Memory Alpha:AOL chats/Ronald D. Moore/ron106.txt

Subject: Answers Date: Tue, Jun 2, 1998 19:35 EDT From: RonDMoore Message-id: <1998060223355500.TAA27967@ladder01.news.aol.com>

Hello again to one and all!

Vacation is over and the entire staff has returned to the glorious halls of the crumbling Hart building to begin assembling the the seventh and final season of DS9.

My hiatus was spent on a roadtrip through the lovely state of Arizona, which neither Ruby nor I had ever visited. Saw the Diamondbacks play (and saw not one, but two, count'em two bats thrown into the stands by a single Brewer), ate a lot, was awestruck by the Grand Canyon, made another sojourn through the cultural Mecca that is Las Vegas, and much fun was had by all.

Waaaay too many postings to even attempt sift through them all, but here's a grab-bag of answers for your dining and dancing pleasure:

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I'd say MASH, I Love Lucy, Saturday Night Live, All in the Family, SCTV, Monty Python, MAD Magazine, Johnny Carson, Richard Pryor, and the great George Carlin were big influences on my sense of comedy when I was growing up.

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Gee, I think I'll try not to tackle that one.

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I often wonder if there is a practical upper limit to what our brains can comprehend and/or retain. I know the cliche is that there is nothing that human beings cannot do or cannot learn, but is that true? Are we limited by the very nature of our biological hardware? Are there greater truths that simply cannot be fathomed by our particular brand of cranial circuitry?

As for Alexandria, while I am not well-versed in this story (and my apologies to anyone out there who is and is about to tell me just how ill- informed I am), I've generally viewed the legends of vast knowledge lost forever as just that -- legends. Who knows what was really lost? I think we've always been titillated by stories of lost civilizations and lost treasures and the tales of unbelievable breakthroughs in science and medicine that were destroyed in the library of Alexandria have always seemed to be tinged with more than a touch of romanticism.

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In a perfect world, we would be able to match a specific story with a specific director every week. Unfortunately, the directors' schedule must be drawn up well in advance of the completion of our scripts. We line up the directors with what we hope will be the order of stories, but scripts are inevitably shuffled around and sometimes material best suited for one director will wind up with someone else.

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Joe orginally pitched this story for TNG. He wanted to do a show where Alexander fell through the time portal and was whisked off to a harsh and brutal planet for ten years. He eventually finds his way back to the portal and returns to the present. From Worf's point of view, his son has been gone for only the blink of an eye, but his little boy is now a scarred and troubled teenager. In that version, Alexander would've stayed a teenager fo the rest of the series. The entire writing staff absolutely loved the story but Michael Piller absolutely hated it and refused to put it into developmen no matter how many times we tried to sell him on it. Years later, during a story discussion about the O'Briens, Rene brought up the old Alexander story as a possible tale for little Molly and Ira decided to go for it.

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We've avoided the Guardian of Forever for years and probably will continue to do so until and unless there's a really great reason to bring it up. I don't know who does and does not know about it in Starfleet.

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We did discuss the Iconians during this episode, but decided that we didn't want to know much about how the portal worked so we ruled them out as the engineers.

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This was the subject of a long and rancorous argument both within the writing staff and with Rick and Mike. I won't bore you with the details of who supported what and why, but I can assure you we did consider it and debated it at length.

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We have left this deliberately ambiguous.