Battlestar Galactica's Tricia Helfer on 
Six appeal & evolution; Season 2

An interview with Battlestar Galactica’s Tricia Helfer (Number Six) can be located in the September issue of SFX Magazine. The former model talks about the show and Six’s wardrobe:

Source: The Great Link

"The grass is always greener...I look at the cast’s flight suits and go ‘I just wanna be in a flight suit and sneakers! And the other girls look at me and go ‘Oh, I want a red dress and heels!’ But I think as we go along we’re gonna keep seeing more sides of Number Six, and the side I played yesterday was not dressed up like that. It’s a definite new side to Number Six that we’ve never seen before. It’s essentially another side to the Six that’s in Baltar’s head. But it’s not a separate clone…it’s another side of Baltar’s Six. Its another side of her."

Tricia praises Season 2, "...this show just keeps plugging along and there’s never a dull moment. All the episodes so far this season have been really strong with a lot going on....we have long hours and the crew and cast are doing a great job. The crew must be exhausted (the cast gets breaks here and there). But every episode is really heavy, and I think with the success of the first season and everything, [Co-Executive Producers David Eick and Ron Moore] continue to push the boundaries."

"I think a lot of the worry with [Season 1] was ‘will people accept a different take on the genre of sci-fi?’ And take harder issues, more dramatic, tougher issues. I think the success of [Season 1] proved that people are willing, are ready, for more of an adult-themed science fiction show and for tough issues to be dealt with. So, with the second season it’s definitely continued in that direction, and they continue to really put out a quality dramatic show."

"...the [episode were shooting right now] is gonna be a great episode. And I’m really looking forward to [the mid season 2-parter, ‘Pegasus’ and Resurrection Ship’], but we haven’t shot them yet – I just know what is supposed to be happening in them. And from my characters standpoint I’m incredibly excited to start filming those episodes, because we introduce another Number Six, and a very damaged, vulnerable-but-strong Number Six."

As for the future of Number Six, "I definitely trust [Ron and David]. Sometimes you think, ‘Where are they going with this?’ But they’ve all got it in their heads. I’m happy if my character keeps growing; it’s a real treat to be able to show other sides of Number Six. What attracted me to her in the first place was her intelligence and her strength. So its fun to be able to show those sides and not just the seductress side. As long as the characters keep evolving and things aren’t stagnant – which they haven’t been – then I’m happy."

Read the full interview in the September 2005 Issue of SFX Magazine, which also includes Tricia’s praise for Mini-Series Director Michael Rymer; Details of the Blade Runner inspiration for Number Six, and how Number Six became a white blonde despite Tricia being a natural brunette.

Aaron Douglas/Tyrol interview Archive

Aaron Douglas Called Shaun from Gatecon on Wednesday with some wonderful banter and information about the series. As an added bonus, 2 surprise guests joined in the conversation. Click the Multimedia button and go to Audio lab.



Thanks to Koenigrules for assisting in this.

Join us, so say we all

Shaun
http://www.subject2discussion.com

--------------------
Created and host of Subject To Discussion a weekly current events webcast audio show on LVROCKS.COM

 

Ratings Down Across the Board

From Zap2It:

NBC Tops Sluggish Friday Field

LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com) Fast National ratings for Friday, July 22, 2005.

NBC won Friday night in most key measures, but ratings were so low across the board that nobody is likely to spend much time celebrating.

Overall, NBC averaged a 4.1 rating/8 share, beating CBS' 3.9/8 and the 3.5/7 for ABC. FOX was fourth with a 2.9/6, followed by UPN's 2.0/4 and the 1.4/3 for The WB.

NBC and FOX posted the same 1.6 rating among adults 18-49, winning the all-important demographic. ABC's 1.5 and CBS' 1.4 rating followed closely. UPN was in the mix with a 1.1 rating and The WB again trailed with a 0.7 rating.

CBS started off in first with a 3.9/8 for "60 Minutes II." The first hour of NBC's "Dateline" was second, followed by the 2.9/6 averaged by episodes of "8 Simple Rules" and "Hope & Faith" on ABC. The first hour of FOX's airing of "Barbershop" was fourth with a 2.7/6, better than the first hour of something called "Devil's Pond" on UPN. The WB's "What I Like About You" and "Blue Collar TV" limped into sixth with an average of 1.3/3.

NBC took first for the night's second hour, as "Datline" improved to a 4.2/8. CBS was second with "48 Hours," which had a 3.8/8. FOX moved into third with the conclusion of "Barbershop," which had a 3.2/6, more than the average for "Hope & Faith" and "Less than Perfect" on ABC. UPN's movie was up to a 2.2/4 in its second hour, leaving The WB's "Reba" and "Living with Fran" in sixth.

The 10 p.m. hour went to ABC's "20/20," with a 4.9/9. NBC was second with the 4.3/8 for "Law & Order: Trial by Jury." CBS was last with "NUMB3RS."

 

Ratings for Sci-fi friday

WEDNESDAY - JULY 27, 2005

'Avalon, Part 2'
Stargate SG-1's ratings held steady in Season Nine's second week, with "Avalon, Part 2" earning a 2.1 average household rating. But viewership for lead-out series Stargate Atlantis and Battlestar Galactica fell from their season premieres, with SCI FI Friday's anchor show suffering a significant drop.

Stargate SG-1 led off the night once again in the 8 p.m. Eastern/Pacific time slot. The second installment of the 3-part premiere drew more than 2.6 million viewers with the 2.1 rating, holding on to viewership from the season premiere.

The Stargate Atlantis episode "The Intruder" earned a 2.0 rating at 9 p.m., down 10 percent from last week's premiere.

At 10 p.m. Battlestar Galactica suffered a 23 percent drop-off from last week's highly publicized and widely reviewed season premiere. The episode "Valley of Darkness" held its lead-in audience for a 2.0 household rating. It is the lowest rating to date for the series, which premiered in January.

The three series earned ratings of 1.2 (SG-1), 0.9 (Atlantis), and 0.7 (Galactica) for their late-night reruns.

SCI FI also began reruns of FOX's cancelled series Firefly at 7 p.m. "Serenity, Part 1" earned a solid 1.3 rating outside of primetime.

New episodes of Stargate continue this Friday at 8 p.m. Eastern/Pacific on The SCI FI Channel!

Source: Gateworld

Interview: Bear McCreary

Composer, Battlestar Galactica: Season One Soundtrack

by John C. Snider © 2005: Sci-Fi Dimensions

 

Sci Fi Channel's new Battlestar Galactica has been blowing fans away with its cliffhanging episodes, edgy character interactions, "handheld" camerawork - and not least with its exotic, pulse-pounding soundtrack.  With the score to BSG Season One out on CD and the premiere episode of BSG Season Two debuting Friday, July 15th, it seems like a good time to catch up with composer Bear McCreary.

 

Visit Bear's official website at www.bearmccreary.com - and learn more about the Season One soundtrack album at www.lalalandrecords.com.

 

scifidimensions: Bear - my compliments to you on creating a unique soundtrack.  It's unlike anything we've heard before on science fiction television.  Can you give us a glimpse into the conceptual process behind the music?  When the show's producers got you involved, what were the original ideas behind the music and how it would complement the story?

 

Bear McCreary: Thanks.  Obviously the score started with the ideas laid down in the 2003 miniseries by composer Richard Gibbs for whom I was working at the time.  From there, I've had the opportunity to develop those concepts and explore them more thoroughly over the first 13-episode season.  From the very beginning, the producers always wanted the music to be subliminal, psychological.  In general, I try not to score specific action and moments, but rather concepts, story lines, character arcs - let the music speak for the subtext of the story and not necessarily the obvious actions happening on screen.  They wanted to avoid the typical orchestral bombast of Star Trek and Star Wars so my challenge is to create a score that is emotional, subtle, at times grand and sweeping, all without the tried and true instrumentation of the "Hollywood Orchestra."  While challenging, this constraint ultimately led to many fun musical experiments.  How do you take something that back in the day would have been scored with strings and blaring French horns and get the same emotional impact using Taiko Drums, a balalaika, a bagpipe and a Duduk???  Fun stuff...

 

sfd: What is your approach as a composer, especially with respect to BSG?   Do you have ideas sitting around, and then find a place to put them?  Or do you watch scenes and draw inspiration while watching them?

 

Bear: I wish I could say I use the ideas I have sitting around, because they're lots of them.  But, no, that never works.  The show will tell you what it needs, and I find plenty of inspiration just watching the story lines unfold.  Honestly, I'm a huge fan of the show, and I don't read the scripts or spoilers on the internet, so when I spot an episode with the producers, I'm seeing it for the first time - one episode at a time, just like the fans.  I'm usually so excited by where each episode goes, I can't wait to get home and start writing.

 

sfd: Was there any scene from Season One that you found particularly difficult to score?  Also, have you ever put a lot of effort into creating music for a certain sequence and, despite your best efforts, it just doesn't "work"?

 

Bear: There have been several scenes that were really challenging, especially since you never have the luxury of time.  The destruction of the Olympic Carrier in the first episode was a big challenge, especially because it was the first episode I tackled by myself.  I was thrilled with the outcome though - great scene and a great cue.  Usually when you're scoring something and it just doesn't seem to work it's not your fault (sounds like a cop out, but it's true!).   That is generally an indicator that something in the picture itself is flawed.   Music can rarely fix those kinds of problems.  Fortunately, I've never had that situation come up in BSG. The picture works well even without music, so I don't have to "fix problems," I just go through with a subtle brush and accent certain emotional beats or concepts.

 

sfd: What's your background, both educational and professional? What steps led up to your involvement in BSG?

 

Bear: I studied classical composition at the University of Southern California.   I'm a self taught accordionist.  Did a bunch of independent films and short films.  (Bio's on my website, for more details.)  I ended up on BSG in kind of a haphazard way.  I was working for Richard Gibbs at the time he was scoring the 2003 miniseries.  There was a ton of music to write in a short time, so he had me write a bunch of cues in order to make the deadline.  He took on the series, scoring episodes 02 and 03, but returned to feature films after that.  I was the ideal choice to take over for him, since I had contributed so much to the BSG musical universe already.

 

sfd: Where's "Bear" come from?

 

Bear: What can I say?  Parents were hippies.

 

sfd: How much of the BSG compositions are generated digitally and how much with real-live instruments?  And if the latter, what resources can you draw on to get performers who can play all the exotic instruments?

 

Bear: With the BSG score, the general rule is: "If it sounds like a synth, it's a synth, if it sounds real, it's real."  The score features a lot of live instruments, and working with the talented musicians who can perform on so many ethnic and traditional instruments is a real joy.

 

sfd: A handful of the tracks contain music in non-English languages - Gaelic, Italian, and (so I'm told) even Hindu mantras.  Do you write all your lyrics in English and then turn them over to translators?

 

Bear: I will usually write English lyrics first and hand it over to a translator.   From there, we'll do a couple of drafts until the lines are finessed into something that fits my melodic ideas.  One time, for a great little computer animated short called "Free Radicals" I actually wrote the lyrics initially in French (4 years of high school French).  I knew just enough of the language to understand the grammar, so all the nouns and verbs were in the right place, etc.  But, my vocabulary was so limited, I was totally incapable of having any of it actually make sense.  A sample lyric:

 

"The happiness of the bugs who live in my shirt

Makes me want to eat a bicycle

With a little parsley"

 

Thankfully, the movie was a comedy about talking cockroaches with French accents, so the absurdity paid off.

 

sfd: Many fans are curious as to why the music is different for the American and UK versions of BSG.  How much of it is different?  And can you give us any insight into why?

 

Bear: Sci Fi Channel wanted to change directions on it after it started airing in the UK, so we altered the first half, leaving the second half (drum montage) virtually the same.  This season, the second half has gone back to the original UK version and now the drum montage is gone.  There are a lot of people involved in making decisions regarding the MT, so sometimes it takes longer to make up their minds.

 

sfd: Season Two is about to kick off.  Can you give us any hints on what we'll hear new or different in the score?

 

Bear: It's still pretty early to say.  Season Two features the first piece of music written by someone other than me or Richard (or Stu Phillips' original BSG theme).  I performed a solo piano piece composed by Phillip Glass for episode 02.  Should be interesting.

 

sfd: Any new or upcoming projects we should know about?

 

Bear: Got some top secret stuff on the back burner while I'm doing Season Two.  I could tell you, but then I'd have to erase your brain Men-In-Black style. 

 

Battlestar Galactica Season One Soundtrack is available from Amazon.com.

 

Links

La-La Land Records Official Website

Battlestar Galactica: Season One Soundtrack (CD) Review [July 2005]

 

Newshound: Sci-Fi

Bear McCreary flooded with emails

Source: Film Scores Monthly

The following is a email message from Bear McCreary regarding the piano piece that appeared in this last friday's episode of BATTLESTAR GALACTICA


"Hey Guys,

I was out of town over the weekend
and just got home to a flood of email inquiries about the piano piece featured in 202 "Valley of Darkness", so I figured I'd write you all back at once.

While that's me playing the piano, the piece is in fact written by Philip Glass. And, I know you're all going to hate this but... I don't know what its from! However, I'm sure someone out there must recognize the piece and can tell you what its called. I know its commercially available, so maybe try skimming iTunes for Glass piano works.

As for the Season 2 CD, I am thrilled with all the interest so far. We will be putting one out, but it won't be until the Spring of 2006, after I've scored all 20 episodes. The piano piece is definitely on the list of contenders so far. I'm sure the guys at La La Land Records
(
www.lalalandrecords.com) will be willing to start a thread on their message boards so you can let us know each week which cues really catch your ear.

Anyway, back to work. Episode 03 is great, and 04 and 05 are even
better. Trust me...

-Bear McCreary"

The original score "Metamorphosis One" by Philip Glass can be found in the Audio section of this board

Weddle Finds 'Galactica' From Deep Space

Author: Michael Hinman
Date: 07-26-2005
Source: SyFy Portal

This is the first part in a series talking to "Battlestar Galactica" co-producer and writer David Weddle.

His introduction to television writing was unexpected. In fact, like many Hollywood success stories, David Weddle simply found himself in the right place at the right time.

Weddle had written a biography in 1994 on film director Sam Peckinpah called "If They Move ... Kill 'Em!" which actually was a favorite of "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" co-executive producer Ira Steven Behr. In fact, Behr liked the biography so much, he invited Weddle to come visit him on the set of of "Deep Space Nine" at the Paramount lot in Hollywood.

"He invited me to lunch at Paramount, and took me for a tour of the sets," Weddle recently told SyFy Portal's Michael Hinman. "Being a shameless opportunist, I asked if I could pitch story ideas to his show. Ira generously said yes."

And with that pitch started a career that would span the length of "Deep Space Nine," and then land him and writing partner Bradley Thompson on one of the decade's most talked about science-fiction series, "Battlestar Galactica" on SciFi Channel.

But making the break into not only science-fiction, but writing teleplays took a lot of work ... something Weddle said he didn't take lightly.

"At first, I didn't understand what the hell was going on," Weddle said about watching previous episodes of DS9. "But we studied the show for a couple of months, then went in to pitch ideas to Ira. He was extraordinarily patient and became a mentor to us. We sold a story idea in Season 4. (Then co-executive producer) Ron Moore ended up writing the teleplay based on our story. After he finished, we sent him a thank you note, and Ron sent us all the drafts of the script -- which was another tremendous educational experience. It gave us a window into the evolutionary process of TV writing."

The episode was "Rules of Engagement" where Worf (Michael Dorn) stood trial for destroying what was believed to be a civilian transport ship in the midst of a battle. Weddle and Thompson would go on to write 11 more episodes for DS9 before it went off the air in 1999. Following the end of the show, everyone went off in their own directions, including Weddle, who would write for programs like "Ghost Stories" and UPN's version of "The Twilight Zone" that aired with "Star Trek: Enterprise."

Ronald D. Moore, however, had a different path ... one that led him to a brief stint on "Star Trek: Voyager" in its sixth season, which Weddle said was "deeply mired in the 'Great Moments With Mr. Lincoln' school of dramaturgy."

"By that, I mean it seemed like a cast of automatons mouthing freeze-dried dialogue and slogging through pre-programmed melodrama," Weddle said. "Ron tried to paddle the show into darker waters and reinvigorate it by making it more complex and contemporary, but his arguments fell on deaf ears and he finally left."

Weddle said that he kind of lost track of Moore, until he was attending a Director's Guild screening of the "Battlestar Galactica" miniseries that first aired on SciFi Channel in 2003 ... something that Moore had taken a lot of heat for reimagining.

"As I sat down in the theater before the screening, I cringed because I was not a fan of the original 'Battlestar' and could not see how even a remarkably talented writer like Ron Moore could weave that straw into gold," Weddle said. "I should have known better. Ten minutes into the screening, I did know better. It blew me away!"

Weddle said that after the screening, he went up to Ron and exclaimed, "You did it! Everything you wanted to do with 'Voyager,' everything that you argued Star Trek needed to do to grow and survive as a franchise, you did in this show."

A couple weeks later, Weddle and Thompson were invited to lunch again ... not to get a tour of the sets and hang out with some producers, but to have Moore offer them both staff positions on the new "Battlestar Galactica." Moore made Weddle and Thompson co-producers as well as writers. The pair ended up penning the popular first-season episodes "Act of Contrition" and "Hand of God." So far in the second season, they've written the first two episodes, "Scattered" and "Valley of Darkness," with three more ready to go for the season. And that's not all. As co-producers, they have their hands in many aspects of every episode, helping to bring the entire series together.

"None of it would be possible without Ira Behr, who took a chance on us, taught us the craft of television writing, and showed all of us -- Ron included -- what could be accomplished when working with the epic canvas of a science-fiction series," Weddle said.

One of the things that "Galactica" has steered away from that was common in Star Trek series episodes are reset buttons. Weddle, however, says that's a trend not started or maintained solely by "Galactica," but one they are definitely taking part in.

"I think the reset button is a convention that is fading from episodic television," he said. "Do you see the reset button hit on 'The Sopranos,' 'Six Feet Under,' 'West Wing' or 'Lost'? No. This is because audiences are becoming more sophisticated and demanding more complex and developed narratives, demanding them by gravitating to them and making these shows popular."

A lot of that practice, Weddle said, had more to do with what producers and writers were given, rather than what they wanted to introduce to audiences.

"In the old days, when networks cranked out 39 (in the 1950s) episodes of a show each season, and later 26 -- there was an edict that every episode had to be self-contained so that the shows could be rerun in random order on other stations for years to come. This recreated the reset button so that all conflicts had ot be resolved in 30 to 60 minutes and characters remained static, never growing or developing.

"But now that most shows find their second life in DVD box sets, audiences are gravitating to those with continuing storylines. 'Deep Space Nine' was a transitional series. It was supposed to be composed of self-contained episodes, but Ira Behr slyly moved it into an ongoing narrative with continuing storylines. This is where Ron and Brad and I learned the craft of the new generation of TV shows, just as 'Sopranos' was hitting the air and transforming television."

"Galactica," by it's nature, is a very dark series. Billions of people were killed in a nuclear holocaust, and the 50,000 or so that survived are barely holding on as the Cylons continue to chase them down. But yet, the series has found light moments, including when the crew was able to defeat the Cylons at a tylium refinery in "Hand of God" and get enough fuel to last them a couple years.

"It is not hard to write light moments in the show," Weddle said. "One of the episodes we wrote this season (it has yet to air) is actually a very upbeat show. We don't go out of our way to make the show dark. We try to keep the show as real as we can, to proceed from the set of circumstances that our characters find themselves in and allow events to unfold much as they would in our world.

"This often means that for every good thing that happens, there is also something painful or traumatic. Don't you find that to be true in your life? For every achievement, there is a setback, for every gain there is also a loss. This is not dark or pessimistic, it's life. We all struggle to come to terms with that, some of us more successfully than others -- just like the characters of 'Battlestar.'"

This interview series with David Weddle continues the first week of August, and will talk about the genesis of episodes like "Act of Contrition" and "Hand of God," as well as other aspects of what brings "Battlestar Galactica" together

Galactica's Starbuck Finds Love



Source: Sci-Fi wire
25-JULY-05

Katee Sackhoff, who plays Lt. Kara "Starbuck" Thrace on the SCI FI Channel original series Battlestar Galactica, told SCI FI Wire that she asked the producers to expand a storyline in which her character finds romance. "I have a love interest that comes in in episode four and five, and he left," Sackhoff said in an interview. "He was gone. And I thought to bring him back, and it's a big deal to have to bring him back, because basically you have to go back to Caprica again. ... It's a huge thing. It's a couple of episodes, if not more than that, to bring his character back, and I fought for that because we have great chemistry and I enjoy him."

Sackhoff said that the producers took her suggestion and are writing the character, played by Michael Trucco, back into the show. His return may end a streak of brief trysts for Starbuck, which Sackhoff believes are a product of her character's insecurities. "She is extremely vulnerable, and extremely fragile," she said. "And she wants so badly to be loved. And she doesn't know how to do that. She's been hurt so many times in her life. The easiest way for her to feel loved is to have sex with somebody, to feel that immediate connection. And I think that when she [did] do that and realized that wasn't what [she] wanted, again, she leaves them. So that's why it's a string of men and it's only one time or two times. But I think with the man that she met on Caprica, she finally gave her heart to someone. And it's a big thing for her, and we've been seeing the emotional toll it has taken for her, because she misses him a lot."

In a separate interview, producer David Eick (whom Sackhoff calls an "actors' producer"), told SCI FI Wire that it was Sackhoff's performance that inspired a more three-dimensional take on the character. "You really find yourself writing Kara Thrace as the most vulnerable character, because Katee has that vulnerability, and she has that sort of tough exterior," Eick said. "And that balance, that sort of contradiction, really, is what's so interesting about the character. If she was just Han Solo with a haircut, you'd say, 'Okay, nice.' But it starts to feel a little bit cute; it starts to feel a little bit contrived. And the truth is, she's the most emotional. And yet she's the one who's the best shot, and she's probably the one that will pull the trigger first. And that's an interesting contradiction to us, and that contradiction was really provided by Katee." Battlestar Galactica airs Fridays at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

TV Guide: Watercooler: review Valley Of Darkness

Now here's a situation I can identify with: the Cylon virus knocking out the main and auxiliary power on board, not unlike the many times that I blew a fuse with my AC while living in New York. Not that we had any auxiliary anything, you understand. We just had flashlights and basement fuse boxes that hung from their own wires. Enough about me, though. Yet another testament to how well done this show is the way they manage to make CGI Cylon warriors terrifying. You see exactly what it's like to run into one in a dark hallway, and it ain't pretty. And I didn't realize how freakin' big they were. Down on Caprica, Starbuck's laying into Helo. "Your girlfriend's from a lovely family," she says of Cylon Boomer. "Good people. Great values." Oh, c'mon. She's gonna give the guy crap when she already knows he's been on the run for months, one of only two humans (as far as he knew) on the entire planet? Well, yeah — apparently she is. Meanwhile, Baltar can't figure out why Adama, in a dream, would want to drown Baltar and Number Six's baby. Just a guess here, Doc, but I'm thinking it has something to do with your kid serving the purposes of the guys who nearly wiped out all of human civilization. Crazy talk, I know.

But who figured Starbuck for a painter, and not a bad one at that? Nice scene where she listens to the recording of her father playing classical piano, too. "Everyone I know is fighting to get back what they had," she says. "I'm fighting 'cause I don't know how to do anything else." Like I said, nice; just as the scene on Kobol, where Chief Tyrol has to deliver the fatal shot to the dying Socinus to make his death quick is painful to see. Great job cranking up the tension, too, when the last Cylon Centurions go for the aft damage-control room as the underarmed Apollo and his guys try to stop them. "We did it! We got 'em all! They don't look so big now, do they?" one guy screams after they get lucky and destroy the robots. "They were big enough," Apollo says. Good point — all the dead people around him would likely agree. Once again, great episode. Maybe we can wait a little longer for Adama to wake up. It's been pretty interesting with him out of the picture like this (not that it wasn't good when he was up and about, mind you; I'm just saying — especially since it seems to keep Tigh away from that pain-in-the-ass wife of his). — MP

BSG Actors To Appear At "Gatecon 2005"



Island Life

Beam me up, Scotty

By Michelle Hopkins
07/24/2005

Science fiction fans will see stars in Richmond next week.

Mark your calendars, devotees of all things sci-fi. The sixth annual Gatecon 2005 convention kicks off Monday, July 25 and runs to July 31 at the Best Western Richmond Hotel & Convention Centre.

"A lot of fans enjoy the imagination of these shows, their ability to see into the future," says Bill Wanstrom, corporate liaison and publicity for Gatecon. "This convention allows them to take that journey."

Gatecon 2005 is a journey into the unknown. Fans of Stargate SG-1, Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, Andromeda and The Collector of will attend acting workshops, competitions, fiction writer's workshops, a costume competition and meet some of the hottest science-fiction actors, including Kevin Sorbo (Andromeda) and Robert Picardo (the holographic doctor on Star Trek: Voyager), as well as a host of others.

Gatecon was initially inspired by the Vancouver-based TV series Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis, but was modified this year to recognize other series in the popular genre.

In the past, Wanstrom says organizers were focused on promoting MGM's Stargate. This year, the organizing committee expanded the convention to other television shows and movies. Actors Richard Hatch, Aaron Douglas, Kandyse McClure, Lorena Gale, Tahmoh Penikett, Alonso Oyarzun, Alessandro Juliani and Dirk Benedict are all expected at Gatecon.

"All Battlestar actors will be appearing a few times stage during the convention, including Q &A sessions," says Wanstrom. "It's five solid full days and nights of events to entertain everyone... photo sessions, signing events, auctions for charities, studio tours, workshops, and Richard Hatch will be conducting workshops."

But there's another reason to attend Gatecon: "We are a fan-run, charity driven convention where more than $250,000 US has been raised and donated to various Canadian charities," says Wanstrom.

Gatecon has raised some $100,000 for Make-A-Wish Foundation. This year, proceeds go to three charities - Make-A-Wish Foundation, the Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and new this year, C.H.I.L.D.

Wanstrom is hoping to raise the convention's profile in B.C. Attendance last year was more than 700, mostly from outside the province, and for that matter Canada.

"Over the last five years we have found that more than 90 per cent of our visitors to our conventions have been from other countries other than Canada. They come from Germany, Australia, the United Kingdom, the United States, Holland, and other countries."

Bottom line, says Wanstrom: "We are a fan-run, charity-driven sci-fi, horror, adventure, fantasy convention where our net proceeds go to charities, and where our attendees and guests have tonnes of fun and everyone is put in the spotlight."

Advance one-day passes are $75 US ($100 at the door) or a five-day pass in advance is $225 US ($250 at the door). Visit gatecon.com.

Newshound Sci-Fi

Aaron Douglas/Tyrol on S2D Wednesday July 27

 

 

Aaron Douglas will be at a convention but has said he will do his best to call into the program this Wednesday July 27. Subject2Discussion LIVE at 6pm PT on http://www.LVROCKS.com click on LISTEN and click on CAM/CHAT.

We will clear the deck for him at 6:40pm PT to await his hopeful call into the program.

Thanks to Koenigrules for assisting in this.

First up is Robert Hayes of the Blogger News Network with a discussion of the news of the day and more.

Then if the gods cooperate Aaron Douglas will be on in the last segment of the program.

Join us, so say we all

Shaun
http://www.subject2discussion.com

--------------------
Created and host of Subject To Discussion a weekly current events webcast audio show on LVROCKS.COM

 

Pre Order your Battlestar magazine

 

The Titan Magazines company will be publishing the Battlestar Galactica TV series magazine!  The first issue is to be released sometime in August 2005. Possibly on Tuesday, August 9th in the US. It will be 5 issues [bimonthly] and 1 yearbook. The US subscription price is $39.95 including the postage charge. If you want to pre-subscribe, go to the website link listed above. Also, the Battlestar Galactica: The Official Companion book by David Bassom (published by Titan Books) is to be released on Tuesday, October 1, 2005 for US distribution. Here is the book description:
 
>>
 
Battlestar Galactica is back! The brand new, ‘re-imagined’ version of the cult 1970s series has quickly become the most critically acclaimed SF show on TV, with massive viewing figures to match. With its classy ensemble cast, including Edward James Olmos (Miami Vice) and Mary McDonnell (Dances with Wolves, Independence Day), its cutting edge special effects, superb production design and gritty, adult-oriented scripts, the new Battlestar Galactica is being hailed as both a worthy successor to a classic original, and a stunning piece of television in its own right.

Titan Books have been on set from the beginning, and now proudly present the official companion, packed with exclusive interviews, photos, behind the scenes secrets, and a complete episode guide to the mini-series and first season.

Episode guide Updates

We have updated our Episode guide for Ep 203 Valley of Darkness  with over 200 screen caps, the transcript and numerous audio files from last nights airing. Koenigrules  is already beavering away with excitement after seeing the show to get his review finished, so don't forget to look back and see his comments.

TV Tonight

 



By David Bianculli
July 22, 2005
From The New York Daily News:


SERIES

7:00 p.m. (SCIFI) "Firefly." Joss Whedon's underappreciated, and certainly underviewed, 2002 sci-fi series gets an encore run on the Sci-Fi Channel beginning tonight. Some episodes won't be encores, but rather "originals" because Fox didn't broadcast all the shows before canceling the series. Nathan Fillion stars as the captain of a crew of misfits in a futuristic world that feels a lot like a space-bound Western. Morena Baccarin co-stars. With this series preceding runs of "Stargate SG-1," "Stargate Atlantis" and "Battlestar Galactica," SCIFI is shaping up as the destination for Fridays.

8:00 (SCIFI) "Stargate SG-1" (Part 2 of 2). Claudia Black continues her guest-starring role - and this time, the plot manages to get her to change not only costumes, but bodies as well.

10:00 (SCIFI) "Battlestar Galactica." The fleet managed to reunite with a warp jump last episode, but that doesn't mean the danger's over - not when Cylons invade the ship.


10 pm/ET, SCIFI

Newshound:- Sci-Fi

Battlestar Galactica (2004): Season One
 

Universal has announced their "all retailers" release this morning, and as you can see on the left, the cover is noticably different than the box which Best Buy has been depicting. The release is set for September 20th, and the SRP is $59.98 (which means you'll be able to purchase it anywhere from $40 to $55, after retail discounts are applied). The running time is 757 minutes for a 5-DVD package (one more than the Best Buy set), including the 2003 mini-series on the first disc, and there are many extras. Here's a list of them, copied from Universal's release information:
 

  • Commentary Tracks:
    • Feature Commentary on "The Mini-Series" with Director Michael Rymer and Executive Producers David Eick and Ron Moore
    • "Pilot" Commentary with Director Michael Rymer and Executive Producers David Eick and Ronald D. Moore
    • "Bastille Day" Episode Commentary with Executive Producers David Eick and Ronald D. Moore
    • "Act of Contrition" Episode Commentary with Executive Producers David Eick and Ronald D. Moore
    • "You Can't Go Home Again" Episode Commentary with Executive Producers David Eick and Ronald D. Moore
    • "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down" Episode Commentary with Executive Producer Ronald D. Moore
    • "The Hand of God" Episode Commentary with Executive Producer Ronald D. Moore
    • "Colonial Day" Episode Commentary with Executive Producer Ronald D. Moore
    • "Kobol's Last Gleaming: Part 1" Episode Commentary with Executive Producer Ronald D. Moore
    • "Kobol's Last Gleaming: Part 2" Episode Commentary with Executive Producer Ronald D. Moore
  • Behind the Scenes
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Battlestar Galactica Series Lowdown
  • Sketches and Art


An added bonus item listed is "1 of 3 Collectible DVD Exclusive Trading Cards"; we're not sure yet what these are trading cards of, or how someone would obtain the other two cards in the set. We'll look into it, and let you know what we find out. Video is shown as " Anamorphic Widescreen (1.78:1)", and sound is shown to be "English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround". English and Spanish subtitles are on board as well.


 

Galactica Will Encounter Pegasus

David Eick, co-creator and executive producer of SCI FI Channel's original series Battlestar Galactica
, offered SCI FI Wire a few more details about the introduction of the Battlestar Pegasus, a returning element from the original series, which co-creator Ronald D. Moore revealed in a panel at Comic-Con International in San Diego. "This really came out of a conversation Ron and I had early on about the episodes we had seen of the original show and what felt like they might be well served by a fresh interpretation," Eick said in an interview. He added: "The storyline that we thought was interesting was the Battlestar Pegasus. And so, naturally, we put a pretty unexpected and I think pretty subversive spin on it. But it's definitely going to be a fixture for a while." The Pegasus appears beginning in the 10th episode of the second season.

The arrival of the Pegasus will launch a complex story arc inspired by current events, Eick said. "It stands to reason that in a show that's all about how we're all trying to survive this horrific attack by this inhuman enemy, that the thing that we're really exploring is not that threat from without, but how it turns itself inward and how it becomes insidious and internal, and how it begins to break us down from inside ourselves," he said. "And what better way to take that idea to the next level than to introduce another human being who, on the face of it, is going to help us defeat the Cylons, defeat that third outside enemy, once and for all, but in reality serves to only remind us once again that the biggest enemy is really us?"

Eick also hinted that the Pegasus will be involved in a multi-episode arc, though its crew may not be around as long. "It's not going to go away as quickly as people might think," he said. "That's not to say that the folks involved in bringing the Pegasus to us are going to remain indefinitely. But for sure it's going to be a fixture for some time." Battlestar Galactica airs Fridays at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

Battlestar Galactica Flies High in the Ratings
Although the episode was 'Scattered', the performance was not
July 18th 2005 06:58pm | Posted by: Jim Iaccino, HNR Associate Editor



Battlestar Galactica fans should be rejoicing over their show's performance last Friday night when the premiere episode of Season 2 aired on the SCI FI Channel. According to
SyFy Portal, "Scattered" generated the highest rating of all the shows on the SCI FI Friday Lineup.

Over 3 million viewers tuned in, producing an average household rating of 2.6. Galactica's Season 2 premiere was on par with its Season 1 premiere last January.

However, the news was not all good for sci-fi fans. Galactica's sister shows, Stargate: SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis, generated lower household ratings of 2.1 and 2.2, respectively. The expectation was definitely set higher for the Stargates as a number of new members were added to the casts - including the Farscape duo of Ben Browder and Claudia Black. But even identification with SCI FI's cult favorite show Farscape could not attract significantly more viewers to the 'Gates'.

It is interesting to note that when SCI FI's parent network, NBC, decided to re-air three Galactica shows from the first season the previous weekend, it ended up being last place in the ratings. Apparently viewers did not want to see repeats of BSG, but wanted new episodes instead. If SCI FI gets its way, Galactica fans will be getting those episodes and additional seasons for a long time to come.

The conclusion to Episode 201, entitled "Valley of Darkness", airs this coming Friday night on the SCI FI Channel. It promises to be an even more action-driven episode than "Scattered" as an army of the robotic Cylons have just come aboard the battlestar ready to exterminate the human occupants. Stay tuned for a great season of adventures on Battlestar Galactica.

Ratings for Sci-Fi Friday
 

New Seasons of 'Stargate SG-1,' 'Stargate Atlantis' and 'Battlestar Galactica'
Make SCI FI #1 For the Night


New York, NY (July 18, 2005) - SCI FI Channel reasserts its dominance on Friday nights. The July 15 (8pm-11pm ET/PT) season premieres of its 'SCI FI Friday' lineup of original series led SCI FI to the #1 spot on basic cable for P18-49 and P25-54. The season 2 premiere of the Channel's critically-acclaimed 'Battlestar Galactica' was the #1 program on television - including broadcast and cable - among M25-54 and M18-49.

'Stargate SG-1' (8pm) kicked off its record ninth original season with a 2.1 HH rating, 2,610,000 viewers P2+ and 1.6 million P25-54. With the revamped cast, which includes new team members Beau Bridges and Ben Browder, the series has been rejuvenated. Versus its January '05 premiere, Friday's 'SG-1' debut was up +5% in HH ratings, 5% in P2+, +6% among P25-54 and +8% among P18-49.

'Stargate Atlantis' (9pm) launched into its sophomore season with a 2.2 HH rating, 2,783,000 viewers P2+ and 1.9 million P25-54. Compared against its January '05 premiere, Friday's 'Atlantis' debut was up +6% in HH ratings, +6% in P2+, +8% among P25-54 and +11% among P18-49.

'Battlestar Galactica' (10pm) kickstarted its second season as the #1 program on all of television among M18-49 and M25-54 - beating every cable and network program that aired that night. The season 2 premiere also marked 'Battlestar's highest-rated episode to date. With a 2.6 HH rating, "Scattered" delivered 3,053,000 total viewers (P2+) and 2.1 million P25-54.

Other SCI FI highlights:
--SCI FI Channel was the #2 basic cable network on Friday night among P18-34, F18-49 and F25-54
--SCI FI had the #2, #3 and #4 programs of the night among P25-54 and P18-49
--'Stargate SG-1,' 'Stargate Atlantis' and 'Battlestar Galactica' were the Top 3 cable programs for the day among M25-54 and account for three of the Top 4 among M18-49
--'Battlestar Galactica' and 'Stargate Atlantis' were both ranked in the Top 10 cable programs for the day among F25-54 (#7 and #8, respectively). 'Galactica' also ranked #9 among F18-49

All three 'SCI FI Friday' series were honored with Emmy nominations last week for Outstanding Special Visual Effects. 'Stargate Atlantis' was nominated for Outstanding Main Title Theme Music.

SCI FI Channel is a television network where "what if" is what's on. SCI FI fuels the imagination of viewers with original series and events, blockbuster movies and classic science fiction and fantasy programming, as well as a dynamic Web site (www.scifi.com) and magazine. Launched in 1992, and currently in 85 million homes, SCI FI Channel is a network of NBC Universal, one of the world's leading media and entertainment companies.

Newshound: sci-fi

Tuned in, turned on and totally television
July 18, 2005
Karla Peterson:
Union Tribune


We all had our reasons for attending Comic-Con, the pop-culture extravaganza that wrapped up yesterday at the San Diego Convention Center.

Some of us wanted to brush up on our Pokémon battling skills. A few of us needed to get our pictures taken with Chewbacca. Others of us will use any excuse to get our Riddler suit out of mothballs.

And some of us just had to know how the polar bear got on the island.

"Are you bringing up the polar bear again?" Chicagoan Tara Walker asked her friend Saul Del Toro of Oceanside, who accompanied her to Saturday's panel featuring members of ABC's "Lost" cast and creative crew.

"I want to find out what's going on," said Del Toro, who – like many "Lost" watchers – wondered how a polar bear ended up on the show's tropical island. "Just to find out what's going to happen, that's what I want to see."

He came to the right place. Because if you love television enough to obsess about it, this year's Comic-Con was the best way to get out of the house without leaving your entertainment universe.

EARNIE GRAFTON / Union-Tribune
Last year, when creators brought their ideas to the fest, "Battlestar Galactica" fans were skeptical. But at this year's Comic-Con, they were over the moon for the show, a remake of a popular old series, but with modern sensibilities and drama turns.

While the movie freaks waited in massive, snaking lines to see sneak peaks of "Superman Returns," and the comic-book fans waited for an audience with the legendary Stan Lee, television lovers could use the four-day conference, its maze of merchandise booths and its barrage of panels and screenings to interface with their electronic friend in myriad real-world ways.

And if you are a man whose livelihood depends on the kind of people who are passionate about "Alias" trading cards and the debut of the "Family Guy" DVD, you could use Comic-Con to rope 'em in.

"We're coming to Comic-Con to get more fans," said Rob Thomas, creator of "Veronica Mars," UPN's sassy drama about a high-schooler who moonlights as a private detective. "I need more people to be watching the show. It would be nice to come back for a third year."

With its second season beginning in fall, the critically acclaimed but ratings' challenged "Veronica Mars" does need more fans. But judging by Friday's raucous love-fest of a panel, which found the audience cheering through a greatest-hits reel and hooting happily at the photogenic leading men, it would be hard for "Veronica Mars" to find better fans than the ones it has now.

Summer-camp camaraderie was in abundance in room 6B, and the über-friendly cast members were definitely part of the gang. That included new guest performer Charisma Carpenter, a former Chargers cheerleader whose cult-TV track record ("Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Angel") made her the girl most likely to rock the "Veronica Mars" fans' world.

"What will you be playing?" one man wanted to know.

 


 
EARNIE GRAFTON / Union-Tribune
"They're treating us like rock stars," says David Eick, executive director of the new "Battlestar" series, of cheering fans.

"A bitch," Carpenter said with a honeyed smile. "In a bikini."

And after Thomas answered questions about the show's San Diego locations (Yes, Oceanside High will make more appearances); the new season (Yes, the dead Lilly Kane will be back); and the challenges of airing opposite "Lost" in the fall ("TiVo 'Lost,' " was his advice); one audience member summed it up for everybody.

"This show is so much better than any award you could give it. Thank you."

No such wellspring of affection awaited TV executive David Eick when he took His baby to Comic-Con last year. As the executive producer of the Sci Fi Channel's rather radical update of the 1978 spaceship drama "Battlestar Galactica," Eick came to the convention with doubts that turned out to be grounded in reality.

"It was the first time I was able to communicate with people who were very angry at us for taking their beloved title and doing something with it that they didn't expect," Eick said in a pre-convention interview.

"But then I felt the tide turn. As they started seeing snippets (of the show), this momentum started to build. At the end people stood up and said, 'I came here expecting to be bitterly disappointed, but I was pleasantly surprised.' Now, they're treating us like rock stars."

When "Battlestar Galactica" returned to Comic-Con this year, it landed in a ballroom jammed with supporters who couldn't wait to discuss this erudite, politically astute serial that TV Guide dubbed one of the best dramas on television. And one of the show's leading ladies couldn't wait to give the fans credit for keeping it aloft.

"You are deeply interested in the metaphysical," actress Mary McDonnell said. "You are deeply into politics. You are deeply interested in the environment, and you are deeply interested in sex. So thank you for that."

And after watching the first episode of the WB's promising ghost-hunting drama "Supernatural" and clips from ABC's eerie "Invasion" and spooky remake of 1974's "Kolchak: the Nightstalker," it was a pleasure to join the masses in the ballroom to pay tribute to "Lost," the show that resurrected the supernatural when it made its debut at last year's Comic-Con.

"There were about half as many people in the room last year," executive producer Bryan Burk told the people who crowded into the 4,500-seat ballroom to see clips from the upcoming season-1 DVD and meet the cast. "And I think that's because we had a hobbit."

Alas, "Lord of the Rings" fixture Dominic Monaghan – who plays musician Charlie Pace on "Lost" – couldn't make it to Saturday's panel. But Josh "Sawyer" Holloway was there to prove that he is just as dimpled and lethally charming as his character, and to confirm rumors that he does occasionally swim in the nude.

Co-creator Damon Lindelof was there to reassure us that the questions of season 1 will be answered in season 2, and executive producer Carlton Cuse was there to tell us that we will find out what's in the mysterious hatch.

And bless his heart, writer Javier Grillo-Marxauch was there to explain how the polar bear got on the island. It was an answer the Comic-Con television contingent could truly appreciate.

"It's a little-known fact that polar bears are indigenous to the South Pacific," the screenwriter said with a trace of a grin. "I watched a lot of 'Wild Kingdom' as a child, and Marlin Perkins taught us right."

Newshound: Sci-Fi

Battlestar Galactica Raises The Bar
Sci-Fi experts at Comic-Con in San Diego look at how the genre has changed
July 17th 2005 07:16pm |
Posted by: Michael Hinman, HNR Genre Editor



There was once a time when science-fiction shows were compared to Star Trek and its various spinoffs. When Ronald D. Moore left the franchise in the late 1990s to pursue other interests, he probably never imagined that he would lead something that would change the way the entertainment industry thinks.

But he has.

At last weekend's Comic-Con in San Diego, a group of science-fiction "experts" got together to talk about the state of the genre, and most especially the 39-year-old stalwart, Star Trek. Their conclusion? If it's ever going to come back, it needs to take the lead from SciFi Channel's and Moore's Battlestar Galactica.

"Galactica is made like a contemporary television show," said Jeff Bond, executive editor of Eon Magazine. "It can measure up to any show on television right now."

Bond was among a panel of movers and shakers in the industry, including Free Enterprise director Robert Meyer Burnett, producer Daren Dochterman, and Digital Bits editor Bill Hunt.

Burnett said that once upon a time, shows like Star Trek took on important social issues, but fell away from that in recent years. Galactica, however, is trying to change that.

"We need to ask the tough questions, because the press isn't," Burnett said. "And Galactica has attempted to do that."

In its first season alone, Galactica has tackled issues similar to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, suicide bombers, paranoia of enemy infiltration, political prisoners, prison abuses, and even extreme religious influences in government.

Sci-fi has been able to get away with such commentary because it can displace it and make it something of its own. The original Star Trek also dealt with issues like that, including the Vietnam Conflict and racial issues. However, many fans feel that the later shows missed the boat on a lot of possible social issues, including gay rights, stem-cell research, and some of the stronger political climate of today.

 

Ron Moore's Deep Space Journey
By JOHN HODGMAN
Published: July 17, 2005

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.

"Battlestar Galactica" 70's version: From top, Richard Hatch as Captain Apollo and Dirk Benedict as Lieutenant Starbuck; Muffitt II, the robot dog; Lorne Greene, as Commander Adama; Jane Seymour.

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 miniature of the Enterprise, which he still has today, and wrote stories about dinosaurs fighting in World War II. He went to Cornell to study political science on a Navy R.O.T.C. scholarship. Though he flunked out of college and never ended up joining the Navy, he still has a deep affinity for the institution and its rituals and still subscribes to the Navy journal Proceedings (''Much to my horror,'' says his wife, Terry, who grew up in Berkeley). In his office in L.A., Moore has a complete set of Samuel Eliot Morrison's multivolume history of the Navy's World War II campaigns, a model of the U.S.S. Utah and an actual ship's binnacle (as well as a rather vicious-looking bat'leth, the ceremonial sword of the Klingon empire).

In 1989, when he was in his mid-20's, he managed to sell a spec script to ''Star Trek: The Next Generation,'' which was still in its infancy. Titled ''The Bonding,'' it told the story of a boy on board the Enterprise who is suddenly orphaned when his mother is killed on a routine mission. (Do not fear -- he is later semi-adopted by Worf, the Klingon security chief.) Soon, Moore became a staff writer for the show, then graduated to helping to produce its darker spinoff, ''Deep Space Nine.'' As a writer, Moore became a fan favorite, known for his thoughtful scripts that revered yet challenged the long-established mythos of ''Star Trek.'' He also became known for killing people. He would go on to kill the mother of Worf's biological son; in the movie ''Star Trek: Generations,'' written with Brannon Braga, he managed to kill Captain Picard's young nephew, as well as Captain Kirk. It was this latter death that changed his status slightly among the fan community, to the tune of death threats.

"Battlestar Galactica" updated: From top, Jamie Bamber as Captain Lee Adama (Apollo) and Katee Sackhoff as Lieutenant Kara Thrace (Starbuck); Starbuck; Bamber with Richard Hatch as Tom Zarek, a former terrorist; Edward James Olmos as Commander Adama.

He told me that he wept as he worked on the scene in which Kirk falls to his death. ''But I was really driven to do it,'' he said. ''I wanted to do this story about mortality, and how mortality comes to even the greatest hero, and what happens when Kirk dies.'' He paused. When he is asked a question, Moore often replies with a calm, unsettling candor bespeaking long reflection. ''It's weird,'' he finally said. ''He was my childhood hero, and I killed him. What does that mean? What does that say about me?''

It all came to an end with the third spinoff, ''Voyager.'' Moore had been intrigued by its premise: a starship and its crew are left to fend for themselves in deep, unknown space (a premise not unlike that of ''Battlestar Galactica''). He had hoped it would be a new direction for the story he loved -- setting ''Star Trek'' loose from the moorings of its old cliches and letting it explore new, more realistic territory. But as he watched the show develop, Moore grew disenchanted. No matter how many times the bridge of the ''Voyager'' was destroyed, the ship was always spic and span by the next episode. ''How many shuttle crafts have vanished,'' he later said in an interview posted on a science-fiction Web site, ''and another one just comes out of the oven?'' But no one at ''Voyager'' seemed to share this frustration, and after he joined the show in 1999, at the beginning of its fifth season, his attitude left him isolated from the rest of the staff. Within months he quit. ''It was very difficult,'' he told me, his eyes locked sadly on an empty space somewhere between us. ''I didn't want to leave the nest.'' It was the first time he had been outside the ''Trek'' universe in 10 years.


Shortly after Moore left ''Voyager,'' Richard Hatch was in the San Diego convention center, receiving a standing ovation. Hatch had been the star of the original ''Battlestar Galactica,'' playing the idealistic Captain Apollo opposite Dirk Benedict's roguish Lieutenant Starbuck. Together they had been on the cover of People; their faces served as the models for countless lunch boxes and T-shirts. But then it was all suddenly over.

The original ''Battlestar'' was often dismissed as a ''Star Wars'' rip-off, but it was always stranger and more ambitious than that. There was an element of 70's-era ''Chariots of the Gods'' crackpot-ism to it. (''There are those who believe that life here began out there,'' spoke the tweedy voice of Patrick Macnee at the opening of each episode, and proof of this common ancestry was provided weekly in the King Tut-style space helmets Apollo sported.) But that was blended in an intriguing way with late-cold-war anxiety over Soviet appeasements and an openly biblical story line, widely considered a tribute by its creator, Glen A. Larson, to the parables of his own Mormon faith. Twelve colonies of space-faring humans, survivors of slaughter driven away from their home planets, had set off through space in search of the mythical 13th tribe that, legend tells, settled a promised land called ''Earth.''

Yet ''Battlestar'' could never fully escape the orbit of its time. The most expensive-to-produce program of its day, at $1 million per episode, it kept drifting to the security of ''Love Boat''-style prime-time conventions: feathered hair and a fondness for weekly guest stars, including Fred Astaire as Starbuck's con-man father and Macnee as, well, Satan. After the show's initial great success (the premiere drew a reported 65 million viewers), the audience quickly dwindled, and it was canceled after eight months.

Dirk Benedict went on to star in ''The A-Team.'' Richard Hatch did soaps and TV work and started a business leading seminars in personal communication. In 1995, his girlfriend at the time persuaded him to do a signing session at a ''Star Trek'' convention in Pasadena. He agreed, but he wasn't sure if anyone would come. By that point, ''Battlestar Galactica'' had virtually disappeared. There had never been a complete video release, and with only a single season's worth of programming in existence, reruns were few and far between. So Hatch was nervous before the signing session, clutching his handful of photographs, watching the long lines of fans waiting to meet their favorite ''Star Trek'' actors, wondering if he would be sitting at his table out on the edge of the convention for hours by himself. Then his name was announced on the P.A., and he heard the crowd roar. One by one, they came to him, the fans, with their memories of ''Battlestar Galactica,'' emotionally recounting what the show had meant to them, how it helped them through difficult times in their lives.

''With all its flaws and imperfections, 'Battlestar' had somehow connected,'' Hatch told me recently, recalling the convention. ''I think that archetypal, very powerful story -- Moses and the Israelites journeying across the farthest reaches of space in search of a new homeland -- there's something epic in that.''

After the signing, Hatch registered the Web site battlestargalactica.com. (Neither Universal, which had produced the original show, nor Larson had ever bothered.) And so began his campaign to find and bring together fans of the original series and lead them to a new homeland, a resurrected ''Battlestar'' TV show or movie modeled on ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'' -- one that would continue the journey to Earth and would star several of the original actors, with Apollo as one of the leaders.

The journey took many turns. As Hatch continued to call and meet with executives from Universal, trying to convince them of the viability of his idea, he was approached to write new comics set in the old ''Battlestar'' universe, and then to share writing credits on a series of novels that would outline his vision. The first, ''Armageddon,'' was published in 1997. Six more followed. Universal seemed content to let him work within these media. But when it came to a new TV series, Hatch says, the executives he met with in the ''black tower'' building at Universal just didn't get it. They couldn't get past the original failure of ''Battlestar.'' So he decided that the best way to spark interest in a revival was to shoot what he called a ''proof of concept'' -- in effect, a trailer for a film or television show that didn't yet exist, based on one of his own books and starring him. He shot it using his own money, mortgaging his home and maxing out his credit cards. He relied on volunteer help from actors and cinematographers he knew around town and from fans he met on the Internet.

Compared with the thriving ''Star Trek'' and ''Star Wars'' franchises, ''Battlestar'' fandom was marginal -- the province of a few diehards making Web sites and sewing Colonial-warrior costumes. But these diehards rallied around Hatch, donating the costumes and props they had fabricated or volunteering to do the computer graphics for the space battles. And as they did, Hatch became for most of them the face of the fight for the new ''Galactica.''

In 1999, at the San Diego Comic-Con, he showed his completed trailer, titled ''Battlestar Galactica: The Second Coming.'' He reports that it received a standing ovation. I can report that it looks remarkably professional and engaging and certainly faithful to Larson's original story. But you will probably never see it, because Hatch spent somewhere between $20,000 and $40,000 of his own money to create a film within a franchise in which he owned absolutely no rights and which, for this reason, as well as actors' union regulations, he can never show or distribute for money.

But that was fine. Because for Hatch, it was always about convincing the world that it made sense to bring back ''Battlestar.'' And in fact, soon Universal would indeed be relaunching the Galactica -- although Richard Hatch would not be on board.

In December 2001, David Eick, who was behind shows like ''American Gothic'' and ''Xena: Warrior Princess,'' got a call from David Kissinger, president of the media conglomerate Studios USA, which controlled the Universal library. Over the previous year or two, the idea of reviving ''Battlestar'' had been floating around Universal. Now, Kissinger said, there was some new interest at Studio USA's sister company, the Sci Fi Channel. Would Eick be interested? Eick had his misgivings about the idea. But he had some experience sending out secret, under-the-radar cultural messages through pulp entertainment (in Xena's case, a nascent lesbian chic). He saw an opportunity -- what he called ''a great potential for irony.'' As he told me, ''If you could do a show called 'Battlestar Galactica,' with that title, that would harken toward the kind of sincere, dimensional, textured, emotional drama of '2001' and 'Blade Runner' -- oh, my God. You could blow everyone's mind.''

Eick met Ron Moore a few years before, when Moore was consulting on ''Good vs. Evil'' for the Sci Fi Channel. But even though Eick didn't know ''Star Trek'' particularly well, he knew that ''Star Trek'' was exactly what he didn't want this new series to be. And he knew that ''Star Trek'' was not and would never be a subject that was close to Moore's heart. And so he called Moore and asked him if he was interested in bringing a second big spaceship show back to life. Moore knew the original ''Battlestar,'' and after talking to Eick, he watched Larson's original three-hour pilot again. It surprised him. Here was a deeply somber story about a civilization that had basically endured genocide, and for the first hour it was elegantly told and strangely affecting. ''They were trying,'' he told me. ''It took a hard left turn to insanity when they reached the casino planet, but they were really trying.''

Moore said he would do it, but he wanted to make some changes. After numerous meetings and a full script treatment, he wrote a two-page memo that laid out the basic tenets of what the new ''Battlestar Galactica'' would eventually become. ''We take as a given the idea that the traditional space opera, with its stock characters, techno-double-talk, bumpy-headed aliens, thespian histrionics and empty heroics has run its course, and a new approach is required,'' it began. ''Call it 'naturalistic science fiction.''' There would be no time travel or parallel universes or cute robot dogs. There would not be ''photon torpedoes'' but instead nuclear missiles, because nukes are real and thus are frightening.

''To this day,'' Eick says, ''I don't think either of us could have anticipated how valuable the memo would be.'' It would repair everything that had been worn down to convention in a genre Moore had once loved. But ''Battlestar'' would be more than just an opportunity to do ''Voyager'' correctly.

''When I watched the original pilot,'' Moore says, ''I knew that if you did 'Battlestar Galactica' again, the audience is going to feel a resonance with what happened on 9/11. That's going to touch a chord whether we want it to or not. And it felt like there was an obligation to that. To tell it truthfully as best we can through this prism.'' In the miniseries Moore wrote to introduce the new ''Battlestar,'' the echoes of the war on terror were unapologetic and frequently harrowing: what happens when an advanced, comfortable, secular democracy endures a devastating attack by an old enemy that it literally created (which enemy, in Moore's version, also happens to be religious fanaticism)?

For a genre often derided as escapist, science fiction has a long tradition of social commentary, no small part of which comes from ''Star Trek'' itself, which embraced race and gender equality on the bridge of the Enterprise at a time when it was still largely being rejected in real-life America. But Moore wanted a show that would move between the idealistic fantasies of ''Trek'' and the hard moral pragmatism of the military -- that would embrace both the binnacle and the bat'leth, if you will. He listed for me some of the thornier questions the show evokes: ''What does it mean to be free in a society under attack? What are the limits of that freedom? Who's right? Who's wrong? Are you rooting for the wrong side?''

Like Richard Hatch, Moore and Eick were taking ''Battlestar Galactica'' more seriously than it had been taken in a long time, though in a very different way. And for this reason, Moore thought he would be a hero to those who had rallied to Hatch's cause. At last there would be someone who would get a new ''Battlestar'' made and, what's more, who would be faithful to the original story's dark premise -- perhaps even more faithful than the original had been.

As production progressed on the miniseries, details of the changes Moore and Eick had in mind for ''Battlestar Galactica'' began to circulate on the Internet, and to many fans they were deeply disturbing. The Cylons would look human, and they would be sexy. Even more troubling: Moore had killed the idea of any ''continuation story,'' as Hatch had long been championing. All of the characters would be recast, including Hatch's own Apollo, and the story would start over.

Things had not gone easily for Hatch and his followers since that great day in 1999. Two attempts to revive or create a new series based on ''Galactica'' -- one by its original creator, Glen Larson, the other, for Fox, by the film director Bryan Singer and his producing partner Tom DeSanto -- had seemed imminent and had then fallen apart. Both had been continuations. The failure of the Singer-and-DeSanto project was particularly heartbreaking for Hatch. He had thrown his support behind DeSanto's proposed pilot, and the fans followed. But Singer left the project to complete ''X2,'' and Fox subsequently let it drop before it could go into production.

So among the hope-dashed fan community, which had come to see the issue of a continuation as sacrosanct, Moore was regarded with some suspicion, his ''Star Trek'' credentials aside. Then, when they learned that he intended to recast Starbuck as a woman -- it was too much.

''Starbuck is a guy. A GUY. A GUY!!!'' posted a fan named Rhonda on the forums of battlestargalacticaclub.com in December 2002. Moore was accused of bowing to political correctness, of dishonoring the memory of the original actors, of requiring a beating. One original-series fan called him ''the Paul de Man of current science fiction,'' accusing him of casually deconstructing the story that had been so close to their hearts for so long, only in order to ''make his mark.''

''I started a Yahoo group called 'Ron Moore Sucks,''' John DiPalermo, a New York-based old-series supporter, told me recently by e-mail. ''I proudly take credit for starting to refer to him as the MooreRon right after the script was first made available.'' (Someone leaked the script on the Internet.) ''In every 'Battlestar Galactica' Yahoo group, I would call him the MooreRon, and it became very popular.''

As for Hatch, he had been approached about doing a cameo in the miniseries, which, if he accepted, would, in effect, give the new show his blessing. Hatch declined. In an interview on the Web site ''Sci Fi Pulse'' in August 2003, Hatch conceded that Moore's ideas were interesting, but, he said, ''what angers me is the fact that they have disregarded the polls and most if not all of what fans have said they liked about 'Galactica.''' And Hatch was right. The fact was that the active fans of the old series, pro-continuation or no, represented a tiny percentage of those who might come to Moore's show out of curiosity and stay if it was good.

But Moore understood fans from his ''Star Trek'' days. He had been a fan and had gone to conventions, and he remembered what it was like to feel that devotion to a fictional world, and what it could make you do. And so when he was invited to appear at Galacticon, the convention Hatch was helping to organize to mark the 25th anniversary of the original show, Moore said yes.

It was held in October 2003, two months before the miniseries was to go on the air, at the Sheraton Universal Hotel in Universal City. Moore took video clips from the miniseries that no one had ever seen. ''I really had this blind faith,'' he told me. ''All the way through it, I always had this faith that they just have to see it, and then they'll see that it's actually pretty good.''

The audience was tense and angry. Apparently a coordinated plan had been circulating to pelt Moore with popcorn. He took the stage and showed his clips. And the crowd booed. (''They booed,'' Moore recalled, with a kind of cool, blinking amazement. ''And hissed.'')

The popcorn didn't come, but the questions did.

''I know it must be uncomfortable to be here,'' one audience member began. ''Not to patronize you, but we owe Richard so much. . . . Ron, it's a slap in the face that he was not taken into consideration.'' The room grew quiet. ''And when this miniseries fades away, and if it becomes a series, and when that series fades away . . . I hope you will consider what some of us said here today. That there could have been a correct way to making this happen.''

Moore nodded understandingly and said a few words in his own defense. ''I was asked, 'What do you want to do with 'Galactica'?'' he told the audience. ''I said, 'This is what I want to do' . . . and I did it. And I don't make any apologies for that. . . . I have nothing but good things to say about the original show. I have nothing but good things to say about Richard Hatch. . . . But I'm the guy that's doing the show, and this is the choice that I made, and I stand by it.''

A boo began to form in the room again, and people started to yell things, and then, in the back of the room, Hatch stood up. He wore a black T-shirt, and he raised his hand to calm his people. (If you are curious, there is a commemorative DVD of Galacticon 2003, and at this moment, the camera swings wildly around to quick-focus on Hatch.)

''Ron,'' Hatch said, ''I just want to say, No. 1, that it takes incredible courage to stand there and listen to people express their emotions and feelings, and I just take my hat off to you, No. 1.'' He then said he didn't blame Moore for anything. ''You had the boldness and strength to actually commit to that vision,'' he said. ''Whether it stands or falls will be up to the wide audience of this world. But just even from this, I can see that you have a bold vision, that you're an incredibly talented man and you have a lot to say. And I honor that.''


"Enterprise,'' the most recent tv series in the ''Star Trek'' franchise, was going off the air as I was visiting Moore and Eick in Vancouver. The week I saw Moore in L.A., the most recent ''Star Wars'' movie, ''Revenge of the Sith,'' was opening up at the CityWalk in Universal Studios. I saw it there, not far from where the old ''Battle of Galactica'' display on the Universal Studios Tour used to be, before they replaced it in the 80's with a mock earthquake, not far from where Moore and his writers meet now.

When I walked out, those two sagas were finished (at least for now) for the first time in almost 40 years, and it was difficult not to appreciate the strange journey ''Galactica'' had taken to outlast and, at the end, outshine those sagas it had once been accused of ripping off. Having made its debut first as a miniseries in late 2003 and then having its premiere as an original series this past January, ''Battlestar Galactica'' is the most successful original program in the Sci Fi Channel's history. Meanwhile, many of the fan sites that had originally opposed Moore and Eick's vision now actively or passively support it. Discussion of the show has migrated somewhat, from the fan boards to political blogs, where the issues it raises about security, religion and the ethics of android torture inspire heated debate, as well as praise from conservatives and liberals alike.

But there are some remaining diehards. ''I will never support the MooreRon,'' John DiPalermo wrote to me. ''Maybe I'm stubborn and pigheaded, but . . . Starbuck is a MAN!!!!!'' He said he prayed every day that Moore would