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"Appearances and Other Deceits"


Overview

As a group of propaganda specialists visits the Excalibur to try
to improve its image, the crew comes across a derelict alien ship.


Production number: 113
Original air date: July 28, 1999

Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Directed by Stephen Furst



Plot Points

  • Mr. Welles (Babylon 5, "The Fall of Night") is still working as a propagandist for the Earth government.

  • Somewhere in the galaxy there exists a race of aliens who are able to pass their consciousness from one body to another by touch, effectively possessing the new host. They reproduce by subdividing as they spread, the old host retaining part of the alien presence and passing it on to the new. Rather than send their physical bodies out on risky space journeys to colonize other worlds, they sent out a series of probes, each imbued with a piece of the alien consciousness. As the probes are discovered, the aliens take over the worlds in question.



Unanswered Questions

  • Where is the mind-altering aliens' original homeworld?

  • How many other probes are drifting through space waiting to be discovered?

  • Where did the derelict spacecraft come from?



Analysis

  • Though it turned out to be correct, Max's line of thought about the alien writing missed an obvious possibility. He noted that the writing on the ship and the aliens' spoken language seemed to bear no relation to one another. The explanation could have been as simple as the ship being manufactured by one group of aliens and crewed by another; the crew might have bought or stolen the ship from someone else.

  • As the alien was being forced out the airlock, it tried to say to Gideon, "I know what you're looking for! I know where you can find it!" Was it referring to a cure for the Drakh plague? If so, did it in fact know of a cure, or was it just trying to tell whatever lie was necessary to save its life?



Notes

  • Director Stephen Furst played Vir in the original B5 series.

  • The costume changes in this episode are a result of a quirk in the series' production: After five episodes were filmed with the "new" costumes and set designs introduced in this episode, TNT increased the show's budget. This episode and the ones before it in the airing sequence were filmed after the budget increase. Had the series continued beyond 13 episodes, the 14th episode would have featured an "accident" in the laundry room that forced the crew back to their more expensive uniforms.



JMS Speaks

  • "It's obvious that the episodes filmed sixth through 13th were intended to air before the first five that were filmed. Why on Earth would you do that?"

    Let me ask you a really simple question:

    What makes you think it was my decision?

    TNT wanted the "new-look" episodes aired first. They wanted to push the first five back as far as possible. I initially figured we'd do 5-6 of the "new look" ones first, the minimum possible, then the first 5, then the new-look (black uniform) ones to the end.

    TNT *mandated* that the black-uniform ones would go first. It was not my choice. I have NO control over broadcast order.

    Not only did they want to hold them back, they were debating if they'd even allow us to FINISH post-production on the first five. It was a struggle to get them to let us finish 'em, and they were the last ones to go through post.

    Before you fire, it's always a good idea to know what the target is first.


  • "As Gideon was preparing Greenberg's body for Airlock 'n' Load, the alien within was pleading: 'Don't do this! I know what you're looking for!' Was this a reference to the Plague/Cure?"

    Yep. But since the body couldn't talk aloud, it couldn't communicate this effectively.