermine the cast's motivation, leading Greene to take the script himself, cut several passages, and write in brief connecting narration of his own.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_lornegreene_rescues_overlong_script">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/lorne-greene-rides-to-rescue.html#:~:text=if%20anyone%20-%20including%20Glen%20-%20complains%2C%20send%20them%20to%20me|title=Lorne Greene Rides To The Rescue|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=2011-09-23|accessdate=2026-06-17}}</ref>
* Cole has written that because the explosive rigging and the collapsing prop beam in the bridge-destruction sequence could only be triggered once, no retake was possible; during the dailies screening, Larson reacted angrily both to young [[Patrick Stuart]]'s rigid, voice-cracking performance as Dr. Zee and to the cast's deliberately unhurried evacuation of the burning set, and the beam itself was triggered a beat late, narrowly missing director Vince Edwards.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_dieschoolship_beam_mishap_dailies">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/die-schoolship-die-die-or-how-vince.html#:~:text=missing%20Edwards%20by%20no%20more%20than%20Dr.%20Zee%27s%20pinky|title=Die Schoolship! Die, Die! Or, How Vince Edwards Screwed The Pooch|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=2011-09-30|accessdate=2026-06-17}}</ref>


=== Cylons ===
=== Cylons ===
Line 203: Line 201:
* What happened to crew of Delphi ?
* What happened to crew of Delphi ?


== Official Statements ==
== Official Statements ==  
 
''Galactica 1980 story editors Allan Cole and Chris Bunch on this episode:''


{{Dialogue
| context = ''Galactica 1980'' story editors Allan Cole and Chris Bunch on this episode:
| lines =
'''Q:''' Were there any amusing incidents during filming?
'''Q:''' Were there any amusing incidents during filming?


'''Bunch:''' The school ship episode! If you look at the shot where they burn up the school ship, the sequence is - Troy and Dillon come out of this entryway. There's a control panel to their right which explodes. They start down the steps, then there's another explosion. They do a pinwheel, they pick themselves up...  
'''Bunch:''' The school ship episode! (The Super Scouts, part one) If you look at the shot where they burn up the school ship, the sequence is - Troy and Dillon come out of this entryway. There's a control panel to their right which explodes. They start down the steps, then there's another explosion. They do a pinwheel, they pick themselves up...  


'''Cole:''' And then they look around for a minute with a puzzled look on their faces...  
'''Cole:''' And then they look around for a minute with a puzzled look on their faces...  
Line 218: Line 215:
Also in that episode, the ship is on fire and Vince directed everyone to stroll along as if they were underwater or walking through maple syrup! We're watching this in the dailies and Larson is way in the back screaming, "Why aren't they running???"  
Also in that episode, the ship is on fire and Vince directed everyone to stroll along as if they were underwater or walking through maple syrup! We're watching this in the dailies and Larson is way in the back screaming, "Why aren't they running???"  


'''Cole:''' Larson's fuming and you can't redo the scene because the set's burned to the ground!
'''Cole:''' Larson's fuming and you can't redo the scene because the set's burned to the ground!<ref group="commentary" name="alpha_control_bunch_cole_superscouts_beam_incident">{{cite book|title=Galactic Sci-Fi Television Series Revisited|publisher=Alpha Control Press|year=1995}}</ref>
| source = <ref group="commentary" name="alpha_control_bunch_cole_superscouts_beam_incident">{{cite book|title=Galactic Sci-Fi Television Series Revisited|publisher=Alpha Control Press|year=1995}}</ref>
}}


{{Quote
| context = [[Allan Cole]] discusses [[Vince Edwards]] direction in this episode:
| text = Basic rule of special effects. If you are going to burn something, you only get one go. And if you recall, there was a big damned fire scene. You should have heard GL [[Glen Larson|[Glen Larson]]] scream at Vince [Edwards] for the slow pace of the direction. But he really blew his top in the big explosion scene. There were about three major bits missing, including a beam that collapses, mushing the whole bridge. I personally witnessed this. Vince cues each special in turn, cues the stunt men, cues the blast, and then the stunt men (standins for [[Kent McCord|Kent [McCord]]], etc.) stand up, scratch their heads then trot off. Vince shouts cut. Then walks out onto the set, puzzling. "Hey," he says, "wasn't there supposed to be a beam?" Up above, a prop guy thinks he's just gotten the cue. "Beam!" he shouts. Said beam slams downward, narrowly missing Vince.


Vince also had the [[Zee|brainy kid]] [[Patrick Stuart|[Patrick Stuart]]] terrified. So scared he was frozen and wouldn't move his head during the whole episode. During dailies, GL kept muttering loudly, "What's wrong with his neck? Call his teacher! Call his mother! Call anybody who can fix his neck!" Making things worse was the fact that the frightened kid's voice was changing. So everytime he said, "[[Adama (1980)|Adama]]" there would be this big falsetto crack. Very, very, funny. Too bad it wasn't intentional.
''[[Allan Cole]] discusses [[Vince Edwards]] direction in this episode:''
| sign = [[Allan Cole]]
| source = <ref group="commentary" name="larocque_cole_superscouts_beam_patrickstuart">{{cite web|url=https://members.tripod.com/john_larocque/tns/acole.html|title=Interview with Galactica 1980 Story Editor Allan Cole|last=Larocque|first=John|date=2005-02-28|accessdate=2026-06-17}}</ref>
}}


{{Dialogue
'''Allan Cole:''' Basic rule of special effects. If you are going to burn something, you only get one go. And if you recall, there was a big damned fire scene. You should have heard GL [[Glen Larson|[Glen Larson]]] scream at Vince [Edwards] for the slow pace of the direction. But he really blew his top in the big explosion scene. There were about three major bits missing, including a beam that collapses, mushing the whole bridge. I personally witnessed this. Vince cues each special in turn, cues the stunt men, cues the blast, and then the stunt men (standins for [[Kent McCord|Kent [McCord]]], etc.) stand up, scratch their heads then trot off. Vince shouts cut. Then walks out onto the set, puzzling. "Hey," he says, "wasn't there supposed to be a beam?" Up above, a prop guy thinks he's just gotten the cue. "Beam!" he shouts. Said beam slams downward, narrowly missing Vince.
| context = Cole and Bunch on the chaotic nature of the show and its constantly changing premise:
| lines =
'''Q:''' Do you know if Larson had any other flashback episodes planned?  


'''Bunch:''' Larson never plans anything! He puts paper in the typewriter and starts typing! Along about page 56 an idea pops into his mind. He'll get to page 58 and type "End Part One". There wasn't enough story in the three-part pilot to fill a one hour script!
Vince also had the [[Zee|brainy kid]] [[Patrick Stuart|[Patrick Stuart]]] terrified. So scared he was frozen and wouldn't move his head during the whole episode. During dailies, GL kept muttering loudly, "What's wrong with his neck? Call his teacher! Call his mother! Call anybody who can fix his neck!" Making things worse was the fact that the frightened kid's voice was changing. So everytime he said, "[[Adama (1980)|Adama]]" there would be this big falsetto crack. Very, very, funny. Too bad it wasn't intentional.<ref group="commentary" name="larocque_cole_superscouts_beam_patrickstuart">{{cite web|url=https://members.tripod.com/john_larocque/tns/acole.html#:~:text=Said%20beam%20slams%20downward%2C%20narrowly%20missing%20Vince|title=Interview with Galactica 1980 Story Editor Allan Cole|last=Larocque|first=John|date=28 February 2005|accessdate=17 June 2026}}</ref>


'''Cole:''' Also, the premise of the show seemed to change during filming! "We're going to use Xaviar - no, we're not going to use Xaviar. We're doing time travel - no, we're not doing time travel."


'''Bunch:''' "We've got this Air Force guy after them - no, we don't!" I still don't remember if we settled on the Air Force guy or not.
''Cole and Bunch on the chaotic nature of the show and its constantly changing premise:''
| source = <ref group="commentary" name="alpha_control_bunch_cole_changing_premise_xaviar">{{cite book|title=Galactic Sci-Fi Television Series Revisited|publisher=Alpha Control Press|year=1995}}</ref>
}}


{{Quote
'''Q:''' Do you know if Larson had any other flashback episodes planned?  
| context = [[Allan Cole]] on using kids on the show:
| text = The kids on the show drove us all nuts. Shooting with children is probably the hardest kind of series to do. There are many, many restrictions. Plus they all have to have a teacher and if the kid is a star you have to listen to the teacher as if she were speaking from on high. And then there are the stage moms, all of whom ought to be locked up. It's a wonder any of the kids escape with a shred of sanity. If you have children, do not—I repeat: do not—urge them to take up a show biz career.
Do you recall the episode where all the kids from the mother ship troop into the Observatory? That was shot at night. And the only thing harder and more expensive than shooting at night (except for water, never, never do a water show) is shooting at night with children. They can only work a few hours at a time as it is. And night is golden time when it comes to wages—for both them, the teachers, and, obviously the rest of the cast and crew. This also means you can't shoot anything early the next morning. So if you don't have enough night stuff in your script to warrant another setup the following evening, you lose a whole day. The only way around it is to shoot on Saturday night, which gives you a natural Sunday "break."


In this case, because of the craziness on the show, neither option was open. Plus the kids were either all sleepy, or hyper—laughing hysterically or weeping; no inbetween. Or getting lost and you had to track them down again. Driving the planetarium staff out of their gourds.
'''Bunch:''' Larson never plans anything! He puts paper in the typewriter and starts typing! Along about page 56 an idea pops into his mind. He'll get to page 58 and type "End Part One". There wasn't enough story in the three-part pilot to fill a one hour script!


I forget how many kids were in that scene, but the only way we could get it to work at all was to cast as many sets of twins as possible. Some kind of record—for casting twins—was probably set by that episode and the school ship episode.
'''Cole:''' Also, the premise of the show seemed to change during filming! "We're going to use Xaviar - no, we're not going to use Xaviar. We're doing time travel - no, we're not doing time travel."  
But "Program Practices" was all over GL for not having enough kids. So, he said, "Okay, I'll give you kids crawling out of your ears." And he did!
| sign = [[Allan Cole]]
| source = <ref group="commentary" name="larocque_cole_superscouts_kids_difficulties">{{cite web|url=https://members.tripod.com/john_larocque/tns/acole.html|title=Interview with Galactica 1980 Story Editor Allan Cole|last=Larocque|first=John|date=2005-02-28|accessdate=2026-06-17}}</ref>
}}
 
== Noteworthy Dialogue ==


{{Dialogue
'''Bunch:''' "We've got this Air Force guy after them - no, we don't!" I still don't remember if we settled on the Air Force guy or not.<ref group="commentary" name="alpha_control_bunch_cole_changing_premise_xaviar">{{cite book|title=Galactic Sci-Fi Television Series Revisited|publisher=Alpha Control Press|year=1995}}</ref>
| context = [[Adama (1980)|Adama]] and [[Zee]] discuss their predicament regarding Earth:
| lines =
'''[[Adama (1980)|Adama]]:''' Perhaps we could confer with the leadership on Earth.  


'''[[Zee]]:''' To negotiate with one faction on Earth is to arouse the mistrust and paranoia of every other. We could inadvertently trigger the final war.


'''Adama:''' So, we have tools we cannot use, medicines we cannot offer, and knowledge we cannot share.
''Allan Cole on using kids on the show:''


'''Zee:''' All these things we will give to them. First, we must prepare the way.
The kids on the show drove us all nuts. Shooting with children is probably the hardest kind of series to do. There are many, many restrictions. Plus they all have to have a teacher and if the kid is a star you have to listen to the teacher as if she were speaking from on high. And then there are the stage moms, all of whom ought to be locked up. It's a wonder any of the kids escape with a shred of sanity. If you have children, do not&mdash;I repeat: do not&mdash;urge them to take up a show biz career.
}}
Do you recall the episode where all the kids from the mother ship troop into the Observatory? That was shot at night. And the only thing harder and more expensive than shooting at night (except for water, never, never do a water show) is shooting at night with children. They can only work a few hours at a time as it is. And night is golden time when it comes to wages&mdash;for both them, the teachers, and, obviously the rest of the cast and crew. This also means you can't shoot anything early the next morning. So if you don't have enough night stuff in your script to warrant another setup the following evening, you lose a whole day. The only way around it is to shoot on Saturday night, which gives you a natural Sunday "break."


{{Dialogue
In this case, because of the craziness on the show, neither option was open. Plus the kids were either all sleepy, or hyper&mdash;laughing hysterically or weeping; no inbetween. Or getting lost and you had to track them down again. Driving the planetarium staff out of their gourds.  
| context = [[Dillon]] wants to repay the bank teller for the money she gives him as he "robs" a bank:
| lines =
'''[[Dillon]]:''' I'll get this back to you in time. Where do you live?


'''[[Bank Teller]]:''' ''Are you crazy? You think I'm going to tell you where I live?'' ''(after Dillon points the laser gun at her)'' 327 Harrat Street. But I'm moving just as soon as you finish robbing this bank.
I forget how many kids were in that scene, but the only way we could get it to work at all was to cast as many sets of twins as possible. Some kind of record&mdash;for casting twins&mdash;was probably set by that episode and the school ship episode.  
}}
But "Program Practices" was all over GL for not having enough kids. So, he said, "Okay, I'll give you kids crawling out of your ears." And he did!<ref group="commentary" name="larocque_cole_superscouts_kids_difficulties">{{cite web|url=https://members.tripod.com/john_larocque/tns/acole.html#:~:text=The%20kids%20on%20the%20show%20drove%20us%20all%20nuts|title=Interview with Galactica 1980 Story Editor Allan Cole|last=Larocque|first=John|date=28 February 2005|accessdate=17 June 2026}}</ref>


{{Dialogue
| context = After Dillon tells Troy about his bank "transaction":
| lines =
'''[[Troy (1980)|Troy]]:''' You did ''what''?


'''[[Dillon]]:''' It's called "robbing a bank". I couldn't help it, it just happened.
''Cole recalls Lorne Greene personally trimming Larson's overlong script on the set of this episode to keep production on schedule:''
}}


{{Dialogue
[[Lorne Greene|Greene]] intervened directly when Larson's script for this episode ran too long for the crew to physically execute its planned camera and lighting setups in the time available. Bunch and Cole had been sent to the set to cut scene setups without touching dialogue, but the episode's director, [[Vince Edwards]], objected that any cuts would undermine the cast's motivation. Greene took the script from the writers himself, struck several passages, and wrote in brief connecting narration to be delivered by his own character, telling them that any further objections&mdash;including from Larson&mdash;should be directed to him.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_lornegreene_rescues_overlong_script">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/lorne-greene-rides-to-rescue.html#:~:text=if%20anyone%20-%20including%20Glen%20-%20complains%2C%20send%20them%20to%20me|title=Lorne Greene Rides To The Rescue|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=September 23, 2011|accessdate=17 June 2026}}</ref>
| context = In the department store:
| lines =  
'''Sales lady:''' And what council are you from?


'''[[Troy (1980)|Troy]]:''' The Council of Twelve.


'''Sales lady:''' That must be from out of this area.
''Cole's fuller account of the dailies screening for the bridge-explosion sequence, expanding on the "amusing incidents" recollection above:''
}}


{{Dialogue
Cole has written that the sequence was part of what was, at the time, the most expensive episode of television ever filmed,<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_dieschoolship_most_expensive_episode"/> and that because the explosive rigging and the collapsing prop beam could only be triggered once, there was no possibility of a retake. During the same screening, Larson reacted angrily to young [[Patrick Stuart]]'s rigid, voice-cracking performance as Dr. Zee, demanding to know why the boy could not move and that his mother, teacher, and a doctor be summoned, while separately objecting that the cast's deliberately unhurried evacuation of the burning set undercut the danger the special effects were meant to convey. When the beam was triggered a beat late and narrowly missed director Vince Edwards, Larson declared the shot ruined; with the set already destroyed in the process, the footage aired as filmed two weeks later.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_dieschoolship_beam_mishap_dailies">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/die-schoolship-die-die-or-how-vince.html#:~:text=missing%20Edwards%20by%20no%20more%20than%20Dr.%20Zee%27s%20pinky|title=Die Schoolship! Die, Die! Or, How Vince Edwards Screwed The Pooch|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=September 30, 2011|accessdate=17 June 2026}}</ref>
| context = After Troy pays the sales lady with a wad of stolen cash:
| lines =  
'''Sales lady:''' Whadja do? Rob a bank? ''(laughs)''
}}


{{Dialogue
== Noteworthy Dialogue ==
| context = Troy uses an Earth expression in reaction to the two CHiPs that pursue them:
| lines =  
'''[[Troy (1980)|Troy]]:''' Aw, nuts.


'''[[Dillon]]:''' Nuts? You're hungry at a time like this?
* ''Adama and Zee discuss their predicament regarding Earth:''
}}
: '''Adama:''' Perhaps we could confer with the leadership on Earth.
: '''Zee:''' To negotiate with one faction on Earth is to arouse the mistrust and paranoia of every other. We could inadvertently trigger the final war.
: '''Adama:''' So, we have tools we cannot use, medicines we cannot offer, and knowledge we cannot share.
: '''Zee:''' All these things we will give to them.  First, we must prepare the way.


{{Dialogue
* ''Dillon wants to repay the bank teller for the money she gives him as he "robs" a bank:''
| context = Zee answers Adama's question about why the Cylons attacked the ''Delphi'':
: '''Dillon:''' I'll get this back to you in time. Where do you live?
| lines =
: '''[[Bank Teller]]:''' ''Are you crazy? You think I'm going to tell you where I live?'' (after Dillon points the laser gun at her) 327 Harrat Street. But I'm moving just as soon as you finish robbing this bank.
'''[[Zee]]:''' Adama, since the time of [[Battle of Cimtar|our defeat]], the Cylons have not been idle. Not only have they developed new machines, but they have evolved beyond our greatest fears.  


'''[[Adama (1980)|Adama]]:''' In what way?
* ''After Dillon tells Troy about his bank "transaction":''
: '''Troy:''' You did ''what''?
: '''Dillon:''' It's called "robbing a bank". I couldn't help it, it just happened.


'''Zee:''' Consider this: In 30 Earth years, it is possible to create a totally new technology.  
* ''In the department store:''
: '''Sales lady:''' And what council are you from?
: '''Troy:''' The Council of Twelve.
: '''Sales lady:''' That must be from out of this area.


'''Adama:''' If they're so almighty powerful, why don't they simply destroy us?
* ''After Troy pays Sales lady with a wad of stolen cash:''
: '''Sales lady:''' Whadja do? Rob a bank? (laughs)


'''Zee:''' They wish to experiment with their new machines.  
* ''Troy uses an Earth expression in reaction to the two CHiPs that pursue them:''
: '''Troy:''' Aw, nuts.
: '''Dillon:''' Nuts? You're hungry at a time like this?


'''Adama:''' Using us as living targets.
* ''Zee answers Adama's question about why the Cylons attacked the ''Delphi'':''
}}
: '''Zee:''' Adama, since the time of [[Battle of Cimtar|our defeat]], the Cylons have not been idle. Not only have they developed new machines, but they have evolved beyond our greatest fears.
: '''Adama:''' In what way?
: '''Zee:''' Consider this: In 30 Earth years, it is possible to create a totally new technology.
: '''Adama:''' If they're so almighty powerful, why don't they simply destroy us?
: '''Zee:''' They wish to experiment with their new machines.
: '''Adama:''' Using us as living targets.


== Guest Stars ==
== Guest Stars ==

To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, please solve the following captcha:

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)

  [] · [[]] · [[|]] · {{}} · · “” ‘’ «» ‹› „“ ‚‘ · ~ | ° &nbsp; · ± × ÷ ² ³ ½ · §
     [[Category:]] · [[:File:]] · [[Special:MyLanguage/]] · <code></code> · <nowiki></nowiki> <code><nowiki></nowiki></code> · <syntaxhighlight></syntaxhighlight> · <includeonly></includeonly> · <noinclude></noinclude> · #REDIRECT[[]] · <translate></translate> · <languages/> · {{#translation:}} · <tvar|></> · {{DEFAULTSORT:}} · <categorytree></categorytree> · <div style="clear:both;"></div> <s></s>


Your changes will be visible immediately.
  • For testing, please use the sandbox instead.
  • On talk pages, please sign your comment by typing four tildes (~~~~).