Firefly

That's actually a load crap, Universal have not officially said anything still nor Joss Whedon. If you think about it if Universal were just pondering the idea they ain't gonna tell all the actors straight away and that article is just based on what Jewel Staite said. So their is still a chance so I wouldn't give up hopes just yet.

And I've known and so have BROWNCOATS known her about Jewel's Blog for nearly 2 weeks now and Alan Tudyk at a convention since then has still said that they (universal) might be thinking about it.
 
I've never watched Firefly, but I've heard some interesting things about it. The only thing I was wondering was since I like Babylon 5, Crusade (set in the B5 universe), and the original Star Trek, would I like this?
 
This is absolutely nothing like any of those shows. :oldrazz: Really it's a western set in space. There are no alien races or anything like that. Just good old guns n ****es n bounty n slugfests with great humor and characterization. The whole point of the show is that it's anti-Star Trek. The only Star Trek like characters are actually antagonists.

I'm sure you'd love it anyway. Very few people seem to NOT love it.
 
This is absolutely nothing like any of those shows. :oldrazz: Really it's a western set in space. There are no alien races or anything like that. Just good old guns n ****es n bounty n slugfests with great humor and characterization. The whole point of the show is that it's anti-Star Trek. The only Star Trek like characters are actually antagonists.

I'm sure you'd love it anyway. Very few people seem to NOT love it.

I agree. It's worth checking out at the least. It has so little bearing on what other shows/movies are like and it's definitely more like a western. My friend likes and she hates all things Sci-Fi including Star Wars.
 
This is absolutely nothing like any of those shows. :oldrazz: Really it's a western set in space. There are no alien races or anything like that. Just good old guns n ****es n bounty n slugfests with great humor and characterization. The whole point of the show is that it's anti-Star Trek. The only Star Trek like characters are actually antagonists.

I'm sure you'd love it anyway. Very few people seem to NOT love it.

I forget why I put Trek up there. The reason I put B5 up there was that it was a story-driven show.
 
I'd say more character driven than story-driven. You can pretty much come onboard like any time whatsoever and still enjoy it. It's pretty "story of the week" but the characters make it work. You can put them in the most ridiculous situations and it's still awesome.
 
I miss Firefly... :(
I want an ongoing comic.
 
Yeah, totally got a kick yesterday out of seeing this guy dressed as Jayne at the parade. He had the orange hat and everything. :woot:
 
Yeah, totally got a kick yesterday out of seeing this guy dressed as Jayne at the parade. He had the orange hat and everything. :woot:

Oh cool he had the hat awsome! lol.
 
Does anyone think that if the series continued for a longer time...they would eventually have some kind of alien menace? Or something introduced?
 
Yup. They'd probably make a big deal out of it too since this would be the first time any contact with aliens is made or even seen on the show. I think that's enough to force the outer planets to work with The Alliance.
 
Firefly would never introduce Aliens, Joss wanted to move away from monsters, demons, aliens, etc for Firefly plus it would ruin it.
 
Joss also said he'd never work with Fox again but LOOKATIMNOW!
 
Have you gauys been following this mass campaign to bring the show back after Nathan Fillion said that if he won the Lottery he would buy the firefly rights from Fox

Because of that, there is a large mobilization to make this come true

Internet-savvy 'Firefly' fans fly back into the fight


(CNN) -- True Browncoats, like the fictional freedom fighters they named themselves after, don't give up easily.
Those diehard fans of "Firefly," the 2002 cult TV hit, have a history of turning to the internet to buck improbable odds in defense of their favorite show.
Now, they're at it again.
Just days after an apparently offhand comment from Nathan Fillion, who played Capt. Malcolm Reynolds on the short-lived Fox series, the Web has once again lit up with efforts to revive the sci-fi franchise.
Last week, Fillion, who now stars in ABC's "Castle," told Entertainment Weekly he'd love to play Mal again. Then, he ratcheted things up a notch.
"If I got $300 million from the California Lottery, the first thing I would do is buy the rights to "Firefly," make it on my own, and distribute it on the internet," Fillion told EW, a CNN.com partner.
Then, some possibly surprising online reactions started rolling in.
The next day, former "Firefly" writer Jose Molina wrote on Twitter: "For what it's worth, I've told him I'd drop what I was doing and follow."
Then, Jane Espenson, who wrote an episode, chimed in: "I'm there, if needed," she tweeted.
Jewel Staite, who played ace mechanic Kaylee on the show, had a simple answer when a Twitter follower asked if she'd be on board: "Is the Pope Catholic?"
That was more than enough for fans (whose "Browncoat" nickname, by the way, comes from the Western-style dusters worn by Fillion and others on the show).
A website, "Help Nathan Buy Firefly," popped up, under the title "Let's get the Captain his money."
The goal? To set up a means of collecting pledges that would turn into donations if a revived "Firefly" looks like it could become a reality.
The pledge system hadn't been officially created as of Tuesday, but fans were already writing in the site's comment section that they're willing to pony up.
In five days, the site's Facebook group had picked up more than 33,000 members -- about 10,000 of them in the past 24 hours.
The two creators of the site are remaining publicly anonymous for now. In an email to CNN (which came from an address linked to the site and was mentioned on the group's Facebook page), they said they work in the nonprofit field but "have no credentials to speak of" in the TV/film industry or "Firefly" community.
They acknowledged that the odds that Fillion was serious about buying the show's rights are "pretty low," but hope the community's willingness to support some sort of revamped "Firefly" will encourage creator Joss Whedon or someone else with the proper clout to make a move.
"Joss paid out of pocket to make [Web series] 'Dr. Horrible,' and it's not only paid him back, it's paid the folks involved," they said in the email. "We'd like to see him be willing to let fans become his pocket and revisit ['Firefly']."
They say they "won't take a penny" from anyone until someone like Whedon or Fillion gets involved in an effort to revive the show and would look to set up a not-for-profit foundation or something of the sort if that happens.
Other devotees of the cult favorite say they're not surprised by the quick Web action.
"I couldn't believe it when I first read the story," said Brian Harvard, co-creator of the 25,000-member-strong "Bring Back Firefly" Facebook page. "Then, all of a sudden, everyone's posting these links to the 'Help Nathan Buy Firefly' page and I said, 'We've got to help get the word out about this.' "
Even before "Firefly" was officially sacked in 2002, fans had taken to the Web to try to save it. Using the online tools of the early 2000s -- message boards, fan sites, chat rooms and LiveJournal blogs -- they organized. Call it an early example of crowd-sourcing.
They collected money for an ad in Variety, organized a postcard-writing campaign to Universal Pictures and, when the DVD box set was released, raised $14,000 to put copies on 250 Navy ships for the crews to watch.
The fan base's self-styled guerrilla marketing is widely considered to have helped Whedon get funding for 2005's "Serenity," a feature film that draws together some of the loose ends from the series.
"On the internet, that was one of the first times you've seen such a drive to bring something back," Harvard said. "Now, with the advent of Facebook? My goodness -- that's probably the most useful tool, next to the internet itself, to really bring some fire under this movement."
Harvard acknowledges that Fillion's comment sounds like an off-the-cuff quip. (And 20th Century Fox, which owns the rights to "Firefly," hasn't expressed any desire to sell them.)
But he says that doesn't mean nothing will come out of the internet reaction to it.
"Even if this project goes nowhere, at least it's something to show the powers-that-be that there's a product there that could be making them some money," he said.
Fillion was talking about the series after the Science Channel announced they'd be airing reruns of the original series. The episodes, which begin airing at 8 p.m. March 6, will include segments with the network's Dr. Michio Kaku commentating on the science portrayed in the show.
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/TECH/we...nn_tech+(RSS:+Technology)&utm_content=Twitter

there's already a website: http://helpnathanbuyfirefly.com/ and a facebook page http://www.facebook.com/HelpNathanBuyFF?sk=info#!/HelpNathanBuyFF?sk=wall&filter=2
 
Sad thing is that if it ever did come back, it'd probably suck just like everything else thats ever been un-cancelled
 
The biggest problem is that Fillion is in a show that is going strong. A show that I love. I love Firefly more, but I don't want Castle canceled because of Firefly. Unless he brings Beckett into Firefly then I will have a total fangasm.
 
Was going through my Netflix instant streaming and noticed all Joss Wheedon shows were leaving Netflix April 1st 2011

So I got 1 more episode to watch then Serenity

So far River is my favorite, followed by Mal then Jayne

"no power in the 'verse can stop me"

Whaaaaat, River is NUTS!!!

That and her whole peeking her head back in the room Jayne lays paralyzed in after Simons "talk" with him

"by the way, I can kill you with my brain"

Epic

Can't wait to finish the series and movie
 
Well I watched episode 14 finally, did they KNOW that was their last episode? I love that it was River centric

Going to watch serenity tonight, hoping to get into some good convo's about it afterwards
 
Why are all of Joss's shows leaving Netflix.
 
Probably because the contracts are up and they haven't made a new one yet.
 

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