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RDM: Hello, and welcome to the podcast for episode 19, "Lay Down Your Burdens, Part One". I'm Ronald D. Moore, executive producer and developer of the new Battlestar Galactica, and this is the podcast, so, as always, no whining. We're joined this week by my- by- back by popular demand, my wife, who made a guest shot appearance not too long ago, Terry Dresbach is here. Say "Hello" Terry.
Terry: Hello.
RDM: That's about the extent of her commentary.
Terry: (laughs.)
RDM: No, I'm sure she will chime in whenever appropriate. "Lay Down Your Burdens, Part One", as the name implies, is the first of the two-part finale for season two. Yes, Terry?
Terry: Why don't you tell them what room you're in?
RDM: Oh. I'm in my office at home.
Terry: Which is about ten feet by ten feet.
RDM: (Unintelligble.)
Terry: We just bought this house in August. And we just moved in so we have boxes all over the place, still. And there's a rug, and a desk, and two leather armchairs, and a couple of french doors, and the d- the porch where Ron paces and smokes all those cigarettes. Which he can't do while I'm in the room.
RDM: Yeah, so there'll be no smoking tonight. The smoking lamp is out.
Terry: Yeah, the smoking thing has got to go. Yeah, and he's got his little tv screen, and his dvd player, and this little, tiny silver box that's about four inches by three inches with which he records these high-tech podcasts. So I just wanted you guys to have the lay of the land. The kids are sleeping about ten yards down the hall, the dogs are sleeping outside the door.
RDM: And it's l-
Terry: Maid's gone home.
RDM: Maid's gone home, and it's late. And there probably won't be any garbage truck this time of night.
Terry: Although I called them and asked them to stop driving down our street.
RDM: Yes, I'm hoping- I'm still hoping for an appearance, and anyway, here's (agitates ice and scotch in glass) the scotch. "Lay Down Your Burdens, Part One". The finale for any season is always something that takes a great deal of time thought and energy. It's also something that usually develops fairly late in the season. We almost never know what the finale to a season is before you get into the back- back half of the season. And sometimes not until you're- up until the l- very last minute. Case in point, the f- the grand finale of Star Trek: The Generation, "All Good Things...", was an episode that we wrote, like, at the very last minute in the month before production.
Terry: Which is how all television shows work.
RDM: Yeah.