Saturday September 29th

Battlestar Galactica Minimates back for more

Source: Diamond Select Toys

With the second series of Battlestar Galactica Minimates on stores shelves and the third wave due in stores later this year, we’re extremely pleased to reveal the next pint-sized BSG release! The fourth wave of space-faring Minimates will include the highly anticipated President Laura Roslin & Tom Zarek, Lieutenant Gaeta & Specialist Cally, Doc Cottle & Dr. Baltar as well as the limited Miniseries Baltar variant!

Battlestar Galactica premiered as a mini-series in 2003 to rave reviews from both critics and fans of the classic property, setting viewership records for the SciFi Channel. Leaving much of traditional science fiction behind, the new Battlestar Galactica instead focuses on character-driven conflicts and the series’ epic storytelling style as viewers follow the triumphs and hardships of both the humans aboard the Colonial Fleet and the Cylons bent on following them to Earth.

Battlestar Galactica returns to the small screen this November with the premiere of the extended telefilm Battlestar Galactica: Razor and begins its fourth season this February. Look for our first series of Battlestar Galactica action figures due in stores this fall and don’t forget to pre-order the DST-exclusive Chief Tyrol figure and Blue Dress Six Bust!
 

Friday September 28th

60 Seconds: Katee Sackhoff

Source: Metro UK
 

Actress Katee Sackhoff has become a hit on the cult TV circuit thanks to her role as Starbuck in the new incarnation of Battlestar Galactica – a character substantially changed from the 1970s original played by Dirk Benedict. She is also a regular in the new version of Bionic Woman. Battlestar Galactica series three is available on DVD now.

Why do you spell your name like that?
I told my parents at 11 that I wanted to be famous and I didn't want to spell my name 'Katie' anymore because it was boring. My real name is Katherine so my mum told me I could do anything to 'Katie' that I wanted. At that point, I was planning to become a famous swimmer. That didn't work out – I got a knee injury at 15 which ended that plan.

Why did you go into acting?
I guess I always wanted to be an actor but, growing up in Oregon, I never heard of anyone becoming successful in a business like this so I didn't have anyone to look up to as a role model. I bit the bullet and told my parents I was moving to California to be an actor when I was 18. I had a strong work ethic instilled in me but I had no idea what I was doing. It was like: 'I'm moving to California to be famous.' I got acting work straightaway, though, so I never had a day job.

You're filming Bionic Woman and Battlestar Galactica at the same time. Are you worn out?
I am and I've got a cold. Both are filmed in Vancouver so there's a little bit of running between the sets. They wanted to make me a regular character in Bionic Woman but you can't be contracted to two shows at the same time. I appear in half the episodes. I'm the villain. It's quite fun. I do a lot of scheming and a lot of trying to kill the Bionic Woman [played by Michelle Ryan].

Has Michelle become particularly 'bionic' since she left EastEnders?
She's doing really well. She's at the gym training every day. She worked her butt off to get into the physical condition that she's in now. They won't pay for me to go to the gym. I've got to do it on my own. I did weights for the first year of Battlestar but I got bored, so I just run now. They usually teach me the fight routines on the set of Bionic Woman. Because of the stuff I've done on Battlestar, it's usually pretty easy to pick up.

If you took over the world, what changes would you make?
I don't know where I'd start. I'm concerned about the environment. They don't recycle on Bionic Woman. It drives me nuts. But on Battlestar Galactica, we have a recycling bin next to every single garbage can.
 

You're doing two culty sci-fi shows – have fans sent you anything weird?
I get sent weird stuff all the time. The weirdest thing is when people follow you around because that's an invasion of privacy. It's not nice. You can't do anything. If you tell them to get lost, it engages them and that's what they want. You have to pretend they're not there.

If you had a super power in real life, what would it be?
I'd like to hear people's thoughts. I'm not nosy; I'd just use it for self-preservation. No one ever really knows another person's motives.

Wasn't Dirk Benedict upset Starbuck was re-written as a woman and you'd replaced him on Battlestar Galactica?
We did something for the Sci-Fi Channel when we met each other and we got on really well. Then I read an article where he made some negative comments. People wanted us to hate each other. I don't hate Dirk – he was a nice man when I met him. We all have our own opinions and I don't care if he doesn't like me. I just joke about it now. I say I'm going to remake everything he ever did. Next I'm going to play Face in the A-Team.

Changing Starbuck's sex upset some fans. Did that bother you?
It did but I got over it. If people still have a problem with it, it's too bad because it's worked really well. There's a level of confidence that builds up as you succeed in the business. You depend less on people's opinions and more on whether you think you did the best work possible. Once that happens, you really don't care and when you don't care, they love you.

Isn't the fourth series going to be the last one?
Yes it is and I'm very excited about it. I think a lot of good is coming out of this. Any chance you get on a series to wrap it up is a great opportunity. So many TV shows get the rug pulled out from under them and they never get to know where the end is. This is a place television should turn more toward and give you a beginning, middle and end. It gives people a vested interest in watching because they know the end is coming. That's what's great about the last year on Battlestar. We all know it's the end but none of us knows what's coming.

What was your last dream about?
I had one the other night and I woke up laughing hysterically but I don't remember what the dream was now. I wish I'd written it down. It's never happened before.

 


Galactica Star Battles Real World Stalker

Source: TV Guide

Battlestar Galactica prez Mary McDonnell has obtained a cease-and-desist order against an obsessed female fan, the New York Post's Page Six reports. Among her assorted trespasses, the stalker — who on fan forums goes by the screen name "peakeana" — allegedly has been spied following McDonnell around when the actress visits her daughter at Brandeis University, says a classmate. The Post could not reach McDonnell for comment.
 

 

Thursday September 27th
Villain rules Bionic Woman

Source: Home News Tribune

Things I liked about "Bionic Woman":

Katee Sackhoff, who chewed up the scenery as villainous Sarah Corvus, the "original" bionic woman.

Ummm... that's pretty much it. Which is disappointing, since the show is supposed to be about Jaime Sommers.

Unfortunately, I wasn't nearly as interested in Jaime (Michelle Ryan) as I was in Sarah.

Throughout last night's premiere, I found it difficult to focus on Jaime's plight (awakening from a debilitating car crash - caused by Sarah - to discover two legs, one arm, an eye and an ear have been replaced by bionic parts). Why? Because I kept hoping Sarah would make another appearance.

I was also distracted by Ryan, who reminds me a lot of a young Linda Hamilton in the original "Terminator" movie. Which makes sense, because the show felt like "Terminator" to me (maybe it was Sarah driving that big rig right into Jaime's car).

But that's not the only classic sci-fi film "Bionic Woman" reminded me of. The scene in which Jaime is being interrogated by Bionic team member Ruth reminded me specifically of the scene in "Blade Runner" in which replicant Leon is being questioned by police. And then the showdown between Jaime and Sarah on the rooftop was totally borrowed from "The Matrix" trilogy.

Sure, all of these movies are great, and it's cool that a TV show wants to incorporate these elements. But none of that's going to matter if the storylines aren't strong and if you keep hoping that the real leading lady (which Sackhoff clearly is) will take over the show.

Heck, it is possible to build a successful show around a bloodthirsty character who's a killer. Just look at Showtime's "Dexter."
 

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Katee Sackhoff is Sarah Corvus

Source: Cort and Fatboy

A couple hours before the premiere of Bionic Woman, she dishes on how she mercilessly stole from Tricia Helfer, her ambition to pull woodland creatures from her ass, Is Starbuck even STARBUCK in season 4, and the 5th of the Final Five is….

Also, I know you guys will hammer the hell out of the server, so if the site endures some serious slowdown, we've got the file mirrored over at kufo.com:

Thanks guys. Hope you dig it

Listen now! (22:34min / 16MB)
 

 

Tuesday September 25th
'Bionic Woman' needs less superficial angst, more Katee Sackhoff

Source: The Watcher

There are moments when “Bionic Woman” (8 p.m. Wednesday, WMAQ-Ch. 5), the disappointingly average remake of the Lindsay Wagner vehicle from the '70s, comes to life.

They're when Katee Sackhoff (who plays Kara “Starbuck” Thrace on “Battlestar Galactica”) is on the screen. The catch: Sackhoff isn't playing the show's main character.

Jaime Sommers is played by English actress Michelle Ryan, and every time she and Sackhoff are together, I wished that the producers had waited one more season to make “Bionic Woman.”

If they'd held off, Sackhoff, who finishes “Battlestar” in early 2008, could have played Sommers. But even then, she would have had to work mightily to overcome the script's leaden dialogue and dour tone.

Sackhoff's recurring character is Sarah Corvus, another bionic woman who went rogue. Playing her as a lady with a penchant for bright red lipstick and melodramatic rebellion, Sackhoff bites into the villainess role with glee. In her scenes, “Bionic Woman” is every bit the slightly campy, action-oriented, B-grade escapism-fest I wanted it to be.

The trouble is, despite sterling supporting players Miguel Ferrer (the head of the secret research lab where Sommers' new limbs and other gizmos are implanted) and Mark Sheppard (a pioneer of bionic research now in prison), “Bionic Woman” just isn't much fun.

The show's publicity materials hype “Jaime's journey of self-discovery and inner strength.” But it's hard to take “Bionic's” ambitions seriously when the script is full of lines such as, “You rehabilitate yourself!” and “Guess he must have left his IQ in the car.”

It appears that “Bionic Woman” wants to be both a compelling action show and a serious drama. In the early going, however, it's merely pretty good in the action department. As for the drama, “Bionic Woman” (so far) mistakes solemnity and humorlessness for depth.

Also, there's lots of rain. Lots and lots of rain. Is that also supposed to convey depth? It only conveyed to me the idea that the actors were probably freezing in those scenes.

The best news I've heard about the show is that Jason Katims, the head writer for “Friday Night Lights,” will be consulting on “Bionic Woman” scripts. The casting of the far from charismatic Ryan may be an unfixable mistake, but if Katims can provide these characters and these scripts with some texture and soul and even lightness, then “Bionic” may move up several places on my already overcrowded TiVo Season Pass list.

Yes, I will keep watching -- it'd be nice to see the show greatly improve, as "Heroes" did last year. And of course I don't want to miss a moment of Sackhoff's scenes. I'd also like to see how the stunt-casting of Isaiah Washington, who'll be guesting on at least five episodes of “Bionic Woman,” plays out.

Katee Sackhoff as Sarah Corvus, Isaiah Washington as Antonio Pope.

Summaries of upcoming episodes from NBC's Web site can be found below.

From NBC's press Web site:

Episode 1: Pilot (Sept. 26)

SERIES PREMIERE --SECOND CHANCES - - KATEE SACKHOFF GUEST-STARS

When a devastating car accident leaves Jaime Sommers (Michelle Ryan) at death's door, her only hope of survival is a cutting-edge, top-secret technology performed by her boyfriend, Dr. Will Anthros (Chris Bowers), and with her new bionics come a covert life that she is not sure she is ready to lead. Meanwhile, the first bionic woman Sarah Corvus (guest star Katee Sackhoff), has her own agenda as she tracks Jaime and Will down - which leads to a showdown between the two bionic woman. Also, Will's father, Dr. Anthony Anthros (Mark Sheppard) escapes from a maximum security prison. Miguel Ferrer, Molly Price, Will Yun Lee and Lucy Hale also stars.

Show Cast: Michelle Ryan, Lucy Hale, Chris Bowers, Miguel Ferrer, Molly Price, Will Yun Lee, Katee Sackhoff, Christina Jastrzembska, Thomas Kretchman, Mark Sheppard

Episode 2: Paradise Lost (Oct. 3)

LOST INNOCENCE - - ISAIAH WASHINGTON GUEST-STARS

After Jaime experiences another devastating loss, she encounters a stranger who befriends her. Later, she discovers the stranger is Antonio Pope (guest star Isaiah Washington), who works for the Berkut Group and the meeting was deliberate. As Jamie struggles to balance her secret new life while trying to maintain some normalcy at home with her sister, Becca (Lucy Kate Hale), Jaime finds herself in harms way on her first mission. Miguel Ferrer, Molly Price, Will Yun Lee, Mark Sheppard and Chris Bowers also star.

Episode 3: Sisterhood (Oct. 10)

GIRL FOR HIRE -- Jaime (Michelle Ryan) is tasked by the Berkut Group to watch the daughter of a Canadian defense contractor. At the same time, she must decide whether or not she is going to help Sarah Corvus (guest-star Katee Sackhoff), the first bionic woman, save herself. Miguel Ferrer, Molly Price, Will Yun Lee, Mark Sheppard, Chris Bowers and Lucy Kate Hale also star.

Episode 4: Girl for Hire (Oct. 17)

EXPIRATION DATES -- Jaime (Michelle Ryan), while on a mission to rescue an American doctor working in Paraguay, discovers the truth about her bionic lifespan. Miguel Ferrer, Molly Price, Will Yun Lee, Mark Sheppard, Chris Bowers and Lucy Kate Hale also star.
 

 

Monday September 24th
Sci Fi Channel has plans for 'Battlestar Galactica'

Source: Buddy TV

Battlestar Galactica finally received not only Emmy Gold, but some of the proper nominations befitting its television goodness. The question is, now that it has achieved some notoriety in Emmy circles, will Galactica finally at least be nominated for Outstanding Drama in its final season, as it has deserved since its first?

One thing that may stifle Galactica's chances at the category is the rumored plan for the Sci Fi channel to split the final season of the series into two 10 episode chapters, which would be aired during separate television periods.

Even though the move is highly unpopular amongst Battlestar fans, it addresses the fact that once BSG leaves Sci Fi, it will leave behind a void that may cause the channel to slip inexorably into gravity of its ample black hole of schlock.

While Galactica may not be pulling in the numbers that put Sci Fi into the big leagues, its accolades serve as an anchor against the pull of its less than successful – cough, Flash Gordon, cough – programming. For years, the channel has struggled to be taken seriously, and Battlestar Galactica is the first episodic show since Farscape to keep Sci Fi legitimate and vital.

True, with minis like Taken, and The Lost Room, Sci Fi has created a niche for genre fans that is unrivaled. But the saturation level of sub par programming like Mansquito, or Mega Snake, keeps the channel dismissive as a steady source of quality programming. Don't they know that brilliant independent filmmakers like Shane Curruth (Primer) are looking for work?

At this point, an Emmy nom in Outstanding Drama would be the ultimate feather in Sci Fi's cap, but by splitting Battlestar Galactica into two pieces, and continuing to invest in sub par programming, is the channel telling the Academy it doesn't take itself serious enough to reach the next level?
 
 

Battlestar Galactica gets a visitor

Source: The Watcher

Nana Visitor will have a prominent guest role on the sixth episode of the new season of "Battlestar Galactica." Season 4 is expected to begin airing some time in early 2008.

Visitor is a longtime TV veteran who may be best known for her role as Kira Nerys in “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.”

“Battlestar Galactica” executive producer Ronald D. Moore wrote for “Deep Space Nine” for several years, as did “Battlestar Galactica” supervising producers Michael Taylor, David Weddle and Bradley Thompson. (“Deep Space Nine” is by far my favorite slice of the “Trek” franchise, by the way.)

According to Moore, Visitor's character is “another cancer patient named Emily who's being treated in sick bay.She gets Laura [Roslin's] attention because she insists on listening to Baltar's wireless broadcasts every day, much to Laura's annoyance. The two women connect and bond over their treatment regimens, and explore the nature of mortality and questions of life after death. She's in ‘Faith,' the sixth episode” of Season 4.

The episode was written by Seamus Kevin Fahey and was directed by Michael Nankin. And Visitor's casting came about via her “DS9” connections.

“When David Weddle saw the script, Nana was the first person he thought of,” Thompson said in an e-mail. “He ran the idea immediately by Ron, who thought she'd be great. And she was.”

“She has some amazing scenes with Mary [McDonnell, who plays Roslin],” Thompson added.

In other “Battlestar Galactica” casting news, actress Leela Savasta will appear several episodes of Season 4. She'll play a character called Tracey Anne, who is a member of Baltar's cult following.
 

 

Possible 'Battlestar Galactica' Season 4 Split rooted in money

Source: The New York Times

It's a rich television age and a demanding one. The selection is now so plentiful and fragmented and good. And deciding among hundreds of channels, on-demand options, DVR, Internet streaming and iPhones requires so much research, planning and commitment that viewers have become proprietary about their choices. Alliances are formed, and so are antipathies. Snobbery takes root. Preferences turn totemic. The mass audience splintered long ago; now viewers are divided into tribes with their own rituals and rites of passage.

....Science fiction is one thing: “Battlestar Galactica” has intellectual cachet.

“The humans are pagan polytheists and the robots are monotheists, whose divine jihad is against the humans (even though the former know that the latter created them),” Anthony Gottlieb, the author of “The Dream of Reason: A History of Philosophy from the Greeks to the Renaissance,” explained off the top of his Blackberry from an airport baggage claim. “There's a curious mix of high-tech and superstition and scriptural fundamentalism (which interestingly suggests that religion is ineradicable, as today's theorists of secularism are increasingly saying).”

Mr. Gottlieb likes the philosophical puzzles (“Some of the robots think they are human, and some of the humans fear they may be robots”) as well as the way the show switches sympathies back and forth from democracy to dictatorship. He really had only one objection. “There's lots of romance, though this bores me,” he typed. “Less kissing, more killing is a frequent internal refrain of mine.”

This summer “Mad Men,” rippled across my world in ever-widening circles of connoisseurship. We were entranced by the amber-colored look at the early 1960s, when men drank martinis at lunch, and housewives smoked at P.T.A. meetings, and the battle between the sexes had barely begun. Michael Hainey, the deputy editor of GQ, is enamored of the way the series captures the finer details in a lost moment of American overconfidence. “It's a period piece that's about right now,” Mr. Hainey explained. He also loves the show's look and feel, which he described as “ ‘The Apartment' meets ‘The Spy Who Came in From the Cold.' ”

...Before the Internet, iPhones and flash drives, people jousted over who was into the Pixies when they were still a garage band or who could most lengthily argue the merits of Oasis versus Blur. Now, for all but hardcore rock aficionados, one-upmanship is more likely to center around a television series — like metaphysical clues buried in “Lost,” whether the current “Battlestar Galactica” is an affront to the 1978 original (some bloggers sneeringly refer to the current incarnation as Gino, short for “Galactica in name only” ) or who discovered “Flight of the Conchords” when it was a comedy team performing in concerts, not an HBO series.

Television used to be dismissed by elitists as the idiot box, a sea of mediocrity that drowns thought and intelligent debate. Now people who ignore its pools and eddies of excellence do so at their own peril. They are missing out on the main topic of conversation at their own table.

Click the link to see the full article
 

A rich TV Age

Source: The New York Times

It's a rich television age and a demanding one. The selection is now so plentiful and fragmented and good. And deciding among hundreds of channels, on-demand options, DVR, Internet streaming and iPhones requires so much research, planning and commitment that viewers have become proprietary about their choices. Alliances are formed, and so are antipathies. Snobbery takes root. Preferences turn totemic. The mass audience splintered long ago; now viewers are divided into tribes with their own rituals and rites of passage.

....Science fiction is one thing: “Battlestar Galactica” has intellectual cachet.

“The humans are pagan polytheists and the robots are monotheists, whose divine jihad is against the humans (even though the former know that the latter created them),” Anthony Gottlieb, the author of “The Dream of Reason: A History of Philosophy from the Greeks to the Renaissance,” explained off the top of his Blackberry from an airport baggage claim. “There's a curious mix of high-tech and superstition and scriptural fundamentalism (which interestingly suggests that religion is ineradicable, as today's theorists of secularism are increasingly saying).”

Mr. Gottlieb likes the philosophical puzzles (“Some of the robots think they are human, and some of the humans fear they may be robots”) as well as the way the show switches sympathies back and forth from democracy to dictatorship. He really had only one objection. “There's lots of romance, though this bores me,” he typed. “Less kissing, more killing is a frequent internal refrain of mine.”

This summer “Mad Men,” rippled across my world in ever-widening circles of connoisseurship. We were entranced by the amber-colored look at the early 1960s, when men drank martinis at lunch, and housewives smoked at P.T.A. meetings, and the battle between the sexes had barely begun. Michael Hainey, the deputy editor of GQ, is enamored of the way the series captures the finer details in a lost moment of American overconfidence. “It's a period piece that's about right now,” Mr. Hainey explained. He also loves the show's look and feel, which he described as “ ‘The Apartment' meets ‘The Spy Who Came in From the Cold.' ”

...Before the Internet, iPhones and flash drives, people jousted over who was into the Pixies when they were still a garage band or who could most lengthily argue the merits of Oasis versus Blur. Now, for all but hardcore rock aficionados, one-upmanship is more likely to center around a television series — like metaphysical clues buried in “Lost,” whether the current “Battlestar Galactica” is an affront to the 1978 original (some bloggers sneeringly refer to the current incarnation as Gino, short for “Galactica in name only” ) or who discovered “Flight of the Conchords” when it was a comedy team performing in concerts, not an HBO series.

Television used to be dismissed by elitists as the idiot box, a sea of mediocrity that drowns thought and intelligent debate. Now people who ignore its pools and eddies of excellence do so at their own peril. They are missing out on the main topic of conversation at their own table.

Click the link to see the full article
 

 

Katee on Corte and Fatboy

Source: Battlestar Blog

In honor of the debut this week of Bionic Woman on NBC, Cort and Fatboy will be having Katee Sackhoff as a guest on their KUFO radio show from Katee's home town of Portland, Oregon on Wednesday evening at 7pm to Midnight, pacific time. You can hear the show live via the stream on KUFO's website, or download the podcast after the show is over on cortandfatboy.com
 

Saturday September 22nd
'Battlestar Galactica': Zarek Trade Features Richard Hatch

Official Press Release

Source: CBR.COM

Runnemede, NJ - DYNAMITE ENTERTAINMENT has announced that the upcoming Battlestar Galactica: Zarek Trade Paperback collection will contain a foreword written by Richard Hatch, the actor who plays Tom Zarek on the newly re-imagined Battlestar Galactica series, as well as hot shot viper pilot, Apollo, on the original series.

Collecting the complete four-issue Battlestar mini-series event (issues #1 - #4) written by Brandon Jerwa with art by Adriano Batista, the New Battlestar Galactica: Zarek collection is available in a Mass Market Edition with a stunning photo cover, and as a Previews Exclusive Edition with a cover by Adriano Batista! Additional bonus material includes a complete cover gallery, behind-the-scenes bonus material and more!

Revealing content from Zarek's own novel "The Revolution Within," the Battlestar Galctica: Zarek series tells the untold origin of Tom Zarek and the Sagittaron colony. This four-issue series shows Tom's beginnings as he grows up in a loving home amidst a slave state and alongside a Cylon work force- all in the shadow of the First Cylon War. It's through these humble, and tragic, beginnings that he becomes the man we see in Battlestar Galactica today, and this is where fans will learn all about him!

About writing the forward, Richard Hatch exclaimed, "It was certainly my pleasure to write the foreword for Dynamite's Zarek collection. The dedication of Battlestar fans has always been outstanding and an absolute testament to the show's powerful themes and strong philosophies. Tom Zarek is an intriguing and philosophical character and it's been amazing for me to play such and influential part of Battlestar history."

Dynamite stated, "We are thrilled to have the opportunity to tell Tom Zarek's beginnings, and to have Richard Hatch-Tom Zarek himself, and Apollo from the original series!- take time and write the foreword is just awesome! Richard is a great person, devoted to his fans, his work and the characters that he portrays. His foreword is incredibly genuine and motivating as he recounts his work on Battlestar and how the show impacted his life and so many others."

NEW BATTLESTAR GALACTICA: ZAREK - DIRECT MARKET PREVIEWS EXCLUSIVE COVER (APR073576) Features a cover by Adriano Batista!

NEW BATTLESTAR GALACTICA: ZAREK - MASS MARKET COVER (APR073575) Features a stunning photo cover!

Written by Brandon Jerwa in his most poignant and powerful work to date, illustrated by Adriano Batista and featuring stunning and cinematic covers by both Batista and Stjepan Sejic, Tom Zarek: The Revolution Within is a must - read. Also features a complete cover gallery and bonus material!
 

First Look at Battlestar Galactica - Razor

Source: EW.Com

Gotta love those wily scribes at Battlestar Galactica. The fourth and final (sniff!) season of the acclaimed Sci Fi series doesn't yet have a set air date—a rep says look for it early next year (more on that in a bit)—so for an appetizer, the show's cooked up Razor, a two-hour flashback episode airing Nov. 24. (An extended-cut DVD hits shelves Dec. 4.)

The story is ostensibly about the first mission of the (now-lost) Battlestar Pegasus under the command of Lee Adama (Jamie Bamber), which falls roughly in the latter half of the second season. It's told, though, through the eyes of new character Kendra Shaw (Stephanie Jacobsen). ''Lee promotes [her] to be his [second-in-command],'' explains show-runner Ronald D. Moore, ''and you wonder, who is this woman?'' That question, says Moore, allows the show to explore ''a lot of things that we've talked about or alluded to but never actually seen. You start flashing all the way back to before the Cylon attack on the colonies, to who she was, how she came to the Pegasus, what happened to them, and what was their story before they met up with Galactica.''

Read more
here
 

Anal BSG Fans get Razor DVD Art Corrected