'Pushing Daisies' was honored with an award from the Casting Society of America, winning an Artios Awards, the Hollywood Reporter says || James Cromwell, who played Zefram Cochrane in 1996's 'Star Trek: First Contact,' broke his collarbone in a fall off his bicycle last weekend, Yahoo! News reports. He's expected to fully recover. || ABC's 'Lost' will return to Wednesday nights starting Jan. 21. A clip show will run at 8 followed by a two-hour premiere. || All of the Star Trek movies could be coming to Blu-Ray as early as next year, Digital Bits says. Paramount had supported HD-DVD, but has conceded defeat to Blu-Ray, and is now moving to the format || SciFi Channel's 'Warehouse 13' has completed its creative staff with the likes of Jack Kenny, David Simkins, Drew Greenberg, Stephen Scaia, and others || 'Pushing Daisies' was honored with an award from the Casting Society of America, winning an Artios Awards, the Hollywood Reporter says || James Cromwell, who played Zefram Cochrane in 1996's 'Star Trek: First Contact,' broke his collarbone in a fall off his bicycle last weekend, Yahoo! News reports. He's expected to fully recover. || ABC's 'Lost' will return to Wednesday nights starting Jan. 21. A clip show will run at 8 followed by a two-hour premiere. || All of the Star Trek movies could be coming to Blu-Ray as early as next year, Digital Bits says. Paramount had supported HD-DVD, but has conceded defeat to Blu-Ray, and is now moving to the format || SciFi Channel's 'Warehouse 13' has completed its creative staff with the likes of Jack Kenny, David Simkins, Drew Greenberg, Stephen Scaia, and others ||
 
 

Not Exactly A Surprise: Larson Unhappy With New 'Battlestar'



By MICHAEL HINMAN
Source: Associated Press
Sep-02-2008

So the secret to getting original "Battlestar Galactica" creator Glen Larson to open up about the new SciFi Channel series ... was to ask him about "frak"?

After a Peabody, several Emmy nominations (and even a win), and inclusion on lists celebrating the best in television, Larson -- who first brought "Battlestar" to the screen in 1978 on ABC and who said he's not a big fan of the current series -- finally has something to say about the series developed by Ronald D. Moore.

"Our point was to whenever possible make it a departure, like you're visiting somewhere else," Larson told the Associated Press about his original series. That means removing a lot of what would be considered real, like modern Earth-like clothes, vehicles, and even red fire extinguishers.

"And we did coin certain phrases for use in expletive situations, but we tried to carry that over into a lot of other stuff, even push brooms and the coin of the realm."

The AP was exploring how the expletive substitute "frak" made its way into popular culture beyond the show, appearing everywhere like "Scrubs," "Gossip Girl" and even "The Office." Larson originally developed "frack" -- the "C" was removed later by Moore and his team to make it a true four-letter word -- as well as other words like "feldergarb" and "yahrens" to help remind audiences that while they were watching humans, they were still quite alien to what we know society to be like.

However, in the new series, realism was necessary, and "frak" was the only word that survived the original. Otherwise, the vocabulary from the likes of Adm. William Adama and President Laura Roslin is almost exactly like that of your next door neighbor.

Michael Angeli, an Emmy-nominated writer and co-executive producer for the series, says he likes using the word in his scrips.

"It's a great way to do something naughty and get away with it," he said. "One of the things that television shows do constantly is they battle with Standards and Practices over what can be seen and what can't be seen, what can be said and what can't be said. A lot of our characters are soldiers. That whole sort of view and that subculture, that's how they speak. They're rough and tumble, and they're bawdy ... and they swear."

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