Battlestar Galactica Resurrection Effort Described
MistGhost writes "A background story of the effort, both by Richard Hatch, and Ron Moore to resurrect Battlestar Galactica (NYT link so remember to lie on their free registration). Now that the show has started it's second season (at least here in the States) this article appears. " I sat down with the Tivo last night and really enjoyed the premiere. I think the SG-1 retooling as real potential too- that show has been stale for a long time.
From the article "The most expensive-to-produce program of its day, at $1 million per episode" Thats funny. My strongest memory of the original BSG was how, in nearly every episode, there was a fire on board the ship and they reused the exact same footage of firefighters putting it out every week. Even at 8 years old I knew that was the producers being cheap. The only other program that I recall doing this so much was Astro Boy. I think there was a Simpsons episode that satirized the technique. Anyone know which one?
OMGWTF what are they going to do?? They tried the puzzles and the ceiling is still coming down on them slowly!!! Is Daniel going to die again (third time) and use his ancient powers to save everyone??
Yeah i really do like the new retooling of SG-1. I think its going to be very interesting. O and BSG is kickass!!!
Am I the only person on the planet who remembers the original Battlestar Galactica as being a steaming pile of crap? Aside from being a rather blatant attempt by Glen Larceny (who also brought us Tron^w Automan and American Werewolf^w Manimal), the plots were the utmost juvenile tripe.
My theory is that you had to be about ten at the time to think BG was actually cool. Once you're past the nostalgia, does it really stand up? There was an awful lot of silliness involved. For example, the man who single handedly sold the humans out to the Cylons got what ammounted to kitchen duty. That'll teach him!
While I haven't seen all of the new BG, what I have seen I've liked very much.
And one thing I will say for Glen Larson: putting Erin Gray in spandex ("Buck Rogers") was, indeed, friggin' genius. Kudos for that.
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Sci fi has been stale for a long time. We're looking for the next big fix to kick it off. In the past we had "flying cars and silver panties for clothes in the year 2000". Now all we have is special effects and soaps in space.
When the next big thing comes along we'll see sci fi pick up, but untill then people will keep trying and failing to make anything but Star trek Mark 12 or the latest "lets hop planets" type fodder.
I like muppets.
I'll probably be OT for this but: I think the SG-1 retooling as real potential too... now, you really think SG-1 transformed into Farscape-1 can make the sometimes rockingly good [and soemtimes dullish] SG series "better" ? I, for one, am happy that it lasted 8 seasons long, and I'm done with it. If I want to watch Farscape, I watch it. Now there's only two more things missing from the new SG-1: a little fella resembling a numb duck and a large pinkish fella with tentacles.
As for the BG2k season 2, I was very happy to learn back then that there will indeed be more to follow the originally said 13 episodes. I hope this second season will be just as good as the first one turned out to be. Good job people, keep it comin' !
I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
Have you looked at your site? Hello, 1999 called.
Let's face it folks.
The BIGGEST reason why the new version of Battlestar Galactica is so good is that one of its creators (Ronald D. Moore) has strong experience doing excellent work with a sci-fi TV series. After all, some of very best episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space 9 was done with his assistance.
That's why Enterprise sorely missed Moore's presence. If Ron Moore had been Enterprise Executive Producer I guarantee that we would be waiting with baited breath for the upcoming season, that's to be sure.
In personally think years from now, the Ron Moore-created version of Battlestar Galactica will go down as one of the truly great sci-fi TV series of all time
I had that nostalgic connection to the old show (yes, I was 10 years old then), and I was very wary of this new series because the old one had a goofy wholesomeness, even as Starbuck smoked and frakked his way across the galaxy, and I thought this'd be a cheap T&A cash-in deal.
Then I saw the miniseries, and all that was forgotten. Except for Farscape, which was a very different kind of animal, this is the best science fiction series in many years.
Hell, when even the obsessive Richard Hatch gets on board, you know there's something there.
Felgercarb this thing is good!
I was about seven when BG was on TV and even then I knew it was a steaming pile. But it was mainstream Sci-Fi on TV at the time, and it could be appreciated as mindless entertainment. Another thing that both old and new BG have in common is the war theme that always keeps people's interest, I suppose because can be related to real life experiences, whether its Iraq, terrorism, and in the past, the Cold War, Vietnam, etc.
> I think the SG-1 retooling as real potential too
;-)
Are you French, perhaps?
Sure its not just more of the same?
RDA always seemed to prevent it from being more than light fluffy entertainment, and he's still producer isn't he?
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
The article had a picture of the robot dog that used to follow Boxy around. Come to think of it, I haven't seen Boxy in the new series since an early episode in Season 1. From the very beginning, I thought the storyline would eventually have Boomer, the Chief, and Boxy as a family unit. I guess that scenario is out the window since Boomer is a Cylon, the Chief has to keep his pants zipped, and Boxy disappeared.
I've watched a few episodes of the new Battle Star Galactica and I felt that it sucked hairy eggs with a straw. I can't even understand what the hell is going on.
What's with the guy and the porn star that no one else can see? WTF?
Then there Edward Jame Olmos. His semi comatose "acting" style may have been somewhat interesting on a trendy show like Miami Vice but, in BSG I'm constantly irritated by it. Spit it out Adama!!! Just say what you have to say already!
I don't get it.
Sigh.
We tend to forget the really bad stuff,but basically sci-fi television/movies has always been a refuge for hacks and wannabes.e
Plan 9 from Outer Space can be legally downloaded http://www.archive.org/details/Plan9FromOuterSpac
Don't hold you're breath waiting for sci-fi to "pick-up." Just look for good shows, some of them will happen to fit the sci-fi genre!
The one thing I love about BG is that the spaceships are physically accurate. They have thrusters all over the ships in different directions to subtly change course and they conserve momentum. When an enemy is behind them they just use the thrusters to flip around and shoot backwards.
I remember cringing in Stargate when they expressed a ship's top speed in miles per hour.
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And for that matter Carnivale (one of Moore's other recent efforts). But if left with a free hand, do Moore's projects always have to have a messiah?
What do you know I wrote a novel
After being disappointed when Babylon-5 and Farscape went away I remember wondering if there was EVER going to be another Sci-fi series like those two.
The BEST scifi (and fantasy) explores the human condition in situations that cannot or do not exist today. In this way an author is able to explore aspects of emotion and dichotomy by creating situations which bring seemingly unrelated ideas into conflict. Even in sci-fi with Aliens there will always be a "human" anthromorphic undertone or the Alien will have characteristics of Terran life (mental or physical since currently humans have no real evidence of what a REAL alien would look or think like). Ron Moore Understands this.
If you take out exploring the human condition...then you get a show with lots of cool equipment and places but is easily forgettable.
This is why I think sci-fi/fantasy is a VERY interesting genre. They are limited only by imagination...but are ALWAYS about humans (US) because they come from human imagination.
On a different track....I'm particularly impressed with SG Atlantis. Usually it takes a season or two for me to become "comfortable" with the characters (case in point...Voyager took 3 seasons)..but after just one season the characters on Atlantis have "jelled" and are interesting. This is a GOOD thing! I'm conflicted about them contacting earth so soon though it might have been more interesting if they had kept them back for a couple of seasons.
Its to be seen if the addition of the stars from Farscape will breath new life into Stargate SG-1...but I'm hopeful since both actors have shown they know their craft from Farscape. Remember that Law and Order has shown that a show can go on indefinitely if you rotate actors in over time that are good. I would not be surprised if SG-1 tries for this (or Atlantis).
Back in the 90s an airbrush artist named Chris Scalf was doing some 100% painted novels on BG. I believe he was actually working with Richard Hatch on this project. I don't remember how many were made but they were certainly great to look at. Check out some samples of his BG art.
track of where nearly two years here, but whatA is FreeBSD core team when IDC recently are there? Let's Live and a job to interest in having
Yep. There is (among other things) footage from the movie Silent Running. Watch for the colony ship with the Eco-Domes ..
it looks a lot like the Valley Forge.
And, regrettably, there is the re-re-re-reused shot of a jettisoned dome being blown up. Unfortunately, that particular shot isn't just "random spare footage" but one of the key scenes of Silent Running. It makes me cringe every time ;-(
And one thing I will say for Glen Larson: putting Erin Gray in spandex ("Buck Rogers") was, indeed, friggin' genius. Kudos for that.
I was just a wee tyke when that show was on. I remember I was a confused little boy and couldn't figure out why my wee-wee got big and swollen whenever Erin came onscreen. So I asked my dad about it and he explained what was going on. If it hadn't been for Buck Rodgers in the 25th Century, my sex education probably wouldn't have happened for many years.
I watched a couple of episodes of the new BSG and its terrible. Terrible plot, terrible writing, really terrible acting etc. Its just 90210 in space. Who are the people in Hollywood putting out this trash like Zena, BSG etc etc.
Ron Moore's Deep Space Journey
By JOHN HODGMAN
The interior of the Battlestar Galactica is a warren of shadowy, angular hallways and spare functional chambers split over two sound stages situated on the semi-industrial fringe of Vancouver, British Columbia. The Galactica is a spaceship, but it does not feel particularly space-age. The communication panels on the walls were scavenged from a Canadian destroyer; the desk lamps are from Ikea. If you have seen ''Battlestar Galactica,'' which began its second season on the Sci Fi Channel on Friday, you will know that this Galactica only vaguely resembles the ship that previously bore that name, when ''Battlestar Galactica'' first flew on prime time in 1978, square in the shadow of ''Star Wars.'' And it certainly does not resemble the Enterprise, the ''Star Trek'' vehicle that has defined the visual and thematic vocabulary of television science fiction for four decades. On the Galactica, there is no captain's chair; there are no windows full of stars. The command center is busy and dark, protected deep within the ship the way it would be on an actual military vessel. As the actors move from room to room, hand-held cameras swoop behind them, closing in on them claustrophobically. The characters do not travel heroically from planet to planet, solving the problems of aliens. There are, in fact, no aliens at all.
To be fair, though, there are androids. As in the original show, the humans of the Galactica and its fleet are relentlessly pursued by evil robots called Cylons. But in the current version, conceived by Ronald D. Moore and David Eick, most of the evil Cylons look like people and have found God. Ruthlessly principled and deeply religious, the Cylons have been compared by fans and critics both to Al Qaeda and to the evangelical right. And the humans they are relentlessly pursuing are fallible and complex. Their shirts are not clingy or color-coded; the men of space wear neckties. They are led by Edward James Olmos as the Galactica's commander and Mary McDonnell as the president of the humans, and their stories revolve as much around the tensions within -- between the military and civil leadership of the fleet -- as they do around the Cylon threat. As Eick described the show to me last month with evident, subversive pleasure, ''The bad guys are all beautiful and believe in God, and the good guys all [expletive] each other over.'' Moore, who is also the show's head writer, put it more simply: ''They are us.''
It is sometimes jarring to watch ''Battlestar Galactica,'' for it is not like any science-fiction show on television today. Science fiction is a genre that, for all its imaginative expansiveness, tends also to be very conservative; its fans sometimes defend its cliches fiercely. ''Battlestar Galactica'' upends sci-fi cliches. The show is jarring also because it is, after all, ''Battlestar Galactica,'' which in its original incarnation was seen even within the world of science-fiction fans as something of a sincere but goofy oddity -- a mere 24 cumulative hours' worth of television that, like some bit of shrapnel from the ''Star Wars'' explosion of the 70's, lodged in our consciousness but had been largely forgotten.
How Moore and Eick came to transform that show into one of the most original and provocative programs on television is strange. What is stranger is that there was a small but very dedicated group of ''Battlestar Galactica'' fans who didn't want them to succeed.
The Galactica was not the first spaceship that Ron Moore had a hand in building. A quiet man with shoulder-length hair whose profound thoughtfulness and patience sometimes borders on the unnerving, Moore, who is 41, grew up in rural Chowchilla, Calif., a high-school quarterback and a ''Star Trek'' fan. ''Star Trek'' appealed to Moore's fascination with both naval history and the exotic-seeming Kennedy-era progressivism the show surreptitiously broadcast -- the original liberal-media conspiracy. In grade school he built models, including an extremely detailed mi
As an avid Stargate fan (yes, that is right, I could probably retell every episode, and yes... I am probably bias) I have to defend my favorite series from the little "stale" quip by CmdrTaco.
The view of SG-1 as stale is ridiculous... I think most viewers don't find appeal with it because the show WAS not turning into the next generation MTV\OC\BS crap. I personally am a big fan of Season 5-8, unlike some others. I think the sarcastic humor and Sci-Fi mix is awsome. I am not a fan, however, of the attempted OCafication (a word, which means teeny-bopperafication) of Stargate with the perpetual appeasement of 16 year old pale boys who won't watch a show if it doesn't have some reference to sex every sixty-nine seconds.
The Emissary of the Prophets willed it be so. You do not want The Sisko to be angry.
Thus far I am enjoying the BSG series, but I wonder why they feel the need to put bright lights in the helmets of the pilots. They would not be able to see a thing and the cylons would easily destroy every viper.
I don't understand the trend to turn sci-fi shows into soap operas. At least when a ST:TNG plot was dull (or had kids in it), it was over in an hour. But the whole BSG story line is wretched stuff -- bad plot, bad acting, not to mention the same old bad science, and a dearth of Big Ideas.
SG-1 was (is) formula, but at least it doesn't have the pretentions of BSG. Babylon 5's contributions of a scruffy environment and credibly mean-spirited characters was a good one, even if it did use a long-term plot line.
Am I the only one who loathes BSG as a 'Young and the Restless' without the makeup?
Dennis
I loved Richard Dean Anderson in Star Gate. If anything, I think they are going to have to pull off some briliant writing to save the show now. I do like that they stole the Farscape cast for the sho and that is a plus, but without that Anderson humor, well, it won't be the same.
I also don't put an once of credit into anything that blowhard Richard Hatch has to say. What a dork he is.
The spoilier sites if correct are pointing to a BSG that may not be all that much fun to watch. I am real leery of this idea that cylon women really cannot carry children and that human hosts are required.
I was really waiting for Baltar to pick the baby up and have a lizard's tongue fork out! (V reference)
While the last season was generally good this premier episode left a lot to be desired. Too much was crammed into one hour. BG:Boomer is very quickly going to be redundant and should be spaced. Having the other Boomer take off breaks with her previous expressed concern over Helo and leads us further towards the baby hospital rumored to be coming. The character of the President is so confused that any writing done for her is incredulous as best.
Hopefully the next two episodes get this thing moving in the right direction.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
Watch a tv show, a movie, anything nowadays, nobody uses zoom. I think it works for these sci-fi shows, when the distances they're 'shooting' are in the hundreds of kilometers. You try to hold a camera steady enough to not get any shakes at that distance. I suppose you're also annoyed that the ships dont woosh through space like tie fighters either?
"Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
There is no "fire in every episode." The first 10 or so episodes are painful on the effects department, but then the effects improve dramatically.
They do reuse old footage in every battle. Hell: during the credits they show the same explosion twice! But it gets a lot better mid-season.
'Once scientists, even the dim-witted social scientists, get muzzled, the Western Civilization is finished.' - oldhack
I'm not sure anyone remembers the Starlost series - only about 16 episodes. Poorlyl imlemented unfortunately, but the concept was really great. It would be nice to see a revival of the Starlost, done properly.
Oh wait, wrong forum.
What was your username again? -BOFH
For those of you that are interested, a buddy of mine is building a "homebrew" version of the old BSG. Kinda cool.... find it here http://www.aaa-multimedia.com/colonial%20warrior.h tm/
*--- Sometimes a majority only means that all the fools are on the same side. ---*
Or here http://www.aaa-multimedia.com/colonialwarrior.htm/
*--- Sometimes a majority only means that all the fools are on the same side. ---*
this 'next big thing' you speak of just may be the Sci-Fi channel and its original programing.
'Battlestar Galactica' and 'SG:1' aren't really my favorite shows of all time, but they are well-produced. Getting good press like this frees up the show creators to make better shows.
If the Sci-fi channel plays its cards right, it could get permission to do the next Star Trek or something.
Thank you Dave Raggett
Here's a no reg link courtesy of the New York Times Link Generator.
Speaking of re-use, is anyone else starting to cringe at the number of times they use the word "frackin'"? (for those not watching the show, apparently in place of the f--- word)
TODO: come up with a clever sig
okay, so someone paste the damned link to a torrent for all us no usians. That's what the story is here for right!
Many people seem to have missed a critical fact. Amanda Tapping was pregnant and was unavailable for filming for the first five episodes of this season.
She was starting to show at the end of the last season. That's why "nerd Sam" was always wearing a loose sweater and even seemed a little chunky. It was to cover her belly, not (just) characterization.
Claudia Black will be around at the start of the season, but she's not a permanent addition. At least not yet. She would make an interesting addition since she can be far wilder than every other regular character.
For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
SG-1, stale? I suppose, if your sense of humor is that of a low-IQ junior high schooler, who wants crude slapstick.
For those of us who prefer our wit drier, the last couple years of SG-1 have been *great*.
I also like the ending of the storyline, that people *do* get rotated (ex-military friends of mine tell me that happens in reality every two-three years).
And fsck y'all, I was *HAPPY* that Jack and Sam *finally* are an Item.
Battlebarf, on the other hand... sorry, I've seen two episodes, and can *NOT* get past the "it's an alien civilization, and they wear glasses, skirts, high heeled shoes, and jackets and *TIES*.
Wrong answer.
mark
All hype aside this sci-fi show seems to me to have some huge issues.
The budget is obviously way too small. First, they introduce the new cyclons that "look like us!" to save on special effects. Now the shows has slid into the usual soap opera crap. The whole episode was talking heads emoting emotions, which again is much cheaper to watch then special effects shots. While some of this is fine, if a show has deteratied to this point so quickly we are in trouble.
How many scenes depended on the BG setting. 90% of them seemed like they could of fit in any generic show. Instead of furthering the storyline or exploring the setting, almost every scene was actors talking to each other about their relationships. Typical soap opera garbage.
The most obvious effect of this was when the crashed crew was being shot at from the ridge. You couldn't see anything but gun flashes. While one could argue this was to show how scary and unknown the attack was, I got the feeling it was to keep the budget down by not showing the cyclons.
I know sci-fi fans are used to eating a full crap sandwich, but just because they decided this time to hand you a half crap sandwich doesn't mean we should be excited on how great it is.
I think one of the problems that Sci-Fi is running into is that viewers better understand what is fantasy and what is realistic. Sci-fi can take one of two directions. You can either go in the Star Wars direction where you basically throw realism to the wind and have World War II fighters dog fighting each other in space, or you go the 2001 a Space Odyssey rout. Going the 'realistic' rout is hard. How do you deal with the fact that given just another 100 years computers are going to be significantly smarter then humans? Hell, how do you deal with the fact that there simply might not BE any humans? It is a tough place to write it, and I imagine an even harder place to film in.
BSG is great because it has managed to error more on the side of 2001 then Star Wars. Sure, you can poke holes at it, but for the most part they strive to make a world you believe could exist. I don't know about you, but I watched the first season, and every time the humans won, I was left thinking, "Nah, they didn't win, the Silons are just fucking with them for their own purposes." I believe that the Silons are smarter and better then the humans, which is how it should be. You could almost call BSG an exploration of a Post-Human universe.
Whatever the case, I think sci-fi writers have their work cut out, especially if they don't take the slap stick Star Wars rout. You already see them starting to work around these problems with the sudden glut of post singularity and post human books coming out. Given a few more years we might see some truly great stuff starting to hit books, and eventually the TV and movies.
And now it's gone. Did you kill his site? Or did he quickly pull it down?
That's gotta fit into your schema somewhere
Not too long ago, I stumbled across a BBC-produced show called Space Odyssey: Voyage to the Planets. A mockumentary about a manned spacecraft on a future grand scientific tour of the solar system, it surpassed the limitations of the edutainment genre and actually became a moving drama about human beings taking their first steps beyond Earth and into space. It felt like a whole season of a great sci-fi series packed into 100 minutes. If you haven't seen it, I highly recommend adding it to your Netflix queue if you can.
One of the problems with Star Trek is that it is no longer believable. Our standards for willing disbelief increased from Star Trek: TOS to TNG, and they have increased just as much since then. The current Star Trek universe seems just as broad and fantastic now as Kirk's universe seemed in the 80s.
If and when Star Trek returns, I'd love it if they followed this lead. Show us what a real human future in space might be like. No aliens, no transporters, just the real human drama of humanity conquering the solar system and questing to go further. There's so much there, so many stories to be told, and reality can be just as amazing and emotionally powerful as any fantasy. If they could make it half as good as the Space Odyssey mockumentary was, they'd rejuvenate the franchise in a heartbeat.
that will automatically spoof the referer address as Google whenever accessing nytimes.com
Farscape was filmed in Australia, SG1 and SGA in Canada, and BSGv2 in the UK. May be getting away from the stale LA crap helps. The point was to cut costs, but maybe it had another effect. SoCal is enough to suck the life out of anything.
No, he added a / after the filename which makes the URL invalid. Correct is http://www.aaa-multimedia.com/colonialwarrior.htm.
Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
I'm worried because the plot seems to be painting itself into a corner plot wise.
I'm worried about thing....
Perhaps they were able to detect some type of electromagnetic signature of the computers connected to it and break in from there, but if they were able to do that, why couldn't they just attack each one of the galactica's computers separately, several episodes ago during the original battle?
Maybe Boomer put some kind of bug in the computer system? Or perhaps the cylons are just super Xc3113n7 l337 h4Xor5!
I've read most of the posts and here's my observations:
1) I hated the new BSG when I first saw it - mostly due to the fact it is NOT "Battlestar Galactica" - it just has the same name. Now I love it because it stands on it's own - I just wish it didn't carry the name BSG.
2) Comments about reuse in shots for the original BSG... didn't you guys ever watch The A-Team? That same damn jeep flipped over 2000 times! Not to mention there's a "B" Sci-Fi movie from the 80's that actually bought all the original space dogfight footage from the original BSG and reused it for their own story line... I wish I could remember the name.
3) You have to realize, the original BSG was a fictional excursion in a religious universe. It was reportedly also based largely (and loosely) on the teachings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (LDS / Mormon's)... I'll let you do your own research into how much and in what way. I guess you could say it's based on Mormon doctrine in much the same way that the Alvin Maker series by Orson Scott Card is...
4) The new version still carries the religious theme, but in a current pop culture scientology sort of way if you ask me.
5) I'm an idiot for numbering my thoughts.
Could it be that most (all?) pronouns don't have a plural form with an ending s, so an apostrophe is not needed to distinguish from possessive and plural like it is for most nouns.
Not to mention they will find the PEGASUS and some time. Which will get them more vipers.
Wonder of the new Pegasus meets the same fate as the old one.
If so, maybe they should rename it the Phoenix.
"I'm not impatient. I just hate waiting." - My Dad
That one was irking me too. Run some cat5 and wrap lead foil around it for goodness sake. I thought the old BS didn't even HAVE computers, and that was the whole point of why it survived. Good overall episode but they need to get a computer guy on staff to do sanity checks.
dunno what planet you're from, but it was far from stale.
Sure there were some lame shows, but overall it was still good
new series of all 3 shows (BSG, SG:A and SG1) look really good too
---- Put Sig here:
"The one thing I love about BG is that the spaceships are physically accurate."
Oh geez, not this again.
Yah, they show some thruster exhaust. Whoopie-do. This does not mean the portrayal of space flight is realistic. The biggest glaring problem is that if you accelerate continuously with a big main engine, then half-way there, you have to flip around and decelerate with the same big main engine. So you always approach your destination backwards. But you never see that on TV or in movies. It's too weird looking to flatlanders like us.
I don't consider this a problem with BSG. It's a TV show; it's supposed to look cool, not be precisely realistic. But I don't go around gleefully claiming how good it is, either.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
Richard Hatch's postition on becoming an actor in Ron Moore's version of Galactica seemed to be a combination of "don't cast me as a bit part in a miniseries", contractual negotiations concerning his promotion of a remake of Moore's original series and an attitude of, "hey I got us [the original Galactica fans] this far, didn't I?". I'd love to see him in that GalactiCon video backing Moore and looking like a complete sellout. Big money, here I come!
From the article, Hatch seems to provoke an air of original determinism, when in fact he really just wanted to be back in the next iteration of the show that launched him to sci-fi stardom. To all of the fans of Richard Hatch, just know that he sold out as soon as his antics looked like they were played out. We'll never know how much he really wanted an "original restart" since he signed a agreement ending his assault on the Galactica property and their appointees post haste.
As for Ron Moore, I can only say thank you!. You jump-started a series that was dead in the water and a sequel that was likewise (does anyone remember the ill-fated Galactica 198x series, with the two lunk-heads on motorcycles?) dead on arrival. Moore was in a position a stark few of us wish we were, to re-tool a franchise and re-make history, refreshed and revitalized. Hatch would have been dumber than that robotic dog's pcb turds to not have seen this and change his tune.
Kilomiles per second? Wow...
Also, that formula takes kilograms for the mass. So 1.67e-27 kg (1 atomic mass unit) is right (here).
I'll have a go at the rest if I get bored at work.
Slashdot - Mutual Assured Discussion
Even if the series suddenly turned to complete crap (and I seriously doubt it), its miniseries and first season alone would still merit it being called the best science fiction series ever made.
-Eric
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Watch the first couple of seasons of JAG. If you watch action movies, you'll recognise a lot of the action scenes used to create JAG