496 lines
32 KiB
BibTeX
496 lines
32 KiB
BibTeX
From: hendrickca@phibred.com (Carol Hendrick, Ext. 4137)
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Subject: Deep Space Nine Bible
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Message-ID: <18m6mvINN6le@agate.berkeley.edu>
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Date: 10 Sep 92 01:00:15 GMT
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Organization: Vulcan Science Academy, Tau Ceti Sector
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Lines: 487
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Hello--I pulled this off AOL last week and wondered if it might be something
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you could use. (Not sure if you have a length limitation or not.)
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Carol Hendrick
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Internet: hendrickca@phibred.com
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AOL: CarolH
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____________________________________________________________________________
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[Editors Note: The following ran in issue #24 of CCSTSG Enterprises, the
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monthly newsletter of the Central Connecticut Star Trek Support Group (7
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Quarry St./Vernon, CT 06066, for more info), a few weeks ago. At Shore Leave
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14, in Hunt Valley, MD, on the weekend of July 11-12, 1992, Majel Barrett
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Roddenberry addressed the large audience on the subject of Deep Space Nine by
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reading extensive excerpts out of the writers bible and answering questions.
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She also made some interesting comments on other issues surrounding Trek in
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the post-Gene era. I captured Majels presentation on tape and transcribed it
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for my newsletter. Note: I have verified the spelling of proper names where
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possible, but some discrepancies may exist.]
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Majel Barrett Roddenberry speaking:
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The first thing Id really like to do is to thank all of you who did send
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cards and letters last year. Ive come to tell you that I appreciate it from
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the bottom of my heart. Ive tried to send back thank-you notes to everyone. I
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hope you all got them. The second thing I want to thank you for is having me
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back here again. I think it was probably about four or five years ago that I
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was here before. It could be twenty eight as far as I know -- I dont know, Ive
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been hanging around Star Trek that long.
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Now, I dont talk, I dont give speeches or anything like that. Gene did that.
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And I dont sing -- Michelle does that. Jimmy tells jokes with an accent. All I
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do is gossip, so... So basically, Im here for you to ask me questions and Ill
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try to answer them. If I dont know the answer, Ill make one up.
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What I am going to do, though, in whatever order youd like it, is to tell
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you about Deep Space Nine. I have the Bible with me. You cant have it, Im not
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allowed to sell it to you or give it to you, or let you look at it, but I
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certainly can read it to you. If you would like me to start with that I will.
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[Applause] Okay. It would take me a long time to read it word for word, so Im
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going to do a little bit of skipping, but youre going to get the general idea:
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[Reading from the series bible:] Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the series,
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set in the next generation of Star Trek lore, follows a team of Starfleet
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officers who take command of an alien space station situated near the Bejoran
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Worm Hole, one of the most strategic locations in the galaxy. The Bejoran Worm
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Hole. Worm holes, simply put, are shortcuts through space. You go in one end,
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come out the other in seconds to find yourself billions of kilometers away.
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All known worm holes previously encountered in the Star Trek universe have
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been unstable. Their ends can whip randomly around the universe, and they last
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for brief periods of time before collapsing. But in our pilot episode, the
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first stable worm hole is discovered near the Denarias asteroid field close to
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the planet Bejor. Like other worm holes it is only visible when an object
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enters or exits through it. A brief journey through the Bejoran Worm Hole will
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take a starship to the Gamma Quadrant, normally a sixty-year journey at
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warp 9. The ride is a spectacular light show: very brilliant colors surround
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the ship, while inside, strange visual distortions affect perceptions as
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passengers tear through the space-time continuum. This worm hole is a new
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passage way to hundreds of unexplored sectors of space and it will turn Bejor
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into the leading center of commerce and scientific exploration in the sector,
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attracting travelers from all over the galaxy. In the first episode, we learn
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that the worm hole has been artificially created by a species of aliens that
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do not live in the same space-time continuum as we do. Thus, we encounter them
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unexpectedly within the worm hole itself. They have been sending out orb-like
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probes from the worm hole, one orb every century for a thousand years, seeking
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contact with other life forms.
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The Backstory. The Cardassians and Bejora are known to Star Trek audiences. A
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century ago the Cardassians conquered the planet Bejor, an ancient society
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dedicated to spiritual pursuits. The mysterious orbs that have arrived each
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century are among the fundamental sacraments of the Bejoran religion. Bejoran
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terrorism during the last several decades has been a significant problem for
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the Cardassians. Just before our series begins, the Cardassians have completed
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mining operations on Bejor, stripping the planet of all its resources. They
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have decided to unilaterally withdraw from Bejoran space and give up the
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headaches that the Bejoran have caused them.
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Well, they have not left quietly and in revenge for the years of terrorism,
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the Cardassians ravaged the planet, poisoned the wells, scorched the ground
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and, striking at the heart of the Bejoran people, have desecrated the ancient
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monastery that is the center of spiritual life. The Bejoran desperately need
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help. Theyve asked for membership in the Federation and have been granted
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preliminary acceptance. But the political situation on the planet is terribly
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unstable: factions that have been united in opposition to Cardassian rule have
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resumed age-old conflicts. The Starfleet teams mission is to spearhead the
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arduous diplomatic and scientific efforts that accompany the lengthy entry
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procedure. All of this is about to be complicated by the discovery of the worm
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hole.
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Deep Space Nine. The station designated DS9 by Starfleet was assembled
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haphazardly over several years by Cardassian and Bejoran work teams and
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anybody else who happened to offer services at a premium. It was used by the
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Cardassians primarily to monitor mining operations on Bejor and to service
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incoming and outgoing crews. About two hundred people, mostly Bejorans, still
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live there. By episode three, there will be about fifty Starfleet officers and
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crewmen stationed there. When the Cardassians abandoned Bejor they stripped
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the station of all advanced technology and defense capability and the
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Starfleet team has a huge job of making it operational again. In fact, it will
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never work up to our re-quirements and will always be causing the engineering
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crew a lot of headaches.
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The Ops controls are a hub of activity; there are shuttle bays for smaller
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vessels. On a given day there might be anywhere from 10 to 300 visitors to
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DS9, as ships come through with foreigners, scientists, merchants, and spies.
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Most of the visitors stay on their ships but there are special quarters for
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some guests. In the first episode, we learn that the ships power sources are
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destructive to the ionic field that is home to the aliens who created the worm
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hole and live within a different timeframe. During that experience, we are
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told how to travel through without harming them.
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One aspect of life on the space station hasnt changed since the departure of
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the Cardassians. During their tenure they sold commercial concessions to the
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highest bidder to provide services to the mining crews. The result is the
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Promenade. Unlike any space interior ever seen on Star Trek, its somewhere
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between a free port and a flea market, bustling with aliens of all sorts when
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a ships in, intriguing and unusual characters at every bend. Theres gambling
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and smuggling, alien grifters at work here, bars with sexual holo-suites
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upstairs. Right next to the traditional ships stores are the Bejoran temple
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and the kiosk serving live food. Part of the job of the Starfleet team will be
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to try to tame this honky tonk atmosphere. They will have Runabouts [ed: a new
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class of smaller ships], which allow our characters to travel to numerous star
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systems with a maximum speed of 4.7, operated by a two-man crew, with a single
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pilot in control if necessary. They can transport up to forty people, but
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thats a crowd. There are cramped, uncomfortable sleeping quarters for six
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people.
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Bejor. Bejor is the world we will visit most often because of its proximity to
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the space station. Striking architecture with rounded domes and spherical
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shapes mark the landscape. The ancient Bejora were great architects and
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engineers before humans were standing erect. The people are deeply mystical.
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On their planet we will find monks who meditate and chant in chords. They are
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people who believe in spiritual phenomenon, are devoted to a nonsecular
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philosophy that goes against the Federations logical, scientific way of life.
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Their religious leader, known as the Kai, is curious and insightful and
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develops a strong bond with our Commander.
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The Characters. Benjamin Sisko, human Starfleet commander with a twelve year-
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old son, whose gentle, strong, soft spoken demeanor belies the temper that he
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is constantly trying to control. And when he loses it, he gets furious with
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himself. Hes a man of action who gets impatient with too much talk, but as he
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has become more mature, hes learned to stop and think twice about losing
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control. He has a weakness for baseball, a sport that died out in the 22nd
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century and he frequently goes to a holo-suite to have a chat and a catch with
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one his legendary ballplayer heroes. Sisko was on a starship with his wife and
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son at the famous encounter with the Borg led by the Borgified Picard, and his
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wife was killed. That leads to bitterness toward Picard. Picard: Have we met
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before? Sisko: Yes, we met in battle. Since that tragedy, he has been assigned
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to shore duty on Mars where he was on the team reconstructing the fleet at
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Utopia Benecia Yards. Sisko objected to being assigned to DS9. He told
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Starfleet he had a son to raise and had been asking for an Earth assignment,
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not this. His important work on DS9 gives him a new direction, but his is
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still very much a life framed by tragedy.
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Major Kira, a former major in the Bejoran underground. Kira is now an
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outspoken critic of the provisional government. Having fought for freedom all
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her life, it has angered her to see the older leaders throw it all away
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through their petty dissensions. She has been trying without success to reach
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the Kai herself to air her grievances. It is very possible she was sent by the
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government to be the Bejoran administrator at the space station simply to get
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her outspoken voice out of ear shot. [Addressing the audience:] This part was
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to have been played by Ensign Ro, but Michelle decided she wanted to try to be
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a movie star instead, so she turned it down. And its a shame because it was a
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good character. But the characters just been renamed, the character will still
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be there -- it just wont be Michelle whos playing it. [Reading again:] Kira
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loathes the Cardassians. She committed atrocities against them in the name of
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freedom, some of which bother her. But others in the Bejoran underground begin
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a new wave of terrorism and she is forced into a moral quandary about tracking
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them down and bringing them to justice. Former terrorists consider her a
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turncoat.
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Miles OBrien... will be played by Colm Meany. [Applause] OBrien has been the
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transporter chief on NexGen for five years. This assignment represents a
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promotion to Master Chief of Operations, and a tremendous career opportunity
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for him. [ed: Not to mention Colm Meany.] He has a wife, Keiko, and a three
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year-old baby girl, Molly. Molly just happens to be Rick Bermans three year-
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old daughter. He will be in charge of the comings and goings of vessels, plus
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the nuts and bolts maintenance of the station. Hes constantly frustrated by
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the jerry-rigged way this place is put together. He saw the Cardassians commit
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unspeakable atrocities and lost a close friend at the massacre at Setma III.
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The war changed and hardened him. The first man he ever killed was a
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Cardassian who jumped him on patrol. As he tells the story to another
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Cardassian in the NexGen episode, The Wounded, I never killed anything before.
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When I was a kid I would worry about having to swat a mosquito. Its not you I
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hate, Cardassian: I hate what I became because of you.
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Jadzia Dax is a science officer ranked lieutenant, an alien woman, very
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attractive, late 20s. Dax is a Trill, the joint species first encountered in
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the NexGen episode, The Host. A Trill is comprised of two separate but
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interdependent entities -- a host and a symbiont. The host provided the
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humanoid body, the symbiont is an invertebrate, androgynous life form that
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lives within the host. It looks like a short, fat snake. Many centuries ago
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[on the Trills home world], the symbionts lived underground while the
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humanoids were on the surface. Due to an environmental disaster, they were
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forced to join to survive. As time went on this mutual support evolved to
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become a biological dependency, and thus two individuals became one. They
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speak with one voice. The symbionts life span is far longer than the hosts
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and, as a result, one symbiont will be combined with several hosts during its
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life. When a host dies, doctors surgically remove the symbiont. The worm then
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burrows itself into the new host. Daxs host was joined with her when she was
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an adult. The symbiont part of her is 300 years old, a brilliant scientist
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with an innate wisdom who can draw upon a library of knowledge built of six
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lifetimes of experience. Kira forms a very close relationship with Dax and
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often tells her to loosen up. Dax admires Kira for her youthful energy, her
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purpose and her drive and becomes something of a mentor to her. Dax and Sisko
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have worked together before; the only problem is that back then, Dax was still
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in the host body of an elderly man and was something of a mentor to Sisko. Her
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sexually appealing new form will create a certain tension between her and
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Sisko, which they will both resist. After all, hes still having a hard time
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getting used to the fact that shes a 300 year-old worm. But he does not hide
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the respect and affection he has for her.
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Odo, an alien male, middle-aged curmudgeon, and a shape-shifter. In his
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natural state he is a gelatinous liquid. He was Bejoran law enforcement
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officer on the space station under the Cardassians. Starfleet decides to have
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him continue in that role, since hes extremely savvy about the Promenade and
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all who frequent it. His back story is: 50 years ago, with no memory of his
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past, he was found alone in a mysterious space craft that appeared in the
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Denarias asteroid belt. He was found by the Bejoran and lived amongst them. At
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first he was sort of an Elephant Man, a source of curiosity and humor as he
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turned himself into a chair or pencil. Finally he realized he would have to
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take the form of a humanoid to assimilate and function in their environment.
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He does it, but resents it. As a result, Odo performs a uniquely important
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role in the ensemble: he is a character who explores and comments on human
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values. Because he is forced to pass as one of us, his point of view usually
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comes with a cynical and critical edge. But he cant quite get it right, this
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humanoid shape, though he continues to try. So he looks a little unfinished in
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a way. Hes been working on it a long time. Someone might ask him: Why dont you
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take the form of a younger man. His answer: I would if I could. He has the
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adopted child syndrome, searching for his own personal identity. Although he
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doesnt know anything about his species, he is certain that justice is an
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integral part of their being, because the necessity for it runs through every
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fiber of his body -- a racial memory. Thats why he became a law man. He has a
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couple of Bejoran deputies; he doesnt allow weapons on the Promenade, and once
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every day he must return to his gelatinous form.
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Quark is the Ferengi bartender. The Ferengi race has been a part of NexGen
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since the very beginning. They are ugly, sexist, greedy little aliens who are
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interested only in profit and getting their hands on anything of yours they
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happen to fancy. Quark runs many of the entertainment concessions on DS9,
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including the bar, restaurant, gambling house, and the holo-suites upstairs
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where your every fantasy can be played out. He spends most of his time behind
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the bar. If there is some scam being run in the sector it often involves him.
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But beyond the mal-evolence he is a charming host, in a Ferengi sort of way,
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and forges an interesting relationship with Sisko. They actually enjoy
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sparring together now and then. The Ferengi lends a hand to dissolve a problem
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for the commander -- as long as theres something in it for him. His completely
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sexist attitude makes Kira an obvious adversary, and he is consumed with
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passion for Dax.
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Then we have Dr. Julian Amoros -- human male, mid 20s, rank of lieutenant
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commander, fresh out of Starfleet, graduated second in class, brilliant
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specialist in multi-species medicine. He arrives at DS9 with gung-ho
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expectations about adventures in Starfleet. Hes naive and charming and cocky
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all at the same time. Hes chosen this remote outpost instead of the cushy job
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he was offered at Starfleet medical because this is where the action is, where
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heroes are made, in the wilderness. Dr. Amoros is still wet behind the ears
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and has a lot to learn. He is the antithesis of Kira who is street wise savvy
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but wiser and cynical. OBrien becomes Amoros confidant As a man who has seen
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combat and a decorated veteran of Starfleet duty, OBrien represents an ideal
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to the young doctor. Julian greatly respects Sisko, but is terrified of him.
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He is anxious to live up the commanders expectations. Sisko is amused by
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Julian and is very patient with him.
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Recurring Characters. Jake Sisko, the commanders son. An Army brat who
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doesnt remember life on Earth, has been aboard four different starships, and
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stationed on two planets. This transient life style has taught him how to
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scope out a new terrain and assimilate quickly. At the same time he has an
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inner fear of forming new friendships because he loses them so easily. He
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dreams of going to live on Earth. He collects holodeck programs of various
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places on Earth that he uses to try to fulfill his fantasy. Deep inside he
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knows that his mom would still be alive if they did not live in space, and he
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has a suppressed bitterness about it. His father promised there would be other
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kids on the station; as it turns out there are only a handful of various alien
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species. Only one is his age, Nog, a Ferengi teenage boy who is a bad
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influence. Jake is close with his dad; they are buddies. The boy has no
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technical expertise at all [great applause]. He struggles with his homework
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but is dedicated to doing his best.
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Keiko is OBriens wife. She wondered what a botanist would do on a space
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station -- she was happy on the Enterprise -- but she agreed that the
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promotion was an incredible opportunity for her husband. Shes not entirely
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happy on DS9, and in the early episodes she sees serious shortcomings in the
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educational facilities and volunteers to be the station's tutor.
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Then theres Lwaxana Troi. [Loud applause: Im with you!] Lwaxana is Deannas
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mother, established on NexGen as the Auntie Mame of the galaxy. When
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circumstances bring her to the space station she forms a romantic attachment
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to Odo and finds reasons to come back to see him. He tries to discourage her:
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Maam, I turn into a liquid form at night. Lwaxana: I can swim. [Audience glee:
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Boy, were off and running.]
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One of the other Ferengi who works for Quark is his teenage son, Nog, who
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becomes friends of the commanders son. Nog is a bad boy, the kind of kid your
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parents didnt want you to associate with.
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And Gil Ducket is a 40s male, deceptively amiable Cardassian commander who
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represents the continuing threat to our people. The military empire and its
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borders are only a short distance away from Bejor and DS9. He used to be the
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Prefect of the Bejoran province when it was under Cardassian denomination.
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Thus he is the former landlord of the space station.
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Kai Apaka is the spiritual leader of Bejor, who provides sharp counterpoint
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to the secular nature of Starfleet. She challenges conventional human logic.
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The Kai seems to have an awareness on a higher plane of consciousness and
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knows things she cannot possibly know. Although our people do not accepts her
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powers at face value, we cannot always explain them, either. She speaks in
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vague, mystical indirect language, forcing her listeners to seek her meaning.
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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine brings into the Star Trek universe an original
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set of characters as diverse and memorable as the crews of the first two
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series. It also provides far more interpersonal conflict than weve seen before
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in the 24th century. If, as Gene Roddenberry always said, Star Trek is wagon
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train to space, then think of Deep Space Nine as Fort Laramie on the edge of
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the frontier.
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[Closing the Bible...] This one is going to have a lot more humor, a lot
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more probably what youd call action, and a little sex and violence. Were going
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to mix it up a little bit. I hesitate to use the word violence -- youre all
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going to get the wrong idea. But I think you know what I mean. Its not going
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to be even as cerebral as Star Trek. So... Im going to take questions now.
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Q: Did Gene have anything to do with this?!
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Majel: [Laughing] Uh, he knew about it, but he was not about to become
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involved. He had done what he wanted to do and that was it. He just wished
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them Godspeed and go ahead. And as long as the name Star Trek is on it, yes,
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the estate will have a part of the action.
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Q: Will there be NexGen movies?
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Majel: NexGen actors have all signed on for a seventh year -- at least most
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of them have. There will be a seventh season, for sure. They were trying to
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get everybody to go for eight, but theyve so far resisted it. I have a feeling
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that if were still in the ratings the way we are now -- which is just
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incredible -- I cant see Paramount letting it die. What really could happen
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is, when this group graduates to movies, they might keep some of them on and
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fill in the other parts with new people. You know, captains change, and other
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officers change -- or they could go for a whole new cast and just keep on
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filling it in. I think Paramount is now at the stage where they feel that its
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the vehicle that is the important thing -- and theyre just going to keep it
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going as long as you guys want it... Under these circumstances, the 7th movie
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wouldnt happen for at least another three years. I can't see Paramount letting
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it go that long. There was some talk -- again, its only a rumor -- about
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perhaps trying to do another one with the old cast. Excuse the expression!
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They [the NexGen actors] work 8-9 months a year now, and only get two and a
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half months off, which isnt enough time to do a movie. And when you sell to
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syndication, those people buy 26 episodes, youve got to make em 26 episodes.
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Thats your contract and thats what has to be delivered. You cant say, Well,
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fellas, well only give you 20 this year.
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With Deep Space coming, what theyll be doing is running them in tandem. The
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NexGen will introduce Deep Space Nine, so in your home town, whatever station
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is carrying the NexGen does not have it backed up with Deep Space, yell at em.
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Theyll listen to you. Really! It is being offered to the stations that are
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already carrying Next Generation. Other stations were coming in and saying,
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Well give you more money than you were asking for, and for a while I think
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Paramount toyed with it, then decided this was not real good public relations.
|
||
So they went back and offered it on the same basis that the Next Generation is
|
||
picked up on. And most of them have picked it up. If your channel has not,
|
||
honest, yell at em! They listen to things like that.
|
||
|
||
Q: Since Genes death have you had different relations with the studio than
|
||
before? i.e., Are you filling in where Gene was?
|
||
Majel: No, not really. Thats not my job, thats not my input. I stay away
|
||
from all the creative heads of it and just go ahead and let them do their job.
|
||
Gene had a marvelous machine going, and its well-oiled and beautifully trained
|
||
and its working like magic and all they need is someone to stick their nose
|
||
in. I have no contractual arrangements in any capacity -- at all.
|
||
|
||
Q: Last November or December the Star Trek office was closed. What is the
|
||
status of that? Is there any hope of getting it opened?
|
||
Majel: Oh, the Star Trek office? Its not closed. Its just not Genes office
|
||
anymore. Its up in Rick and Mikes office. I mean, you ask for Star Trek and
|
||
thats what youll get. So his office was not really closed. Its just that his
|
||
physical office was closed. You know, there was really no need to keep it
|
||
open. You know, why have somebody sitting there doing nothing. All the mail
|
||
comes to the house anyway, so... No, there arent any real big changes.
|
||
|
||
Q: Will Deep Space Nine be carrying a handicapped character?
|
||
Majel: Not the way it is right now. They had, at one point, a very, very
|
||
interesting character they said they worked and worked and worked on, and they
|
||
just couldnt get the character to work. It was a doctor, and it was a female,
|
||
and she was wheelchair bound because, theres no gravity on her original
|
||
planet, and everybody floats. When everybody came to see her in her lab, they
|
||
would have to be in a wheelchair, because there would be no gravity. It was a
|
||
very interesting character, but they said they just couldnt make it work in
|
||
connection with the other characters.
|
||
|
||
--- GoldED 2.40.P0720
|
||
* Origin: USS Galifrey, Regina SK Canada, (306)949-6032 (FidoNet 1:140/1701)
|
||
|
||
Q: My question is a little personal. I dont want to make it too difficult
|
||
for you, but you probably know better than anyone else how to answer this
|
||
question: Do you think Gene was happy being remembered mainly for Star Trek?
|
||
Or did he ever sometimes wish that people would remember the other things that
|
||
he did in his life?
|
||
|
||
Majel: Oh, Ill tell you that for awhile it was kind of touch and go. He
|
||
said, I dont want to go away with my epitaph saying, this is a tribute to the
|
||
man who created Star Trek. And then it got to the point where Star Trek became
|
||
a world and he could work on other projects and other things. And then it
|
||
became a challenge. And then he worked so hard to get you people interested
|
||
and get his ideas and everything across. And it finally became his life. By
|
||
the end he really loved it. He was very, very appreciative of everything that
|
||
had happened and I think its rather remarkable that he was allowed to live
|
||
long enough to see and reap some of the benefits of this, too, and to know how
|
||
much people loved him and his show and his ideas and how part of his vision
|
||
was coming true. I think that was the most important part. If there would be
|
||
one thing that would be put on his epitaph, this is what he said: I would like
|
||
to see it say that He loved humanity. I would say that by the looks of
|
||
everyone here, humanity loved him too.
|
||
|
||
Q: Im a really big virtual reality fan and Im really glad that you guys put
|
||
the holo-deck on the Next Generation. Ive heard a lot of rumors about the
|
||
Elementary, My Dear Data episode. Why wasnt there ever a sequel to it? Are
|
||
they planning one?
|
||
|
||
Majel: No. Cant. Its the Arthur Conan Doyle thing. I thought it was
|
||
absolutely delightful and charming. And they wanted to do more with the
|
||
character, but the estate came in and said uh-unh, not on your life. I think
|
||
its a big, big mistake. It gave new life and dimension to the characters. Its
|
||
the same thing as when Gene wrote Tarzan. He did a combination of Tarzan and
|
||
John Carter from Mars -- seeing as how the same author wrote them both. So he
|
||
put them together and it got very, very sexy. Course I tell you, he went
|
||
overboard on the Tarzan thing. There were green monsters and all sorts of
|
||
..... well I cant even talk about it in todays market. The Burroughs estate
|
||
took one look at it and said, Are you crazy? They said they werent going to
|
||
let this squeaky clean character that they had built for so many years be
|
||
tarnished by making love to strange green women in the middle of the jungle.
|
||
Which is what Gene had them doing.
|
||
But some of them get very protective. And I think, basically thats what you
|
||
writers here might keep in mind, also. I think to a certain degree, I know
|
||
that you didnt like the idea that Gene did as much supervising on your scripts
|
||
or as much tearing apart on your scripts or your stories as he did. But, he
|
||
had a vision, too. And I have a theory on that. I almost have to go along with
|
||
the Doyle Estate and the Tarzan Estate. If you dont like the world that Gene
|
||
created, if you cant live within his universe, go write your own. Leave his
|
||
alone. Dont write in brothers and sisters and things like this. It had gotten
|
||
to the point where everybody kinda thought that these were real people. And
|
||
they say what happened to so and so? Its like whos that? Its Spocks sister.
|
||
Spock doesnt have a sister! We never wrote that in. But you guys did, and
|
||
thats what Gene took objection to. Work within the framework of it. I think
|
||
thats what the estates are trying to say, too: We created the character; dont
|
||
screw it up.
|
||
|
||
Q: Youve invented so many marvelous characters. Where did these characters
|
||
come from? And what are their pasts? And how did they get to where they were
|
||
and everything?
|
||
Majel: I think that this particular show, after five years, has done a
|
||
rather remarkable job of exploring some of those things, whereas the original
|
||
show did not. Theyre two entirely different shows. They have very little
|
||
similarity. I think the way to describe them is that the first one is more of
|
||
a fantasy type of thing. If this kind of space travel were possible in the
|
||
future this is the way we would like it to be. In the Next Generation I think
|
||
were a little more realistic to say if this kind of space travel were possible
|
||
this is the way it will be. And I think thats one of your basic, main
|
||
differences. You see, cause Star Trek the television series was just that. It
|
||
was seventy-nine episodes of a television series made for the purposes of
|
||
entertainment and to sell soap and toothpaste. But Star Trek the legend --now
|
||
that was an ideal. Thats a vision. That was Genes vision and it encompassed
|
||
humanity, unity, peace and love. And to quote Genes own words, Civilization
|
||
will reach wisdom and mat-urity on the day it learns to value diversity of
|
||
character and ideas. To be different is not necessarily to be ugly. To have a
|
||
different idea is not necessarily to be wrong. The worst thing that could
|
||
possibly happen is for all of us to look and think and act alike. For if we
|
||
can not learn to appreciate the small variations of our own kind here on
|
||
earth, then God help us if we get out into space and meet the variations that
|
||
are almost certainly out there.
|
||
I think I rambled on that. Did I get anywhere near the question? I think we
|
||
have done a lot of exploration of the characters.
|
||
|
||
Q: When will Deep Space Nine be on the air?
|
||
Majel: It will be on January of 93. We start filming in August. The sets
|
||
are already being built. And were taking up three stages, which means that the
|
||
Star Trek productions will have six permanent stages on the Paramount lot --
|
||
something unheard of.
|
||
|
||
Q: Do you think the two series running together will take anything away
|
||
from either one?
|
||
Majel: I dont think so. Supposing you liked one and didnt like the other?
|
||
You know how to use the on and off button. No, I dont think so.
|
||
|
||
Q: Will ILM be doing the special effects?
|
||
Majel: Everything is crossing over. So, what we use on one well be using on
|
||
the other. Its going to be one big happy family. Itll be two shows, but one
|
||
group. Michael is going to oversee the makeup on both of them. Bob Blackman is
|
||
going to oversee the costumes on all of them. Itll have the same beautiful,
|
||
marvelous technicians. We hired the best, now we just sit back and let them do
|
||
their work.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
|