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|
- <h2><a name="OV">Overview</a></h2>
-
- <blockquote><cite>
- Disaster strikes an old friend of Captain Sheridan. Dr. Franklin offers
- nutritional advice to some reluctant patients.
- </cite>
-
- <a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Tamblyn,+Russ">Russ Tamblyn</a> as Capt. Maynard.
- <a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?Nu%F1ez+Jr%2E%2C+Miguel+A%2E">Miguel A. Nuñez, Jr.</a> as Orwell.
- </blockquote>
-
- <pre>
- Sub-genre: Suspense
- <a href="/lurk/p5/intro.html">P5 Rating</a>: <a href="/lurk/p5/026">7.34</a>
-
- Production number: 204
- Original air date: November 23, 1994
- <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000087EYB/thelurkersguidet">DVD release date</a>: April 29, 2003
-
- Written by D.C. Fontana
- Directed by Jim Johnston
- </pre>
-
- <h3>Watch For:</h3>
- <UL>
- <LI> Captain Maynard's footwear.
- </UL>
-
- <p>
- <hr size=3>
- <p>
-
- <h2><a name="BP">Backplot</a></h2>
- <ul>
- <li> Sheridan's first commander, on Earth-Mars patrol duty, was Jack
- Maynard, who Sheridan admired greatly. "I thought he knew
- everything," Sheridan says. "He <em>did</em>, too."
-
- <li> The Earth Alliance has a small fleet of huge Explorer-class ships that
- travel out on the rim of known space, mapping new systems and
- installing new jump gates. More specialized scout ships follow later
- to perform detailed or specific surveys of these newly opened
- systems.
-
- <LI> The Explorer ships, which are considered choice commands, can
- also repair jumpgates.
-
- <li> Navigation in hyperspace involves locking onto jumpgate signals.
- There seem to be no natural reference points in hyperspace, so
- a ship must keep its own internal navigation references or lock
- onto the signals of nearby gates or it will become lost. Until this
- episode, no ship lost in hyperspace had ever been rescued.
-
- <LI> Minbari society is built upon a strict caste structure and obedience
- to superiors within that caste structure. Delenn has challanged
- that organization, and the Minbari are beginning to react.
-
- </ul>
-
- <h2><a name="UQ">Unanswered Questions</a></h2>
- <ul>
- <li> <em>Is</em> something living in hyperspace? (This isn't a new
- question; it was the subject of a front-page Universe Today story in
- <a href="008.html">"And the Sky Full of Stars."</a>)
- <li> Why does Delenn feel she is more "one of us" now than she's ever been?
- Is it because she views humans and Minbari as joined, and she feels
- she's a part of both halves?
- <LI> How does hyperspace work in the B5 universe?
- </ul>
-
- <h2><a name="AN">Analysis</a></h2>
- <ul>
-
- <LI> The appearance of his friend and mentor Jack Maynard suddenly throws
- Sheridan's new duties aboard Babylon 5 into contrast with his training
- and experience, kindling a strong sense of dissatisfaction with the job.
- "I've been beached," he says. This is sure to crop up again in the future.
- Despite his newfound energy at the end of the episode, what Captain
- Maynard said is still true; being a governor and a diplomat isn't what
- Sheridan trained or even wished for. If he's itching for action when a
- crisis comes up, that might cause him to look less thoroughly for peaceful
- solutions than someone like Sinclair might.
-
- <LI> Delenn's transformation is something that's clearly a mystery to the
- general Minbari population, suggesting that it is either unprecedented
- or so rare as to be unheard-of. Yet she seemed to know what she was
- doing, as did at least some of the Grey Council. The Council is
- likely harboring many secrets that aren't simple matters of
- religion and spirituality; what other technologies do they possess
- that the Minbari public knows nothing about?
-
- <LI> Jumpgates act as locator beacons in hyperspace, providing a three
- dimensional homing signal detectable for a thousand kilometers or so
- there. To be useful in the featureless and chaotic void of hyperspace
- it would have to provide both a relative and an absolute reference much
- like a VOR does for aircraft. If the beacon can respond to ship data
- requests, then range data and traffic information could also be transmitted
- to the approaching (or departing) ship. Just how this works is not explained.
-
- <LI> Hyperspace is a featureless place, yet it has currents and eddies that
- corrospond to gravity in normal space. Sheridan says, "We know
- there is a drift in hyperspace that can pull a ship down the gravitational
- incline." Gravity works in hyperspace, though apparently not in quite
- the same way that it works in real space. Electromagnetic waves
- also propogate in hyperspace, but become distorted rapidly over
- distance in a random and variable way. Jumpgate beacons are, therefore,
- very short range -- more like lighthouses in hyperspace -- and communications
- with ships in hyperspace is possible only when the vessel is near a jumpgate.
-
- <LI> What looks like a great deal of hand-waving over the Cortez accident
- can be explained upon close examination of the circumstances. The
- timeline of the accident seems to be:
- <P>
- <OL>
- <LI> Cortez enters the jumpgate.
- <LI> Cortez exits the jumppoint in hyperspace and attempts a restart of her
- primary power system. The fusion reactor restart fails, and the power
- system spikes, producing a powerful electro-magnetic pulse (and presumably
- a sizable radiation pulse) which takes out some systems aboard Cortez,
- including main propulsion, navigation, and some computer systems. Cortez
- is now adrift.
- <LI> Many hours later Cortez gets some main power back and systems running.
- Captain Maynard, after getting a damage report that tells him that nav won't
- be back up for 48 hours, puts up a distress call, which is received (barely) by B5.
- At this point Cortez is under power, but without reference points the best they
- can do is hold station against the pull of a nearby gravity well.
-
- <LI> B5 receives the distress signal, and Captain Sheridan decides to make a rescue
- attempt. Cortez is effectively just "offshore" in hyperspace, and despite Ivonova's
- misgivings he feels they stand a chance of recovering her. Five fighters are
- launched into hyperspace by B5, and they form up on a line facing down the local
- gravity well at 1000km intervals.
- <LI> The fighters set up the search pattern, with Cdr. Galus (fighter group commander)
- and Lt. Keffer together at the far end. This puts them about 4000km away from B5.
- <LI> A shadow ship enters hyperspace almost on top of Galus, colliding with and
- destroying his fighter. It also rams Keffer's Star Fury, but only knocks out some
- systems (comms, nav, and propulsion).
- Keffer begins firing (presumably on internal references) in the direction of Galus's
- last position. Cortez figures it out, and at about the same time Keffer's fighter
- gets communications back online. Rather than risk losing a good bearing back
- to the jumpgate, Keffer tells Captain Maynard to take Cortez directly back to
- the gate, leaving him behind in his unmaneuverable Star Fury. He is unable
- to keep station and will drift, eventually losing any reference back to B5.
- <LI> About 24 hours later (more or less -- it seems like the next night, end of shift
- in C&C, about midnight) Keffer is running out of oxygen--but his Star Fury has
- succeeded in getting his thruster systems back online. Shortly after that he
- spots another shadow ship, and using that as a reference point he navigates
- back to the jumpgate and returns to B5.
- </OL>
-
-
- <LI> This <I>may</I> not have been as much of a crisis as it seemed to be. Cortez, given its
- stated function of running about on the rim, must carry its own jumppoint
- generator. The problem was the lack of main power. Since it has already been
- stated that opening a jumppoint takes a great deal of energy, the size of the
- Cortez fusion plant would therefore be determined by the power requirements
- for creating the jumppoint. With only partial main power, she was unable to do so.
- But given the size of the ship and its presumed independence, it is possible that
- Cortez could have repaired her main power plant herself, and then opened a
- jumpgate of her own. This possibility explains why Captain Maynard didn't broadcast a
- mayday immediately following the accident -- he assumed they could get Cortez
- out of trouble themselves. It was only after he received the damage report
- detailing the slow recovery of main power and the long repair time for navigation
- that he decided to call for assistance.
-
- <LI> This episode further delineates the technological capabilities of
- the Shadows, though not explicitly. They use the same hyperspace
- the major races do. (As opposed to, for example, the Sigma 957
- aliens from
- <a href="006.html">"Mind War,"</a>
- who appeared to use something different.)
-
- <LI> Though the Shadows presumably noticed the Starfuries and the Cortez
- and realized they could be seen as well, they took no action against
- the human ships. This is somewhat in contrast to their apparent
- desire to remain undetected. Several explanations are possible.
- Perhaps the Shadow ship was in a hurry; perhaps its weapons aren't
- functional in hyperspace; or, most intriguing, perhaps it realized
- that the ships were from Earth and chose to leave them alone for
- that reason.
-
- </ul>
-
- <h2><a name="NO">Notes</a></h2>
- <UL>
- <LI> Captain Maynard has seen a shadow ship in the past, though he didn't
- recognize it as such, and now Lt. Keffer has seen one as well.
-
- <p>
- <li> Garibaldi's special dinner:
-
- <p>
- Bagna Cauda (from Jeff Smith's -The Frugal Gourmet-)
-
- <p>
- 1/2 cup olive oil<br>
- 1/4 lb. butter (1 stick) - not margarine!<br>
- 5 cloves garlic, finely chopped<br>
- 6 anchovy fillets, mashed<br>
- black pepper
-
- <p>
- Heat oil and butter together in top of double boiler. In a small
- skillet cook the garlic in a bit of this oil until soft. Add the
- anchovies, and cook till the fish turns into a paste, about 5 min. Mix
- this paste with the hot oil and butter. Transfer to a chafing dish or
- fondue pot to keep warm on the table (it congeals as it cools.)
-
- <p>
- <li>@@@864543530 The Egyptian blessing: "God be between you and harm, in
- all the empty places where you must walk." This blessing was
- quoted by creative consultant Harlan Ellison in his short story,
- "Paladin of the Lost Hour."
-
- <p>
- <li> Delenn's speech about "starstuff" is very similar to a section of
- Carl Sagan's <cite>Cosmos</cite>, as well as a section of the play
- <cite>The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds</cite>.
-
- <p>
- <li> (unverified) As the Cortez exits the jumpgate, its hull numbers
- can be read, "14286." Later, when Sheridan grants clearance for
- it to leave, its number is stated as "C199."
-
- </UL>
-
- <h2><a name="JS">jms speaks</a></h2>
- <ul>
-
- <li> To be filed under the heading of, "What I does, I takes the rap for;
- what I does not, I doesn't take the rap for," when we discussed the
- hyperspace accident in our production meetings, Jim -- our director --
- asked if he could so some fratzing and sparking, some fire...I said I
- did not *want* huge gouts of flame, just a few small sparks, fine, a
- bit of smoke from components burned out, fine...and that day I was
- over in the other facility overseeing a mixdown of the audio...and
- guess what he did in my absence? Yup.
-
- <p>
- <li> So many questions about hyperspace came up over the last year or so
- that we figured they should be addressed; be assured, we're staying
- as clear of technobabble as ever, despite my Spousal Overunit's
- absolute and unshakeable conviction that *everything* is, at its
- root, a math problem.
-
- <p>
- <li> To get in and out of hyperspace you have to know where you are and
- where you're going, otherwise you'll come out even *more* lost,
- hundreds of light years from home; you jump in, and you're even
- further gone now.
-
- <p>
- <li>@@@846702887 Once in hyperspace, you can ride the navigational beams
- between beacons (narrow beam stuff, to cut through the interference,
- as noted in "Distant Star"), and by corrolating the beacons, know where
- you have to come out.
-
- <p>
- That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
-
- <p>
- <li> And the Cortez might've been able to locate some stars, but any fix
- on its position would only have been within a few light-years, not
- nearly precise enough for their purposes. They'd still be lost.
-
- <p>
- <li> <em>Should a ship have been named after Cortez, considering what
- effect his arrival had on the native Americans?</em><br>
- If Cortez had NOT landed in northern Mexico, do you think it would
- have remained undiscovered until now?
-
- <p>
- Fact #1: somebody was bound to discover the Americas.
-
- <p>
- Fact #2: any sufficiently advanced civilization or culture will
- inevitably attempt to exploit any civilization or culture not
- sufficiently advanced to fight back on a level playing field.
-
- <p>
- Blaming explorers for exploring has always seemed to me really kind
- of silly; do people *really* think that if Columbus hadn't landed
- here, it'd be 1994 and we still wouldn't know the world was round and
- that this continent was here? It doesn't matter who discovered it,
- the same result would've come. Somebody had to discover it sooner
- or later.
-
- <p>
- <li>@@@846702887 <em>Did the Cortez spin to produce gravity?</em><br>
- Yes, it rotated to create its gravity, as you can
- see quite clearly in the episode.
-
- <p>
- <li> (He coughs and speaks in his Executive Producer Voice:) "I *LIKE* the
- opening title sequence."
- <p>
- Now...onto other matters.
- <p>
- We re-mixed the narration and music today in the titles, and it's a LOT
- better. I slightly shifted the placement of some of the lines, and
- Bruce's rendition is very nice. Really carries the weight. Look for
- it to appear starting in episode #4.
-
- <p>
- <li> Actually, we just redid the narration with Bruce yesterday, and it's
- MUCH better. We'll be able to get it in starting in episode #4.
- <p>
- While we were at it, btw, we took the opportunity to re-do the
- faceplate shot in the main title sequence. It was fine, but it
- could've been better. Now it is. Expect it around the same time as
- the new VO.
-
- </ul>
-
- <hr>
- Originally compiled by Dave Zimmerman
- <hr>
|