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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.tv
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!gatech!destroyer!cs.ubc.ca!news.UVic.CA!cs16!mmcalees
- From: mmcalees@cs16.UVic.CA (Michael McAleese)
- Subject: Re: Babylon 5: WHAT EXACTLY IS IT?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec25.180817.23846@sol.UVic.CA>
- Summary: A quick explaination
- Sender: news@sol.UVic.CA
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cs16.uvic.ca
- Organization: Those Dudes
- References: <alix.725262045@pv663d.vincent.iastate.edu>
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 92 18:08:17 GMT
- Lines: 97
-
- In article <alix.725262045@pv663d.vincent.iastate.edu> alix@iastate.edu (L.A. Melloy) writes:
- >I've been seeing all this discussion about the new series, Babylon5, but I
- >realized after seeing a commercial for it on Fox yesterday, that I have NO
- >IDEA WHAT IT'S ABOUT. Can someone out there in netland maybe post a short
- >summary for those of us who have been buried in books all semester? Thanx.
-
- Hmm. Okay, here's a try. Babylon 5 is a new SF series that has got quite
- a bit of good word-of-mouth advertising on the new, mostly because the
- creator and guiding light of the show J. Michael Straczynski posts to the
- net or GEnie about the show and his progress in getting it to the screen.
- What he has to say about what he's attempting to do has struck a responsive
- chord in many SF fans, who, like him, were wanting someone to do a decent
- television SF show. The unofficial motto of Babylon-5 is "No cute kids or
- robots... ever." For the actual background of the show I include a section
- of the Babylon-5 FAQ, available for ftp from ftp.coe.montana.edu in
- ftp/pub/TV/guides/babylon-5 (get it, all your questions are answered there).
-
-
- FROM: The BABYLON 5 Frequently Asked Questions List
-
- The version: Updated 6/10/92 - Compiled by Lee Whiteside
-
- [lots of stuff deleted for brevity]
-
- Section II: The Babylon 5 Universe
-
- 1. What is Babylon 5 about?
-
- The date: 2257 A.D.
-
- We have gone to the stars, and found that we are not alone. We have
- moved quickly out, establishing relations with other civilizations that
- has let us leapfrog technologies via an information and cultural exchange
- with at least one other culture. Many contacts have been friendly. Some
- have not been quite so benign.
-
- From 2236 through 2247, war raged between the Earth Alliance and the
- Minbari, an alien federation. The EA was losing, badly. As a last
- resort, a suicide perimeter was set up around Earth, known as the Line.
- Every last ship we had was on the Line, in a desperate defense of
- Homeworld.
-
- And on the brink of winning the war, just as they were breaking
- through the Line...the Minbari surrendered. To this date, no one knows
- why. They could have won, but chose not to. The secret behind their
- surrender will gradually play a part in our story.
-
- But that was now 10 years ago, in our story. There is now an uneasy
- peace between the Earth Alliance and the four other alien federations.
- To help cement that peace, the EA has constructed BABYLON 5.
-
- BABYLON 5 is a five-kilometer-long space station in neutral space
- more or less central to all five of the different alliances, human or
- alien. To get to one or the other, you have to pass through this sector
- of space. Thus, Babylon 5 has been created as a sort of port-of-call for
- travelers, statesmen, emissaries, traders, refugees and other, less
- savory characters. Five kilometers long and two kilometers wide, Babylon
- 5 is divided into separate, discreet sections that rotate at differing
- speeds to provide different gravities to accommodate those who come to
- the station. There are also sections with alternate atmospheres.
-
- The station boasts living quarters, customs areas, docking bays,
- meeting areas, a casino, several bars/nightclubs, command and control
- spheres fore and aft, and a decent defensive grid. In addition, each of
- the various federations has one official representative aboard the
- station (with the station's commander representing the Earth Alliance),
- so that it also functions as a sort of mini-U.N.
-
- It is home to humans and aliens in various roles, some arriving or
- departing every day, others working there full-time. They live on the
- very edge of the frontier, in the sense that if they get into trouble,
- there's no one who can arrive in time to help them. Because of the
- nature of the travelers, they bring their stories with them to Babylon
- 5 rather than having to seek them out. The stories are of people in
- flight, seeking sanctuary; stories of smugglers, assassins, traders,
- mappers, dignitaries and others, all on urgent missions of one sort or
- another.
-
- If STAR TREK was "Wagon Train to the Stars," then BABYLON 5 is
- Casablanca in space.
-
- It is humanity's last hope for peace, a single hope in the middle
- of an uneasy, fragile peace.
-
- And it *is* fragile, and dangerous. It is called BABYLON 5 because
- the first three efforts to build the station were sabotaged and
- destroyed. The fourth one disappeared without a trace 24 hours after
- becoming operational. No one knows what happened to it.
-
- And *that*...is only the beginning of our story.
-
- [rest deleted]
-
- --
- * mmcalees@csr.uvic.ca (Michael McAleese) : I speak only for me... *
- "Man can believe the impossible, but never the improbable." - Oscar Wilde
- (For snooping governments: heroin, cocaine, FBI, CSIS, CIA, albatross...)
-