The Lurker's Guide to Babylon 5
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### GUIDE ### [3][Background] [4][Synopsis] [5][Credits] [6][Episode
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_Contents:_ [9]Overview - [10]Backplot - [11]Questions - [12]Analysis
- [13]Notes - [14]JMS
_________________________________________________________________
Overview
Lyta tests the limits of the Shadows' newly-discovered weakness.
Dr. Franklin goes on a journey to discover his place in life, and
meets a singer in Downbelow. The new Ambassador Kosh arrives on the
station. [15]Erica Gimpel as Cailyn. [16]Jennifer Balgobin as Dr.
Hobbs. [17]Patricia Tallman as Lyta Alexander. [18]Robin Sachs as
Na'Kal.
[19]P5 Rating: [20]7.89
Production number: 318
Original air week: August 18, 1996 (UK)
September 30, 1996 (US)
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Directed by Kevin Cremin
_________________________________________________________________
Backplot
* Lyta has previously carried "pieces" of Kosh with her. This is
most likely what she was doing at the end of [21]"Passing Through
Gethsemane."
* At least ten Narn ships have survived the battle with the
Centauri, damaged but able to be repaired. A new Narn fleet seems
to be gathering.
* It takes the White Star 20 minutes to recharge its jump engines
after they've been taken offline and their energy diverted into
the weapons systems.
* The Vorlons are a long-lived race, are relatively few in number,
and death is a rarity among them. It had been a very long time
since a Vorlon had died.
* Franklin is a Foundationist. The Foundation apparently borrows
customs and beliefs from various cultures, perhaps in the belief
that no one people has all the right spiritual answers.
Unanswered Questions
[INLINE]
* What was the message the Vorlon ship showed to Sheridan?
* Lyta, a P5, could barely hold one Shadow ship at bay. How much
telepathic energy is required to defeat a Shadow ship? What effect
would a high-rated telepath like Bester have on a Shadow vessel?
* Is Lyta still "only" a P5, or has she been enhanced by her
relationship with Kosh?
* Why does the new Vorlon insist on being called Kosh in public and
private? What does he mean by his statement that "We are all
Kosh?" (see [22]Analysis)
* Where did the pattern in Kosh's quarters come from, and what does
it mean? (see [23]Analysis)
* Why did Lyta bleed from her eyes during the battle? Was it just
the strain, or is there some deeper explanation?
* Why didn't the forces of Light take the destroyed Shadow craft in
tow for analysis?
* Why didn't the Minbari cruiser open fire on the "held" shadows?
* Lyta required 'line of sight' to the Shadow ship in order to
attack it. Did the Minbari telepaths also need to see the Shadows
in order to attack them?
* How did the Vorlon ship know where to find Sheridan?
* Does the "piece" of Kosh that may be left behind in Sheridan have
anything to do with Sheridan's place as "The One?" How might it
fit in with Kosh's statement that if Sheridan goes to Z'ha'dum, he
will die? It may explain Kosh's final words to Sheridan: "As long
as you're here, I'll always be here."
* Do the Shadows know a piece of Kosh survived?
* Does the different style and color of the new Vorlon ambassador's
encounter suit denote anything?
* Is this the same Vorlon who was on Minbar in [24]"War Without
End?"
* How did G'Kar manage to persuade the other races to come to
Sheridan's aid in his battle against the Shadows?
Analysis
[INLINE]
* The strange pattern which the new Vorlon sees on the screen in
Kosh's quarters could be a representation of Kosh's death. It
could be construed as a diagram of two or more Shadows attacking a
Vorlon. It could also be construed as a diagram of Shadows being
accompanied by a human. Presumably the human would be Morden, and
the images were burned into the wall in some form, silhouettes,
when Kosh was killed.
* It's clear that Lyta believes, based on her vision, that Sheridan
may hold part of Kosh within him. What that means -- for Sheridan,
for Lyta, and for Kosh -- remains to be seen.
* How did the piece of Kosh get into Sheridan's mind? If it was the
result of Kosh's contact with Sheridan, might G'Kar also have a
piece of Kosh following their contact in [25]"Dust to Dust?"
* More disturbingly, might Morden also have a piece of Kosh, present
as he was at Kosh's death? Perhaps that was why the Shadows
brought Morden along; they wanted someone there who could carry
part of a Vorlon.
* In [26]"All Alone in the Night," Kosh tells Sheridan, "I have
always been here." Could he perhaps have been referring to
Sheridan's mind, implying that Sheridan has carried a piece of
Kosh for quite some time?
* Might the statement that "We are all Kosh" suggest that the
Vorlons exist more as a collective whole than as individual
entities? (See also [27]JMS speaks.)
* The tide may be turning, now that it's clear that telepaths are
effective weapons against the Shadows, especially considering that
all major races except the Narn have telepaths. (Which begs the
question: what will the Shadows' response be?)
* Telepathic control over Shadow ships is tenuous at best, and may
be limited to preventing them from attacking; the three ships
being held by the Minbari telepaths were free to flee the scene
when G'Kar and the others arrived.
* In [28]"Revelations," G'Kar told Na'Toth that when Narn warships
jump into normal space, they're briefly out of contact because of
the energy drain of the jump engines. Yet the G'Tok was able to
fire on the Shadow warship before it even left the vortex. Does
that mean that the weapons systems take less energy than
establishing faster-than-light communications? Perhaps Narn FTL
communication involves the use of the jump engines to beam a
signal into hyperspace, and the effect in "Revelations" was simply
a matter of the jump engines needing to recharge from the ship's
main power source.
* The Shadows now probably know that the White Star is capable of
solo jumps. It seems Sheridan has decided that keeping that
capability a secret is no longer of strategic importance
([29]"Matters of Honor.") Or perhaps he figures that the secret is
out by now anyway, perhaps as of Delenn's emergence from a jump
point in the White Star in close proximity to Babylon 5, and thus
presumably in full view of a large number of people ([30]"Severed
Dreams.")
* The new Kosh's ship is reddish in color, as is his encounter
suit's eyepiece, perhaps suggesting the link between Vorlons and
their ships.
* Every sentient race, according to G'Kar, has food resembling
Swedish meatballs. The Narn call it "breen." Since the Vorlons
have manipulated all the younger races, perhaps Swedish meatballs
are really a Vorlon delicacy, part of an intricate plan to defeat
the Shadows through culinary unity.
Notes
* In Australian aboriginal cultures, a "walkabout" is a ritual in
which a young man goes on a solitary journey through the
wilderness in an attempt to learn more about his own character and
strength.
* Metazine, the painkiller Cailyn used, was also used on Sinclair to
keep him unconscious in [31]"And the Sky Full of Stars."
* In the initial UK broadcast, as well as the first-run US
broadcast, Patricia Tallman's first name was misspelled "Patrica"
in the opening credits.
* JMS wrote both songs in this episode. See [32]jms speaks.
* When the ship bearing the new ambassador arrives, Sheridan
originally says, "Welcome to Babylon 5." This line was edited out
later.
jms speaks
* As it happens, as soon as I finish the two-parter, this week, the
next script will get a lot more into Lyta and the Vorlons and all
that jazz.
* It came out pretty well; it's exceeded by Shadow Dancing, Z'ha'dum
and Rock, but it ain't bad.
* Re: "Walkabout," thanks...of the final 5, it's not at the top, but
it ain't bad. If you happen to be out of the house this coming
Thursday, and miss "Grey 17 is Missing," you miss a little, but
not a lot. It's okay. But the ones after that are just *killer*.
* _Was this supposed to come before "War Without End?"_
Correct. Initially we'd wanted to put Walkabout in first, but that
would have meant airing only WWE1 in that sweeps period, and
having to wait until the fall for part 2, which seemed not only
excessive but remarkably stupid. So we reversed the
shooting/airing order to accommodate that, and the fact that we
knew we'd need a LOT of EFX in WWE1, and this would give us time
to do it properly.
* _Will the order be corrected when TNT airs the series?_
Not really, because it doesn't make *that* much difference to risk
confusing them about it....
* _About [33]Patricia Tallman's misspelled name_
WHAT?!?!
Are you sure? We changed it on my copies here.....
* (slow burn)
We delivered a corrected print ages ago.
Someone gon' DIE.
* It's fair to say that Lyta has been...aided, slightly, in her
abilities. But I'm not ready to pull the trigger on that one for a
while yet.
* The new Vorlon arrives in Walkabout.
* _Is the new ambassador the same as Kosh?_
Actually, no, the replacement isn't Kosh, as you say, it's another
Vorlon, with a very different personality...the "we are all Kosh"
is more of a conceptual thing....
* I'd say this Kosh has a bit more of an edge to him....
* _Will we ever find out what was written on the side of Kosh's
ship?_
What, do I look like someone who can speak Vorlon? Oh, sure, a few
words, mainly "Where is the bathroom" and "What's that smell?" but
to translate something like that...pfsh, please.
(Answer: probably not.)
* _What did the ship say?_
"Welcome to Hawaii."
There was apparently a hideous malfunction...they never talked
about it thereafter....
* Franklin isn't gone from the show; he's in the very next episode,
in a major way, and has a big part in "Shadow Dancing." He just
has a lot to work out right now.
* "When is walkabout a legitimate choice, and when is it a cop-out?"
When you're more afraid of what you're running *to* than what
you're running *from*.
* It's not widely known -- I guess mainly because I haven't ever
mentioned it much -- but from time to time I've written songs.
Mainly the lyrics; I know how the music should sound, but I'm
incapable of reading music...I think it's the same mental glitch
that hits me when I try to do certain kinds of math. "X is a
numerical value." "No, X is a letter, 7 is a numerical value." I
can't ever seem to make the one equal the other in my head.
Similarly, a black note on a piece of paper isn't the
music...anyway, it's a glitch.)
So when I write songs, and I have a specific melody I'm hearing in
my head, I'm invariably placed in the humiliating position (since
I can't play a musical instrument) of humming it, or somehow
trying to suggest it to the music-person. Suffice to say it looks
really goofy and stupid.
Anyway...despite this, I do sometimes write songs, and like to
keep my hand in, as they say. I did two songs for an ABC-TV
prime-time Real Ghostbusters special, did a few songs that have
been recorded by small groups (you've never heard of any of them,
trust me), another song that, much to my chagrin, is apparently
still being used in church songbooks (and that's all I will ever
say about that)...and when I decided to do a show with a singer
for B5, I wrote a couple of songs for that one, with Chris Franke
providing the music.
They're bluesy, Billie Holliday kinds of songs, updated slightly.
I'm actually very pleased with how they came out (Erica Gimpel,
one of the cast members from Fame, plays the part and sings the
songs). Several folks around here want either or both songs to
come out on the next B5 album, but I"m loathe to do so, on the
theory that the soundtracks work better in the style we've already
used, all instrumental. (There've even been some inquiries from
music people who've heard the songs about releasing them
commercially, but that would mean adding about 30 seconds to each
song to make them airplay compatible, and I'm not sure I want to
take on the extra hassle just now.)
* _Who did the music?_
I wrote the lyrics, Chris Franke did the music.
* _Are the songs linked to elements of the story?_
Not coincidences, no, but not quite as tightly linked as you
suggest. Thematically indicative more than anything that points to
story specific elements.
* I figured it might be cool to continue the song over the credits.
That happens one more time this season.
* Here's what I think is a bit of cultural short-sightedness.
Everybody keeps saying, "well, if they had that kind of music,
shouldn't it have been shown to be an oldies bar or something?"
Look at classical music for a moment. Goes back to Beethoven,
Brahms, Bach and lots of composers whose names don't even begin
with B. And earlier. Now, I don't mean to alarm anyone or startle
anyone with this revelation, but classical music is *still being
written and performed* hundreds of years later. Not old stuff, new
stuff, of that school and in that style. The orchestral suites in
the Star Wars movies are strongly based on classical
compositions...is that "oldies" stuff? You've got one of the
longest running musical plays running now in London, in "Phantom
of the Opera," a *new* composition (well, mostly, knowing how
Webber works).
Jazz and blues kinda formally began in the 1920s and 1930s, but
its roots run back to spirituals and african-american music in the
1800s. And it didn't just stop suddenly in the 1930s. There's
still new material being written in that style now; so should
Stevie Ray Vaughn's albums or performances have been labeled
"oldies?" After all, it's sixty years later and more.
Certain musical styles will stay with us for a long, long time.
Not performances based on old stuff, but new material in that
vein, for those forms that have shown themselves to be enduring.
200 years from now, in addition to other forms, you're still going
to have original blues songs, original classical compositions,
original jazz, original compositions in the style of gregorian
chants, on and on and on.
It's odd when people try to apply illogical rules to the future
that don't apply now; no one said, as noted, that a Stevie Ray
Vaughn concert should be billed as an "oldies" event, or an oldies
bar...even though it's over half a century since serious blues
started going...it's just silly.
* Vorlon ships come out backwards when possible to help decelerate.
Pat has interesting eyes...they're slightly larger than is the
norm, and they take some getting used to. Those eyes are one of
the things that beckoned to me to cast her...they're the eyes of a
telepath, who sees more than should be seen. They're terrific
eyes.
* _So, were the shadows following Lyta, or were they an image on the
wall?_
They weren't following Lyta. We were in Kosh's old quarters, and
those images were burned into the wall when Kosh died. Bear in
mind that she doesn't actually meet the new ambassador until the
next scene.
It was the same effect you would get in a massive energy burst
that "paints" shadows on the wall, which only he could see.
Those are two different scenes; the first one takes place in
Kosh's quarters, the second one out in the hallway. Perhaps that
could've been made clearer....
* _Garibaldi said he went over Kosh's quarters with a fine-toothed
comb. How'd he miss the image?_
Watch the scene again; the first time the new Vorlon looks at the
wall, he sees nothing; the next time he looks at it, the lens wide
open, the image is somewhat distorted around the edges, and now
he's seeing the afterflash. Only certain types can see it.
* _Is there significance to the different eye-piece colors of the
two Koshes? Why no one would suspect Kosh suddenly having a
different encounter suit?_
No signicance to the eyepiece color; no reason to assume Vorlons
only have one encounter suit their entire life.
* Actually, the new Vorlon's encounter suit is more purple/red than
green. The design is a matter of form following function.
* _On differences between the two Koshes:_
They're not that far apart in age, but yes, Kosh would be a bit
older.
* The look of the new Vorlon was developed by John Vulich of Optic
Nerve based on my suggestions. I got in after a bit and
redesigned/sketched the headpiece a bit, and recommended the
colors used. We're actually doing a bit of fine-tuning on the new
Vorlon prior to next season.
* Re: the new Kosh...yeah, the look is intentional. I worked with
Optic Nerve to get the new lines right, messed with their sketches
until I had what I wanted. It's very effective in some lights,
less so in others, but the sense comes across.
* Sheridan commands the Army of Light, Delenn as second. If the AOL
speaks with one voice on something of importance, they have to be
listened to. When Sheridan put himself on the front lines, he was
then taking on the role of soldier, not commander. They also felt
it risked leaving them without said commander if it went wrong.
Bear in mind that their orders in *no* way compromised his actual
mission, or over-rode his decision. They were sending along a
secondary mission to keep an eye on the primary mission. I don't
see a conflict here.
* Just some comparisons to illustrate...during WW II, the head of
naval operations for the Japanese fleet insisted on being on board
during several of their more pivotal missions. His subordinates
insisted that additional ships be sent as escorts given his
importance to war strategy. That's a very rigid military
structure, but when *all* the subordinates get together on
something, to go against it causes more problems than it's worth.
Even within the context of a conventional military situation,
there's flexibility. If a commanding officer gives an order which
is immoral, illegal, or against the rules of engagement, a
subordinate can refuse to implement that order, even give a
countermanding order which, depending on the situation (such as a
nuclear missile firing) would take precedence over the CO's order
(though you'd first have to relieve the CO of command, and if you
do that, you'd darned well better be prepared to back it up with
every legal and moral means at your disposal, or it's mutiny).
Heck, it was just this kind of dilemma that was at the core of the
movie "Crimson Tide," and was brought up in the recent war crime
trials going on investigating what happened in Bosnia, with a
soldier being asked why he didn't refuse to carry out an order to
kill civilians.
Ain't a lot of black-and-whites in the world, but a whole lotta
greys.
* There's nothing dangerous at all about a fleet coming out of
hyperspace or a jump point together.
* _The UK cut Lyta's line from the Shadow battle, "Burn, you
bastards!"_
They cut that? How curious...I didn't know that. From what I'd
seen of British TV, some shows use the word bastard like I use a
comma, they're ubiquitous....
* _Why not use Bester in the test?_
Because Bester is on Earth or Mars, can't just drop everything and
come when beckoned, and it would take 3 days to get there, and
they were in kind of a hurry to test this. Besides, P10s are very
few and far between; they're more likely to have lower levels as
their main weapons, so best to see what impact those will have.
* The fragmentation or fractionalizing is also visually cued by the
last shot of Franklin through the window, split into many versions
of himself.
Re: the hand-on-shoulder gesture, from Marcus it was an
upbraiding, stop-him motion, whereas from Sheridan it was one of
congratulation.
* It's imagery, yes, of his still being fractured, still looking to
find himself, as it were.
* _Why isn't Sheridan setting up propaganda to help turn the
Shadows' allies, such as Earth, against them?_
There's really no need for propgaganda. By about now, everybody
out in this part of space knows the situation...and what's going
on back home is secondary to winning the war. Also, you can be
sure that if they set up a network -- and who has time in the
middle of a war -- you can be sure Earth would find some way to
jam it.
* You're the leader of an isolated space station with a quarter
million inhabitants, who need air, food, supplies, space, support.
You no longer have ties to Earth, no support from there, no money,
so you have to rely on whatever docking fees you can get from
other worlds. You're in the midst of a war in which you have few
resources, little money, allies that have a tendency to turn on
one another, nobody's giving you a break, your position is tenuous
as hell, you're constantly undermanned, shorthanded....
Now you tell me where the heck you're going to get the time,
resources, money and manpower to launch a propaganda operation,
which if you're going to broadcast (and what's the point
otherwise?) on an interstellar basis is going to require extensive
and expensive facilities, broadcast repeaters, tacyhon carrier
wave generators to get around the time-delay aspects, writers,
directors, broadcast engineers, spokespersons, propaganda
specialists, psychologists, technicians, camera equipment, space
in which to PUT all of this stuff...on and on and on.
* _The Minbari could help with the propaganda._
For starters, having just had a MAJOR WAR with the Minbari, which
nearly wiped out Earth, and many folks back home *hating* the
Minbari...do you think for one second that they're going to
believe a word of what the Minbari say to them? Do you think the
government would allow this to go through unjammed? Hell, EarthGov
would have a field day with this..."See? It's all alien
propaganda, just like we told you, they're trying to destabalize
Earth."
Second, I don't think the Minbari have the propagandists, writers,
directors, and others needed to put together a propaganda network,
and would find the whole idea immoral to begin with...and a couple
of paragraphs of text are meaningless...Earthgov says "it's not
true," and it's your word against theirs. That's why you must have
absolute, unvarnished PROOF, otherwise it blows up in your face,
which any journalist worth his or her salt knows.
* _Does the Army of Light have access to any of the Minbari's
resources?_
Yes, they do...but bear in mind that the Minbari are currently
having their own problems. The Grey Council has fallen apart, the
Military Caste (as we'll see in one of the next episodes) is
having some serious doubts about how the Religious Caste is
handling things, and that much of the support given Earth (by way
of B5) has been covert; the White Star program was launched in
secret, and the greater amount of the Minbari population aren't
aware they're so much "in bed" with the humans (as it were). As
far as they're concerned, we're apparently necessary to the plan,
but not much more than that. So I think they wouldn't be warm to
the notion of extending their services overmuch to Earth.
* _Is the White Star more powerful than a regular Minbari cruiser
because of the Vorlons' involvement in its design?_
The Vorlons were cooperating in the recent past, yes, and it still
takes a couple of Minbari cruisers under most circumstances to
take out an immobilized shadow vessel, though one can do it if the
firepower is concentrated and prolonged.
Originally compiled by Jason Snell.
[39][Next]
[40]Last update: August 8, 1997
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