Well, it was "a long time ago", so perhaps this fits. The Cylons could fly, so it makes sense they could have arrived on a planet w/some Darth Vader propaganda photos and liked the idea.
@irish_stickman: LEGO can actually be one of the many sources of attraction. A person who can't understand the love of LEGO is a person not worth being with.
@SWM,30isoSWF_GitEmSteveDave: BSG got a small ratings bump but, even towards the end, were nothing great. As MSNBC put it in August, "Galactica's" numbers - to put it politely - have begun to stink. The latest Nielsen ratings seem to indicate the show's viewers are as hard to find as the fleet's mythical destination of Earth. The series averaged 2.8 million viewers an episode during Season 1. During the most recent run of 10 episodes, the show averaged 2.2 million viewers, a slight dip overall but up from Seasons 2 and 3. The series lost some of that steam by the midseason finale, falling to just 1.8 million viewers." [www.msnbc.msn.com]
This isn't to say that only 1.8 million were watching on a regular basis. Many people were watching on DVD (thanks to Netflix) and/or on DVR. There were other outlets like iTunes and there are also those who torrent it. But that stuff does not get added to ratings. This might sound technologically backwards but there is arguably a legitimate reason not to add torrenters, DVD, and iTunes to the ratings.
The ratings are a tool used by advertisers to gauge how many potential viewers their ads will reach. Ads don't reach those watching on DVD, iTunes, or torrents. Arguably, they don't reach the DVR crowd either. On top of that, SciFi often has local cable ads that get put over the national feed (the SNL fake commercials like "Marble Columns" and "Sofa King" are extraordinarily accurate).
BSG had bad timing. It's audience was likely to watch the show outside of traditional means which screwed up the metrics. On top of that, its ratings flagged while on NBC which is run by a highly impatient programming division. Additionally, the writer's strike directly led to the cancellation by allowing a force majeur opt-out. [theamericanscene.com]
@OMG! Ponies!: OK, I think my joke failed. Buffers are what Travellers call non-Travellers. There is an estimated 350,000 Travellers living in the world today, compared to the 6.5 billion total population. I was trying to allude that the ~7,000 Travellers in the US could have "saved" the show, and that it was the "buffers" that save shows. Bad joke. It was early. I apologize.
@DangerousDac: Not only do the ratings stink right now (they have not been very good since after they left New Caprica), but the show stinks. None of the plot lines they are using right now make any sense at all. It is as though the writers forgot what happened the first two seasons. Don't get me wrong - I am glad someone likes the show now, but we deleted it from our DVR this week after one of the worst episodes yet.
10/25/09
10/25/09
06/16/09
06/16/09
06/16/09
06/16/09
Jim: You know, it's weird. It's practically a shot for shot remake.
Andy: Really? Huh, that's cool.
Jim: Story's kinda bland. It's about this guy named Dumbledore Calrissian who needs to return the ring back to Mordor.
06/16/09
06/16/09
06/16/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
About 80% of the guys in the photo are married.
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
Except for the steam punk Viper, everything was frakkin amazing. I really like the different colored Vipers. Reminds me of Robotech.
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
Why must this show end? :(
01/26/09
Also, you fast-forwarding through commercials killed BSG. Buffers kill programs!
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
This isn't to say that only 1.8 million were watching on a regular basis. Many people were watching on DVD (thanks to Netflix) and/or on DVR. There were other outlets like iTunes and there are also those who torrent it. But that stuff does not get added to ratings. This might sound technologically backwards but there is arguably a legitimate reason not to add torrenters, DVD, and iTunes to the ratings.
The ratings are a tool used by advertisers to gauge how many potential viewers their ads will reach. Ads don't reach those watching on DVD, iTunes, or torrents. Arguably, they don't reach the DVR crowd either. On top of that, SciFi often has local cable ads that get put over the national feed (the SNL fake commercials like "Marble Columns" and "Sofa King" are extraordinarily accurate).
BSG had bad timing. It's audience was likely to watch the show outside of traditional means which screwed up the metrics. On top of that, its ratings flagged while on NBC which is run by a highly impatient programming division. Additionally, the writer's strike directly led to the cancellation by allowing a force majeur opt-out. [theamericanscene.com]
01/26/09
01/26/09
That said -- these Lego vipers rock.