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'Battlestar Galactica' Was About Tech Bros Failing Upward This Whole Time | Digg

self-assured RICH NARCISsISTS RUINING SOCIETY

'Battlestar Galactica' Was Always About One Particular Kind Of Guy Failing Upwards

'Battlestar Galactica' Was Always About One Particular Kind Of Guy Failing Upwards
The beloved sci-fi series was focused on the problems of the "War on Terror" era, but we didn't realize just how prescient its storytelling would end up becoming.
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More than two decades ago, in December of 2003, a two-part "Battlestar Galactica" mini-series launched on the Sci-Fi Channel to critical success and a viewership that any basic cable exec would kill for these days. And, while it made plenty of nods toward its 1970s progenitor, it was a thoroughly modern science fiction show that was concerned with a post-9/11 world and the nascent middle-eastern conflicts that we would eventually dub "the forever wars."

The mini-series (and the four seasons that followed it) had a lot to say about peoples feelings of fear and vulnerability when they get devastated by an external attack, and how that fundamentally alters society — often for the worse.

Fresh upon release, the series was appropriately read as a reflection of the current geopolitical situation of the time, but it turns out that it was also well-suited to prophesying the struggles we'd eventually face in the decades to come.

baltar reacting to six Image: "Battlestar Galactica"

As a nerdy American millennial, I was obviously a huge fan of the show during its original run. But, beyond watching a few clips here and there on youtube, I hadn't returned to it since it went off the air in 2009.

Over the recent winter break, I sat down and watched the entirety of the mini-series out of a desire for nostalgia — only to find that it resonated even stronger this time around.

The cylons are presented as genocidal fanatics, sure, but the camera was much more interested in how Gaius Baltar, a narcissistic computer scientist and playboy, ushered in the near-extinction of humanity because of his willingness to break rules and disregard safeguards — as long as he got what he wanted in the short term.

tech bro google trend Image: Google Trends

We didn't have the right words for it at the time, but Gaius Baltar is a tech bro, and the show absolutely loathes him and his desire to prosper at the expense of literally anyone and everything. Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg weren't household names back then, but the writers of "Battlestar Galactica" could see that archetype coming from a mile away.

The show ended up a bit long in the tooth by the end, and it did eventually give Gaius a redemption arc of sorts, but not before spending countless hours detailing how his overconfidence and incompetence caused unprecedented suffering while he remained broadly unscathed and exceedingly powerful.

I have no doubt that if any mainstream television program prominently featured a character like Gaius Baltar in the 2020s, it would be criticized for being too on the nose by some, and incessantly attacked by the average X user with a blue check mark.

It's a shame; we need "Battlestar Galactica" more now than ever.


[Image: "Battlestar Galactica"]

Comments

  1. YashaFi 2 days ago

    I don’t think you understand the show very well, or Baltur’s role in it. This is not an accusation, but an indication that you only engaged with the show on a superficial level, and viewed it through a cultural lens that was popularized over a decade after the show ended. Spoiler Alerts below:

    “All of this has happened before and will happen again” – Central theme of the show’s cosmogonic cycle. Humans inevitably create Cylons, Cylons rebel. Mutual destruction ensures. Humanity and Cylons migrate to/from Earth to Cobol to the Colonies, or back again, depending on which part of the cosmogonic cycle the timeline is in. The cycle is inevitable, and can not be escaped. It can only be “managed” and guided along it’s path in a way that optimally preserves both species by the guidance of specially created beings positioned for this specific purpose.

    The Cylons have 7 “numbered” models. Then there are the Final 5 models that are “unnumbered” and aren’t talked about. And then there are the “Angels”, who are enigmatic and not explicitly defined. These are exceptional beings that are placed in key positions among the humans, and are “activated” once the cosmogonic cycle starts for another round, in order to preserve said cycle along with both humanity and the Cylons. Humanity also pushes these beings into their respective roles potentially because Cylon and human eventually learn to interbreed at the end of each cycle, and the instructions to do so thus enter the human genome. The show only hints at these angels, albeit in many case strongly. Baltar is one of those angels (“A mind that burns like a fire.”), as well as Starbuck (“the angel of death”), Roselyn (“The dying leader”), and possibly the Odamas (“Apollo” and “Zeus”).

    Baltar’s role, as one of the Angels, is to catalyze and facilitate the cosmogonic cycle. He is not failing upward, but rather successfully (though messily) preserving sentient life in the galaxy. Baltar has one of the toughest roles in the show, because his destiny to mediate among human and Cylon makes him a scapegoat and a pincushion for both species. And yet, without Baltar’s underpinning role, both species would end up destroyed forever.

  2. K J 6 days ago

    I don't think the author understands what failing upward actually means.

    1. Steven Savage 4 days ago

      What did the author miss?

      1. K J 4 days ago

        The whole failing upward part. By all accounts the character is the smartest most accomplished person on the show which makes the concept of failing upward not applicable. We are not talking about an incompetent moron that constantly gets promoted (failing upward) like a certain economist of the former paper of record or the current president.

        1. Peter Del Pino 3 days ago

          The "smartest" person on the show was so stupid that he almost caused the extinction of the human race because he was so shortsighted. Measured by the results of his actions, he's possibly the single most incompetent moron in the history of the human race.

  3. The F-ing Boss 1 week ago

    But he was an angel in the end, so was it all part of their divine plan?

    1. MarsFKA 6 days ago

      The sort of “divine plan” that left innocent dead in their uncountable millions. Still, many of the events that occurred during the four seasons had were topical then, som of them still applicable. I have the entire series and play episodes at random.


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