To the two questions raised above...as indicated before, B5 will use a mix of storytelling elements. I'm a strong believer in the notion that each episode of a series MUST be able to stand on its own. Although I loved it dearly, that was the problem with TWIN PEAKS. If you missed even one episode, you didn't know WHAT the heck was going on. And, further, that show asked questions that it never seemed willing to answer.
I've constructed the B5 writing scenario more or less as follows:
1) Each episode will be able to stand alone. If you come in on season two, without having seen anything else, you'll be able to get into it.
2) Questions asked in the course of an episode or a season will be answered in that episode or season.
3) BUT...if you continue to watch the show, then over time a story writ on a much larger scale will begin to emerge. Consider it like a triptych, something out of Hieronymous Bosch...each individual panel is sufficient unto itself, but put them all together, and suddenly you see connections and a whole picture that wasn't there a moment earlier.
Relationships will change. People will live, and die. Alliances wll shift. And at one point or another, everything you THINK you know about these characters will be turned upside down. But there won't be cliffhangers or that sort of thing between episodes. There may be such between seasons, but not in the course of a season.
Funny thing...there are two characters in the show whose roles are going to be COMPLETELY reversed by the middle of the run. But I wasn't absolutely clear on how to do that, I had only a general notion in my head. Then, in Ireland, while standing on the hill of Tara, in the seat of the old High Kings...it hit me. And the last bit of information I needed came through.
There will be continuity. I've mapped out what will happen, in general, in about half the episodes in any given season...incidents that will eventually form the tapestry of the larger story. But the other half of any given season are left completely open to what our writers might come up with. I like being surprised, and want the show to remain open to changes in tide and wind.
As for the Toaster stuff...Ron would know more about that than I would. All I know is what I saw when I visited his digs the other day: he's got -- let's see -- six? seven? computers, all with 3 accellerators each, hooked up. There's new cards and devices and programs that very literally didn't exist two weeks ago; he's having them designed to his specs. Speed-wise, in terms of rendering, it now functions as fast as a Cray computer. Walking into that place was like walking into Frankenstein's lab...amazing stuff.
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