Paramount had two proposals for a space station themed show on the table. They went with the pitch that tied in with an established, profitable product.
In what year?Paramount had two proposals for a space station themed show on the table. They went with the pitch that tied in with an established, profitable product.
You tell me. What was the timeline between the rejection of the B5 proposal and the beginning of DS9?In what year?
Actually, you tell us. You were the one who claimed that Paramount was looking at two pitches at the same time and chose the one that tied in with their established product.You tell me. What was the timeline between the rejection of the B5 proposal and the beginning of DS9?
Paramount had two proposals for a space station themed show on the table. They went with the pitch that tied in with an established, profitable product.
Yes, exactly. In what year were the two pitches supposedly on the table before Paramount at the same time?In what year?
Paramount had two proposals for a space station themed show on the table. They went with the pitch that tied in with an established, profitable product.
So, you don't know and your earlier statement was baseless.Actually, I don't think it has ever been confirmed when JMS proposed the idea to Paramount. If you look online, he took his pilot script, concept art, and bible to every major network. The show and its ideas were probably not a secret at the time.
I read somewhere that Crusade was conceived of as a TNG-type spaceship-based show set in the B5 universe. However, people usually compare it to the anime Space Battleship Yamato aka Star Blazers; something with which hardly anyone outside Japan has any familiarity although it was hugely influential there. Perhaps JMS was inspired by it - I don't know. Crusade failed, which is a pity as I thought it had promise. I wasn't interested in the anime on which it was supposedly based. A five-year run of Crusade would have ended about 16 years ago.
Hmm, are there any other points of commonality apart from saving the Earth and a main weapon with a long recharge time? The first of those seems a little bit generic; the second does appear to be borrowed but it doesn't strike me as anything like wholesale theft of intellectual property. Are there any similarities in episode storylines or characters? At least the Excalibur wasn't a WW2 battleship recovered from the depths of the Pacific Ocean and converted into a spaceship - something that always sounded ludicrous to me - and especially now we know the Yamato was broken in two.JMS' "Crusade" was a wholesale ripoff of the 1973 Japanese Anime series "Space Battleship Yamato"; substituting 5 years in place of the 1 year to 'save the Earth'. Hell, the big Excalibur 'Vorlon Main Gun' operated (and had the same pitfalls) exactly like the Yamato's 'Wave Motion Gun'.![]()
A lot of things in B5 make more sense if you assume JMS really wanted to write epic fantasy. I mean, a thieves' guild? Rangers? (Techno)mages?
Yes, JMS deliberately included homages to Tolkien - that much is obvious. Another example: Sheridan and the remaining First Ones going beyond the Rim was JMS's version of Frodo and the elves sailing to the Undying Lands. Not close enough that Tolkien's estate could sue, however. And even Tolkien was riffing on old myths and tales to try to create a new folklore. Nothing new under the sun and all that...A lot of things in B5 make more sense if you assume JMS really wanted to write epic fantasy. I mean, a thieves' guild? Rangers? (Techno)mages?
It makes the show better for it. I mean, I was not a fan, especially with the whole Psi Corps aspect, but getting to rewatch it with this viewpoint has made it far more enjoyable.A lot of things in B5 make more sense if you assume JMS really wanted to write epic fantasy. I mean, a thieves' guild? Rangers? (Techno)mages?
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