All Posts (1351)

Sort by

Ascension Sy-Fy Mini Series

12578046464?profile=original

“Ascension” an Original Sy-Fy (TV mini-series)

In just 11 days, our favorite Cylon, Tricia “6” Helfer embarks on the USS Ascension the original Sy-Fy Mini Series. It’s almost as if Tricia’s part was custom tailored for #6. Her part is the beautiful, manipulative and dangerous wife of the Ascensions, Captain Denninger.

Ascension is inspired by the real-life Project Orion that existed under the administration of President John F. Kennedy. The show sets up an alternate version of reality which in 1963, President Kennedy and the U.S. government, fearing the Cold War will become hot and lead to the destruction of the Earth. President Kennedy decides to launch a covert space mission.  600 men, women and children are sent into space on a century-long voyage aboard the USS Ascension, a massive, self-sustaining generation ship. Their mission is to colonize Proxima Centauri assuring the survival of the human race. Nearly 50 years into the journey (i.e. in the present), as they approach the point of no return, the mysterious murder of a young woman — the first homicide since their departure — causes the ship's crew to question the true nature of their mission. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

12578058872?profile=original12578059474?profile=original12578060077?profile=original12578060464?profile=original

Read more…

I have a secret...

This is for all of you wonderful Fan Club members...yeah you!

If any of you wonderful folks are interested in attending (and you should be!) Geekmonicon in Biloxi, Misssissippi, Dec 12th-14th...I actually have a special deal for you.

You...and only you can get special 1/2 price deal, but only I know the magic password...so send me a message at Shawn O'Donnell directly and I will tell you.

This fine show features Richard Hatch, Jack Stauffer & from Farscape Gigi Edgley...and promises to be a great show.Come visit the Battlestar Galactica Fan Club table while your there!

So Say We All!

Shawn O'Donnell

President

Battlestar Galactica Fan Club

12578072899?profile=original

Read more…

A message from Jack Stauffer

Hello Colonials,

Passing along a few thoughts about Glen Larson that Jack Stauffer wanted to share with all of you:

Wasn't it only yesterday that as youthful vibrant athletic actors, we climbed into the cockpit of our vipers and sped out to do battle with the cylons? What great fun we had. I will always be grateful to and keep a special place in my memories for Glen because he not only cast me as Bojay in the original Battlestar Galactica" he also hired me for other shows he produced including "Six Million Dollar Man" and "Fall Guy".

Moving on is the natural order of things and for those of us who are now in our late 60's, many of the producers and directors who helped steer our careers are leaving us for new adventures in other places. So - I choose not to mourn the loss of Glen as a friend and mentor. I wish him bon voyage as he embarks on another life journey full of surprises and amazing new experiences. Have a great time Glen and if on your new mission on deep space patrol you come across Commanders Cain and Adama raise a glass of ambrosia and say hi from all of us who will never forget.

12578074080?profile=original

Read more…

Glen A. Larson, Creator of TV’s 'Quincy M.E.,' 'Magnum, P.I.' and 'Battlestar Galactica,' Dies at 77

The writer-producer also was behind 'Knight Rider,' 'Fall Guy' and 'Six Million Dollar Man'

12578072259?profile=originalGlen A. Larson, the wildly successful television writer-producer whose enviable track record includes Quincy M.E., Magnum, P.I., Battlestar Galactica, Knight Rider and The Fall Guy, has died. He was 77.

Larson, a singer in the 1950s clean-cut pop group The Four Preps who went on to compose many of the theme songs for his TV shows, died Friday night of esophageal cancer at UCLA Medical Center in Santa Monica, his son, James, told The Hollywood Reporter.

Larson also wrote and produced for such noteworthy series as ABC’s It Takes a Thief, starring his fellow Hollywood High School alum Robert Wagner as a burglar now stealing for the U.S. government, and NBC’s McCloud, with Dennis Weaver as a sheriff from Taos, N.M., who moves to Manhattan to help the big-city cops there.

After ABC spurned the original pilot for The Six Million Dollar Man (based on the 1972 novel Cyborg), Larson rewrote it, then penned a pair of 90-minute telefilms that convinced then-network executive Barry Diller to greenlight the action series, which starred Lee Majors as a former astronaut supercharged with bionic implants.

Other shows Larson created included Alias Smith & Jones, B.J. and The Bear, Switch (another series with Wagner), Manimal and The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo. He spent his early career at Universal Studios, inventing new shows and reworking others, before moving to 20th Century Fox in 1980 with a multiseries, multimillion-dollar deal.

With Lou Shaw, Larson conceived Quincy M.E., which starred Jack Klugman — coming off his stint on The Odd Couple — as a murder-solving Los Angeles medical examiner. A forerunner to such “forensic” dramas as CSI, the series ran for 148 episodes over eight seasons on NBC from 1976-83.

CBS’ Magnum, P.I., toplined by Tom Selleck as a charismatic Ferrari-driving private instigator based in Oahu, Hawaii, also aired eight seasons, running from 1980-88 with 162 installments. Larson created the ratings hit with Donald Bellisario, with whom he had worked on Quincy and Battlestar.

NBC’s Knight Rider, starring David Hasselhoff as a crime fighter aided by a Pontiac Trans-Am with artificial intelligence (K.I.T.T., drolly voiced by William Daniels), lasted four seasons and 90 episodes from 1982-86. And ABC’s Fall Guy, with Majors as a stuntman who moonlights as a bounty hunter, prevailed for five seasons and 113 episodes spanning 1981-86.

If you’re counting, Quincy, Magnum, Knight Rider and Fall Guy accounted for 513 hours of television and 21 combined seasons from 1976-88.

During a 2009 interview with the Archive of American Television, Larson was asked how he could possibly keep up with such a workload.

“I tried to stay with things until I thought they were on their feet and they learned to walk and talk,” he said.

“If you believe if something, you must will it through, because everything gets in the way. Everyone tries to steer the ship off course.”

Battlestar Galactica lasted just one season on ABC from 1978-79, yet the show had an astronomical impact. Starring Lorne Greene and Richard Hatch as leaders of a homeless fleet wandering through space, featuring special effects supervised by Star Wars’ John Dykstra and influenced by Larson’s Mormon beliefs, Battlestar premiered as a top 10 show and finished the year in the top 25. But it was axed after 24 episodes because, Larson said, each episode cost “well over” $1 million.

“I was vested emotionally in Battlestar, I really loved the thematic things. I don’t feel it really got its shot, and I can’t blame anyone else, I was at the center of that,” said Larson, who years early had written a sci-fi script, Adam’s Ark, with a theme similar to Battlestar’s and had been mentored by Star Trek's Gene Coon. “But circumstances weren’t in our favor to be able to make it cheaper or to insist we make two of three two-hour movies [instead of a weekly one-hour series] to get our sea legs.”

Much like Star Trek before it, Battlestar became much more beloved after it was canceled. Universal packaged episodes into two-hour telefilms and added a “Battle of Galactica” attraction to its studio tour that proved hugely popular. A new version debuted in 2004 on the Sci-Fi Channel, followed by a spinoff, Caprica.

Yet for all his success, Larson had his share of critics.

Writer Harlan Ellison, in a 1996 book about his Star Trek teleplay for the famous episode “City on the Edge of Forever,” infamously called him “Glen Larceny,” accusing him of using movie concepts for his TV shows.

It often has been noted that Battlestar premiered soon after Star Wars, that Alias Smith & Jones arrived shortly after Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid and that the setups for McCloud and B.J. and The Bear bore similarities to the Clint Eastwood films Coogan’s Bluff and Every Which Way But Loose, respectively.

“Larson is undeniably a controversial figure in TV history because of his reputation for producing video facsimiles of popular films, but scholars, fans and critics should also consider that ‘similarity’ is the name of the game in the fast world of TV productions,” John Kenneth Muir wrote in his 2005 book, An Analytical Guide to Television’s Battlestar Galactica. “Shows are frequently purchased, produced and promoted by networks not for their differences from popular productions, but because of their similarities.”

Fox in 1978 sued Battlestar studio Universal for infringing on Star Wars copyrights but lost the suit years later, vindicating Larson, who described his TV show as “Wagon Train heading toward Earth.”

He also said that Alias Smith & Jones was “certainly in the genre of Butch Cassidy, a New Wave western” and compared B.J. and the Bear to something along the lines of the 1977 film Smokey & the Bandit.

He was not apologizing for any of this.

“Television networks are a lot like automobile manufacturers, or anyone else who’s in commerce. If something out there catches on with the public … I guess you can call it ‘market research,’ ” he said in the TV Archive interview. “You can go in and pitch one idea at a network and they’ll say, ‘You know, we’d really like it if you had something a little more like this.’ ”

And the trend goes on: new versions of Battlestar, Knight Rider, Manimal, Six Million Dollar Man and The Fall Guy have been floated about for the big screen in recent years.

Glen Albert Larson was born an only child on Jan. 3, 1937, in Long Beach, Calif. He and his parents moved to Los Angeles when he was young, and he became enthralled with the art of storytelling while listening to hour after hour of radio shows.

He met Wagner while hitchhiking to Hollywood High and landed a job as a page at NBC, then home to such live anthologies as Lux Video Theatre and Matinee Theatre.

Music took over when Capitol Records A&R exec Nik Venet signed The Four Preps to a long-term contract in 1956, and the wholesome youngsters recorded such hits as “Twenty Six Miles (Santa Catalina),” “Big Man," “Dreamy Eyes” and "Down by the Station."

“Ultimately, The Four Preps’ biggest influence can be heard via their impact on Brian Wilson, whose harmony-driven production for The Beach Boys was a direct antecedent of The Four Preps’ sound,” or so says a biography of the group on AllMusic.com.

The Preps appeared on The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet, The Ed Sullivan Show and American Bandstand, played college campuses around the country and toured the world. But with a new wife and child, Larson wanted to get off the road, so he pursued a career in television and sold a story idea for a 1966 episode of The Fugitive.

Larson then wrote an episode of It Takes a Thief, and within the short span of a season he went from story editor to producing the series.

He created his first show, the ABC Western Alias Smith and Jones, which starred Peter Duel and Ben Murphy as outlaw cousins trying to go straight. He exited the series soon after Duel died of a self-inflicted gunshot on New Year’s Eve in 1971.

He did not get along with Klugman on Quincy and eventually left the show in the hands of Bellisario.

Selleck, who was under contract at Universal and had done a couple of pilots that had not made it to series, was obligated to do Magnum, whose pilot was written by Bellisario.

“We got the star, it was a perfect fit,” said Larson, who was a fan of the 1960s CBS series Hawaiian Eye, which centered on a detective agency. “I had a house over there [in Hawaii] and a guy [like Selleck’s character] who lived in a guest house and took care of it.”

Larson based the unseen novelist character Robin Masters, the owner of the home, on author Harold Robbins.

After years at Universal — where he also did The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries for ABC and Buck Rogers in the 25th Century for NBC — Larson left for Fox. But to get out of his Universal deal, he had to give the studio one more show, and that would be Knight Rider.

“Michael Knight [Hasselhoff’s character] in a way is a prototyped by the Lone Ranger,” Larson said. “If you think about him riding across the plains and going from one town to another to help law and order, then K.I.T.T. becomes Tonto.”

At Fox in the spring of 1983, he sold four new series: Manimal to ABC and Trauma Center, Automan and Masquerade to ABC, but all were quickly canceled.

Larson’s next show, CBS’ Cover Up — about a photographer (Jennifer O’Neill) who replaces her late husband as an undercover CIA agent — lasted one season. During production, actor Jon-Erik Hexum died as a result of an accidental self-inflicted blank-cartridge gunshot wound on the set.

In July 2011, Larson sued Universal, alleging a decades-long fraud perpetrated by a studio that he said never once sent him profit participation statements despite his shows earning hundreds of millions of dollars.

More recently, Larson reteamed up with The Four Preps, reuniting in 2004 for a PBS reunion show, Magic Moments, with best friends and fellow group members David Somerville and Bruce Belland.

Survivors include his wife Jeannie, brother Kenneth and nine children (including his son James) from former wives Carol Gourley and Janet Curtis: Kimberly, Christopher, Glen, Michelle, David, Caroline, Danielle and Nicole.

A memorial for his service will be held in the near future, his son said.

Despite his remarkable career churning out hits, Larson earned but three Emmy nominations, two for producing McCloud and one (for outstanding drama) for Quincy. He never won.

His shows, Larson said in the TV Archive interview, “were enjoyable, they had a pretty decent dose of humor. All struck a chord in the mainstream. What we weren’t going to do was win a shelf full of Emmys. We got plenty of nominations for things, but ours were not the kind of shows that were doing anything more than reaching a core audience. I would like to think we brought a lot of entertainment into the living room.

8:22 AM PST 11/15/2014 by Mike Barnes at The Hollywood Reporter

Read more…

Veterans Day Message 2014

12578071490?profile=original

Colonials and to all Members of Battlestar Raven and Raven Friends and Family Circle,

I just wanted to quickly take my time to welcome all our news members here at Battlestar Galactica Fan Club!

Second, I know we have a lot of Battlestar Galactica Fans especially Battlestar Raven members out there,  that are either a veteran of the military or still currently serving.  My husband and I just wanted to take our time to wish each and everyone of you,  HAPPY VETERANS DAY!  THANK YOU for serving and or having served!  But Veterans Day is also a time to remember those who lost their lives serving this country.  So to those who courageously gave their lives.....THANK YOU!  You maybe gone, but you will NEVER be forgotten!  A lot of us wear different uniforms representing our respective branch of the military. But in the end, regardless of the difference in the unifrom we all wear, we are all brothers and sisters at arms doing the same job....and that is PROTECTING the very foundation of which this country was founded on and the freedom we all so much enjoy!

So when you are walking around wherever you maybe going, if and when you see a veteran, THANK THEM for their service!  Those words may mean little to some people but for those veterans, they mean EVERYTHING to them!!!!

HOOAH!!!!!

In Service,

Raven Actual- USAF ( still currently serving )

Read more…

Here's another case where real life and science fiction reflect each other. This is a recent account of a Russian fighter testing out the equivalent of the Cylon weapon used to dud the Colonial defenses in the Re-imagined version of Battlestar Galactica. By the way, their war game test was on a US warship and it was left helpless, just like the Colonial fleet. Maybe it's a controlled EMP, or maybe it's some sort of virus that they can transmit. What ever the case, their target is easily duded and left completely helpless, basically dead in the water.

http://www.voltairenet.org/article185860.html

Read more…

"Interstellar" Now Playing

12578046464?profile=original

Leah Cairns: Interstellar: (Mystery/Sci-Fi ) 11-7-2014

Earth is at the brink of extinction due to extreme climate changes. A mysterious rip in the space-time continuum is discovered. It may be the last chance to save the human race. The crew of the Endurance uses the newly discovered wormhole on an interstellar voyage in a last ditch attempt to locate a habitable planet for a new beginning. No one knows if they will ever see their families again and what the future holds for them.

 

I found information about the now playing movie “Interstellar” earlier this year. Leah “Racetrack” Cairns plays the part of Lois in the film; although I’m not sure how big of a part her character has. Leah is my favorite Raptor pilot from the Re-imagined BSG series and I would see the film just because she’s in it.

12578070484?profile=original12578070680?profile=original12578070878?profile=original

Read more…

Narcopolis

12578046464?profile=original

"NARCOPOLIS"

Jamie “Baltar” Callis stars as Todd Ambro in “Narcopolis.” In 2024 all drugs are legal. Ambro is largest Pharmicutal producer of recreational narcotic drugs. Ambro drugs are Legal, Affordable and Safe, but are they? Elliot Cowan is the hard hitting drug Cop Frank Grieves investigating drug related deaths. Soon Frank has his superiors and Ambro henchman gunning for him in this Mystery / Sci-Fi / Thriller to be released sometime in 2015.

12578069092?profile=original12578069294?profile=original12578069861?profile=original

Read more…

Everyone,

If you have not seen these special awards given by BFC President O'Donnell,  it is located at the following link on the Raven main website and also on the Raven Facebook page dated July 21, 2014:

http://www.battlestarraven-bfc-002.com/#!battlestar-galactica-fan-club--awards/c1p49

The way the certificate is displayed on the Raven website is it is from the highest and on down.

Read more…

12578068482?profile=original

Raven Marines,

I just wanted to quickly post this to let everyone know, the RAVEN COLONIAL MARINE PATCHES are in!  Like I said when I agree to take on this position and learn more about how you do things in the science ficition world as I am new to this, I told myself that if I am going to do something like this, I vowed to make the Raven Marines unique and different.  And this is JUST one of the ways I will do it.  Uniformity WILL BE maintained within the Raven Colonial Marine Ranks but at the same time, we are different amongst the other Colonial Marines Detachment out there amongts the other Battlestar Chapters.  That is why WE ARE THE RAVEN COLONIAL MARINES!  WE think outside the box!  Unless the Commander tells me otherwise ( ONLY SHE CAN DO IT ), I will continue to make us unique towards becoming the best one out there!  I mean after all, I was told that this is all for fun.  And fun it will be!

There will be more new things to come for the Raven Colonial Marines including the long awaited Raven Marine Tactical Manual!  As stated before, that manual will ONLY be exclusive to actual deserving Raven Colonial Marine Members and select individuals within the Raven.  Why I chose to do this in this manner, it is because a lot of hard work was put into this manual by both me and the Commander so we want to make sure that deserving individuals   ( active members ) who contributed a lot to the Raven, gets it as a reward. And I believe that is a fair thing to do.  So far, real life responsibilities has been getting on the way but we are still moving along with many new things being put into play.  

Have a great weekend and SEMPER FI!

In Service,

-Raven Marine OIC

Read more…

Quebec City Comiccon, a first event!

Last week-end It was the first Comiccon of Quebec City in Canada.  Chief of Machine Room PO2 Hugo Valencia and I have been representing Colonial Defense Forces and the BSG fandom.  

12578066300?profile=originalPO2 Valencia (hard to recognize him without greasy hands and face...), Col. Landry as COL.  GDSOAB Saul Tigh and littl'Padawan Asohka Tano Landry.

12578066894?profile=originalWith another BSG fan met there.  "What the fraaaak!  What the hell is this, water?"

12578067097?profile=originalAt ease! PO2 Valencia, leave those comic books alone and lets have a good bottle of ambrosia!

-Col. Fred Landry, 11Th Fleet BSR-05 Excalibur CO, Canada.

Read more…

12578068252?profile=originalWelcome aboard all new Crew. If any of you want some real fun, and if you prefer your Cylons up close and personal, you're invited to apply to join the Raven Battle Group Colonial Marine Detachment. There is no written test. The OIC, Tusker and me are the test.

Congratulations to all the new Ensign pilots (salutes). It is tradition for newly commissioned officers to pay a cubit to the enlisted person rendering a first salute. Payments will be received in Joe's Bar, preferably before you get shot up by the Toasters. - Sgt. Paul "Iceworm" Oakley, Marine Detachment NCOIC.

Read more…

Then we could be Heroes...

Hello Colonials!

It has been a while since I had the opportunity to talk to all of you, what with the trip to Florida & the subsequent catching up of everything...(there's always things to do!)...but back I am!

Speaking of my trip, or more specifically...I want to thank Gene & Renee Hagerty for the wonderful event that they put on along with the wonderful staff that pulled it all together.

12578063256?profile=originalI think you'll see some familiar faces in this photo...and btw, the man in the Colonial helmet is Dr. Story Musgrave, veteran astronaut who served is the only person to have flown on all of the shuttles but also served onboard Skylab.

You'll also note that Nicki Clyne, Jack Stauffer & Aron Eisenberg joined in the group photo!

We of course tonight want to honor our Heroes of Battlestar Galactica, so I will proceed directly to that.

Firstly (and you all probably recently saw a blog I published in honor of this man called "Farewell to a Gunslinger"), I wish to honor a wonderful man, great actor, gentleman and everything else good that can be said about a person...someone who joined us on our Galacticruise in 2008 & was always very personally kind to me....Mr. Denny Miller.

Denny passed away September 9th but he is certainly not forgotten. He is well known to BSG fans as Ser-5 in the episode "Gun on Ice Planet Zero'...he also starred ad Duke Shannon on Wagon Train.

Denny also appeared in the Peter Sellers film The Party....along with spots on Gilligan's Island, The Brady Bunch, Alice and many more television & film projects.

The Hero goes to Denny Miller!

12578062491?profile=originalWe also honor an actor who appeared in television shows ranging from The Twilight Zone, Banacek & Newhart and film projects such as Love is a Many-Splendored Thing & How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying.

You all know him as Specter on the original Battlestar Galactica.

Though no longer with us, the history of his film performances remain.

The Hero goes to Murray Matheson!

12578063086?profile=original12578064076?profile=originalLast but not least, this actor was born in Jerusalem in the then Mandate of Palestine in 1919...his first job in the US was as a subway electrician.

His television credits span such shows as Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Gunsmoke, The Wild Wild West & Chicago Hope (to name just a few).

Films include Some LIke it Hot, Sadat & Yentl (again to name a few).

You all know him as the wicked leader of the Eastern Alliance in the original BSG episode "Experiment in Terra".

Though retired from the acting now, he paints full time and lives in Calfornia.

The Hero goes to Nehemiah Persoff!

12578064271?profile=originalPlease remember to keep checking back with us on news for Galacticon IV and just so you know new guest announcements are on the way for November!

So Say We All!

Shawn O'Donnell

President

Battlestar Galactica Fan Club

12578065054?profile=original

12578065469?profile=original

12578065279?profile=original

Read more…

Colonials,

            I hope everyone is doing well and life is good.  First i wanted to a brief moment to thank everyone personally who gave me time to deal with my retirement from the United States Naval Service.  To President O'Donnell, Daniel Allen, Cherry Oclima and other close friends i thank you.  Everyone else i am proud to say i am OFFICIALLY retire and can fully focus on what i love.  Sci Fi and everything that makes me a Sci Fi geek of all genre to help fellow members wherever they are here in the states or around the globe.   I have retired after serving 20 years in the US Navy and i bring that talent and experience to everything i do.  Of course all in fun here and not to take everything to serious b/c as WE ALL know it can suck the fun out of anything right?

           I have settled in to my new City after moving from Florida and will be back on full duty starting tomorrow.  For all you Viper and Raptor jock you have all passed your examinations and will be getting your Certificates and Awards tomorrow.  Give me 24 hours to get them all out and if you have not gotten yours after 24 Hrs email me at CAG_VF84@yahoo.com  i will also check eng33ladder49@yahoo.com if email is sent there as well.  Expect changes folks on the BFC Fleet Military side.  There will be a few wake up calls if you will and alot of smiling faces.  I have some catching up to do, but not much. 

           Fleet personnel can expect subtle changes here and there.  There will a be a few revisions to existing SOPS(Standard Operating Procedures)  For my Colonial Marines there will also be some changes as well nothing to major but i am steering us into a positive, productive and expanding direction.  I will be releasing the Fleet Ship compliment and commissioning procedures soon.  If you are interested in becoming a ship Commanding Officer my email is CAG_VF84@yahoo.com  Lets talk and i like doing short interviews so i can get a feel for you and answer questions you may have.  Just allow me 48 Hrs so you as the interested party can read the, "Fleet Ship compliment and commissioning procedures"  Colonials in due time i will have us exactly where we need to be as a FLEET and more importantly as a FAMILY!   I expect nothing but the best from you all as i know you expect the same thing from me and MORE! Thank you very much all of you for constant support and cooperation i appreciate it.  SO SAY WE ALL!!  ~SALUTES!~

Read more…

Spotlight on Dirk Benedict

Well known of course for his role as Starbuck in "Battlestar Galactica", Dirk is probably equally as well known for his role as Templeton "Face" Peck in "The A-Team."

Dirk's first film "Georgia, Georgia" debuted in 1972 & he followed up with a string of television and film appearances, notably alongside Linda Blair in "Ruckus" & notably as Jake Barnes in the 1996 film "Alaska".

Dirk is also the author of several books, the first of which "Confessions of a Kamikaze Cowboy: A True Story of Discovery, Acting, Health, Illness, Recovery, and Life" which was published in 1991.

Shawn: What was your first Con experience?

Dirk: I can't remember, sometime around '98. In Florida. I was sure people thought I was Harrison Ford...why else would they be coming to see me???

Shawn: How did it go?

Dirk: I was stunned that people remembered me. The very first "fan" I met at this convention was in an elevator on the way to the signing area and she did a double take as she recognized me & said, "Whatever happened to you?" I'm not sure what she meant. Did she wonder why she didn't see my on TV anymore (I also wonder that) or was it that I looked..."older"? But I never forgot and quite often sit in front of the fire during the winter, with a cigar and whiskey and wonder, "What the hell happened to me?"

12578058890?profile=originalShawn: How about the best Con you've been to?

Dirk: Most of them have been quite good...seriously...and the fans are wonderful, though I STILL don't know how or why they remember me. I suppose I'd choose the show I did in Salt Lake City in the summer of 2013. It was an inaugural show, had 45,000 people attend and so smoothy I wanted to hire the promoter, Dan Farr, to run my life. I was hoping Marie (Osmond) would come to see me but alas it was not to be. Why are you never remembered by those you WANT to remember you?

Shawn: How about the worst Con?

Dirk: A show in Denver about 10 years ago. I think 400 people showed up. Most of them NOT to see me. I spent most of my time in the bar.

Shawn: How about the strangest or most unusual fan you've encountered at a Con?

Dirk: I think all fans are strange and unusual, as are all actors. All people. Once you scrape the surface. The wonderful thing about "fans" is, they aren't afraid to show it...for the most part. There's no such thing as an "ordinary" person...you just need to get to know them, which I try to do in some small way at shows...even if is for a minute or so to do it.

Shawn: Have you had any actual bad experiences at a Con?

Dirk: I've been stranded at the hotel after the show was over a couple of times. And one time the promoter absconded with all my (and a few other actor's) money. About a month later...an envelope full of cash arrived at my home in Montana. Yikes!

12578059852?profile=originalShawn: What would you do differently if you were running a Con?

Dirk: I'd give Dirk Benedict an hour and a half to do his "talk"...so he can truly get everything off his chest. Of course we'd have to charge admission. And hire lawyers?

Shawn: Have you ever wanted to get an autograph from anyone?

Dirk: Nope and I'm not sure why. Fred Astaire gave me his, George Peppard gave me his & Dwight Schultz keeps promising to give me his, but other than that, I've led an autograph free life. Do you know I don't have one picture of myself from any of the films or TV shows I've done hanging in my home. I think it's because I don't like looking back...which makes doing conventions painful in a way...and driving dangerous as hell.

Shawn: What are you currently working on?

Dirk: Trying to make the answers to these questions interesting...and finding a woman who can put up with my scatological, eclectic life-style.

12578059892?profile=originalShawn: OK, how about future projects then?

Dirk: Learning how to embrace celibacy as a way of life. Oh, yoiu mean professionally...
Nope. make me an offer. I'd like to do some acting, now that my kids have found more interesting people to hang out with and I have time to do whatever I want. And then there is "The Third Book"...of which the procrastination of wriing...keeps me up at nights. But it is a wonderful excuse to drink.

Read more…

Attention on deck! This is a general heads up on the recent scuttlebutt! 

The Cylons seem to have at least two new pint sized models they are mass producing for the 31st. They are disguised as Chucky and Annabelle dolls. They seem harmless enough to some, horribly creepy to others, but they are very lethal. There are also larger models as well, disguised as Evil Clowns that are already stalking the streets of some cities. Be ware.  If you encounter any Chuckies, Annabelles or Evil Clowns, you have weapons hot, dispatch with extreme prejudice!  That is all.

That is all.

Buzzsaw OUT!

Read more…

Farewell to a Gunslinger...

With great sadness I must report the passing of a giant.

Having known this wonderful guy & having thought so much of him as a person, it has taken me a while to compose my thoughts, maybe not so much as to what to say but as to get myself to say it.

I am of course speaking of Denny Miller, who is so well known to Battlestar Galactica fans as Ser-5 in the classic episode "Gun on Ice Planet Zero".

Denny passed away on September 9th of this year.

12578060675?profile=originalOf course Denny's career spanned much more than one episode of Battlestar Galactica...did you know that he was the first blond Tarzan?

Yep, he starred in the 1959 film "Tarzan, the Ape Man".

12578061061?profile=originalPerhaps the role that Denny was best known for was as Duke Shannon on the television series "Wagon Train" which ran from 1957-1965.

12578061654?profile=originalDenny always said that the role he most enjoyed was as "Wyoming" Bill Kelso in the the film "The Party" which starred Peter Sellers of Pink Panther fame.

Denny had roles in many great television westerns such as "Laramie", "Have Gun, Will Travel" & "The Rifleman".

He appeared on "Gilligan's Island", first as surfer Duke Williams & then as Tongo the ape man.

12578061875?profile=originalDenny also appeared on such diverse (and well known & loved) shows as "The Brady Bunch", "I Dream of Jeannie", "Gunsmoke" & "Alice"

Denny also played the Gorton's Fisherman in Gorton's television commercials for 14 years.

Denny also joined us for the 2008 Galacticruise & I wanted to share one of the wonderful pictures that photographer Chris Loomis took of him then.

12578062491?profile=originalFilmography & all else aside...Denny was one of the kindest & most decent human beings I have met & he had a wonderful partner in wife Nancy...she too is a great and wonderful person and my thoughts are with her.

They were always so very kind to me.

How much more can be said?

Words are probably not enough, but know well that this man made his mark on the world and in the minds & hearts of millions of people...a true Gunslinger for our times...

Read more…

new members

"Hello,

 I'm Ernie Miller and as the Battlestar Galactica Fan Club Adminstrator of Colonial Affairs,    I welcome you on behalf of the leadership of the BFC.

 Please let me know if there is anything I can do to help you on the site"

 Welcome   So Say We All !!!!!!

Read more…

Blog Topics by Tags

Monthly Archives