I'm going to have to do a re watch it's been that long.
I'm going to have to do a re watch it's been that long.
I'm going to have to do a re watch it's been that long.
Damn, I still haven't watched Season 3. And I should be able to actually watch the new episodes the day after they air since HBOMax in part of my streaming service rotation.
Season 3 was such a disappointment. I LOVED the first season, and the 2nd season was decent, but season 3 went off a cliff.
^ You might feel like Jonah and Lisa are only making stuff up as they go, but you're wrong.
It's been well-documented that the series went on a self-imposed production hiatus during the middle of Season 1 and that Jonah and Lisa used said hiatus as both an opportunity to fully complete the scripts for the first season without the additional pressures of simultaneous filming and to map out a complete narrative direction for the series in full, ultimately culminating with the development of a 5-season plan.
Babylon 5 is one show that comes to mind that seems to have followed a plan all the way through.I recall very different stories about why that hiatus happened
Besides, every mystery box show claims they have it all planned out. They all lie. They sometimes have vague notions of where they are going, but often throw most of it out the window as they go, depending on what they are finding is working on the show, what isn't, cast changes, writer changes, audience reception, network notes, critical reception etc.
Babylon 5 is one show that comes to mind that seems to have followed a plan all the way through.
Even as a big defender of LOST, I have to agree with this.Besides, every mystery box show claims they have it all planned out. They all lie. They sometimes have vague notions of where they are going, but often throw most of it out the window as they go, depending on what they are finding is working on the show, what isn't, cast changes, writer changes, audience reception, network notes, critical reception etc.
I guess I'm the only person who genuinely enjoyed the third season.
Even as a big defender of LOST, I have to agree with this.
Babylon 5 is the only one that can come close to actually making the longterm plan claim and even JMS had to make a lot of adjustments along the way due to cast changes (not just O'Hare, but also Andrea Thompson and Claudia Christensen), WB mandates, and the expectation of cancelation.
I think he planned to kill Ragnar at the end of season 1 though, so he actually changed a hell of a lot from his original concept.TV is just too collaborative and long form for a true, multi season arc with no changes occurring. Writers have to be flexible. They can have long term goals but writing out a full 5 year story in advance and expecting to stick to it word for word just isn't very likely to ever happen. Can't say it's impossible, because nothing is impossible, but. It doesn't even happen with novels very often, if you look at original story plans vs final products.
Michael Hirst probably came close with Vikings as well, he is the only credited writer on the show until the final season, like JMS on B5. And he said in the first season that he planned on switching generations partway through. But even then you can definitely see course corrections on the show as it went on.
I recall very different stories about why that hiatus happened
Lol here he is again believing "reputable" sources that use official studio press releases for their info.Everything that was reported about the Season 1 production hiatus that came from credible and reputable sources was consistent in identifying said hiatus as having been self-imposed by the production and HBO based on a need to complete scripts without the added pressures of filming simultaneously, with Jonah and Lisa additionally revealing that the hiatus had also provided them with the opportunity to craft a broad-strokes 5-year narrative plan.
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