Tag Archives: Kevin Grazier

Defiance, a transmedia project, goes nano (for one episode anyway)

Defiance sounds more like the name for a warship than the title of transmedia (tv/games) science fiction project. It (both the tv series and the game) debuted with much fanfare in April 2013 on the US SyFy channel. Given the alien invasion aspect of the show I wasn’t expecting any nanotechnology but episode eight broadcast on June 3, 2013 has a character being ‘brought back to life’ by nanomachines according to the Defiance recaplet by Jacob Clifton for Television Without Pity,

In fact, Sukar’s first death was the result of a bit of Ark that contained nanomachines and were piloting his body around to save the Votans in town. She [Irisa] takes his comatose body back to the Badlands tribe, and I guess deals with the fact that what little guidance she had for dealing with her coming godhood is now gone, which has to suck. But then too, she seems to understand that miracles never look like miracles — that just because it was nanomachines doesn’t mean it wasn’t also a miracle — so that’s comforting.

I’m not entirely sure how the nanomachines piloted a dead (?) character’s body around town but I don’t think that was the recapper’s main concern. However, curiosity aroused I found some interviews with the science advisor for Defiance, Kevin Grazier. Here’s an excerpt from Grazier’s April 15, 2013 Q&A with Emilie Lorditch for Inside Science,

Kevin Grazier is a planetary physicist who worked at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on the Cassini/Huygens Mission to Saturn and Titan, and is currently conducting research on long-term, large-scale computational simulations of Solar System dynamics and evolution. Grazier has also been a science advisor for numerous television shows such as “Eureka,” “Battlestar Galactica,” and the new SyFy show “Defiance.” …

IS: What is your typical day like?
KG:
My interaction with the writers and producers depends upon the show, and for each episode it frequently depends upon the writer. Some shows (“Eureka,” “Falling Skies”) have brought me in prior to the beginning of a season to recommend technology or elaborate on scientific concepts for the upcoming season. Some writers will have an idea for a story, and will chat with me before they even start writing. Sometimes writers solicit input at the story outline stage, sometimes at the first draft stage. Sometimes, on the less tech-heavy stories, I have no interaction until there is a completed script, and then I weigh in with my notes.
On a few occasions I’ve been called into the writers’ room to do a presentation when we’re planning a particularly big or blockbuster season finale. Sometimes I get called to help with the visual effects. That happened a lot on Eureka.
For two episodes of Eureka, I was even asked to write a several pages of book chapters. In these episodes characters opened books and, since we shot in high-definition, fans could freeze the frame and read the text – so the text had to be original, not copyrighted, and, most importantly, correct.
On Defiance, I’ve had more telecons [telephone conferences]  than I’ve had on previous series, primarily because our game designer, Trion Worlds, is located in San Diego. I’ve also been editing a lot of online content, which I’ve never got to do before. As I said, nothing is “typical.”
IS: What advice do you have for scientists who want to work as a science advisor?
KG: It’s actually a lot easier to break in these days than it was when I started. There is an organization, program of the National Academy of Sciences, called The Science and Entertainment Exchange. They pair up scientists as consultants to the productions that need expertise. If you’re a scientist, and are interested in consulting (usually non-paid, at least at first), they maintain a database of scientists and their areas of expertise. If science consulting is something that interests you, start there.
One of the most important recommendations I could offer is that to do the job well, to be able to relate to the writers with whom you’re working, it really pays to have taken a screenwriting class or three. When it was obvious that I was going to get continued work in the industry, I went to UCLA Extension and earned a certificate in television writing. That’s been supremely helpful.
When you have an inkling of how difficult it is to tell a story in 42 minutes, with a beginning, middle, and end, along with five act breaks, you’re a much better advisor.

That last response from Grazier gives me daymares as I imagine some science type who’s taken a few courses and decides s/he is not just a science advisor but also the head writer. I’ve seen the phenomenon at work. All some people need is a workshop or a course and suddenly, they’ve become experts.

The article about Defiance on ScriptPhD is not credited or dated but I’m assuming it was posted in the last few months,

ScriptPhD.com was very honored to have the opportunity to sit down with both series writer and co-creator and executive producer Michael Taylor, as well as the show’s scientific advisor Kevin Grazier, to get a better idea of the characters, storyline and what we can expect going forward.

Taylor, also a series writer and producer on breakout SyFy hit series Battlestar Galactica, was involved in the early development of the series, which took over one and a half years to re-conceptualize and bring to the small screen from its initial concept. “Keep in mind, the original draft [of the pilot] was very different,” Taylor says. “The Chief Lawkeeper role was prototyped as this older, wry Brian Dennehy-type of character, for example. Irathient warrior Irisa was more of a wide-eyed, naïve girl than she is in the current version. We even had about two to three episodes of the series done. But as we went along, we were finding it hard to keep thinking up episodes from week to week.” Which is when the series went back to the drawing boards.

And reimagine the series they did! Unlike the vast majority of sci-fi shows, which explore the process of warring factions integrating and co-existing, in Defiance, this has already occurred, something that Taylor calls a “cool experiment.” “The 30-year-war has already been fought, all that stuff is long in the past,” Taylor reminds us. “And now we are at the point where the 8 races are trying to co-exist together. …

As for integrating the video game concept, it predated the show by five years, which allowed writers to establish stories and character development that will happen separately from, albeit concurrently with, the action in Defiance onscreen. …

“We’ve seen time and time again small plot points that have become little tidbits, or plot points or even major points driving an episode when you get the science right,” Grazier notes. “Caring about the science [in a series plot] can be as much of a strength as it is a constraint.”

And while it’s true that the science of Defiance does seem a bit less obvious or upfront than in shows like BSG or Eureka, it’s no less important nor is it any less incorporated. “We have a really rich, really well thought-out backstory, and that is very much informed by the science,” Grazier says. “We know that the V-7 [Votan] races came from the Votan System. What happened to their system? Well, we have that [mapped out], we know that.” He also pointed to subtle implications such as in the first few minutes of the pilot. When Irisa looks up at the sleeper pods, she says, “All those hundreds of years in space just to die in your sleep.” Grazier notes: “The subtle implication is that the V-7 aliens don’t go FTL [faster than light]. So we have figured out where they’re from and how far away they’re from and which direction of the sky they’re from and how long it took to get here.”

In addition to its elemental role in the backstory, science has also also had fun ‘little’ moments in the show, like the importance of the terrasphere in defending the Volge attack in the pilot or the hell bugs (a genetic amalgam of several earth critters) in episode 3. Some of these small scientific details were even able to result in cool visual effects. For example, when the table of writers was discussing the ark falls, Grazier, an astrophysicist by training, noted that the conservation of angular momentum meant that these things would not land vertically, but rather horizontally, using the screaming overhead comets in Deep Impact as a touchstone. Sure enough, in the first few minutes, you see Nolan and Irisa tracking what’s about to be an ark fall and you see them screaming overhead. “That will, by the way, come into play in a later episode,” Grazier teases. “We know where the ark belt is. Where the ships were when they blew up, how far away they are.”

Sadly, I couldn’t find any details about Defiance’s nanotechnology aspects but both the articles I’ve excerpted feature intriguing science and insider information.

Webinar on television and film productions collaborating with scientists

David Bruggeman in an Aug. 26, 2012 posting on his Pasco Phronesis blog features information about a webinar being co-hosted by the National Academies of Sciences (through their Science and Entertainment Exchange initiative) and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS),

The Science and Entertainment Exchange, a National Academies program to facilitate connections between entertainment productions and scientists and engineers that could serve as advisers for those productions.  On Wednesday [Aug. 29, 2102], the Exchange is holding a webinar to discuss recent productions and how various films and television programs are trying to maximize entertainment value and the accuracy of scientific and technical information.

Here’s a little more about the webinar from the AAAS event page,

Summer is synonymous with Hollywood blockbusters and the popular genre for these films (more often that not) is science fiction. “The Dark Knight Rises,” “Prometheus,” and “The Amazing Spider-Man” are just three of this summer’s box office heavyweights, each offering over the top special effects meant to wow audiences. But how much of what we are seeing is actually scientifically possible?

… Hollywood’s approach towards science, and scientists, has started to change.

In this hour-long webinar we’ll look at some TV and film collaborations that are bringing scientists and Hollywood professionals together in an effort to create programming that is both entertaining and more scientifically accurate.

Guest Speakers:

Kevin Grazier
Science Advisor/Researcher
NASA

Kevin Grazier is a writer/producer and also currently the science advisor on TNT’s “Falling Skies,” Syfy’s upcoming epic “Defiance,” and next summer’s blockbuster “Gravity.”  He formerly served as science advisor on “Eureka,” the Peabody-award-winning “Battlestar Galactica,” “The Event,” and several other series.  Grazier is a recovering rocket scientist, and spent 15 years on the Cassini/Huygens Mission to Saturn and Titan. Still an active researcher, his research areas are numerical method development and long-term large-scale computer simulations of Solar System dynamics, evolution, and chaos.

David Kirby
Senior Lecturer in Science Communication
University of Manchester, UK

David Kirby is an evolutionary geneticist and senior lecturer in science communication studies at the University of Manchester, UK. He has explored the collaboration between scientists and the entertainment industry and has publications in Social Studies of Science and Public Understanding of Science on this topic. His book Lab Coats in Hollywood: Science, Scientists and Cinema demonstrates scientists’ impact on the culturally powerful medium of cinema and how these texts have subsequently affected real world science and technology.

Ann Merchant
Deputy Executive Director for Communications
National Academies of Sciences

Ann Merchant is currently the Deputy Executive Director for Communications at the National Academies of Sciences in Washington, D.C., where she is responsible for a number of innovative outreach programs that contribute to an increased public understanding of science. She was instrumental in launching the Science & Entertainment Exchange (“The Exchange”), a program of the National Academy of Sciences that seeks to connect entertainment industry professionals with top scientists and engineers. Merchant is also an adjunct professor at the College of Professional Studies at the George Washington University where she teaches marketing in the masters-level publishing program.

Moderator:

Adam Ruben
Writer/Comedian/Molecular Biologist
Sanaria Inc.

Adam Ruben is a writer, comedian, storyteller, and molecular biologist in Washington, D.C. Ruben currently works at Sanaria Inc., a biotech company in Rockville, Maryland, developing a vaccine for malaria. Ruben has performed stand-up comedy for over ten years at clubs, colleges, and private venues. A former freelance writer for National Lampoon, Ruben is the author of the humor book Surviving Your Stupid, Stupid Decision to Go to Grad School (Broadway Books, 2010) and the monthly column “Experimental Error” in Science Careers.  He has appeared on NPR’s “All Things Considered,” the Food Network’s “Food Detectives,” and the Science Channel’s “Head Rush,” and will soon co-host a new show on the Discovery Channel called “You Have Been Warned.”

You will have to register for the free one hour long webinar which starts 9 am PDT, 12pm [noon] EDT, 5 pmUK on Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2012.

I have written previously about the Science and Entertainment Exchange in my Sept. 6, 2011 posting about the organization’s appearance at the American Chemical Society’s Fall 2011 national meeting and in a May 7, 2010 posting about scientists and their portrayal in movies and other media.