On Mon, 23 Apr 2012 18:43:17 +0100, Jim G. <
jimg...@geemail.com> wrote:
> thinbluemime sent the following on 4/21/2012 11:28 AM:
>> If the Observers can time travel, and appear at major world events, do
>> you
>> think September was at Ground Zero on September 11, 2001?
>
> Dude. You seriously need to either get a life or drop the obsession. Or
> both.
>
It is useless to respond to personal attacks on usenet because to do so
usually devolves into a flame war. So instead of starting another useless
war, I decided to list some of JJ Abrams recent works, with an eye toward
the September 11, 2001 attacks and the influence of that event on his
vision of television pop culture.
------------------
Fringe is an American science fiction television series created by J. J.
Abrams, Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci.
Executive producer(s): J. J. Abrams, Bryan Burk, Alex Kurtzman, Roberto
Orci, J. H. Wyman, Jeff Pinkner
Fringe (2008–present) - The show repeatedly references the 9/11 attacks,
as well as depicts an alternate reality, in which the show explicitly
shows the event having been averted, at the cost of there being other
terrorist attacks in its place.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cultural_references_to_the_September_11_attacks#Television
----------------------
FRINGE Executive producer J. H. Wyman
@JWFRINGE what's your favorite book? :)
JOEL WYMAN @JWFRINGE
@pohtaytoes A Tale Of Two Cities.
7:11 PM - 18 Apr 12
http://twitter.com/#!/JWFRINGE/status/192676738373926912
----------------------
In anticipation of the third season of "Lost," ABC News Senior National
Correspondent Jake Tapper sat down with executive producers and writers
J.J. Abrams, Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse to talk about the show, the
mythologies, and its place in TV history.(1)
LOST Season 3 Episode 1 - Season Premiere (A Tale Of Two Cities):
http://gallery.lost-media.com/displayimage.php?pid=74560&fullsize=1
http://gallery.lost-media.com/displayimage.php?pid=74564&fullsize=1
http://gallery.lost-media.com/displayimage.php?pid=74598&fullsize=1
http://gallery.lost-media.com/displayimage.php?pid=74568&fullsize=1 <-
Juliet Burke arrived on the island in September 2001. She eventually fell
to her death and her body was retrieved from under a pile of construction
rubble
-----------------
Cloverfield is a 2008 American found-footage style action/horror film
produced by J. J. Abrams. Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times wrote that
the film is "pretty scary at times" and cites "unmistakable evocations of
9/11"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloverfield
-----------------
Person of Interest is an American television crime drama broadcasting on
CBS. It is based on a screenplay developed by J. J. Abrams and Jonathan
Nolan.
David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle said "Person of Interest
separates itself from the gimmick pack, not only because of superbly
nuanced characterization and writing but also because of how it engages a
post-9/11 sense of paranoia in its viewers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person_of_Interest_(TV_series)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person_of_interest#2001_anthrax_attacks
-----------------
(1)
http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/story?id=2553741&page=6#.T5VqFOV_6Sw
In anticipation of the third season of "Lost," ABC News Senior National
Correspondent Jake Tapper sat down with executive producers and writers
J.J. Abrams, Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse to talk about the show, the
mythologies, and its place in TV history.
LINDELOF: When we were first working on the pilot, the idea that it was
going to start with a plane crash and that all throughout the first 10 or
so episodes of the show there are just shattered pieces of the plane all
around -- people started to process that 9/11 metaphor without it being
intentional at all.
ABRAMS: These questions had come up. But it wasn't until we got to the set
the first day and saw this airplane -- we had taken an airplane and
shipped it to Hawaii and we'd built this set but it was a real plane --
that it was so depressing and it was so numbing to see this plane there.
It was a very interesting thing that that reality of not just a plane
crash but, you know, but 9/11 itself there -- it wasn't theoretical
anymore. I actually sort of felt it more that first day that I was on the
set than I had before.
LINDELOF: There was a scene in Season 1 where they've been getting
attacked by The Others and Locke comes out on the beach and he's saying,
"We've been attacked by these people, sabotaged by these people. We need
to stop worrying about attacking each other, and we have to start worrying
about them." And I remember watching that scene in dailies for the first
time and going, "Oh, wait a minute!" That was the first moment where from
the inside looking out I suddenly realized that -- it wasn't intentional
but at the same time very similar things were being said on Fox News.
And I thought that we were going to get now accused of doing the big
political statement. The whole idea of sort of al Qaeda -- the invisible
enemy, they hate us but we don't know why, but then when you look at
things from their point of view you begin to sort of look at things in an
entirely different way -- that parable started playing out on the show.