<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, arial">quote:</font><HR>The thing about DS9 that annoys us is not so much the theft as the Motive.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
That and the fact that their plan
worked.
A great many stations
were intimidated into not airing the
B5 pilot, and later the series, and a lot of people thought that
B5 was a copy of
DS9 because
The Gathering aired a week or so after
The Emissary.
Since the
DS9 pilot went into production
after the
B5 pilot, Paramount had to spend a fortune rushing it through post-production and saved what time and money it could by having the script revised so that most of it took place aboard the
Enterprise (or an identical starship) so that the existing
TNG sets could be used as much as possible.
It was a thoroughly cynical exercise from beginning to end, and given the untold crap that
B5 fans have had to put up with over the years I don't see anything wrong with reminding people exactly who stole what from whom.
Quite aside from the generic elements of adventure stories (and
DS9, not really being an arc show, didn't really adhere to the Hero archetype in any event) there are a number of quite
specific things that the Paramount development people made sure that the producers put into the new show. (Said producers, of course, had no notion where these ideas came from, since they had never had access to the
B5 materials and wouldn't have deliberately cribbed from them if they had - as JMS has repeatedly said.)
1) Series set aboard a space station - which
Trek had never done or even considered until after it rejected
B5.
2) The "jello man", a shapeshifter. The draft of the pilot that Paramount saw had a shape-shifter as the assassin, inspired by the then-new technology of "morphing" via computer. By the time
The Gathering went into production JMS had dropped the idea because he thought morphing was old hat. But Paramount hadn't seen the later drafts...
3) A space station where stories come to the main characters via an interstellar gateway - in the case of
DS9 a "stable wormhole" - something which had never before existed in the
Trek universe. (The only time the notion had been suggested it turned out the wormhole
wasn't stable.) The really stupid part about this bit of larceny is that it was unnecessary.
Trek has warp drive. You don't need a jumpgate or anything like it. But the theives were so literal-minded that they couldn't see this, hence the wormhole.
4) The commander of the station is associated with an alien religious prophecy. Oh, yeah this happens
all the time in TV SF. Practically a cliche, it is.
Need I go on?
Regards,
Joe
------------------
Joseph DeMartino
Sigh Corps
Pat Tallman Division
joseph-demartino@att.net