|
|
- ===========================================================================
- | This text is compiled from posts by J. Michael Straczynski on the Usenet
- | group alt.tv.babylon-5. This document contains material Copyright 1993
- | J. Michael Straczynski. He has given permission for his words to be
- | redistributed online, as long as they are marked as being copyright JMS.
- | This document, as well as other Babylon-5 related material, is available
- | by anonymous FTP at ftp.hyperion.com.
- ===========================================================================
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 1 Nov 1993 00:46:49 -0500
- Subject: Comments on B5
-
- Thus far, with 22 stories ready and slugged for this season, we
- haven't done any of the ones you warn against...so I guess we're doing
- something right....
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 1 Nov 1993 02:48:23 -0500
- Subject: A (trivial) suggestion
-
- Happily, we're doing that; the bartender is generally the same, we
- have a recurring character as one of the techs in the observation dome,
- some of our security people are repeaters, and so on.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 2 Nov 1993 05:31:14 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- One thing we're trying to do on B5 in this respect is to really use
- three-dimensional space, on the full x-y-z axis for ship movements and
- the like. Opens up all kinds of wonderful opportunities.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 2 Nov 1993 06:13:50 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- Thanks. The process has sometimes not been easy. More often than
- not, one runs into fairly blunt opinions. But that's part of the process.
- Many people I know in the TV or film business have tried to maintain such
- a line, and just get turned off or insulted and go away. Or they come in
- briefly to get the PR invovled, a la "Sneakers," and then they're gone. A
- few stay...George Martin, others. And sometimes it's very hard to take it
- on the chin from someone you've never met, who's just called something you
- worked on for five years "crap" and sometimes for reasons that are more in
- the perception than the reality (such as the internet user who flamed me
- for using wrist links when it's clearly established that in the future we
- will all be using chest-communicators a la TNG, and thus every time I used
- our links it broke the illusion for him)....
-
- But in the long run, it's been, and continues to be more of a positive
- experience than a negative one. Because some of the criticisms have merit,
- and need to be addressed. Other times, hard questions get asked, and I
- have to sit down and really think about this character or that situation,
- and in doing so, those answers end up helping the show. Every day, I find
- anywhere from 30-60 messages in my GEnie box, most of them Internet relays,
- and it's like opening a puzzle box...you're never entirely sure what you're
- going to find inside.
-
- And most of the messages are informed, and literate, and challenging,
- which is the part I enjoy most. As for the rest...my sense is this: a long
- time ago, when we began this journey -- and I've been on-line talking about
- B5 on the nets for several *years* now -- the one thing that was foremost
- in my mind was the sense that SF media fans are probably the most exploited
- such fans around. They're expected to be cash cows who line up and buy
- the products, no talking or shoving in the lines, and for god's sake no
- questions or hassle. They're often valued for as long as they continue to
- buy the merchandise. Every year, producers who don't know SF, and don't
- know fandom, and really don't care, trundle out their shows as the Next
- Best Thing Since Sliced Bread, raise a lot of attention...and when the show
- turns into crap, they're suddenly nowhere to be found.
-
- When the pilot aired, I stuck around. And I'll do all I can to stick
- around while the series is airing. (The only glitches may be when I'm hip
- deep in production.) This is my audience, and I feel that one should be
- responsive and receptive to one's audience, and not run out when things get
- uncomfortable. You knew the job was dangerous when you took it. See, the
- thing is, I *am* a fan, and I've *been* a fan, from a kid growing up on
- Bradbury and Clarke and Tolkein and Doc Smith to the present...I've sat in
- the audience and listened to those aforementioned producers at conventions
- and waited, only to be disappointed.
-
- And when the time came to do B5, I swore that I'd try and do it
- differently...that there would be an ongoing dialogue with the viewers of
- the show, that we'd listen and be responsive and not just exploit, and if
- we didn't have answers to the hard questions then by god we'd go and we'd
- GET the answers. Or look like idiots. Because it's the fans who keep
- this medium alive, and to ingore that aspect seems to me inappropriate.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 3 Nov 1993 01:11:20 -0500
- Subject: Re: Lifespan of a Centauri / h
-
- We're using a tachyon communications system to handle the FTL problem
- regarding communications. As for the coloration of the jump gate (if
- we're talking about the same thing), the wave effect is red-shifted when
- you enter the jump gate, and blue-shifted when coming out. I think we
- had that slightly out of phase in the pilot; it's since been corrected to
- match correct red-shift.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 3 Nov 1993 01:20:18 -0500
- Subject: Re: JMS: Recent? stuff...
-
- Actually, your description of how it would work is closer to how it
- does work and what's been done. My description was less than perfect.
- When Ron does ship movement stuff, he programs in the dynamics of motion
- so that it's pre-calculated to be correct.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 3 Nov 1993 14:00:52 -0500
- Subject: Re: Comments on B5
-
- Re: "wonder at the mystery of life." Hold that thought and write it
- down, and yank it out before watching "Mind War" and "The Parliament of
- Dreams." You'll understand.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:53:12 -0500
- Subject: Question for JMS...
-
- Kosh will "speak" in the series. After a fashion. But not as you
- might expect. Suffice to say we've seen the final effect now in the mix
- of finished episodes, and it's *real* creepy.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:53:34 -0500
- Subject: Starfury launch error in cgi?
-
- I'm sorry, but I don't agree that this is an error. This launch
- scenario is the one best suggested by some of the techie types we've gone
- to. In addition, you want to fire with the nose facing out because you
- want to get the engines going as quickly as possible, once you're clear
- of the bay, to get the ship *outward* as soon as possible, because the
- primary docking bay is at the "front" of the station, and you don't want
- to have a flight of fighters entering your primary traffic lane. The
- noses of the furies when releeased are pointing in the "down" direction of
- centrifugal force, and that's the direction in which they should be
- released. Nor would they travel diagonally along the station in any
- event; they'd go at a nominal curve away from the cobra launch bays much
- the same as a rock tied to a string flies away from you when you release
- it after whirling it around your head.
-
- This works, and makes the most common, and scientific sense.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:54:02 -0500
- Subject: Starfury launch error in cgi?
-
- P.S. The traveling diagonally alongside the station only works if
- the station is accellerating forward as well as rotating. But the station
- isn't moving forward, it's stationary.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:54:09 -0500
- Subject: StarFuries
-
- The Starfuries are intended ONLY for non-atmospheric combat. They're
- not really built for atmospheres; they'd have all the aerodynamic facility
- of a brick. There are "wings" of a sort which mainly exist to put the
- multidirectional thrusters in the right locations to be of most use, to
- allow the craft to fire engines in any direction at any time, so it can go
- forward, sideways, upside down, backwards, you name it. The closer you
- put them to the center of a small ship, the less effective they are; you
- want them some distance away...and far enough so that when they fire to
- the side, they're not flashing right next to your field of vision.
-
- The weaponry is mainly forward mounted.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 4 Nov 1993 02:54:18 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- "Would it be fair to compare the original ST pilot to B5's pilot?"
-
- No, it would not. Because there is nothing in common with them other
- than that they are both SF. You can compare TNG to DS9 to TOS, because
- they're in the same universe.
-
- Would it be fair to compare Cagney and Lacey with NYPD Blue? After
- all, they're both cop shows. But in fact, they're not the same kind of
- cop show; they share the same genre, but there ends the overlap. The two
- shows are distinct, separate entities, just as Harlan Ellison's work is
- distinct from Bill Gibson's work, even though both incorprorate elements
- of SF.
-
- The ST pilot existed in its own universe, and was primarily an action
- show. The B5 pilot exists in its own universe, and primarily sets the
- stage for a political mystery/intrigue series. It wasn't meant to serve
- the same functions as the ST pilot.
-
- It seems to me that many SF fans continue to compare everything to
- ST because that's their primary frame of reference, and they continue to
- apply it whether it's relevant or not. My suggestion...get another frame
- of reference.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 5 Nov 1993 00:48:34 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- Once again, there's a lot of false analogies here in any attempt to
- compare pilots, as in this TOS and B5 thread. You're talking about
- transporters and other *technological* items. And you're right, they
- didn't explain their tech. Neither did we, with the exception of the
- changling net in the pilot, and only because it was a plot point. We
- didn't explain how the jump gates worked, how centrifugal force kept the
- gravity in place, or any of that.
-
- The difference isn't *technology*, it's *context*. Once again, B5 is
- in many ways a *political* story. Consequently it's necessary to explain
- who the players are in some detail, something that ST didn't have to
- worry about. If you're reading a political thriller about the U.S. and
- the (now defunct) USSR, it helps a lot to know who's who.
-
- Also, when ST started, there wasn't really a clear agenda, a place
- that they were going, story-wise. B5 is a novel for TV. And that puts
- on some pressures and problems other shows don't have. Others may not
- see it that way, but it isn't their call. It's my call, and I stand
- behind it, even while seeing some of the flaws in the pilot.
-
- All of which again points up the...well, *pointlessness* of trying
- to compare the two shows. Compare MASH to ALL IN THE FAMILY. They're
- both comedies. The similarity ends there. Everything doesn't have to
- be comparable or dissectable (to coin a term) in reference to ST.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 5 Nov 1993 03:48:22 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- The first one-hour episode of the series, "Midnight on the Firing
- Line," does a fair amount of re-introduction, for those who've seen the
- pilot and need to be up to speed, and some introducing for those who
- haven't. It is, however, largely an action-oriented story, into which we
- weave the characterization. It manages to convey some of the same info as
- the pilot, but in a *much* more dramatic fashion.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 6 Nov 1993 02:03:19 -0500
- Subject: Why fighters at all?
-
- Why fighters? Real simple. The stations shielding is good, but not
- great; fighters could punch a hole in it. So on that level, they're there
- for defense. But aside from that, B5 is charged with being a port of call,
- and thus must keep those traffic lanes in its general vicinity safe. So
- fighters are sometimes called upon to protect civilian vessels from a
- variety of threats. Also, if a ship is disabled and unable to find the
- station, or otherwise hobbled, a fighter escort can be sent to get them
- to the station. They're *very* useful.
-
- jms
-
- (P.S. Just a thought...but I've been watching the discussion of the
- Starfury launch sequence with great interest, particularly in light of the
- fact that only -- what? -- 20 seconds of B5 material has been released,
- and that alone has triggered off a detailed scientific discussion of
- rotational gravity, centripidal force, and other aspects of physics. I
- can only wonder what more detailed discussions will be triggered once we
- actually begin showing whole *episodes*.)
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 6 Nov 1993 20:44:08 -0500
- Subject: Re: Starfury launch error in c
-
- Yes, this is what we were going for. The use of outward force to
- push the fighters away from the station (rotational force) has nothing to
- do with catapulting the ships, it's just a low-fuel, high-economy way of
- getting the ships away by taking advantage of the station's rotation, so
- they can fire their engines at a safe distance from the station. It's the
- fastest way overall to launch a whole bunch of fighters while leaving the
- primary docking bay clear for larger ships.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 8 Nov 1993 01:46:20 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- Then again, by the definition you apply, no good characterization
- can be done, no surprises can come along, in a novel, since a novel is
- generally planned out and outlined prior to being written.
-
- But in fact you CAN do solid characterizations in novels; if anything
- a novel-like approach (as with B5) lets you do *more* characterization by
- virtue of constructing a whole person.
-
- I would also point you toward "The Prisoner," which had a definite
- story, a definite beginning, middle and end, but is very MUCH a character
- story, with lots of surprises.
-
- In any event, you may want to check out the series before pronouncing
- judgment...who knows, you might just be...surprised.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 8 Nov 1993 01:59:47 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- The other problem with "Twin Peaks," of course, is that they opened
- up a lot of questions, but never *really* answered any of them. In B5,
- every question we ask, will be answered.
-
- jms
-
- (I would also, btw, not characterize B5 as a "mystery" series; like
- Casablanca, it's a character-based story which uses intrigue and mystery
- to heighten the characters.)
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 9 Nov 1993 01:04:36 -0500
- Subject: B5 schedule.
-
- Babylon 5 is on schedule, and on-budget. You can't be ahead of
- schedule in TV, because you have to allocate so many days for any single
- episode, and that's written in stone. But we're absolutely spot on, and
- keeping to the budget, which is something of a first for an SF series.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 9 Nov 1993 01:20:31 -0500
- Subject: JMS comments and encouriagemen
-
- Thanks. Anytime....
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 9 Nov 1993 11:06:44 -0500
- Subject: B5's Weapons
-
- One thing to bear in mind is that the hand-weapon used by the assassin
- in the B5 pilot was the equivilent of a derringer; it wasn't made for such
- consistent use. It has a longer recharge period than, say, a full-fledged
- hand-held PPG or a rifle version. One thing we're trying to get into is
- the reality of how beam weapons would operate. They would chew through a
- lot of energy, very fast, and need large energy supplies; the smaller the
- gun, the longer the power build. What we've instituted with our regular
- weaponry is to include energy pods in the same basic holster as the guns.
- So you have a hand-held PPG with energy pod in place, looking more or less
- like a regular gun (in silhouette, anyway, meaning that it's hand held),
- with an additional pod at the ready for when that one runs out. You run
- out, pop the pod, slap in another, and you're ready to go. The rifle
- versions have larger pods which can fire even more quickly, and can go
- longer without recharging.
-
- Though it's TV, we're trying to hew at least to some degree to what
- seems reasonable; guns shouldn't have an infinite firing capability, there
- is no such thing as an infinite power source that can fit into a small
- space, like a gun.
-
- We've also redesigned the actual burst of the gun to make it look
- faster, and deadlier, than before.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 9 Nov 1993 21:24:24 -0500
- Subject: Re: Why is it "Coming in Janua
-
- Just some corrections to your message....
-
- The January start time has little to do with the points you raise.
- It doesn't give us (or any other show) a longer lead time, because what
- you do is backtrack from when you want to be on the air, to when you should
- start preproduction to meet that date, then factor in about a month just
- to be on the safe side, as a buffer. That applies whether your show goes
- on the air in January or September. It's no longer a shooting schedule
- than any other show. Our schedule is seven working days per episode,
- which is pretty much standard.
-
- There's no "smaller episode package to try and peddle" because we're
- doing 22 episodes, which were pre-sold to the stations. And nobody does
- 27 episodes of any series anymore, not in years and years. Even the most
- successful top-10 series -- and I was on one -- doesn't usually get more
- than 24 episodes total per season.
-
- There's also no financial roll-over to the show, since it began in
- July (for pre-production), and continues throughout.
-
- There are really only a few factors involved in a January launch: it
- does come toward mid-season when people have seen what else is out there,
- and you're not competing in the fall season push with major network
- shows that outnumber you 10-1. Also, January/February are the next big
- Sweeps period for ratings after the fall, so that's the time you pick.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 9 Nov 1993 21:27:10 -0500
- Subject: Minor visual discrepency final
-
- That ain't it.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 10 Nov 1993 04:26:27 -0500
- Subject: Re-runs of Capt. Power?
-
- Better check the temperature in hell first...ain't gonna happen.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 15 Nov 1993 06:33:20 -0500
- Subject: .AVI request
-
- With regrets, a) I don't know how to do an AVI file, and b) even if
- I did, PTEN (which won't let me post gifs) wouldn't let me post that,
- either.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 16 Nov 1993 13:04:48 -0500
- Subject: Re: StarFurries?
-
- That notion of waivers has been proposed, repeatedly, and shot down,
- repeatedly unfortunately. Not seeing ideas is the only way to protect
- oneself in these lawsuit-happy times.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 16 Nov 1993 14:16:16 -0500
- Subject: Master plan, was Re: Trek vs.
-
- I approached B5 with the theory that *every episode* must be able to
- stand completely alone, and be appreciated completely on its own terms. If
- you never saw another episode of B5, you got a solid hour's entertainment
- out of it. It's only as you see more episodes that you gradually become
- aware of a much larger story going on here.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 16 Nov 1993 14:42:24 -0500
- Subject: Re: B5's Weapons
-
- You want helium gas bursts when the PPG is fired? You want it to
- look more like projectile weaponry when fired? You want recoil? You want
- the impact to diminish over distance? You want the kind of sound you
- would get if something that superheated burst through a section of the
- air?
-
- Guess what? You got it. That's *exactly* how a PPG operates.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 16 Nov 1993 16:44:02 -0500
- Subject: Re: B5 computer screens
-
- We've redesigned the monitors to look less like conventional CRTs and
- more like flatscreens.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 17 Nov 1993 07:38:36 -0500
- Subject: There is no BOOM in space!
-
- Unless extreme conditions merit it, we've generally gone more for
- music than for sound effects in space. It works better, looks better,m
- sounds better.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 17 Nov 1993 08:02:53 -0500
- Subject: Re: JMS: Recent stuff
-
- Either you or I should definitely cut back on caffeine.
-
- Go, and sin no more.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 17 Nov 1993 13:07:06 -0500
- Subject: Re: Re-runs of Capt. Power?
-
- I liked POWER as well. Quite a lot. We did some good work. But it
- has this rep for being violent, there was a lot of controversy around it,
- and thus far, at least insofar as I know, there's been no movement by the
- skiffy channel or anyone else to pick up that one season.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 17 Nov 1993 16:20:57 -0500
- Subject: Re: text in pilot
-
- Re: "Universe Today," my feeling was that there are specialized
- editions beamed out to various places...the Mars Colony gets one with
- stories skewed to their interest, and so on. Including B5, since it's a
- major port. The issues are printed on recycled material; finish a copy,
- dump it in a drop, and it's put out again the next day. Synthetic
- material.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 17 Nov 1993 16:23:21 -0500
- Subject: Re: List of "Magical" Technolo
-
- Funnily, everyone has operated off the assumption that Knight One and
- Knight Two are telepaths or psi cops. But I've never said that, or to my
- knowledge implied it. (And no, neither character comes under that
- heading.)
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 17 Nov 1993 17:29:25 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- "It (B5) will be a show that is not based on characters but based on
- mystery."
-
- Wrong.
-
- Point a gun at someone's head. See how it affects them. Is the
- resultant story about the gun, or about the person it's aimed at?
-
- On all of the series I've worked on, the one strong suit I've found,
- the only story I'm really interested in telling, is a character story. I
- am not a big mystery fan. What I enjoy are the characters. While the
- background of our series forms a low-level subtext, every single story
- produced so far this season is a character story. Very *strong*
- character story. The only episode in which it's a little light is in
- the first episode, because we kind of re-establish our cast after the
- delay of the pilot. Even so, there's more character stuff there than in
- the pilot, by quite a lot. And the very next episode up, "Soul Hunter,"
- is an extremely powerful character story.
-
- Anyway, it kind of amuses me to see someone say that B5 "will be"
- one kind of show or another. The only person who knows what the B5 story
- will be is at this end of the keyboard. And that *ain't* it.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 17 Nov 1993 22:31:06 -0500
- Subject: Re: Question about Lita (sp?)
-
- We're definitely keeping the Psi Corps, with the presence of our new
- station telepath Talia Winters, played by Andrea Thompson. And I can say
- that the Corps will play a fairly substantial role in the series, in one
- way or another.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 18 Nov 1993 07:49:56 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- Thank you. Be assured that we are working very hard not to
- disappoint you, and I don't think we will. This is, as you perceive,
- not just another job for most of us involved with Babylon 5. It is a
- labor of love by those who enjoy SF, *for* those who enjoy SF. It's the
- show that *we* would want to watch, as fans. Many of us are putting in
- 20 hour days, fighting to make every frame just right, because it means a
- lot to us...and it is our hope that someday it may mean as much to others.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 18 Nov 1993 08:10:28 -0500
- Subject: Re: Gravity Ring
-
- Actually, it was always our thought that the recorders were made of
- an extremely ultralight material -- there's an actual term for this sort
- of thing that has just fallen out of my head -- kept in place by a fan
- system operating at high speed, gyroscopically controlled to remain
- stable.
-
- Sort of small hovercraft technology up 200 years or so. Ain't much
- magic or, for that matter, much high-tech involved in it.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 18 Nov 1993 08:14:38 -0500
- Subject: Re: Observations from the pilo
-
- Your assumption is correct; the assassin's weapon was a very small
- one...limited power, and a charge-up sequence that becomes longer the
- more it's used. If the Minbari had shot Lyta, it would've taken too long
- for the gun to power-up again for him to shoot Sinclair...and he would've
- been captured. We slightly expanded the power-up whine for each shot
- after the first one. You'll note that the first shot, the one that takes
- out Varner, is almost immediate. Points and fires. Gradually it takes
- longer, and finally the gun runs out altogether (which is why, though we
- probably should've been clearer in showing this, the assassin finally
- went hand-to-hand with Sinclair...the gun was never meant as an assault
- weapon, more as a derringer, with a few shots in case he got into
- trouble).
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 18 Nov 1993 08:21:03 -0500
- Subject: Will B-5 be a "cartoon"?
-
- I don't have anything to do with the promos, for the most part,
- don't make the promos, and in this case still haven't seen this
- particular promo. Sometimes I think they stress the action aspect more
- than the character stuff, because it's easier to blow out action in 15 to
- 30 seconds than character.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 18 Nov 1993 08:42:44 -0500
- Subject: Here's Info on LOSCON, where j
-
- At the LosCon presentation on Thanksgiving Saturday, I'll be showing
- scenes from upcoming shows, one nifty out-take, and "Midnight on the
- Firing Line," our debut episode, *in its entirety*. Present will be me,
- story editor Larry DiTillio, and tentatively, Harlan Ellison and several
- of our cast members. They've given us the biggest room at the con, but
- it's already looking like it's going to be packed to the rafters, so I
- would suggest that anyone attending show up early...when we screened the
- B5 pilot at last year's LosCon, its west coast debut, there was nearly a
- mini-riot over seating.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 19 Nov 1993 01:34:20 -0500
- Subject: Re: Series plot, was Re: Trek
-
- Shawn, excuse me if I'm just a tad curt here, but given that you have
- not seen a single episode, have not read a single script for the series,
- for you to say that in the B5 series, characters "have been forced to take
- subordinate roles" is, frankly, more than a little nuts. In the message
- from you just preceding that, you indicate that you don't think the show
- may work on ANY level, all based on your assumptions which have nothing --
- I repeat, nothing -- to do with the *reality* of what we're doing here.
-
- If I might be so bold, may I suggest that you actually *see* an
- episode or two before reviewing the series? One can review the pilot all
- one wants, but we've changed a *lot* since that pilot, including some
- elements of how we're going to approach the series and the overall arc of
- the story.
-
- Call me crazy, but I kinda like to *see* the painting before I decide
- whether or not I like the brush strokes.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 19 Nov 1993 01:47:03 -0500
- Subject: Re: Series plot, was Re: Trek
-
- "The pilot wasn't good. Face it!"
-
- I'm at the head of the line to point out flaws in the pilot. Flaws
- that we've dealt with. But a) it still holds up, and b) you are trying to
- make your opinion into *fact*. It ain't. An awful lot of people liked
- the pilot a lot. To them, it was good. Maybe to you, it wasn't, but
- that's only true for you. That you may think persimmon yoghurt is the
- best flavor ever created doesn't make it true for everybody else. Just a
- moment for perspective here....
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 19 Nov 1993 01:56:22 -0500
- Subject: Re: Will B-5 be a "cartoon"?
-
- The point you make is absolutely true. For every person who wants to
- do something, there are always 15 people to tell him or her why it can't
- be done, why it won't work, why you'll fail. Okay, fine, there are risks.
- Nothing of substance is ever accomplished WITHOUT taking risks. Sometimes
- you fail, sometimes you don't. But what's the alternative?
-
- One of my prize items in my office is a WWII pin from the Royal
- Air Force. It has the following motto emblazoned on it: "Who Dares, Wins."
- You have to dare from time to time.
-
- For six years -- seven by the time this series hits air -- there have
- been people saying that this show couldn't be done...that it couldn't be
- done for the money (we proved otherwise), that you couldn't get the kind
- of EFX you'd need in television (proved that wrong), and now this comes
- along. And we'll prove that wrong as well.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 19 Nov 1993 16:41:27 -0500
- Subject: User-Friendly and MSG to JMS
-
- Interesting info re: the phone company. I may use that at some point
- if the question comes up. Also, our PR people are definitely working with
- the print media; I would imagine the push will start really manifesting
- itself toward the end of the year.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 19 Nov 1993 16:41:48 -0500
- Subject: Why not guns?
-
- Why use PPGs instead of Uzi-style projectile weapons/automatic
- weapons?
-
- Most of the walls inside B5 are metal.
-
- Does the term "ricochet" ring a bell...?
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 19 Nov 1993 20:06:50 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- Re: jms/jms...don't worry. Everybody misspells Straczynski.
-
- smj
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 19 Nov 1993 20:30:26 -0500
- Subject: Re: Story Ideas Problem
-
- The whole idea as to what constitutes an idea, and what constitutes
- a story, is fuzzy. And the sad reality is that one need not be able to
- win a case in order to *file* a case. And fighting a lawsuit can cost
- upwards of $100,000, which is usually unrecoverable. It's just an
- increasingly ugly situation.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 20 Nov 1993 04:11:07 -0500
- Subject: Re: Series plot, was Re: Trek
-
- "If JMS had not mentioned the hole in Sinclair's mind, what would
- have been the reason for the assassin to try and kill Sinclair?"
-
- Hello...did you see the same movie that I wrote? The assassin was
- not there to kill Sinclair. He was there to kill Kosh. He tried to kill
- Kosh. He tried to stay AWAY from Sinclair, did everything in his power
- to avoid Sinclair, ran from
- Sinclair, and only finally encountered Sinclair when Sinclair came after
- HIM. Then it was nominal self-defense.
-
- Had the "hole in the mind" reference never been made, it would have
- been clear -- at least clear to every other carbon-based lifeform who saw
- the movie -- that the assassin 1) came to try and kill Kosh, 2) in the
- hope of disrupting the purpose of Babylon 5, with the added benefit of
- 3) if he failed in his mission, setting up Sinclair to take the rap for
- his actions. At the very end, rather than be captured and interrogated,
- the Minbari assassin killed himself with an implanted bomb. His comment
- to Sinclair at that moment was more of an "Up yours" comment, designed to
- shatter Sinclair with the knowledge that he knew something Sinclair
- didn't.
-
- You keep saying he was there to kill Sinclair. He wasn't. He didn't.
- He didn't try. It makes it hard to have this conversation with you if
- your comments don't touch reality at any two contiguous points.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 00:28:40 -0500
- Subject: JMS' demons
-
- An interesting bit of demonology. And there is certainly some
- measure of validity to it. A story is only as good as the questions that
- it answers. The writer's job is to always ask the next question. The
- problem is as often in finding the right question as it is in finding the
- right response. One thing I've discovered in something like 10 years of
- net-surfing is that I'm always surprised. And in the case of B5, there
- have been many questions raised, many challenges made, for which I didn't
- have immediate, ready answers. It's forced me to think about things and
- come up with answers I didn't know I needed until the question was posed.
- All things considered, it's been a valuable and educational experience.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 00:32:51 -0500
- Subject: Blooper Reel
-
- There is, for lack of a better term, a Christmas reel...but it's
- strictly internal.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 00:58:31 -0500
- Subject: Who did it?
-
- I don't even know why I'm dignifying this with a response...but a)
- MGM does not produce B5, the PTEN and Warner Bros. are the B5 umbrella,
- and b) B5's treatment and screenplay and bible go back to 1987.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 00:58:32 -0500
- Subject: Famous people
-
- We're doing a few things in that area, mainly background stuff,
- using a consistent news network (Interstellar Network News, ISN), building
- up a picture about politics back home; the problem is that when someone
- says, "Did you see Ross Perot on TV last night?", we have a shared
- societal understanding of who Perot is. That carries more meaning than
- just a random name. But I take your point; it's something we've done a
- little, and don't mind expanding if we can avoid getting obscure.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 01:22:45 -0500
- Subject: Straczynski seems to be an ann
-
- Let me, in far less pejorative terms than those used by you, try and
- set your mind at ease. Or not.
-
- Regarding how I present myself here...I don't think about it one
- way or another. I honestly don't much care how I'm perceived. Who and
- what I am, if I'm annoying or a saint or just another Joe, is utterly and
- completely irrelevant to the work. Fifty years from now, when I'm long
- gone to dust, no one's going to remember me for being a swell guy, or a
- rotten guy. All that matters, all that remains, is the work...if I did a
- good job, the work will live on. If not...nothing matters.
-
- My job here, as I perceive it, is to provide an inside glimpse into
- how a TV series is produced; to engage the viewers of SF television in a
- genuine dialogue and thus *engage* them instead of simply *exploiting*
- them, as is generally the rule, out of some measure of respect, and
- by virtue of being a fan myself. I'm frequently asked by studio people
- why, in an average day where I get maybe 4 hours sleep, I continue to
- take part in a process that, overall, will maybe reach a few thousand
- people...a number so small it doesn't even show up in the ratings. They
- sense, and they're probably right, that all of this dialogue probably
- won't add a single ratings point to the show. Which is fine by me; that's
- not the entirety of why I'm here. I could try to explain it to them, but
- I doubt very much it would work.
-
- Okay, you find me annoying. My response: that's life. I never said
- I was bunny-rabbit cute. Never promised that you'd like me. Being well
- liked is not why I'm here. I hope to provide a service. If you find that
- service useful, that's great. If you don't like the service, well, like
- I said...that's life.
-
- To your point that I "don't understand the background in cyber
- politics," and that I should understand how these nets work...I've been
- modeming since 300 bps modems were considered speed-demons. I was one
- of the first subscribers to Compuserve. I completely understand how
- the nets work. What I don't understand, and don't allow to fly without
- challenge, is an attack that stems from plain, mean-spirited vindictiveness
- by that small slice of the fan community that feels it is not only correct
- but *required* to tear down others. If someone has an honest question or
- a problem with something, I try to answer that question with as much
- grace and politeness as I can. And sometimes, when those questions come
- in very blunt terms, it's hard. But I do try. On the other hand, if I
- see someone coming into visual range with nothing more on his agenda than
- to slam people, insult people, villify and destroy someone out of an
- excess of bile and a notable lack of good manners...the kind of fan who
- gives the rest of us a bad name...then I feel no compunction
- whatsoever against firing back. Hard. Generally in proportion to the
- offensiveness of the original message.
-
- This is the one thing that I've noted, time and time again, on this
- and other nets. I've seen someone call down the vilest terms to describe
- a particular writer, smear the person, demean and debase the person, but
- when someone has the nerve to actually respond in kind, and call this
- person out in the same terms he used on someone else...well, THAT'S
- outRAgeous! How rude!
-
- My feeling: tough. You don't want to get your face bit off, don't
- do something as monumentally stupid as sticking it in the lion cage. Or
- more simply...try the Golden Rule sometime: do unto others as you would
- have them do unto you (a tenet that seems to be lost on a certain portion
- of BBSers).
-
- Which brings me back around to Harlan Ellison. You don't like my
- defending Harlan. Or the fact that I am forceful in doing so.
-
- So?
-
- Harlan is my friend. He has also been the target of cheap,
- unwarranted, vicious attacks by that lunatic fringe that sits festering
- on the edge of legitimate fandom. Maybe you're content to see your
- friend jumped by strangers and beaten up for kicks. Maybe you'd sit by
- the side of the road and watch. Or turn away. Or sell tickets.
-
- I can't do that. One thing that Harlan and I have in common is
- that we're both out of the streets. I'm basically a New Jersey kid,
- born in Paterson, and raised for a long time in the streets of Newark. If
- you know Newark, you understand what that means without further need of
- explanation. Much of my attitude was formed in the streets. And one of
- the first things you learn, the first rule you take to heart, is that if
- somebody jumps your buddy, or attacks your buddy, he's attacking you as
- well. YOu don't cut and run. Whatever the cost. Maybe you think that's
- "macho posturing," as you put it. It's the way I run my life. I know
- such things aren't fashionable just now, but I happen to care deeply for
- and about my friends, and if they're in trouble, if someone is smearing
- their reputation or trying to harm them out of mean-spiritedness, I will
- not stand idly by with my finger up my nose pretending it isn't happening.
- Maybe you can do that. I can't.
-
- I have no difficulty in, as you say, "letting water roll off (my)
- back." But this wasn't my back. It was a friend's. I've put up with a
- LOT from people on some of these systems. And not taken it personally. It
- does roll off my back. But a vicious smear or an attack on a *friend*
- will not go unanswered.
-
- You don't like it, that's your choice. I'm not doing it for you, and
- I'm not doing it to impress anyone, or make friends, or be nice. This is
- what I do because I can't do otherwise, because this is who and what I am.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 19:26:09 -0500
- Subject: Re: Here's Info on LOSCON, whe
-
- As an advisory, in addition to me, story editor Larry DiTillio, and
- tentatively Harlan Ellison, we've confirmed that Michael O'Hare, Mira
- Furlan, and Peter Jurasik will be at the LosCon presentation next
- Saturday. More names may be added to that.
-
- I request that I will make at the presentation, and which I'll set up
- here, is to minimize any kind of spoiler discussion of the episode until
- it airs. It's two months to airdate, and we'd like some parts of the show
- to be a surprise to the viewers. General reactions are great, but if we
- could keep spoiler-type discussions to a minimum, I'd be very happy.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 19:31:28 -0500
- Subject: Walter Koenig on QVC
-
- Darn, I missed Walter's appearance on QVC; e it.
- As for when you can expect to see me on QVC...never. That just isn't
- something I care to get into. Merchandising is fine and inevitable, but
- I think that if you get too into it, it begins to change your direction a
- bit.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 20:00:41 -0500
- Subject: Re: Straczynski seems to be an
-
- Much of the response I have to your message on a personal level I've
- said elsewhere, so I won't repeat it here. But to deal with a couple of
- the things you mention....
-
- "...because (I) knew this woman (Tamlyn, I) would use
- her on this show regardless of what people unconnected with her
- emotionally thought of her acting ability."
-
- This is, frankly, untrue and a distortion of the facts. Prior to
- casting Tamlyn, I had never before met her, and except at the screening of
- the pilot and one live TV gig, have not seen her again since doing the
- pilot. I am not "emotionally connected" to her. This is not nepotism.
- What you are doing is taking a thread that was on another system and
- distorting it. There were some very harsh, demeaning things said about
- Tamlyn, many of them flat-out uncalled for...hurtful and ugly comments. I
- stood up for Tamlyn as a performer. When we did a later analysis of the
- pilot, our decision to recast the role of the lieutenant commander was
- influenced not by anyone's individual performance, but by the synergy of
- the performers as an ensemble.
-
- Tamlyn is a terrific performer; if you've seen her in the Joy Luck
- Club, or her appearance on Quantum Leap, or elsewhere, her skill is much
- in evidence. She is a kind and decent person, and no, I wouldn't allow
- her to be BBS brutalized by a certain small fringe element, and won't do
- so now, and won't allow myself to be bullied by that small fringe. Any
- decisions made will not be based on that kind of crap.
-
- Nepotism doesn't enter into it. On that you're simply dead wrong.
-
- On this "mental model" you've constructed of me based upon my many
- posts here...I am not liable for your perceptions. A French writer once
- observed, "A book is like a mirror. If an ass peers in, you can't very
- well expect an apostle to peer out."
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 21 Nov 1993 20:01:51 -0500
- Subject: Re: Here's Info on LOSCON, whe
-
- BTW, I suspect that the Woody Harper you're responding to, is the
- same Woody Harper who engaged in a bit of BBS terrorism/deliberate
- misinformation, and who I had to take a couple days to hunt down.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 22 Nov 1993 05:13:05 -0500
- Subject: A PLOT REQUEST
-
- No "evil alternate universe" episodes are planned, nor do I think
- they will be.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:16:46 -0500
- Subject: When will the Laserdisc of the
-
- I know that the plan is to eventually release the episodes on disk
- in all their widescreen/surround-sound glory, but when that might be is
- anyone's guess. Heck, I'll be first in line at the video store....
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:18:28 -0500
- Subject: Air Date
-
- The date I've heard most often for the series' debut is January 26th.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:20:19 -0500
- Subject: Re: Babylon 5
-
- Oops, the letter just sent to you was intended for Gharlane, and
- sent by accident (the letter about the
- B5 bathroom). Sorry for the mis-type,and hope it gets to Gharlane.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:21:24 -0500
- Subject: Re: Babylon 5
-
- The bathroom scene was written, but shifted back a bit because we
- decided to go for some different sets, and felt that the money could be
- used better there. We have an *amazing* number of sets as it is; 16
- standing sets and another 10 or so swing sets. So we'll either do that
- scene later in the season, or wait until season two, and a fresh
- construction budget.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 07:26:43 -0500
- Subject: Re: JMS' demons
-
- You're right; the events of the Line are something that Sinclair
- doesn't much like talking about, and has been advised *against* talking
- about. When the Minbari surrendered, Earth put the best possible spin on
- it, tried to make the survivors of the Line look like heroes, but there's
- a general sense of what happened. And a great deal of dismay over it.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 08:04:48 -0500
- Subject: Re: Babylon 5
-
- I'd say that, in certain instances, you may be more right than
- wrong in your speculations.
-
- While I've certainly been positive about the show -- and believe I
- have good reason to be positive -- I have avoid directly over-hyping the
- show. I've never, to the best of my knowledge, said that this will be
- the best series in SF-TV history. What I've said, by and large, is what
- we're *doing*, and not much more. When I get excited about something, I
- say so, and I'm specific to that episode. The greater measure of what you
- might term "hype" comes from those who've followed the show, and from one
- important fact: any promise I make on the content of a show, I keep. I'm
- very careful about that.
-
- The problem, though, with a show like this, presented in this
- fashion, is that when people come to expect a Great Show, long ahead of
- airdate, they begin to sketch out in their heads the show that *they*
- would most like to see, the show they would make if given the chance. And
- that means you've got -- what? -- ten thousand different versions of a
- show. There's no way that anything I do can be exactly what every single
- person would most like to see, what he or she sees in his/her mind's eye.
- So there will have to be some readjustment to what the show *is*
-
- I think, though, that the average SF-TV viewer is sharp enough to
- figure that out, and adjust. For myself, all I can do is make the best
- show I can, the show that *I* would like to see made, that I would like to
- watch...and hope for the best.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 09:58:24 -0500
- Subject: Question on names
-
- G'Kar's first assistant was Ko D'ath, who met with an unfortunate
- accident with an airlock. The replacement is Na'Toth (no L), who will be
- staying around for a while.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 18:22:17 -0500
- Subject: Re: jms's "attitude"
-
- You have now made several charges of nepotism against me. If we all
- speak the same langauge, then nepotism is hiring people not qualified to
- do a particular job because they're cronies or relatives. If someone is
- eminently qualified to do the job, it's not nepotism. If the person is
- neither a friend nor a relative, it's not nepotism.
-
- Please cite to me one single instance in which I have engaged in this
- kind of behavior, or withdraw your allegation.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 18:22:50 -0500
- Subject: Open response to Mr. Straczyns
-
- So let me get this straight...your problem is that I have moments
- when I'm cheerful, and polite...and moments when, fatigued by 20 hour days,
- I sometimes get a little sharper than I might like. Okay, I'm human. So
- what?
-
- Your other problem, at the center of this, is that I don't behave the
- way YOU think I should behave. Once again...so what? I don't HAVE to
- fit your definition. I didn't fight all these years to find my own voice,
- and become my own person, and produce my own show, only to worry about
- whether I fit Rob's picture of a perfect person. I'm sorry, but I have
- substantially more interesting things to worry about.
-
- You use the word "sophmoric" a lot. I could just as easily turn
- that around. I could sit and dissect your messages, what I think you are
- by your language choice, approach, and similar subjects. But you state,
- "You don't know how I (Rob) am, where I came from, or my background; I'd
- also rather not bring it up." Curious how you seem to feel that YOU are
- off-limits to speculation, but others aren't...even though we're both
- on the nets.
-
- This discussion, absent your unsubstantiated allegations, is rather
- pointless. I am who I am, I behave the way I behave. You don't like it.
- I don't like your behavior or your tendency to stick your nose in my
- psyche and engage in some long-distance dime-store psychoanalysis, for
- which you are neither qualified nor welcome.
-
- That's showbiz.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 20:46:30 -0500
- Subject: Query to JMS on a minor point
-
- I've noticed the same thing; he blinks when he wants to, and refuses
- to let go of you the rest of the time. We've also given him a LOT more
- to do of a character-based nature, and I think people are going to be
- very pleased in what they see. The problem with the role of commander is
- that it's the toughest one in the bunch...he has to be firm and
- commanding, but vulnerable...able to be angry, but compassionate...ready
- to fight but just as ready for affection...and I think that what was shown
- of the pilot (minus the nearly half-hour that was cut) only really showed
- one side. We're showing a lot more now, and Michael's doing a hell of a
- job carrying it all.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 21:34:53 -0500
- Subject: Re: Series plot, was Re: Trek
-
- I never said that the commander's intent wasn't to set up Sinclair; I
- only said that he wasn't there to *kill* Sinclair. That aspect of making
- Sinclair the patsy was very much part of the thing.
-
- (Oops, just realized that I mis-typed; that should be "I never said
- that the ASSASSIN'S intent wasn't to set up Sinclair," not "the
- commander's intent." Slip of the tongue.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 21:45:50 -0500
- Subject: Re: Here's Info on LOSCON, whe
-
- Then in the spirit of goodwill I apologize and we begin anew.
-
- jms (no smiley face)
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 23 Nov 1993 21:47:50 -0500
- Subject: Request for JMS's Address
-
-
- I can be reached at the following address:
-
- 14431 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 260, Sherman Oaks, CA 91423.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 24 Nov 1993 03:36:23 -0500
- Subject: Stories I never want to see on
-
- Going over your list of stories...nope, nope...nopenopenopenope....
-
- Guess we must be doing something wrong.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 25 Nov 1993 03:14:04 -0500
- Subject: Re: Trek vs. B5
-
- The advance plotting on the series has made the show neither more nor
- less difficult. It's mainly just...*different*. In addition to threading
- the arc through many episodes (sometimes in a big way, sometimes in very
- small, subtle ways), you've often got an A and a B story, plus we've got
- 14 regular and recurring characters (though not all 14 appear in every
- episode), all of whom have their *own* individual character arcs...and
- that's a LOT of balls to keep up in the air at any given moment. What it
- HAS done is to enrich the texture of all of our individual episodes. You
- get a) a genuine sense that there are PEOPLE in your story, each with his
- or her own life, agenda, problems, and b) that these people are GOING
- somewhere, that there's a submerged thread that ties them together that is
- slowly, gradually coming into view.
-
- This is a trick that I've learned to do on earlier shows, in different
- ways. On Captain Power, we had an arc for that series, though less complex
- than this one...and we learned how to drop in just a reference here or
- there, continuing the feeling of a spider at the center of the story that,
- when it moved, caused the whole web to vibrate slightly. Also, on the
- animated series The Real Ghostbusters, I had to write/story edit on two
- levels...making sure the show was understandable to non-adults, while
- at the same time slipping things in that only adults could appreciate. The
- younger audience wouldn't get the references, but they'd go by so fast
- that they wouldn't notice, and that wouldn't get in the way of enjoying the
- story. (And we got REAL obscure...an episode story requiring the presence
- of a specific small group of eskimos in order to conduct a ritual was
- explained to someone as "sort of an Inuit minyan." Probably only five
- people on the planet caught that one, but hey, why not?)
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 25 Nov 1993 23:17:58 -0500
- Subject: Making of Babylon 5 -document?
-
- There have been several behind-the-scenes pieces cut already; one at
- 8 minutes, slated mainly toward potential advertisers, has already gone
- out on the downlink. At some point a 12 and 30 minute piece will go out.
- When that happens, I don't know.
-
- It's been sold overseas, to Channel 4 in the U.K., but don't have the
- specifics yet on other markets.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 25 Nov 1993 23:21:49 -0500
- Subject: Re: Query to JMS on a minor po
-
- At this point, I suspect that the only version of the pilot that will
- ever be released (barring major success on our part) is the one that's now
- in distribution. Making a new version with the missing 25 minutes would
- require massive editing (there was never a full version made, since we're
- editing on computer file graphics, only going to film when we're done), and
- right now that's not in anyone's budget.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 29 Nov 1993 01:20:19 -0500
- Subject: Re: B5 at LosCon
-
- What you and the others seem to be pointing out is what I've been
- trying -- imperfectly, as best I can -- to communicate for some time. In
- the case of "Midnight," can you follow that show and enjoy it absolutely
- on its own terms? I believe that is the case. There's another level
- there, the "little clues and hints" you mention, which will just skate
- past most casual viewers and not in any way interfere with their viewing
- of the episode...but if you're paying attention, and you catch them, it
- adds a new level. The more you see, the more you begin to perceive that
- second level. It's a cumulative effect that doesn't diminish the single
- episodes as stand-alones.
-
- jms
-
-
- From: straczynski@genie.geis.com
- Date: 29 Nov 1993 01:44:10 -0500
- Subject: Re: B5 at LosCon
-
- (Lost the last paragraph of my message.) In any event, what I'm
- striving for is the idea that you can watch the episodes for the
- character stories, OR the story arc, OR the individual stories, OR all
- three at the same time, all in the same exact episodes. You can get out
- as much as you're willing to find.
-
- It's a very weird kind of writing...but at least on this end, it's
- kinda fun, actually.
-
- jms
-
-
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