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Originally posted by mac_man:
**Sounds like a very cool plug (a needed change from the many fighting orientated plugs). Another possible idea, is that you are not the principal character in the storylines. For eg., in the Polaris string, you could be a reporter that had been assigned to follow Ory'hara's travels through the universe and make reports on them. Or, in the Rebel string it would be the same thing, you would hear about Ory'hara's travels and misns and have to report on them.
This would mean making entire new strings though which would be a lot of work, (of course the strings you would make would be based upon other strings, making it a little easier).
**
I also prefer this direction. As a history buff, what has always attracted me are the side stories; the individuals caught up in the chaos of war, the non-combatants, etc. I toyed for a while with the idea of writing a novel about a USO-type troup during some epic space war.
New missions strings are, at least, less work than creating a TC's worth of new graphics. Mission strings parreleling the original strings would be harder, but in my opinion the most amusing; I love the idea above of being a reporter trailing and at times hanging out with the Ory'hara. Or following the Vell-os thread through extra-careful sneaking -- a non-psychic in a world of hostile mind-readers. Messing around in the Aurora threads calls for a dare-devil reporter, like Hunter S. Thompson of Hell's Angels fame, or the archetypal "Papa" Hemingway.
In re the co-opting of the news;
As a news person reporting on a war you can accept the protection of one side and get easy access to their top leadership as well as timely press releases from the source. The trade-off is that you get a canned version of events, and you are escorted through Potempkin Villages and away from the hamlet of Mai Lai. If you strike out on your own to find the unvarnished truth you go into danger at the front and you face rancor at home ("How dare you make our troops look bad! Do you want your country to lose this war?") And, since the home office bows even more deeply than you to political pressures, you may lose your job.
The trade-off is organisational, too. CBS gets prime access to White House, "an unnamed source close to the...", pristine gun-camera footage, and so forth, but only so long as they play nice. The Boonville Times does not have this access, has a much smaller circulation, and can afford to pay their stringers much less. But they can cover stories CBS wouldn't touch with a ten-foot pole.
So if you are going to go deep into Polaris space to get their story, chances are UNN won't be footing the bill. You'll get out there with a little scout ship paid for out of your own pocket, and maybe a hundred credits advanced from National Geographic or something. But if you get that million-credit photo/vidcapture, you can write your own ticket home...
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"I know the stranger's name."
Turandot