{original post had no questions}
Yeah, a number of shows are now adapting the B5 storytelling
model, with an overarching arc and shows that keep it going. The new
Roddenberry series has a five year arc of its own, apparently. More
will follow, now that we've broken the ice.
jms
Son of B5 Benchmark
{original post unavailable}
I honestly don't know how important the web has been because
frankly, if you added up all the web-users out there, it wouldn't be a
blip on the ratings charts. That said, our audience has definitely
increased over the last 4 years, one of the few syndicated shows that
has grown while nearly all the rest have fallen. Xena has grown, and I
think one or two others, but that's it.
It just takes any show a while to find its audience, or in this
case, for our audience to find *us*, given scheduling. We've begun
doing that, and are nearly at critical mass.
jms
Son of B5 Benchmark
{original post unavailable}
There's a follow-up story in the works...we'll see....
jms
Son of B5 Benchmark
Carol Naylor <100645.2613@compuserve.com> asks:
> Ever since I realised that you'd been on-line long before B5 got
> off the ground, I've wondered whether your on-line participation
> as the show's producer was something you'd conciously decided to
> do or whether it was something that, like Topsey, just 'growed'?
No, it was just a natural extension of already being online.
The only deliberate decision involved was, "Do I *change* my life and
what I do for pleasure just because I'm more well known now than
before?" I'm still the same person, so the answer was no.
jms
Son of B5 Benchmark
(blocked) asks:
> Sound like anybody we know??
I haven't seen much of Buffy, due to work schedules, but what
I've seen, I've liked. I also commend Tales from a Parallel Universe
on the Movie Channel to you...great stuff.
jms