The Lurker's Guide to Babylon 5
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  1. ===========================================================================
  2. | This text is compiled from posts by J. Michael Straczynski on the Usenet
  3. | group alt.tv.babylon-5. This document contains material Copyright 1993
  4. | J. Michael Straczynski. He has given permission for his words to be
  5. | redistributed online, as long as they are marked as being copyright JMS.
  6. | This document, as well as other Babylon-5 related material, is available
  7. | by anonymous FTP at ftp.hyperion.com.
  8. ===========================================================================
  9. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  10. Date: 1 Nov 1993 00:46:49 -0500
  11. Subject: Comments on B5
  12. Thus far, with 22 stories ready and slugged for this season, we
  13. haven't done any of the ones you warn against...so I guess we're doing
  14. something right....
  15. jms
  16. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  17. Date: 1 Nov 1993 02:48:23 -0500
  18. Subject: A (trivial) suggestion
  19. Happily, we're doing that; the bartender is generally the same, we
  20. have a recurring character as one of the techs in the observation dome,
  21. some of our security people are repeaters, and so on.
  22. jms
  23. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  24. Date: 2 Nov 1993 05:31:14 -0500
  25. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  26. One thing we're trying to do on B5 in this respect is to really use
  27. three-dimensional space, on the full x-y-z axis for ship movements and
  28. the like. Opens up all kinds of wonderful opportunities.
  29. jms
  30. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  31. Date: 2 Nov 1993 06:13:50 -0500
  32. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  33. Thanks. The process has sometimes not been easy. More often than
  34. not, one runs into fairly blunt opinions. But that's part of the process.
  35. Many people I know in the TV or film business have tried to maintain such
  36. a line, and just get turned off or insulted and go away. Or they come in
  37. briefly to get the PR invovled, a la "Sneakers," and then they're gone. A
  38. few stay...George Martin, others. And sometimes it's very hard to take it
  39. on the chin from someone you've never met, who's just called something you
  40. worked on for five years "crap" and sometimes for reasons that are more in
  41. the perception than the reality (such as the internet user who flamed me
  42. for using wrist links when it's clearly established that in the future we
  43. will all be using chest-communicators a la TNG, and thus every time I used
  44. our links it broke the illusion for him)....
  45. But in the long run, it's been, and continues to be more of a positive
  46. experience than a negative one. Because some of the criticisms have merit,
  47. and need to be addressed. Other times, hard questions get asked, and I
  48. have to sit down and really think about this character or that situation,
  49. and in doing so, those answers end up helping the show. Every day, I find
  50. anywhere from 30-60 messages in my GEnie box, most of them Internet relays,
  51. and it's like opening a puzzle box...you're never entirely sure what you're
  52. going to find inside.
  53. And most of the messages are informed, and literate, and challenging,
  54. which is the part I enjoy most. As for the rest...my sense is this: a long
  55. time ago, when we began this journey -- and I've been on-line talking about
  56. B5 on the nets for several *years* now -- the one thing that was foremost
  57. in my mind was the sense that SF media fans are probably the most exploited
  58. such fans around. They're expected to be cash cows who line up and buy
  59. the products, no talking or shoving in the lines, and for god's sake no
  60. questions or hassle. They're often valued for as long as they continue to
  61. buy the merchandise. Every year, producers who don't know SF, and don't
  62. know fandom, and really don't care, trundle out their shows as the Next
  63. Best Thing Since Sliced Bread, raise a lot of attention...and when the show
  64. turns into crap, they're suddenly nowhere to be found.
  65. When the pilot aired, I stuck around. And I'll do all I can to stick
  66. around while the series is airing. (The only glitches may be when I'm hip
  67. deep in production.) This is my audience, and I feel that one should be
  68. responsive and receptive to one's audience, and not run out when things get
  69. uncomfortable. You knew the job was dangerous when you took it. See, the
  70. thing is, I *am* a fan, and I've *been* a fan, from a kid growing up on
  71. Bradbury and Clarke and Tolkein and Doc Smith to the present...I've sat in
  72. the audience and listened to those aforementioned producers at conventions
  73. and waited, only to be disappointed.
  74. And when the time came to do B5, I swore that I'd try and do it
  75. differently...that there would be an ongoing dialogue with the viewers of
  76. the show, that we'd listen and be responsive and not just exploit, and if
  77. we didn't have answers to the hard questions then by god we'd go and we'd
  78. GET the answers. Or look like idiots. Because it's the fans who keep
  79. this medium alive, and to ingore that aspect seems to me inappropriate.
  80. jms
  81. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  82. Date: 3 Nov 1993 01:11:20 -0500
  83. Subject: Re: Lifespan of a Centauri / h
  84. We're using a tachyon communications system to handle the FTL problem
  85. regarding communications. As for the coloration of the jump gate (if
  86. we're talking about the same thing), the wave effect is red-shifted when
  87. you enter the jump gate, and blue-shifted when coming out. I think we
  88. had that slightly out of phase in the pilot; it's since been corrected to
  89. match correct red-shift.
  90. jms
  91. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  92. Date: 3 Nov 1993 01:20:18 -0500
  93. Subject: Re: JMS: Recent? stuff...
  94. Actually, your description of how it would work is closer to how it
  95. does work and what's been done. My description was less than perfect.
  96. When Ron does ship movement stuff, he programs in the dynamics of motion
  97. so that it's pre-calculated to be correct.
  98. jms
  99. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  100. Date: 3 Nov 1993 14:00:52 -0500
  101. Subject: Re: Comments on B5
  102. Re: "wonder at the mystery of life." Hold that thought and write it
  103. down, and yank it out before watching "Mind War" and "The Parliament of
  104. Dreams." You'll understand.
  105. jms
  106. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  107. Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:53:12 -0500
  108. Subject: Question for JMS...
  109. Kosh will "speak" in the series. After a fashion. But not as you
  110. might expect. Suffice to say we've seen the final effect now in the mix
  111. of finished episodes, and it's *real* creepy.
  112. jms
  113. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  114. Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:53:34 -0500
  115. Subject: Starfury launch error in cgi?
  116. I'm sorry, but I don't agree that this is an error. This launch
  117. scenario is the one best suggested by some of the techie types we've gone
  118. to. In addition, you want to fire with the nose facing out because you
  119. want to get the engines going as quickly as possible, once you're clear
  120. of the bay, to get the ship *outward* as soon as possible, because the
  121. primary docking bay is at the "front" of the station, and you don't want
  122. to have a flight of fighters entering your primary traffic lane. The
  123. noses of the furies when releeased are pointing in the "down" direction of
  124. centrifugal force, and that's the direction in which they should be
  125. released. Nor would they travel diagonally along the station in any
  126. event; they'd go at a nominal curve away from the cobra launch bays much
  127. the same as a rock tied to a string flies away from you when you release
  128. it after whirling it around your head.
  129. This works, and makes the most common, and scientific sense.
  130. jms
  131. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  132. Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:54:02 -0500
  133. Subject: Starfury launch error in cgi?
  134. P.S. The traveling diagonally alongside the station only works if
  135. the station is accellerating forward as well as rotating. But the station
  136. isn't moving forward, it's stationary.
  137. jms
  138. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  139. Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:54:09 -0500
  140. Subject: StarFuries
  141. The Starfuries are intended ONLY for non-atmospheric combat. They're
  142. not really built for atmospheres; they'd have all the aerodynamic facility
  143. of a brick. There are "wings" of a sort which mainly exist to put the
  144. multidirectional thrusters in the right locations to be of most use, to
  145. allow the craft to fire engines in any direction at any time, so it can go
  146. forward, sideways, upside down, backwards, you name it. The closer you
  147. put them to the center of a small ship, the less effective they are; you
  148. want them some distance away...and far enough so that when they fire to
  149. the side, they're not flashing right next to your field of vision.
  150. The weaponry is mainly forward mounted.
  151. jms
  152. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  153. Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:54:18 -0500
  154. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  155. "Would it be fair to compare the original ST pilot to B5's pilot?"
  156. No, it would not. Because there is nothing in common with them other
  157. than that they are both SF. You can compare TNG to DS9 to TOS, because
  158. they're in the same universe.
  159. Would it be fair to compare Cagney and Lacey with NYPD Blue? After
  160. all, they're both cop shows. But in fact, they're not the same kind of
  161. cop show; they share the same genre, but there ends the overlap. The two
  162. shows are distinct, separate entities, just as Harlan Ellison's work is
  163. distinct from Bill Gibson's work, even though both incorprorate elements
  164. of SF.
  165. The ST pilot existed in its own universe, and was primarily an action
  166. show. The B5 pilot exists in its own universe, and primarily sets the
  167. stage for a political mystery/intrigue series. It wasn't meant to serve
  168. the same functions as the ST pilot.
  169. It seems to me that many SF fans continue to compare everything to
  170. ST because that's their primary frame of reference, and they continue to
  171. apply it whether it's relevant or not. My suggestion...get another frame
  172. of reference.
  173. jms
  174. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  175. Date: 5 Nov 1993 00:48:34 -0500
  176. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  177. Once again, there's a lot of false analogies here in any attempt to
  178. compare pilots, as in this TOS and B5 thread. You're talking about
  179. transporters and other *technological* items. And you're right, they
  180. didn't explain their tech. Neither did we, with the exception of the
  181. changling net in the pilot, and only because it was a plot point. We
  182. didn't explain how the jump gates worked, how centrifugal force kept the
  183. gravity in place, or any of that.
  184. The difference isn't *technology*, it's *context*. Once again, B5 is
  185. in many ways a *political* story. Consequently it's necessary to explain
  186. who the players are in some detail, something that ST didn't have to
  187. worry about. If you're reading a political thriller about the U.S. and
  188. the (now defunct) USSR, it helps a lot to know who's who.
  189. Also, when ST started, there wasn't really a clear agenda, a place
  190. that they were going, story-wise. B5 is a novel for TV. And that puts
  191. on some pressures and problems other shows don't have. Others may not
  192. see it that way, but it isn't their call. It's my call, and I stand
  193. behind it, even while seeing some of the flaws in the pilot.
  194. All of which again points up the...well, *pointlessness* of trying
  195. to compare the two shows. Compare MASH to ALL IN THE FAMILY. They're
  196. both comedies. The similarity ends there. Everything doesn't have to
  197. be comparable or dissectable (to coin a term) in reference to ST.
  198. jms
  199. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  200. Date: 5 Nov 1993 03:48:22 -0500
  201. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  202. The first one-hour episode of the series, "Midnight on the Firing
  203. Line," does a fair amount of re-introduction, for those who've seen the
  204. pilot and need to be up to speed, and some introducing for those who
  205. haven't. It is, however, largely an action-oriented story, into which we
  206. weave the characterization. It manages to convey some of the same info as
  207. the pilot, but in a *much* more dramatic fashion.
  208. jms
  209. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  210. Date: 6 Nov 1993 02:03:19 -0500
  211. Subject: Why fighters at all?
  212. Why fighters? Real simple. The stations shielding is good, but not
  213. great; fighters could punch a hole in it. So on that level, they're there
  214. for defense. But aside from that, B5 is charged with being a port of call,
  215. and thus must keep those traffic lanes in its general vicinity safe. So
  216. fighters are sometimes called upon to protect civilian vessels from a
  217. variety of threats. Also, if a ship is disabled and unable to find the
  218. station, or otherwise hobbled, a fighter escort can be sent to get them
  219. to the station. They're *very* useful.
  220. jms
  221. (P.S. Just a thought...but I've been watching the discussion of the
  222. Starfury launch sequence with great interest, particularly in light of the
  223. fact that only -- what? -- 20 seconds of B5 material has been released,
  224. and that alone has triggered off a detailed scientific discussion of
  225. rotational gravity, centripidal force, and other aspects of physics. I
  226. can only wonder what more detailed discussions will be triggered once we
  227. actually begin showing whole *episodes*.)
  228. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  229. Date: 6 Nov 1993 20:44:08 -0500
  230. Subject: Re: Starfury launch error in c
  231. Yes, this is what we were going for. The use of outward force to
  232. push the fighters away from the station (rotational force) has nothing to
  233. do with catapulting the ships, it's just a low-fuel, high-economy way of
  234. getting the ships away by taking advantage of the station's rotation, so
  235. they can fire their engines at a safe distance from the station. It's the
  236. fastest way overall to launch a whole bunch of fighters while leaving the
  237. primary docking bay clear for larger ships.
  238. jms
  239. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  240. Date: 8 Nov 1993 01:46:20 -0500
  241. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  242. Then again, by the definition you apply, no good characterization
  243. can be done, no surprises can come along, in a novel, since a novel is
  244. generally planned out and outlined prior to being written.
  245. But in fact you CAN do solid characterizations in novels; if anything
  246. a novel-like approach (as with B5) lets you do *more* characterization by
  247. virtue of constructing a whole person.
  248. I would also point you toward "The Prisoner," which had a definite
  249. story, a definite beginning, middle and end, but is very MUCH a character
  250. story, with lots of surprises.
  251. In any event, you may want to check out the series before pronouncing
  252. judgment...who knows, you might just be...surprised.
  253. jms
  254. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  255. Date: 8 Nov 1993 01:59:47 -0500
  256. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  257. The other problem with "Twin Peaks," of course, is that they opened
  258. up a lot of questions, but never *really* answered any of them. In B5,
  259. every question we ask, will be answered.
  260. jms
  261. (I would also, btw, not characterize B5 as a "mystery" series; like
  262. Casablanca, it's a character-based story which uses intrigue and mystery
  263. to heighten the characters.)
  264. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  265. Date: 9 Nov 1993 01:04:36 -0500
  266. Subject: B5 schedule.
  267. Babylon 5 is on schedule, and on-budget. You can't be ahead of
  268. schedule in TV, because you have to allocate so many days for any single
  269. episode, and that's written in stone. But we're absolutely spot on, and
  270. keeping to the budget, which is something of a first for an SF series.
  271. jms
  272. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  273. Date: 9 Nov 1993 01:20:31 -0500
  274. Subject: JMS comments and encouriagemen
  275. Thanks. Anytime....
  276. jms
  277. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  278. Date: 9 Nov 1993 11:06:44 -0500
  279. Subject: B5's Weapons
  280. One thing to bear in mind is that the hand-weapon used by the assassin
  281. in the B5 pilot was the equivilent of a derringer; it wasn't made for such
  282. consistent use. It has a longer recharge period than, say, a full-fledged
  283. hand-held PPG or a rifle version. One thing we're trying to get into is
  284. the reality of how beam weapons would operate. They would chew through a
  285. lot of energy, very fast, and need large energy supplies; the smaller the
  286. gun, the longer the power build. What we've instituted with our regular
  287. weaponry is to include energy pods in the same basic holster as the guns.
  288. So you have a hand-held PPG with energy pod in place, looking more or less
  289. like a regular gun (in silhouette, anyway, meaning that it's hand held),
  290. with an additional pod at the ready for when that one runs out. You run
  291. out, pop the pod, slap in another, and you're ready to go. The rifle
  292. versions have larger pods which can fire even more quickly, and can go
  293. longer without recharging.
  294. Though it's TV, we're trying to hew at least to some degree to what
  295. seems reasonable; guns shouldn't have an infinite firing capability, there
  296. is no such thing as an infinite power source that can fit into a small
  297. space, like a gun.
  298. We've also redesigned the actual burst of the gun to make it look
  299. faster, and deadlier, than before.
  300. jms
  301. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  302. Date: 9 Nov 1993 21:24:24 -0500
  303. Subject: Re: Why is it "Coming in Janua
  304. Just some corrections to your message....
  305. The January start time has little to do with the points you raise.
  306. It doesn't give us (or any other show) a longer lead time, because what
  307. you do is backtrack from when you want to be on the air, to when you should
  308. start preproduction to meet that date, then factor in about a month just
  309. to be on the safe side, as a buffer. That applies whether your show goes
  310. on the air in January or September. It's no longer a shooting schedule
  311. than any other show. Our schedule is seven working days per episode,
  312. which is pretty much standard.
  313. There's no "smaller episode package to try and peddle" because we're
  314. doing 22 episodes, which were pre-sold to the stations. And nobody does
  315. 27 episodes of any series anymore, not in years and years. Even the most
  316. successful top-10 series -- and I was on one -- doesn't usually get more
  317. than 24 episodes total per season.
  318. There's also no financial roll-over to the show, since it began in
  319. July (for pre-production), and continues throughout.
  320. There are really only a few factors involved in a January launch: it
  321. does come toward mid-season when people have seen what else is out there,
  322. and you're not competing in the fall season push with major network
  323. shows that outnumber you 10-1. Also, January/February are the next big
  324. Sweeps period for ratings after the fall, so that's the time you pick.
  325. jms
  326. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  327. Date: 9 Nov 1993 21:27:10 -0500
  328. Subject: Minor visual discrepency final
  329. That ain't it.
  330. jms
  331. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  332. Date: 10 Nov 1993 04:26:27 -0500
  333. Subject: Re-runs of Capt. Power?
  334. Better check the temperature in hell first...ain't gonna happen.
  335. jms
  336. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  337. Date: 15 Nov 1993 06:33:20 -0500
  338. Subject: .AVI request
  339. With regrets, a) I don't know how to do an AVI file, and b) even if
  340. I did, PTEN (which won't let me post gifs) wouldn't let me post that,
  341. either.
  342. jms
  343. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  344. Date: 16 Nov 1993 13:04:48 -0500
  345. Subject: Re: StarFurries?
  346. That notion of waivers has been proposed, repeatedly, and shot down,
  347. repeatedly unfortunately. Not seeing ideas is the only way to protect
  348. oneself in these lawsuit-happy times.
  349. jms
  350. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  351. Date: 16 Nov 1993 14:16:16 -0500
  352. Subject: Master plan, was Re: Trek vs.
  353. I approached B5 with the theory that *every episode* must be able to
  354. stand completely alone, and be appreciated completely on its own terms. If
  355. you never saw another episode of B5, you got a solid hour's entertainment
  356. out of it. It's only as you see more episodes that you gradually become
  357. aware of a much larger story going on here.
  358. jms
  359. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  360. Date: 16 Nov 1993 14:42:24 -0500
  361. Subject: Re: B5's Weapons
  362. You want helium gas bursts when the PPG is fired? You want it to
  363. look more like projectile weaponry when fired? You want recoil? You want
  364. the impact to diminish over distance? You want the kind of sound you
  365. would get if something that superheated burst through a section of the
  366. air?
  367. Guess what? You got it. That's *exactly* how a PPG operates.
  368. jms
  369. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  370. Date: 16 Nov 1993 16:44:02 -0500
  371. Subject: Re: B5 computer screens
  372. We've redesigned the monitors to look less like conventional CRTs and
  373. more like flatscreens.
  374. jms
  375. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  376. Date: 17 Nov 1993 07:38:36 -0500
  377. Subject: There is no BOOM in space!
  378. Unless extreme conditions merit it, we've generally gone more for
  379. music than for sound effects in space. It works better, looks better,m
  380. sounds better.
  381. jms
  382. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  383. Date: 17 Nov 1993 08:02:53 -0500
  384. Subject: Re: JMS: Recent stuff
  385. Either you or I should definitely cut back on caffeine.
  386. Go, and sin no more.
  387. jms
  388. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  389. Date: 17 Nov 1993 13:07:06 -0500
  390. Subject: Re: Re-runs of Capt. Power?
  391. I liked POWER as well. Quite a lot. We did some good work. But it
  392. has this rep for being violent, there was a lot of controversy around it,
  393. and thus far, at least insofar as I know, there's been no movement by the
  394. skiffy channel or anyone else to pick up that one season.
  395. jms
  396. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  397. Date: 17 Nov 1993 16:20:57 -0500
  398. Subject: Re: text in pilot
  399. Re: "Universe Today," my feeling was that there are specialized
  400. editions beamed out to various places...the Mars Colony gets one with
  401. stories skewed to their interest, and so on. Including B5, since it's a
  402. major port. The issues are printed on recycled material; finish a copy,
  403. dump it in a drop, and it's put out again the next day. Synthetic
  404. material.
  405. jms
  406. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  407. Date: 17 Nov 1993 16:23:21 -0500
  408. Subject: Re: List of "Magical" Technolo
  409. Funnily, everyone has operated off the assumption that Knight One and
  410. Knight Two are telepaths or psi cops. But I've never said that, or to my
  411. knowledge implied it. (And no, neither character comes under that
  412. heading.)
  413. jms
  414. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  415. Date: 17 Nov 1993 17:29:25 -0500
  416. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  417. "It (B5) will be a show that is not based on characters but based on
  418. mystery."
  419. Wrong.
  420. Point a gun at someone's head. See how it affects them. Is the
  421. resultant story about the gun, or about the person it's aimed at?
  422. On all of the series I've worked on, the one strong suit I've found,
  423. the only story I'm really interested in telling, is a character story. I
  424. am not a big mystery fan. What I enjoy are the characters. While the
  425. background of our series forms a low-level subtext, every single story
  426. produced so far this season is a character story. Very *strong*
  427. character story. The only episode in which it's a little light is in
  428. the first episode, because we kind of re-establish our cast after the
  429. delay of the pilot. Even so, there's more character stuff there than in
  430. the pilot, by quite a lot. And the very next episode up, "Soul Hunter,"
  431. is an extremely powerful character story.
  432. Anyway, it kind of amuses me to see someone say that B5 "will be"
  433. one kind of show or another. The only person who knows what the B5 story
  434. will be is at this end of the keyboard. And that *ain't* it.
  435. jms
  436. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  437. Date: 17 Nov 1993 22:31:06 -0500
  438. Subject: Re: Question about Lita (sp?)
  439. We're definitely keeping the Psi Corps, with the presence of our new
  440. station telepath Talia Winters, played by Andrea Thompson. And I can say
  441. that the Corps will play a fairly substantial role in the series, in one
  442. way or another.
  443. jms
  444. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  445. Date: 18 Nov 1993 07:49:56 -0500
  446. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  447. Thank you. Be assured that we are working very hard not to
  448. disappoint you, and I don't think we will. This is, as you perceive,
  449. not just another job for most of us involved with Babylon 5. It is a
  450. labor of love by those who enjoy SF, *for* those who enjoy SF. It's the
  451. show that *we* would want to watch, as fans. Many of us are putting in
  452. 20 hour days, fighting to make every frame just right, because it means a
  453. lot to us...and it is our hope that someday it may mean as much to others.
  454. jms
  455. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  456. Date: 18 Nov 1993 08:10:28 -0500
  457. Subject: Re: Gravity Ring
  458. Actually, it was always our thought that the recorders were made of
  459. an extremely ultralight material -- there's an actual term for this sort
  460. of thing that has just fallen out of my head -- kept in place by a fan
  461. system operating at high speed, gyroscopically controlled to remain
  462. stable.
  463. Sort of small hovercraft technology up 200 years or so. Ain't much
  464. magic or, for that matter, much high-tech involved in it.
  465. jms
  466. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  467. Date: 18 Nov 1993 08:14:38 -0500
  468. Subject: Re: Observations from the pilo
  469. Your assumption is correct; the assassin's weapon was a very small
  470. one...limited power, and a charge-up sequence that becomes longer the
  471. more it's used. If the Minbari had shot Lyta, it would've taken too long
  472. for the gun to power-up again for him to shoot Sinclair...and he would've
  473. been captured. We slightly expanded the power-up whine for each shot
  474. after the first one. You'll note that the first shot, the one that takes
  475. out Varner, is almost immediate. Points and fires. Gradually it takes
  476. longer, and finally the gun runs out altogether (which is why, though we
  477. probably should've been clearer in showing this, the assassin finally
  478. went hand-to-hand with Sinclair...the gun was never meant as an assault
  479. weapon, more as a derringer, with a few shots in case he got into
  480. trouble).
  481. jms
  482. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  483. Date: 18 Nov 1993 08:21:03 -0500
  484. Subject: Will B-5 be a "cartoon"?
  485. I don't have anything to do with the promos, for the most part,
  486. don't make the promos, and in this case still haven't seen this
  487. particular promo. Sometimes I think they stress the action aspect more
  488. than the character stuff, because it's easier to blow out action in 15 to
  489. 30 seconds than character.
  490. jms
  491. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  492. Date: 18 Nov 1993 08:42:44 -0500
  493. Subject: Here's Info on LOSCON, where j
  494. At the LosCon presentation on Thanksgiving Saturday, I'll be showing
  495. scenes from upcoming shows, one nifty out-take, and "Midnight on the
  496. Firing Line," our debut episode, *in its entirety*. Present will be me,
  497. story editor Larry DiTillio, and tentatively, Harlan Ellison and several
  498. of our cast members. They've given us the biggest room at the con, but
  499. it's already looking like it's going to be packed to the rafters, so I
  500. would suggest that anyone attending show up early...when we screened the
  501. B5 pilot at last year's LosCon, its west coast debut, there was nearly a
  502. mini-riot over seating.
  503. jms
  504. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  505. Date: 19 Nov 1993 01:34:20 -0500
  506. Subject: Re: Series plot, was Re: Trek
  507. Shawn, excuse me if I'm just a tad curt here, but given that you have
  508. not seen a single episode, have not read a single script for the series,
  509. for you to say that in the B5 series, characters "have been forced to take
  510. subordinate roles" is, frankly, more than a little nuts. In the message
  511. from you just preceding that, you indicate that you don't think the show
  512. may work on ANY level, all based on your assumptions which have nothing --
  513. I repeat, nothing -- to do with the *reality* of what we're doing here.
  514. If I might be so bold, may I suggest that you actually *see* an
  515. episode or two before reviewing the series? One can review the pilot all
  516. one wants, but we've changed a *lot* since that pilot, including some
  517. elements of how we're going to approach the series and the overall arc of
  518. the story.
  519. Call me crazy, but I kinda like to *see* the painting before I decide
  520. whether or not I like the brush strokes.
  521. jms
  522. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  523. Date: 19 Nov 1993 01:47:03 -0500
  524. Subject: Re: Series plot, was Re: Trek
  525. "The pilot wasn't good. Face it!"
  526. I'm at the head of the line to point out flaws in the pilot. Flaws
  527. that we've dealt with. But a) it still holds up, and b) you are trying to
  528. make your opinion into *fact*. It ain't. An awful lot of people liked
  529. the pilot a lot. To them, it was good. Maybe to you, it wasn't, but
  530. that's only true for you. That you may think persimmon yoghurt is the
  531. best flavor ever created doesn't make it true for everybody else. Just a
  532. moment for perspective here....
  533. jms
  534. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  535. Date: 19 Nov 1993 01:56:22 -0500
  536. Subject: Re: Will B-5 be a "cartoon"?
  537. The point you make is absolutely true. For every person who wants to
  538. do something, there are always 15 people to tell him or her why it can't
  539. be done, why it won't work, why you'll fail. Okay, fine, there are risks.
  540. Nothing of substance is ever accomplished WITHOUT taking risks. Sometimes
  541. you fail, sometimes you don't. But what's the alternative?
  542. One of my prize items in my office is a WWII pin from the Royal
  543. Air Force. It has the following motto emblazoned on it: "Who Dares, Wins."
  544. You have to dare from time to time.
  545. For six years -- seven by the time this series hits air -- there have
  546. been people saying that this show couldn't be done...that it couldn't be
  547. done for the money (we proved otherwise), that you couldn't get the kind
  548. of EFX you'd need in television (proved that wrong), and now this comes
  549. along. And we'll prove that wrong as well.
  550. jms
  551. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  552. Date: 19 Nov 1993 16:41:27 -0500
  553. Subject: User-Friendly and MSG to JMS
  554. Interesting info re: the phone company. I may use that at some point
  555. if the question comes up. Also, our PR people are definitely working with
  556. the print media; I would imagine the push will start really manifesting
  557. itself toward the end of the year.
  558. jms
  559. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  560. Date: 19 Nov 1993 16:41:48 -0500
  561. Subject: Why not guns?
  562. Why use PPGs instead of Uzi-style projectile weapons/automatic
  563. weapons?
  564. Most of the walls inside B5 are metal.
  565. Does the term "ricochet" ring a bell...?
  566. jms
  567. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  568. Date: 19 Nov 1993 20:06:50 -0500
  569. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  570. Re: jms/jms...don't worry. Everybody misspells Straczynski.
  571. smj
  572. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  573. Date: 19 Nov 1993 20:30:26 -0500
  574. Subject: Re: Story Ideas Problem
  575. The whole idea as to what constitutes an idea, and what constitutes
  576. a story, is fuzzy. And the sad reality is that one need not be able to
  577. win a case in order to *file* a case. And fighting a lawsuit can cost
  578. upwards of $100,000, which is usually unrecoverable. It's just an
  579. increasingly ugly situation.
  580. jms
  581. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  582. Date: 20 Nov 1993 04:11:07 -0500
  583. Subject: Re: Series plot, was Re: Trek
  584. "If JMS had not mentioned the hole in Sinclair's mind, what would
  585. have been the reason for the assassin to try and kill Sinclair?"
  586. Hello...did you see the same movie that I wrote? The assassin was
  587. not there to kill Sinclair. He was there to kill Kosh. He tried to kill
  588. Kosh. He tried to stay AWAY from Sinclair, did everything in his power
  589. to avoid Sinclair, ran from
  590. Sinclair, and only finally encountered Sinclair when Sinclair came after
  591. HIM. Then it was nominal self-defense.
  592. Had the "hole in the mind" reference never been made, it would have
  593. been clear -- at least clear to every other carbon-based lifeform who saw
  594. the movie -- that the assassin 1) came to try and kill Kosh, 2) in the
  595. hope of disrupting the purpose of Babylon 5, with the added benefit of
  596. 3) if he failed in his mission, setting up Sinclair to take the rap for
  597. his actions. At the very end, rather than be captured and interrogated,
  598. the Minbari assassin killed himself with an implanted bomb. His comment
  599. to Sinclair at that moment was more of an "Up yours" comment, designed to
  600. shatter Sinclair with the knowledge that he knew something Sinclair
  601. didn't.
  602. You keep saying he was there to kill Sinclair. He wasn't. He didn't.
  603. He didn't try. It makes it hard to have this conversation with you if
  604. your comments don't touch reality at any two contiguous points.
  605. jms
  606. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  607. Date: 21 Nov 1993 00:28:40 -0500
  608. Subject: JMS' demons
  609. An interesting bit of demonology. And there is certainly some
  610. measure of validity to it. A story is only as good as the questions that
  611. it answers. The writer's job is to always ask the next question. The
  612. problem is as often in finding the right question as it is in finding the
  613. right response. One thing I've discovered in something like 10 years of
  614. net-surfing is that I'm always surprised. And in the case of B5, there
  615. have been many questions raised, many challenges made, for which I didn't
  616. have immediate, ready answers. It's forced me to think about things and
  617. come up with answers I didn't know I needed until the question was posed.
  618. All things considered, it's been a valuable and educational experience.
  619. jms
  620. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  621. Date: 21 Nov 1993 00:32:51 -0500
  622. Subject: Blooper Reel
  623. There is, for lack of a better term, a Christmas reel...but it's
  624. strictly internal.
  625. jms
  626. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  627. Date: 21 Nov 1993 00:58:31 -0500
  628. Subject: Who did it?
  629. I don't even know why I'm dignifying this with a response...but a)
  630. MGM does not produce B5, the PTEN and Warner Bros. are the B5 umbrella,
  631. and b) B5's treatment and screenplay and bible go back to 1987.
  632. jms
  633. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  634. Date: 21 Nov 1993 00:58:32 -0500
  635. Subject: Famous people
  636. We're doing a few things in that area, mainly background stuff,
  637. using a consistent news network (Interstellar Network News, ISN), building
  638. up a picture about politics back home; the problem is that when someone
  639. says, "Did you see Ross Perot on TV last night?", we have a shared
  640. societal understanding of who Perot is. That carries more meaning than
  641. just a random name. But I take your point; it's something we've done a
  642. little, and don't mind expanding if we can avoid getting obscure.
  643. jms
  644. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  645. Date: 21 Nov 1993 01:22:45 -0500
  646. Subject: Straczynski seems to be an ann
  647. Let me, in far less pejorative terms than those used by you, try and
  648. set your mind at ease. Or not.
  649. Regarding how I present myself here...I don't think about it one
  650. way or another. I honestly don't much care how I'm perceived. Who and
  651. what I am, if I'm annoying or a saint or just another Joe, is utterly and
  652. completely irrelevant to the work. Fifty years from now, when I'm long
  653. gone to dust, no one's going to remember me for being a swell guy, or a
  654. rotten guy. All that matters, all that remains, is the work...if I did a
  655. good job, the work will live on. If not...nothing matters.
  656. My job here, as I perceive it, is to provide an inside glimpse into
  657. how a TV series is produced; to engage the viewers of SF television in a
  658. genuine dialogue and thus *engage* them instead of simply *exploiting*
  659. them, as is generally the rule, out of some measure of respect, and
  660. by virtue of being a fan myself. I'm frequently asked by studio people
  661. why, in an average day where I get maybe 4 hours sleep, I continue to
  662. take part in a process that, overall, will maybe reach a few thousand
  663. people...a number so small it doesn't even show up in the ratings. They
  664. sense, and they're probably right, that all of this dialogue probably
  665. won't add a single ratings point to the show. Which is fine by me; that's
  666. not the entirety of why I'm here. I could try to explain it to them, but
  667. I doubt very much it would work.
  668. Okay, you find me annoying. My response: that's life. I never said
  669. I was bunny-rabbit cute. Never promised that you'd like me. Being well
  670. liked is not why I'm here. I hope to provide a service. If you find that
  671. service useful, that's great. If you don't like the service, well, like
  672. I said...that's life.
  673. To your point that I "don't understand the background in cyber
  674. politics," and that I should understand how these nets work...I've been
  675. modeming since 300 bps modems were considered speed-demons. I was one
  676. of the first subscribers to Compuserve. I completely understand how
  677. the nets work. What I don't understand, and don't allow to fly without
  678. challenge, is an attack that stems from plain, mean-spirited vindictiveness
  679. by that small slice of the fan community that feels it is not only correct
  680. but *required* to tear down others. If someone has an honest question or
  681. a problem with something, I try to answer that question with as much
  682. grace and politeness as I can. And sometimes, when those questions come
  683. in very blunt terms, it's hard. But I do try. On the other hand, if I
  684. see someone coming into visual range with nothing more on his agenda than
  685. to slam people, insult people, villify and destroy someone out of an
  686. excess of bile and a notable lack of good manners...the kind of fan who
  687. gives the rest of us a bad name...then I feel no compunction
  688. whatsoever against firing back. Hard. Generally in proportion to the
  689. offensiveness of the original message.
  690. This is the one thing that I've noted, time and time again, on this
  691. and other nets. I've seen someone call down the vilest terms to describe
  692. a particular writer, smear the person, demean and debase the person, but
  693. when someone has the nerve to actually respond in kind, and call this
  694. person out in the same terms he used on someone else...well, THAT'S
  695. outRAgeous! How rude!
  696. My feeling: tough. You don't want to get your face bit off, don't
  697. do something as monumentally stupid as sticking it in the lion cage. Or
  698. more simply...try the Golden Rule sometime: do unto others as you would
  699. have them do unto you (a tenet that seems to be lost on a certain portion
  700. of BBSers).
  701. Which brings me back around to Harlan Ellison. You don't like my
  702. defending Harlan. Or the fact that I am forceful in doing so.
  703. So?
  704. Harlan is my friend. He has also been the target of cheap,
  705. unwarranted, vicious attacks by that lunatic fringe that sits festering
  706. on the edge of legitimate fandom. Maybe you're content to see your
  707. friend jumped by strangers and beaten up for kicks. Maybe you'd sit by
  708. the side of the road and watch. Or turn away. Or sell tickets.
  709. I can't do that. One thing that Harlan and I have in common is
  710. that we're both out of the streets. I'm basically a New Jersey kid,
  711. born in Paterson, and raised for a long time in the streets of Newark. If
  712. you know Newark, you understand what that means without further need of
  713. explanation. Much of my attitude was formed in the streets. And one of
  714. the first things you learn, the first rule you take to heart, is that if
  715. somebody jumps your buddy, or attacks your buddy, he's attacking you as
  716. well. YOu don't cut and run. Whatever the cost. Maybe you think that's
  717. "macho posturing," as you put it. It's the way I run my life. I know
  718. such things aren't fashionable just now, but I happen to care deeply for
  719. and about my friends, and if they're in trouble, if someone is smearing
  720. their reputation or trying to harm them out of mean-spiritedness, I will
  721. not stand idly by with my finger up my nose pretending it isn't happening.
  722. Maybe you can do that. I can't.
  723. I have no difficulty in, as you say, "letting water roll off (my)
  724. back." But this wasn't my back. It was a friend's. I've put up with a
  725. LOT from people on some of these systems. And not taken it personally. It
  726. does roll off my back. But a vicious smear or an attack on a *friend*
  727. will not go unanswered.
  728. You don't like it, that's your choice. I'm not doing it for you, and
  729. I'm not doing it to impress anyone, or make friends, or be nice. This is
  730. what I do because I can't do otherwise, because this is who and what I am.
  731. jms
  732. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  733. Date: 21 Nov 1993 19:26:09 -0500
  734. Subject: Re: Here's Info on LOSCON, whe
  735. As an advisory, in addition to me, story editor Larry DiTillio, and
  736. tentatively Harlan Ellison, we've confirmed that Michael O'Hare, Mira
  737. Furlan, and Peter Jurasik will be at the LosCon presentation next
  738. Saturday. More names may be added to that.
  739. I request that I will make at the presentation, and which I'll set up
  740. here, is to minimize any kind of spoiler discussion of the episode until
  741. it airs. It's two months to airdate, and we'd like some parts of the show
  742. to be a surprise to the viewers. General reactions are great, but if we
  743. could keep spoiler-type discussions to a minimum, I'd be very happy.
  744. jms
  745. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  746. Date: 21 Nov 1993 19:31:28 -0500
  747. Subject: Walter Koenig on QVC
  748. Darn, I missed Walter's appearance on QVC; e it.
  749. As for when you can expect to see me on QVC...never. That just isn't
  750. something I care to get into. Merchandising is fine and inevitable, but
  751. I think that if you get too into it, it begins to change your direction a
  752. bit.
  753. jms
  754. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  755. Date: 21 Nov 1993 20:00:41 -0500
  756. Subject: Re: Straczynski seems to be an
  757. Much of the response I have to your message on a personal level I've
  758. said elsewhere, so I won't repeat it here. But to deal with a couple of
  759. the things you mention....
  760. "...because (I) knew this woman (Tamlyn, I) would use
  761. her on this show regardless of what people unconnected with her
  762. emotionally thought of her acting ability."
  763. This is, frankly, untrue and a distortion of the facts. Prior to
  764. casting Tamlyn, I had never before met her, and except at the screening of
  765. the pilot and one live TV gig, have not seen her again since doing the
  766. pilot. I am not "emotionally connected" to her. This is not nepotism.
  767. What you are doing is taking a thread that was on another system and
  768. distorting it. There were some very harsh, demeaning things said about
  769. Tamlyn, many of them flat-out uncalled for...hurtful and ugly comments. I
  770. stood up for Tamlyn as a performer. When we did a later analysis of the
  771. pilot, our decision to recast the role of the lieutenant commander was
  772. influenced not by anyone's individual performance, but by the synergy of
  773. the performers as an ensemble.
  774. Tamlyn is a terrific performer; if you've seen her in the Joy Luck
  775. Club, or her appearance on Quantum Leap, or elsewhere, her skill is much
  776. in evidence. She is a kind and decent person, and no, I wouldn't allow
  777. her to be BBS brutalized by a certain small fringe element, and won't do
  778. so now, and won't allow myself to be bullied by that small fringe. Any
  779. decisions made will not be based on that kind of crap.
  780. Nepotism doesn't enter into it. On that you're simply dead wrong.
  781. On this "mental model" you've constructed of me based upon my many
  782. posts here...I am not liable for your perceptions. A French writer once
  783. observed, "A book is like a mirror. If an ass peers in, you can't very
  784. well expect an apostle to peer out."
  785. jms
  786. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  787. Date: 21 Nov 1993 20:01:51 -0500
  788. Subject: Re: Here's Info on LOSCON, whe
  789. BTW, I suspect that the Woody Harper you're responding to, is the
  790. same Woody Harper who engaged in a bit of BBS terrorism/deliberate
  791. misinformation, and who I had to take a couple days to hunt down.
  792. jms
  793. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  794. Date: 22 Nov 1993 05:13:05 -0500
  795. Subject: A PLOT REQUEST
  796. No "evil alternate universe" episodes are planned, nor do I think
  797. they will be.
  798. jms
  799. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  800. Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:16:46 -0500
  801. Subject: When will the Laserdisc of the
  802. I know that the plan is to eventually release the episodes on disk
  803. in all their widescreen/surround-sound glory, but when that might be is
  804. anyone's guess. Heck, I'll be first in line at the video store....
  805. jms
  806. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  807. Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:18:28 -0500
  808. Subject: Air Date
  809. The date I've heard most often for the series' debut is January 26th.
  810. jms
  811. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  812. Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:20:19 -0500
  813. Subject: Re: Babylon 5
  814. Oops, the letter just sent to you was intended for Gharlane, and
  815. sent by accident (the letter about the
  816. B5 bathroom). Sorry for the mis-type,and hope it gets to Gharlane.
  817. jms
  818. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  819. Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:21:24 -0500
  820. Subject: Re: Babylon 5
  821. The bathroom scene was written, but shifted back a bit because we
  822. decided to go for some different sets, and felt that the money could be
  823. used better there. We have an *amazing* number of sets as it is; 16
  824. standing sets and another 10 or so swing sets. So we'll either do that
  825. scene later in the season, or wait until season two, and a fresh
  826. construction budget.
  827. jms
  828. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  829. Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:26:43 -0500
  830. Subject: Re: JMS' demons
  831. You're right; the events of the Line are something that Sinclair
  832. doesn't much like talking about, and has been advised *against* talking
  833. about. When the Minbari surrendered, Earth put the best possible spin on
  834. it, tried to make the survivors of the Line look like heroes, but there's
  835. a general sense of what happened. And a great deal of dismay over it.
  836. jms
  837. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  838. Date: 23 Nov 1993 08:04:48 -0500
  839. Subject: Re: Babylon 5
  840. I'd say that, in certain instances, you may be more right than
  841. wrong in your speculations.
  842. While I've certainly been positive about the show -- and believe I
  843. have good reason to be positive -- I have avoid directly over-hyping the
  844. show. I've never, to the best of my knowledge, said that this will be
  845. the best series in SF-TV history. What I've said, by and large, is what
  846. we're *doing*, and not much more. When I get excited about something, I
  847. say so, and I'm specific to that episode. The greater measure of what you
  848. might term "hype" comes from those who've followed the show, and from one
  849. important fact: any promise I make on the content of a show, I keep. I'm
  850. very careful about that.
  851. The problem, though, with a show like this, presented in this
  852. fashion, is that when people come to expect a Great Show, long ahead of
  853. airdate, they begin to sketch out in their heads the show that *they*
  854. would most like to see, the show they would make if given the chance. And
  855. that means you've got -- what? -- ten thousand different versions of a
  856. show. There's no way that anything I do can be exactly what every single
  857. person would most like to see, what he or she sees in his/her mind's eye.
  858. So there will have to be some readjustment to what the show *is*
  859. I think, though, that the average SF-TV viewer is sharp enough to
  860. figure that out, and adjust. For myself, all I can do is make the best
  861. show I can, the show that *I* would like to see made, that I would like to
  862. watch...and hope for the best.
  863. jms
  864. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  865. Date: 23 Nov 1993 09:58:24 -0500
  866. Subject: Question on names
  867. G'Kar's first assistant was Ko D'ath, who met with an unfortunate
  868. accident with an airlock. The replacement is Na'Toth (no L), who will be
  869. staying around for a while.
  870. jms
  871. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  872. Date: 23 Nov 1993 18:22:17 -0500
  873. Subject: Re: jms's "attitude"
  874. You have now made several charges of nepotism against me. If we all
  875. speak the same langauge, then nepotism is hiring people not qualified to
  876. do a particular job because they're cronies or relatives. If someone is
  877. eminently qualified to do the job, it's not nepotism. If the person is
  878. neither a friend nor a relative, it's not nepotism.
  879. Please cite to me one single instance in which I have engaged in this
  880. kind of behavior, or withdraw your allegation.
  881. jms
  882. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  883. Date: 23 Nov 1993 18:22:50 -0500
  884. Subject: Open response to Mr. Straczyns
  885. So let me get this straight...your problem is that I have moments
  886. when I'm cheerful, and polite...and moments when, fatigued by 20 hour days,
  887. I sometimes get a little sharper than I might like. Okay, I'm human. So
  888. what?
  889. Your other problem, at the center of this, is that I don't behave the
  890. way YOU think I should behave. Once again...so what? I don't HAVE to
  891. fit your definition. I didn't fight all these years to find my own voice,
  892. and become my own person, and produce my own show, only to worry about
  893. whether I fit Rob's picture of a perfect person. I'm sorry, but I have
  894. substantially more interesting things to worry about.
  895. You use the word "sophmoric" a lot. I could just as easily turn
  896. that around. I could sit and dissect your messages, what I think you are
  897. by your language choice, approach, and similar subjects. But you state,
  898. "You don't know how I (Rob) am, where I came from, or my background; I'd
  899. also rather not bring it up." Curious how you seem to feel that YOU are
  900. off-limits to speculation, but others aren't...even though we're both
  901. on the nets.
  902. This discussion, absent your unsubstantiated allegations, is rather
  903. pointless. I am who I am, I behave the way I behave. You don't like it.
  904. I don't like your behavior or your tendency to stick your nose in my
  905. psyche and engage in some long-distance dime-store psychoanalysis, for
  906. which you are neither qualified nor welcome.
  907. That's showbiz.
  908. jms
  909. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  910. Date: 23 Nov 1993 20:46:30 -0500
  911. Subject: Query to JMS on a minor point
  912. I've noticed the same thing; he blinks when he wants to, and refuses
  913. to let go of you the rest of the time. We've also given him a LOT more
  914. to do of a character-based nature, and I think people are going to be
  915. very pleased in what they see. The problem with the role of commander is
  916. that it's the toughest one in the bunch...he has to be firm and
  917. commanding, but vulnerable...able to be angry, but compassionate...ready
  918. to fight but just as ready for affection...and I think that what was shown
  919. of the pilot (minus the nearly half-hour that was cut) only really showed
  920. one side. We're showing a lot more now, and Michael's doing a hell of a
  921. job carrying it all.
  922. jms
  923. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  924. Date: 23 Nov 1993 21:34:53 -0500
  925. Subject: Re: Series plot, was Re: Trek
  926. I never said that the commander's intent wasn't to set up Sinclair; I
  927. only said that he wasn't there to *kill* Sinclair. That aspect of making
  928. Sinclair the patsy was very much part of the thing.
  929. (Oops, just realized that I mis-typed; that should be "I never said
  930. that the ASSASSIN'S intent wasn't to set up Sinclair," not "the
  931. commander's intent." Slip of the tongue.
  932. jms
  933. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  934. Date: 23 Nov 1993 21:45:50 -0500
  935. Subject: Re: Here's Info on LOSCON, whe
  936. Then in the spirit of goodwill I apologize and we begin anew.
  937. jms (no smiley face)
  938. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  939. Date: 23 Nov 1993 21:47:50 -0500
  940. Subject: Request for JMS's Address
  941. I can be reached at the following address:
  942. 14431 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 260, Sherman Oaks, CA 91423.
  943. jms
  944. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  945. Date: 24 Nov 1993 03:36:23 -0500
  946. Subject: Stories I never want to see on
  947. Going over your list of stories...nope, nope...nopenopenopenope....
  948. Guess we must be doing something wrong.
  949. jms
  950. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  951. Date: 25 Nov 1993 03:14:04 -0500
  952. Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
  953. The advance plotting on the series has made the show neither more nor
  954. less difficult. It's mainly just...*different*. In addition to threading
  955. the arc through many episodes (sometimes in a big way, sometimes in very
  956. small, subtle ways), you've often got an A and a B story, plus we've got
  957. 14 regular and recurring characters (though not all 14 appear in every
  958. episode), all of whom have their *own* individual character arcs...and
  959. that's a LOT of balls to keep up in the air at any given moment. What it
  960. HAS done is to enrich the texture of all of our individual episodes. You
  961. get a) a genuine sense that there are PEOPLE in your story, each with his
  962. or her own life, agenda, problems, and b) that these people are GOING
  963. somewhere, that there's a submerged thread that ties them together that is
  964. slowly, gradually coming into view.
  965. This is a trick that I've learned to do on earlier shows, in different
  966. ways. On Captain Power, we had an arc for that series, though less complex
  967. than this one...and we learned how to drop in just a reference here or
  968. there, continuing the feeling of a spider at the center of the story that,
  969. when it moved, caused the whole web to vibrate slightly. Also, on the
  970. animated series The Real Ghostbusters, I had to write/story edit on two
  971. levels...making sure the show was understandable to non-adults, while
  972. at the same time slipping things in that only adults could appreciate. The
  973. younger audience wouldn't get the references, but they'd go by so fast
  974. that they wouldn't notice, and that wouldn't get in the way of enjoying the
  975. story. (And we got REAL obscure...an episode story requiring the presence
  976. of a specific small group of eskimos in order to conduct a ritual was
  977. explained to someone as "sort of an Inuit minyan." Probably only five
  978. people on the planet caught that one, but hey, why not?)
  979. jms
  980. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  981. Date: 25 Nov 1993 23:17:58 -0500
  982. Subject: Making of Babylon 5 -document?
  983. There have been several behind-the-scenes pieces cut already; one at
  984. 8 minutes, slated mainly toward potential advertisers, has already gone
  985. out on the downlink. At some point a 12 and 30 minute piece will go out.
  986. When that happens, I don't know.
  987. It's been sold overseas, to Channel 4 in the U.K., but don't have the
  988. specifics yet on other markets.
  989. jms
  990. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  991. Date: 25 Nov 1993 23:21:49 -0500
  992. Subject: Re: Query to JMS on a minor po
  993. At this point, I suspect that the only version of the pilot that will
  994. ever be released (barring major success on our part) is the one that's now
  995. in distribution. Making a new version with the missing 25 minutes would
  996. require massive editing (there was never a full version made, since we're
  997. editing on computer file graphics, only going to film when we're done), and
  998. right now that's not in anyone's budget.
  999. jms
  1000. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  1001. Date: 29 Nov 1993 01:20:19 -0500
  1002. Subject: Re: B5 at LosCon
  1003. What you and the others seem to be pointing out is what I've been
  1004. trying -- imperfectly, as best I can -- to communicate for some time. In
  1005. the case of "Midnight," can you follow that show and enjoy it absolutely
  1006. on its own terms? I believe that is the case. There's another level
  1007. there, the "little clues and hints" you mention, which will just skate
  1008. past most casual viewers and not in any way interfere with their viewing
  1009. of the episode...but if you're paying attention, and you catch them, it
  1010. adds a new level. The more you see, the more you begin to perceive that
  1011. second level. It's a cumulative effect that doesn't diminish the single
  1012. episodes as stand-alones.
  1013. jms
  1014. From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
  1015. Date: 29 Nov 1993 01:44:10 -0500
  1016. Subject: Re: B5 at LosCon
  1017. (Lost the last paragraph of my message.) In any event, what I'm
  1018. striving for is the idea that you can watch the episodes for the
  1019. character stories, OR the story arc, OR the individual stories, OR all
  1020. three at the same time, all in the same exact episodes. You can get out
  1021. as much as you're willing to find.
  1022. It's a very weird kind of writing...but at least on this end, it's
  1023. kinda fun, actually.
  1024. jms