Just watched the first episode of the new V and am pretty disappointed.
In the course of ~42 minutes of TV:
The V arrive. There’s maybe 3 minutes of wonder. They fail miserably at addressing the implications for religion (though they make a half-assed try). (Also, a guy in a wheelchair starts *halfway* up some stairs then manages to get up down and back up…)
They show that there is a resistance. A surprisingly ineffective and poorly connected one considering how much they know.
The resistance is already somewhat established because the Vs have been here for a while already (the only new aspect I noticed in the setup).
The Vs are indoctrinating people (not as heavy-handed with the Nazi overtones this time).
They do the lizard face-rip reveal (and Alan Tudyk gets impaled in the chest!).
They reveal that there are Vs who are resisting.
What is the point of fast-forwarding through all that great stuff? To get to where?
I don’t really need to see another season of Cylon-occupied New Caprica… Especially when I haven’t the slightest reason to give two shits about the characters in it. They spent as much time on ‘why is the glass shaking?, what’s happening?’ (is it a T-Rex?) as they did developing any single character.
History Channel had a special on last night (I’m sure it will repeat occasionally) called Day After Disaster. It detailed what is known of disaster preparations for the explosion of a nuclear device in a major city, with a 10 kiloton device in Washington D.C. as the example. Sensationalist video excerpt link.
In part it was something of propaganda piece, made with the apparent cooperation of the Department of Homeland Security to show they are a different department since the Katrina days. It mentioned (but glossed over) how very little is being done at our ports and borders to prevent this eventuality from occurring.
Yet it had some really interesting points:
All in all Day after Disaster is a worthwhile show, though the VFX get tiresome after the 8th repeat or so (and the cut in video-distortion effect is horribly overused). I’m not sure if the show served to make smart people think or to make stupid people scared… I’d guess both. But I did come away from it immensely relieved that competent people were once again nominally in charge of our government.
The show was based on a document called DHS-National Planning Scenarios. I found a copy online, it’s entirely worth perusal (in the correct sense of that word). Maybe even more-so than the nuking of DC, scenario 3 is about pandemic flu and scenario 9 is for a major Earthquake. I highly recommend downloading it (right-click link and save-as).