J.LAHUE....clearly you haven't been getting NEARLY enough sleep. Does your mom know you're doing this?
Regarding the WW II stuff...bear in mind that was the feathering of my mind in the early stages. That does not represent where the show is NOW, only what process took me to this. While I don't like any sort of analogy to what went before -- only because it creates images and expectations that may not be exactly the same, and for that matter should not be exactly the same -- the "Casablanca In Space" log-line is the most accurate.
As for SF influences in more general terms...I don't want to leave the wrong impression. I LIKE SF, and grew up reading it. I don't have any particular school (Analog vs. F&SF) that I belong to, I just find what I like and read it. I suppose you could find the scope of the show in my appreciation from youth of such books as the LENSMEN and FOUNDATION books, and the CHILDHOOD'S END material. That is the KIND of saga that I'd like to present. Too-hard, meaning too technical SF doesn't terribly interest me. The technology is a means into the story, and should not (in most cases) BECOME the story, unless you've got something really extraordinary on your hands. The story is how it AFFECTS someone. (Kurt Vonnegutt's "Report on the Barnhouse Effect" being a good comparison.)
I suspect, as the program progresses, you'll catch little influences of Bradbury, and Serling, and THE PRISONER (there's a certain surrealness in some later stories I've planned out), with a healthy dollop of Clarke and Asimov and Ellison. But I don't think there's enough of any ONE to make a clear distinction.
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