
The best written series in any category, in my opinion, just ended its series run Sunday. Battlestar Galactica, the series, debuted in the United States in January of 2005. It was a remake of the 1978 and 1980 TV series of the same name which were based on Glen A Larsen’s science fiction novels about the war between humans and the machines they created called Cylons.

The latest version was totally restructured from the original and presented itself as a darker, more substantive plotline compared to the original. It actually leaped light years ahead of the original in the quality of writing in the show. It went beyond the science fiction.
It was masterful in its character building and its story arcs. The finale was one of the most satisfying series finales I have ever seen in my entire life. If the show were on a regular network channel, it would have had a larger audience and I am sure more recognition and accolades. It would have gone down as one of the great TV classics of this generation.

The Science Fiction Channel should be commended for airing a program that really played out the human condition and relevant humanity issues through this dramatic art form. BSG will forever hold its own as one of the great contributions that television has made to entertainment culture.
For those who never watched the series. Get it in DVD. Experience BSG.
Premise of the Show from Official Website: http://www.scifi.com/battlestar
The world ended with no warning, and all that was left … was hope.
The Cylons were created by the people of the Twelve Colonies. Intelligent robots, they were used as slaves and soldiers to fight humanity’s wars. But the Cylons became sentient and they rebelled. Man and machine fought to a bloody stalemate, then the Cylons withdrew to a remote region of space.
A truce between the Twelve Colonies and the Cylons lasted for 40 tense and silent years. Each year, on the anniversary of the treaty-signing, humanity sent an envoy to the neutral ground of Armistice Station to meet with a Cylon envoy. For 39 years, no Cylon envoy came.
Then, on the 40th anniversary, a stunning blonde — a Cylon in human form — met the human envoy … moments before the Cylons vaporized the station and launched a genocidal attack on the Twelve Colonies.
In one devastating day, billions of human lives were consumed by nuclear fires. Only those souls fortunate enough to be aboard starships were able to band together and escape and flee into deep space, led by the sole surviving Colonial warship, the battlestar Galactica.
The Galactica and its crew seemed to be unlikely saviors for humanity’s fewer than 50,000 desperate survivors. The ship was old and had been about to be decommissioned and turned into a museum when the Cylon attack occurred. In the aftermath its commanding officer, William Adama, found himself responsible for safeguarding the last remnants of the human race.
Meanwhile, the annihilation of the Colonial government on Caprica resulted in the succession of Laura Roslin, the Secretary of Education, to the presidency. Driven by prophetic visions and political necessity, she set the fleet upon a quest that will take it into the farthest reaches of unexplored space … in search of the mythical, lost “13th colony” — Earth.