Amanda delivers healthy baby girl

Amanda Tapping has delivered her baby and posted this message to her fans at her official website:

Hello Everyone!!

I am thrilled to announce the birth of my daughter Olivia Born Tuesday March 22nd at 6:29pm. She is beautiful and healthy!

She weighed in at 9 lbs 4ozs and was 22 inches long. I am over the moon in love!

Thanks to all of you for your prayers and good wishes. Labour and delivery were amazing. With the help of an incredible support team I was able to deliver without any drugs or intervention.

I am deliriously happy.

Thank you for all of the support and love we have received from you.

With love,
Amanda, Alan and Olivia

Vist Amanda’s Official Website
Share your congratulations with other Solutions fans at the SG1Solutions Forum

RDA in seal hunt protest

RDA with Sea Shepherd founder Paul WatsonRichard Dean Anderson is about to get cuddly – with a baby harp seal. Anderson is still recovering from a broken ankle, but nothing could stop him joining the fight against the annual slaughter of baby seals in Nova Scotia, Canada. He is one of the directors of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society which works to protect marine wildlife, and yesterday (6th March 2005) he flew to the ice floes off the Gulf of St Lawrence where he will join an international volunteer crew on board Sea Shepherd ship the Farley Mowat to oppose the seal hunt. While on the ice, Anderson is expected to pose with baby harp seals to publicise their plight. He will then conduct press interviews before flying to Charlottetown for a press conference.

The Canadian commercial seal hunt is the largest mass slaughter of marine mammals in the world; this year alone Canada expects to kill over 325,000 seals in March and April. The seals killed are, on average, only 12 days old and the sealers kill them with clubs and hooks. Last year a poll showed that 71% of Canadians support either banning the hunt or limiting it to seals over one year of age. (National Post editorial quoted here.)

Solutions hope to bring you more news about Richard Dean Anderson’s involvement in this campaign as it happens, so please keep checking for headlines!

Disclaimer: The author of this article is a member of Sea Shepherd. You can find alternative views on the seal hunt at CBC’s news archives.

Canstruction SG-1, Atlantis, Andromeda charity auction!

LEGENDS MEMORABILIA LAUNCHES NEW SCI-FI AUCTION
FOR CANSTRUCTION® FOOD BANK CHARITY
Highlights include a private lunch with Amanda Tapping!

February 22, 2005 (Vancouver, B.C.): Legends Memorabilia Inc., the cast members of Stargate SG-1™, Stargate: Atlantis™ and Gene Roddenberry’s Andromeda™, plus MGM Television Entertainment Inc., Tribune Entertainment Company and Industrial Brand Creative, are spearheading a special charity auction to support the Canstruction® project help the food banks of Greater Vancouver.

Canstruction® Vancouver is an amazing design/build competition using canned food and other non-perishable items as building blocks. Now in its third year, the event brings together teams of designers, architects and builders to create extraordinary structures, which are exhibited to the public and then de-canstructed, with all food shipped to the local food banks of Greater Vancouver. To visit the Canstruction website, please click here.

In 2004, our team built a magnificent ‘movie theatre’ structure (called ‘The Cans Film Festival’) and which consisted of more than 10,000 cans of food. Click here to see photos and a time-lapse video of our canstruction. We are setting the same target for this year’s event and with your help we ‘can’ do it!

Our participation in this project is inspired by our desire to help those in need, and to help raise the funds for this cause; we are conducting a special Sci Fi Charity auction on eBay.com. This special sale features a wide range of unique ‘lots’ donated by our many supporters including Richard Dean Anderson, Amanda Tapping, Michael Shanks, Christopher Judge, Teryl Rothery, Paul McGillion and the Atlantis cast, Kevin Sorbo, Steve Bacic as well as the generous contributions from MGM and Tribune Entertainment.

A few of the highlights of this sale include:

A private lunch with Amanda Tapping at Don Francesco, one of Vancouver’s finest restaurants
• Rare and unique Richard Dean Anderson photo with 6 signatures (used to ‘practise’ his signature!)
• Framed piece of the Stargate, signed by Michael Shanks
• Cast signed Stargate: Atlantis tee shirt
• Stargate SG-1 DVD library case sleeves signed by all 4 main cast members
• Amanda Tapping signed flight suit jacket
• Stargate SG-1 script signed by all 4 main cast members plus Don Davis and Teryl Rothery
• Gillian Anderson bathrobe (gift from GA to the crew of The X-Files)
• David Duchovny ‘life mask’ bust
• Andromeda Force Lance
• Harper’s High Guard uniform from Andromeda (rare!)
• Assorted props and costumes from Stargate SG-1, Andromeda, The Outer Limits, Jeremiah.
• Various miscellaneous signed items

The auction is now open and closes on March 12th. 2005. We shall be adding more items every day over the next 10 days and to visit the auction site, click here.

We encourage you to visit the auction and get involved with helping us reach our goal of 10,000+ cans of food. It’s also your chance to get hold of some really memorable items from your favourite stars as well as feeling good about helping those in need!

For more information, please contact:

Paul Brown
President
Legends Memorabilia Inc.
paulbrown@legends-memorabilia.com

www.legends-memorabilia.com www.stargateprops.com
www.stargate-autographs.com www.andromedaprops.com

Star Anderson breaks his ankle

SOLUTIONS EXCLUSIVE: Stargate SG-1’s star Richard Dean Anderson has broken his ankle

After eight years of playing kick-ass Special Ops Colonel Jack O’Neill taking on all comers in Stargate SG-1, the equally athletic and sporty star Richard Dean Anderson has finally met his match in little daughter Wylie.

A play session for dad and daughter left dad with a broken ankle!

With all of the fights, acrobatics, aeronautics, alarums and excursions Anderson has had to go through in his role as O’Neill, being felled by playing with his little girl of all things has left the star laughing.

A devoted dad who helps out at his daughter’s school, Anderson has signalled his intention to retire from his active role in Stargate SG-1 in order to spend more time with Wylie at their home in Los Angeles.

The show’s producers and broadcaster SCI FI Channel still hope to negotiate with Anderson several appearances as Jack O’Neill in Season 9. O’Neill’s absence from the SGC will be explained by way of promotion as he’ll be taking over from General Hammond as the head of Homeworld Security.

If syndicating this story to your website, please credit Stargate SG-1 Solutions as the source and provide a link back to us. Thanks.

Stargate receives 4 Saturn nominations

Nominations for the 31st Annual Saturn Awards have been announced. Saturns are awarded by The Academy of Science Fiction Fantasy & Horror Films. Television nominations had “Lost” leading the group with five nominations. Following were “The Librarian: Quest For the Spear”, “Smallville”, and “Stargate: SG-1” each with four nominations.

Stargate SG-1 — nominated for “Best Syndicated/Cable Television Series”.

Richard Dean Anderson — nominated for “Best Actor in a Television Series”.

Michael Shanks — nominated for “Best Supporting Actor in a Television Series”.

Amanda Tapping — nominated for “Best Supporting Actress in a Television Series”.

Spin-off Stargate Atlantis has also received nominations: competition for “Best Syndicated/Cable Television Series”; and Torri Higginson for “Best Supporting Actress in a Television Series”.

View the complete 31st Saturn Awards Nominations

Fargate special: Browder speaks

“Fargate” special: Ben Browder speaks
Ben Browder wants to set the record straight.
Maureen Ryan, Chicago Tribune, 10th Feb 2005

[On watching all eight previous seasons of “Stargate SG-1” for the past few weeks] It’s not like it’s a burden, but it does take some time. Your family does end wanting to kill you. “But honey, the Tok’ra are in trouble!”

[On how he will pronounce the name of “SG-1” marquee enemy, the Goa’uld] Whatever Chris Judge [Teal’c] says is right. He knows. I mean, if you’re working for them, you must know what their name was, and he worked for them. Either that or I’ll just imitate Daniel Jackson [Michael Shanks’ character]. Or I’ll come up with a new pronunciation that will have nothing to do with anything that has come before.

[On meeting various “SG-1” people in advance of arriving in Vancouver] I’ve met a number of the writers and producers. Martin Wood, [executive producer] Brad Wright — Brad and I got on really well. I’ve met Joe Mallozzi and his writing partner [Paul Mullie], and I’ve met Michael Shanks.

[Whom you don’t look like at all] Yeah, he’s my secret brother [laughs]. We don’t look that much alike. That’s a myth. He’s six foot and built, and I’m 5 foot 3, 235 lbs and pasty.

[On whether “Stargate SG-1” and “Farscape” share a sense of humor] “Farscape was probably guilty of more irony that perhaps SG-1 is. I don’t know. They certainly have a sense of humor about it. We’ll see when I get up there how much of that was Richard Dean Anderson and how much is other people. You never really know, even after watching a show, because shows change, they evolve, they become different, that’s all due to the producers and where the story is going and the persons involved in telling the story. Season nine will probably be different from season eight and my only problem is that people will attribute that to me.

[On joining a show in its eighth season] It’ll be interesting for me to join a production going on for that extended period of time, to integrate into that environment. Everyone knows each other and knows the routine. Truthfully everyone up there knows what they’re doing and know their jobs, I’ll just be trying to figure out where the bathrooms are. In my first month or two I’m really just going to be learning names and where the bathrooms are and when’s lunch.

Probably a reasonable analogy is going to a new high school in senior year, it may be even more accurate to say, it’ll be like joining a high school football team senior year and trying to find your space.

[On contributing to the writing, as he did on “Farscape”] As far as stories and characters, that’s all someone else’s job. In a way, that’s kind of comforting. There are a lot of people there responsible for the show. My job is to do the best I can [bringing those stories to life]. Every time you get a job as an actor, you’re like “Great, I have a job!” Followed by, “Oh God, it’s gonna be my last job. I’m gonna be terrible.” I’m coming into a series that’s been successful for eight years — I’ve got to learn how they do things.

With “Farscape” it was an invitation to do [writing], I wouldn’t push to do that on “Stargate,” there’s way too much for me to learn before I figure out if I have anything to contribute or not. To presume that my job on the show is to write – it’s not my show. I may have watched the entire series, but I don’t know it the way that the people doing the show know it. It would be presumptuous of me to come in and say, “I want to write.”

[On working with Claudia Black in Season Nine of “SG-1”] They’ve shown a great degree of intelligence by hiring Claudia and bringing her in to do as much as they want her to do. Claudia is a great actress and it’ll be good for me to have a friend there. Is it weird for two actors from one show to be on another show [together]? Who knows. We’re gonna be playing different characters, and I’m not sure how big the [`SG-1’/ `Farscape’] crossover audience is. Most people won’t care past the first scene.

[On his new character] The truth is, I plan on doing everything exactly the same as John Crichton would [laughs]. No, the similarities [between Crichton and his new character] end fairly abruptly. I was talking with the producers, who were saying, “How does it feel to play another military character?” But John was an anti-military character, especially through the first year of “Farscape.” He was not in the military. He was a civilian pilot. Both characters fly planes, that’s about it [as far as similarities go].

Who the character is – that’s to be determined. I honestly don’t know what I’m going to do sometimes until I’ve done it. I have certain ideas, but my ideas are as likely to change as the wind. I haven’t met most of the cast face to face, I haven’t met the directors, there’s a lot for me to figure out.

[On comparisons between “Stargate” and “Farscape”] I know something about both series, they are sort of related. They were both on Sci Fi and they were in close proximity to each other for a period of time. I’m aware of the links but I’m also aware that they’re very different creatures. Fans of both will realize that. I’m an actor, I’m there to serve the story and the script and beyond that, what it means, well, I’m grateful to Sci Fi for allowing me to join another show on the network.

[On “Stargate’s” evolution] At a certain point, you have to keep swimming or die, you have to keep moving or die. Most shows, you look at great shows in TV, “Cheers” or “MASH,” any long-running shows, they have their transitions. “NYPD Blue,” too. The show itself, the story being told, is what’s important. You can change out cast members and the show will survive. Shows add characters, they lose characters, that’s the nature of a solid show.

Even in four years on “Farscape,” we lost characters and added characters. Whether the audience embraces that [on “Stargate”] or how they respond – there’s absolutely nothing I can do about that. Other than enjoy the experience and see where the thing goes and hope the producers feel that they made a good decision.

The great thing with introducing a new character is that he’s got no powers. He’s useless. That’s a great thing. He can’t sense when a symbiont is present. He doesn’t know anything about Ancient technology. He’s not a translator.

If nothing else, it’s going to be interesting. That’s a good thing. On the bright side, everyone can blame me if it doesn’t work out.

[A few random favorite episodes] “The Torment of Tantalus,” “Cold Lazarus” and “Heroes.”

Read the full article in Maureen Ryan’s column at the Chicago Tribune

Ask Matt – about Shanks!

Sci Fi Channel’s current promo for the new run of Stargate SG-1’s Season 8 episodes was filmed with only three of the principles: Richard Dean Anderson (Jack), Amanda Tapping (Carter) and Christopher Judge (Teal’c). Michael Shanks’ (Daniel) exclusion has upset a lot of fans, who’ve been led to believe his absence from the promo means he’s going to be absent from Season 9.

For the record, Shanks was overseas to attend a fan convention at which, ironically, he was standing in for the pregnant Amanda Tapping. Stargate’s fans are not happy the promo is airing without Sci Fi Channel having made the attempt to include the actor in scenes shot at a time when he was available for filming.

And now the fallout from this ill-advised promo has reached America’s TV Guide magazine. Hardly surprising when TV Guide’s Matt Roush was inaccurately touting Farscape’s Ben Browder as Stargate’s new leading man. In his latest “Ask Matt” column at TV Guide Online, Roush attempts to clarify…

TV Guide Online
Matt Roush: Ask Matt column
Monday 7th Feb 2005

Question:
Please tell me why Michael Shanks is leaving Stargate SG-1 and why Ben Browder is taking his place? Sci Fi channel has taken Daniel Jackson out of the Sci Fi Friday ads and you reported Ben Browder was going to be the new leading man. I’m very confused. I watch the show because I love Daniel Jackson, and Michael Shanks is such a good actor. What’s going on, please? — Carin T.

Matt:
Don’t know where you got this idea, but Michael Shanks isn’t going anywhere. Sci Fi confirms he’s signed for Stargate’s ninth season, regardless of his presence (or lack of) in the marketing these days. Ben Browder is coming aboard to add yet another appealing, hunky, humorous character to the mix. Sounds like a win-win to me.

TV Guide Online: Ask Matt column

Shape up or ship out

E!Online reports that “Star Trek: Enterprise” is going where no Star Trek series has gone before: into an early demise. It’s the first Star Trek spin-off that hasn’t had seven seasons on air.

UPN and Paramount announced Wednesday that Enterprise will be phased out in May after four underwhelming seasons. Arguably of even more significance was what was not announced: Another new Trek series.

If Paramount doesn’t come up with a Starfleet-staffed show for the fall, and there is no indication one is the offing, it’ll be the first time in a decade that an outgoing Trek series has not replaced by an incoming Trek series.

Couple that with the franchise’s space-docked big-screen program, and Star Trek, in the words of one Federation expert, “may have run its course.”

“We believe in the show creatively, but the ratings just weren’t there,” a UPN spokeswoman said Wednesday.

Reportedly ordered to shape up or ship out last spring, Enterprise is averaging 2.9 million viewers on Friday nights this season. Of late, the show has dipped so low–2.5 million for last week’s episode–that it’s being matched, sometimes even surpassed, in its time slot by Sci-Fi Channel’s Stargate SG-1.

Ironically, Enterprise’s Jolene Blalock has guest-starred on Stargate SG-1 as the leader of the Ha’ktyl warriors and Teal’c’s love interest Ishta.

This is good news for Stargate SG-1 fans, particularly with all the cast changes to come in Season 9, but we can all feel for the fans of Enterprise, losing their show.

E!Online An Enterprise Lost article

UK ratings update to 18 Jan 05

The official UK rating for “Citizen Joe” have been published.

Stargate SG-1 ratings
05/10: 0.94m viewers, placed 3rd (New Order Part 1)
12/10: 1.19m viewers, placed 2nd (New Order Part 2)
19/10: 1.00m viewers, placed 2nd (Lockdown)
26/10: 1.03m viewers, placed 3rd (Zero Hour)
02/11: 0.92m viewers, placed 2nd (Icon)
09/11: 0.88m viewers, placed 5th (Avatar)
16/11: 0.93m viewers, placed 4th (Affinity)
23/11: 0.89m viewers, placed 4th (Covenant)
30/11: 0.82m viewers, placed 5th (Sacrifices)
07/12: 0.80m viewers, placed 8th (End Game)
14/12: 0.80m viewers, placed 6th (Gemini)
21/12: 0.74m viewers, placed 3rd (Prometheus Unbound)
04/01: 0.68m viewers, placed 4th (It’s Good To Be King)
11/01: 0.79m viewers, placed 3rd (Full Alert)
18/01: 0.71m viewers, placed 5th (Citizen Joe)

Atlantis ratings
12/10: 1.28m viewers, placed 1st (Rising Part 1)
19/10: 0.99m viewers, placed 3rd (Rising Part 2)
26/10: 0.97m viewers, placed 4th (Hide and Seek)
02/11: 0.86m viewers, placed 4th (Thirty-Eight Minutes)
09/11: 0.76m viewers, placed 10th (Suspicion)
16/11: 0.86m viewers, placed 6th (Childhood’s End)
23/11: 0.73m viewers, placed 9th (Poisoning the Well)
30/11: less than 0.72m viewers, not in top 10 (Underground)
07/12: less than 0.78m viewers, not in top 10 (Home)
14/12: less than 0.76m viewers, not in top 10 (The Storm)
21/12: 0.71m viewers, placed 4th (The Eye)
04/01: 0.65m viewers, placed 5th (The Defiant One)
11/01: 0.72m viewers, placed 6th (Sanctuary)
18/01: less than 0.64m viewers, not in top 10 (Hot Zone)