I'm so proud.Wow a zombie thread from 2013 brought back to life...way to troll the BBS Community here. Nearly 9 years (March 2013), that has to be an ear record for a Zombie Thread Resurrection.![]()
I'm so proud.Wow a zombie thread from 2013 brought back to life...way to troll the BBS Community here. Nearly 9 years (March 2013), that has to be an ear record for a Zombie Thread Resurrection.![]()
It's old news, but - B5 was pitched to Paramount and rejected. Straczynski then had to find money to develop his show himself and find someone to broadcast it, with no big studio behind it. Paramount took the idea and spun it into DS9 with all the power and money of a big studio behind it. Thus they managed to get DS9 to air faster.I thought DS9 came just a month before Babylon 5.
The dude who replied is an Ensign... zero experience to know that Zombie threads are a no-no. i know if i were new, i would NO IDEA about that, and wonder what the problem is (especially as that conversation would be new to that person...and for many of us, we forgotWow a zombie thread from 2013 brought back to life...way to troll the BBS Community here. Nearly 9 years (March 2013), that has to be an ear record for a Zombie Thread Resurrection.![]()
It's old news, but - B5 was pitched to Paramount and rejected. Straczynski then had to find money to develop his show himself and find someone to broadcast it, with no big studio behind it. Paramount took the idea and spun it into DS9 with all the power and money of a big studio behind it. Thus they managed to get DS9 to air faster.
I kinda doubt this thread appeared on the first 25 pages - said Ensign had to go looking pretty deep for a nearly 9 year old thread. Hence the belief someone was trolling here.The dude who replied is an Ensign... zero experience to know that Zombie threads are a no-no. i know if i were new, i would NO IDEA about that, and wonder what the problem is (especially as that conversation would be new to that person...and for many of us, we forgot
Also, if this is on anyone's Watched Threads list... it would be interesting if anyone's opinion has changed over the years (especially on the side of appreciating BOTH series), especially with the number of movies and shows that might repeat themes (NPR just brought up the asteriod movies from 1998, for example)
Or they searched for some keywords.I kinda doubt this thread appeared on the first 25 pages - said Ensign had to go looking pretty deep for a nearly 9 year old thread. Hence the belief someone was trolling here.![]()
Also, if this is on anyone's Watched Threads list... it would be interesting if anyone's opinion has changed over the years (especially on the side of appreciating BOTH series), especially with the number of movies and shows that might repeat themes (NPR just brought up the asteriod movies from 1998, for example)
Paramount took the idea and spun it into DS9 with all the power and money of a big studio behind it. Thus they managed to get DS9 to air faster.
It's the reuse of some of the names that really convinces me.
One name is coincidence, two is a pattern. Two names, plus every other commonality . . . you'd have to be a very special brand of obtuse to try and wave that off as coincidence.
It may all be circumstantial, but there is enough of it to be at least reasonably suspicious.
Names are the easiest things in the world to change. The Orville, after all, doesn't refer to "Starfleet" or the "United Federation of Planets." Would thieves really be stupid enough to leave big honking clues? Or could it just be coincidence?
One name is coincidence, two is a pattern. Two names, plus every other commonality . . . you'd have to be a very special brand of obtuse to try and wave that off as coincidence.
It may all be circumstantial, but there is enough of it to be at least reasonably suspicious.
No, DS9 did not rip off B5. But it's certainly plausible that Paramount executives nudged some ideas from the B5 pitch to DS9.So right off the bat, they make two really obvious creative choices that almost anyone trying to make a space opera that's not TNG would probably make circa the early 90s. And a lot of the other similarities essentially flow from those two choices, because those two choices create a common set of artistic challenges that have a common set of artistic solutions.
If you're set on a space station, you're going to have to do stories about the consequences of your choices, because you can't just swan off to the next planet. So serialization becomes almost inevitable. If you're on a station, you have to find ways to get people to come to the station and have conflict -- and that lends itself to telling stories about how diverse cultures interact, and have conflicts, on or near your space station. That lends itself to telling war stories, particularly since you're trying to set yourself apart from TNG with its safe, antiseptic future.
Well, in that case, it's certainly possible that there are corpses of extraterrestrials stored at Area 51. "Certainly possible" doesn't really get us very far, does it?But it's certainly plausible that Paramount executives nudged some ideas from the B5 pitch to DS9.
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