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<h2><a name="OV">Overview</a></h2>
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<blockquote><cite>
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Talia is caught in a treacherous web of intrigue after she witnesses a murder.
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</cite>
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Barbeau,+Adrienne">Adrienne Barbeau</a> as Amanda Carter.
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Beck,+Michael">Michael Beck</a> as Abel Horn.
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Walter,+Jessica">Jessica Walter</a> as Senator Voudreau.
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</blockquote>
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(Originally titled "A Trick of the Mind")
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<pre>
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Sub-genre: Mystery
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<a href="/lurk/p5/intro.html">P5 Rating</a>: <a href="/lurk/p5/028">8.04</a>
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Production number: 206
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Original air date: December 7, 1994
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000087EYB/thelurkersguidet">DVD release date</a>: April 29, 2003
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Written by Lawrence G. DiTillio
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Directed by Kevin Cremins
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</pre>
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<h3>Watch For:</h3>
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<ul>
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<li> Sheridan's drink.
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<LI> San Diego.
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<LI> Shattering glass.
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<LI> "Erronium."
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</ul>
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<p>
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<hr size=3>
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<p>
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<h2><a name="BP">Backplot</a></h2>
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<ul>
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<li> Talia's first assignment was on Mars Colony, where she scanned several
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members of the radical group Free Mars (cf.
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<a href="/lurk/guide/018.html">"A Voice in the Wilderness."</a>)
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<li> Sheridan is a conspiracy buff; he collects information about all sorts
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of black projects and secret organizations.
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<li> After the last rebellion, the Mars Conglomerate, a powerful group of
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business interests, nearly pulled out of Mars.
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<li> In the 2230s, the Earth Alliance began experimenting with electronic
|
|
brain implants. The experiments were unsuccessful because the
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|
machines couldn't operate in conjunction with conscious thought.
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|
Later, after the project was officially closed down, a group within
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|
the Earth Alliance began trying a different approach. They took people
|
|
who were nearly dead and, with telepathic deep scans by one or more
|
|
members of Psi Corps, fixated the subjects' minds on the moments of
|
|
their deaths, blocking out all other conscious thought. That allowed
|
|
the implants to operate as long as the subjects remained fixated.
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|
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|
<li> A secret group within the Earth government called Bureau 13 is
|
|
deeply involved in, if not responsible for, the continuation of the
|
|
experiments. Bureau 13 has at least one officially deceased PsiCop
|
|
in its employ, possibly even its head.
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|
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|
</ul>
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<h2><a name="UQ">Unanswered Questions</a></h2>
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<UL>
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|
<LI> Who is the Bureau 13 "Control" Officer on B5?
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<LI> If the cyber-experiments failed, what is Abbut, the "vicker" from
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|
<a href="009.html">"Deathwalker?"</a>
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<LI> Is "Abbey," Talia's mentor from her first year in Psi Corps, the
|
|
Bureau 13 PsiCop?
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<li> The station's computer system has a secret override built in which
|
|
Bureau 13 has access to. What, if any, other subversions are in place
|
|
on Babylon 5?
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|
<li> What role, if any, will the T'Kar play in the future, assuming they
|
|
decide to come to Babylon 5? What's so special about them?
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<li> What did Sheridan learn when he was on the T'Kar ship?
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</UL>
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|
<h2><a name="AN">Analysis</a></h2>
|
|
<ul>
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|
|
|
<li> Since Talia scanned Free Mars members, it's reasonable to assume that
|
|
Psi-Corps is still doing so. Why, then, were they apparently caught
|
|
unawares by the rebellion in
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|
<a href="/lurk/guide/018.html">"A Voice in the Wilderness?"</a>
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|
In that episode, the Psi-Corps representative expressed surprise at
|
|
the size and well-equipped nature of Free Mars, something that
|
|
presumably would have been discovered during the course of scans.
|
|
Either some within Psi-Corps are actively hiding such information
|
|
from the rest of the Corps (and from Earth) or Free Mars is run very
|
|
tightly and almost no members know enough to compromise the
|
|
organization as a whole.
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|
|
<li> Sheridan's interest in secret organizations and conspiracies may
|
|
explain why he was so ready to believe in an assassination plot
|
|
against the President (cf.
|
|
<a href="024.html">"Revelations."</a>)
|
|
Most other people seem to believe the accident cover story (cf. comic
|
|
<a href="/lurk/comic/001.html">"In Darkness Find Me."</a>)
|
|
|
|
<LI> What about Abbut, the "Vicker" or "VCR" from
|
|
<a href="009.html">"Deathwalker?"</a> He was quite clearly
|
|
human, and also clearly carrying a brain implant. (Indeed, his
|
|
brain was exposed, surrounded and penetrated by what looked like
|
|
quite extensive implants. The exact quote by Garibaldi was, "Most of
|
|
the cyber experiments were a bust." Abbut could have been one of
|
|
those few that worked. In principle implants recording and
|
|
monitoring what Abbut experiences are fundimentally different from
|
|
an implanted AI that controls your actions.
|
|
|
|
<LI> In a related but more tenuous vein, what about the Technomages?
|
|
Some aspects of their abilities (all based on technology, remember)
|
|
seem to imply non-vocal, non-manipulatory control over their gear.
|
|
The production of an orange blossom while walking, talking and
|
|
gesturing. Sleight of hand is one explanation, (sidestepping the
|
|
issue of how the orange blossom was produced,) but an alternative one
|
|
is that they have some kind of control device implanted someplace --
|
|
not necessarily their brains. This would also explain their
|
|
preternatural knowledge. Elric always seemed to know more than anyone
|
|
else, and some of that could have come from a built in data system or
|
|
an implanted link to one. Add to this Elric's ability to pull up
|
|
holograms literally in the palm of his hand, and the arguement seems
|
|
strong for such an implant. But again, it could be nothing but an
|
|
IO path, not an AI, and so again different from the cyber experiments'
|
|
failures.
|
|
|
|
<li>@@@887743545 Sheridan said Earth's cyborg research took place in the
|
|
2230s. That places it just after the Dilgar war
|
|
(<a href="009.html">"Deathwalker."</a>)
|
|
In
|
|
<a href="009.html">"Deathwalker,"</a>
|
|
Na'Toth recalled that the Dilgar were experimenting with brain
|
|
implants. Was Earth continuing the Dilgar research? Did they receive
|
|
research data after the war, the same way the allies obtained Nazi
|
|
advances in rocket technology after World War II?
|
|
|
|
<LI> B5's computer system is compromised. At the very least, communications
|
|
are insecure and under the control of the Bureau 13 AI, including both
|
|
local and interstellar channels. This is supported by the way the
|
|
public computer console is quickly taken over by the AI, and the
|
|
quickness with which it handled the exchange between the Bureau 13
|
|
Psicop in San Diego and the control officer on site at B5. The extent
|
|
of the problem isn't known, but the AI isn't omnipresent. It doesn't
|
|
prevent Captain Sheridan from modifying the environmental sensors, for
|
|
instance.
|
|
|
|
<LI> Is Bureau 13 set up in a cell structure, like an organized underground
|
|
or revolutionary movement? We know of two Bureau 13 members, and we
|
|
saw them interacting via the Bureau 13 computer. They never saw each
|
|
other, and never refered to one another by name. This hints that Bureau
|
|
13 is indeed set up this way, which points to an an explanation for
|
|
the episode title. The cell structure of an underground, with its
|
|
singular links between cells, is indeed a web. And at the center of
|
|
such a web would be a central directing authority -- A Spider in the
|
|
Web.
|
|
|
|
</ul>
|
|
|
|
<h2><a name="NO">Notes</a></h2>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
<li> The title shown onscreen is "Spider in the Web," but all previous
|
|
references to the episode by JMS and others have called it
|
|
"A Spider in the Web," so that's the title listed here. The
|
|
longer title was also listed on the title page before the
|
|
original satellite uplink.
|
|
|
|
<li> The name "Bureau 13" may be a role-playing game reference; it is the
|
|
name of the US paranormal investigations branch in the game
|
|
"Stalking the Night Fantastic." (Of course, that could just be a
|
|
coincidence; another theory is that it refers to P13-level telepaths.)
|
|
|
|
<li> The ship that fired on Abel Horn was the Earth Forces Cruiser
|
|
Pournelle, according to the computer readout on his history.
|
|
|
|
<li> Sheridan orders a Jovian Sunspot; the only other time that drink has
|
|
been referenced is in
|
|
<a href="009.html">"Deathwalker,"</a>
|
|
which also involved Talia and a cyborg of sorts. Probably just
|
|
a coincidence.
|
|
|
|
<li> According to Isogi, Ms. Carter's great-grandfather John
|
|
piloted the first colony ship to Mars. "John Carter of
|
|
Mars" is a classic SF story by Edgar Rice Burroughs; the
|
|
character also appears in other Burroughs stories such as
|
|
<a href="ftp://mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/etext/etext93/pmars10.txt">
|
|
"Princess of Mars."</a>
|
|
See the
|
|
<a href="http://jg.cso.uiuc.edu/PG/welcome.html">Project Gutenberg
|
|
home page.</a>
|
|
|
|
<LI> The animation of the destruction of Abel Horn's ship by an EarthForce
|
|
cruiser over Phobos is quite detailed. When his ship is hit, the
|
|
window Abel Horn was looking through shatters, and the air
|
|
rushes out carrying odd bits and debris with it.
|
|
</ul>
|
|
|
|
<h2><a name="JS">jms speaks</a></h2>
|
|
<ul>
|
|
|
|
<li> Having lived in San Diego from 1974-81, it's just my way of giving
|
|
a wink to the old home town. Though there are some important things
|
|
going on underground, in areas no one goes...the choice of SD is just
|
|
a bit of fun.
|
|
|
|
<li> San Diego was nuked by terrorists some time earlier; but if you dig
|
|
deep enough, you could probably build something with enough money; and
|
|
who knows how bad it *really* is.
|
|
|
|
<li>@@@846703007 How big was the San Diego Nuke? Big enough, and dirty
|
|
enough, to make the area officially uninhabitable for a long time.
|
|
|
|
<li> The San Diego wastelands was a physical model, yes.
|
|
|
|
<li> Local in-house joke: Abby's last name...Normal.
|
|
|
|
<li> If you're a telepath, Psi Corps IS your family. (And no, that wasn't
|
|
Abby, too young; also not a case of programming/rebuilding...the
|
|
DECEASED is a cover to get her out.)
|
|
|
|
<li> Actually, the age on Abby is fairly straightforward...Talia came to the
|
|
Psi Corps as a young child; she was assigned to an adult Psi Corps
|
|
member to help her adjust. So Abby would be anywhere from 15-20 years
|
|
older than Talia. Or more.
|
|
|
|
<li> No, the Bureau 13 rpg precedes our show; we weren't aware of it at
|
|
the time we did the episode.
|
|
|
|
<li>@@@846703007 We hadn't heard of the Bureau 13 game when we did the
|
|
episode, it was just something we came up with 'cause it sounded neat.
|
|
Later, we found out there was a game by that name. At which point I
|
|
decided that it wouldn't be appropriate to use that name again, and had
|
|
a good conversation with some folks at the game company about it. There
|
|
was no problem, I just didn't want to walk on their turf intentionally
|
|
or otherwise. Logically, any secret group is going to change its name
|
|
from time to time *anyway* (it's not like they're in the yellow pages
|
|
or anything), so the organization would remain under varying names.
|
|
|
|
<li> The security guard didn't trigger the detonation; he picked up some
|
|
energy buildup on his scanner the moment Horn's heart stopped.
|
|
|
|
<li> Basically, Garibaldi's third favorite thing...is whatever the member
|
|
of the opposite sex is having....
|
|
|
|
</ul>
|
|
|
|
<hr>
|
|
Originally compiled by Dave Zimmerman
|
|
<hr>
|