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== The correct number of episodes is 12. ==
== RfC: Should this article and the episode list article comply with MOS:TV ==


There are 12 episodes of Terra Nova. The first 2 hours were produced as one episode but of course are split in syndication to fit into an hour slot. The last 2 were shown back to back but separately produced. A 13-episode order is common and so you will see people associated with a show referring to "13 episodes" or "13 hours" for brevity, but a 2 hour episode is still just a single episode if it's produced that way. Amazon.com, itunes, and FOX all list it this way. I would like to change it to 12 but will wait for discussion before I do.] (]) 23:43, 15 September 2014 (UTC)
{{archive top|There's a request on WP:AN/RFC to close this as there have been no comments since June 1. I'm afraid I can't make head or tail of the responses. If the issue still needs to be decided, please reopen the RfC with a clear question, and ask respondents to support or oppose so that it's easier to see what people are saying. Sorry I can't be of more help. ] <small><sup>]</sup></small> 00:06, 25 June 2013 (UTC)}}


There are officially 12 episodes of Terra Nova. The first episode was 2 hours. The final two episodes aired on the same date back to back but were separate episodes. Amazon.com, itunes, the Library of Congress lists them this way. Other Misplaced Pages articles on shows with double-length episodes list hour long episodes as one episode (i.e., Seinfeld).
Should this article and ] comply with ], which states "articles should reflect the entire history of a series", or should it ignore the original airing of the series and list only the 13 episodes into which the series has been broken for subsequent arings and home media release? --] (]) 07:06, 28 May 2013 (UTC)


Production codes are for business use. All episodes of double-length of any series have 2 production codes. That way people get paid for two episodes (since a double-length episode is twice the work).
=== Background ===
When Terra Nova first aired, the premiere and finale aired as two, two-hour episodes, ''not'' 2 pairs of back to back episodes or 4 single episodes. This was supported by the Fox website at the time but that link is now "dead", (although it is archived at archive.org, which clearly shows the premiere and finale aired as one episode each) so the fact has been declared as "unverifiable" in the above discussion titled "]", despite the lengthy discussion at ] where the Fox website was referenced more than once. However, it is also supported by existing reproductions of the original press releases at thefutoncritic.com, which is widely regarded to be a ]. Those press releases quite clearly declare the premiere and finale to be single episodes: The first says "The "Genesis" two-hour series premiere '''episode''' of TERRA NOVA" and the second says "the all-new "Occupation/Resistance" '''episode''' of TERRA NOVA". (emphasis added) Use of "episode" in both releases instead of "episodes" indicates the premiere and finales were aired as single episodes, which they were, with no breaks between parts and only one set of credits. Transition between the parts of the episodes is so seamless that they appear to be one episode, not two. It was the decision of the discussion at ] that the episode list should appear in but the latest discussion has decided to completely overturn that decision and only list 13 episodes, with no mention of how the episodes originally aired. ] says "articles should reflect the entire history of a series" but this has been challenged as the statement appears in the "Cast information" section of the MOS. The response to a question about the applicability of the statement was "''(and you can send this message to those on Terra Nova's talk page), since I'm the original author and was here for all the adjustments with the other editors, when it was written originally we were talking about the entire article, but placed in the cast section because it just happened to be the place where we had the most issues of people wanting to remove cast members no longer on a series. Obviously, we can place it in a way that it's more clear that we're talking about the entire show/article, and not just one section.''" In order to comply with the MOS, both the original airing as 11 episodes, and subsequent breakdown into 13 episodes should be mentioned but the above discussion has resulted in complete censorship of mention of the original airing as 11 episodes.


I'm going to change the information to reflect the correct information, which is 12. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 23:58, 22 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
=== Further notes ===
:If you took the time to read the previous discussion, you may realize that those two episodes that originally aired as one episode, have two production codes and two writers and are billed as part one and part two. Also, those episides air seperatly in syndication. This was brought up in the last discussion and the agreement was to go by production codes. Unfortunately uour edit warring is going to get your up address blocked from editing. ] ] 00:16, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
* The following are mentioned because they need correction and I would rather not edit the articles until after the RfC, lest I be accused of edit warring (or worse):
# The reference now used at ] to justify listing 13 episodes is duplicated several times instead of being a reused reference, which is incorrect.
# The reference is used in the <code>EpisodeNumber</code> field, which is meant for a number only, not for references.
# The reference refers to a DVD breakdown for a foreign market, which is inconsistent given that all other content in the table refs to the original airing in the original market.
# In this article, the lead includes the following: "''concluded on December 19, 2011 with a two-hour, two-episode finale.''" - The source used only mentions one episode, not two. The editor who added this assumes that the use of two production codes means two episodes, which is ]. I did correct this, but it was reverted, despite the citation.
Comment on the above would be appreciated as part of this RfC. --] (]) 07:07, 28 May 2013 (UTC)


How the episodes air in syndication is irrelevant. The fact is there were 12 episodes. If it were decided to air them in syndication in half-hour blocks, would there now be 26 episodes? That wouldn't make any sense. The last 2-hour-long block was produced as two episodes. That's why it's 12 and not 11. Just check the sources. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 01:05, 23 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
===Comments===
*As it is a 13 episode series this should be reflected in the article. However, as 4 episodes were aired back to back in the states, this should be reflected in the broadcasting section. --<span style="border:2px solid black;margin-top:2px;bottom:2px;font- verdana;background:orange" > ] ]</span> 10:19, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::Episodes were not aired "back to back" in the traditional manner, ie as two separate episodes with the second immediately after the other. They were aired as single episodes with one set of credits each. This is supported by the Fox website (previously thought to be dead but now found to have been archived) and the press releases reproduced by the Futon Critic. --] (]) 13:01, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::The first episode was aired together with one opening and one closing credit. This episode has subsequently been divided into two episodes on the DVD and in the reliable sources. Yet each has its own writer and production code, which leads me to belive that they are two episodes regardless if they ran together without a break in credits. The last two episodes ran on the same night, but did not run together. Each episode had its own opening and closing credits. They are not a single episode, no matter how many times you say so.--] ]</font> 13:11, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::Do you have a reliable source that confirms they aired as you say, and not as the reliable sources say? --] (]) 13:20, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::The ratings (see below) show two episodes. The rel;iable sources confirm two episodes. And a personal question: Did you watch the episodes that night? They aired separately, If you were watching that night you would know that.--] ]</font> 13:38, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::What the ratings show does not override how Fox aired the episodes - that's just how the ratings were recorded. The DVR copy that I have on my TV right now shows that Occupation/Resistance aired as a single episode, just as Fox and the Futon Critic indicated was the case. The lengths are almost exact - Fox says 1:27:48, my recording says 1:27:47. At 1:27:18 The screen is displaying the editors for both Occupation and Resistance, at 1:27:38 the production codes are displayed for each part. Other than that, the credits don't differentiate between the two parts. At the beginning of the episode, at 05:37 is "'Occupation' Written By Bryan Maone & Barbara Marshall", 4 seconds later, at 05:41, is "'Resistance' Written By Terry Matalas & Travis Fickett", so that doesn't help your claim that they weren't aired as a single episode either. --] (]) 14:46, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::So I guess that does it. Your DVR must be a reliable source. So now I see what the problem is. Its POV, not Bias. Regardless of how your DVR recorded them in New South Wales, in the United States, the country of the shows origin, they aired separately and are therefore separate episodes.--] ]</font> 14:58, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::::I never said that my DVR was a reliable source. You're claiming that the episode aired as two episodes, but Fox and the press releases say it was aired as one. Even the ratings source used in the episode list refers to a single entity, ie the finale (8-10PM). The ratings link that you referred to doesn't refer to a single episode, it just breaks the ratings down into separate hours. Assuming that means two episodes is ]. The episode is a primary source and may be used to confirm that it was aired as a single episode and that's all I've done. You haven't shown a reliable source that confirms your claim that "Each episode had its own opening and closing credits", and the available sources can't confirm it either. No, the issue here is not POV, bias or mutant space goats. It's ]. --] (]) 15:16, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::::Fox aired those final two episodes separately in the US. Are you denying this? As far as a source, the best source found, so far, is the ratings. A plethora of other sources refer to the season has having 13 episodes so that should be a clincher, but you continue to hang on to your single source as some sort of trump card over all the other sources. Its not how this works. But I realize that your POV is slanted because they were broadcast in your country together and not separately as they were in the US. That doesn't mean however that the two episodes should be referred to as airing together, just because they aired that way on your TV. If you want to add that somewhere in the international broadcast section, if there is one, then by all means feel free, but this is an American television production and should reflect the American broadcast, not the foreign one.--] ]</font> 16:01, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::::::As much as you may argue that they aired separately, the sources don't support you. The DVR copy (which is from a US broadcast) seems to directly reflect what Fox and the Futon Critic say. You claim "a plethora of other sources refer to the season has having 13 episodes" but that is not in dispute. What is in dispute is how the episodes aired, and you haven't provided any sources. The ratings only break down the hours, not the episodes. I'm afraid you are continuing to make assumptions. There really is no point continuing this. As has been pointed out, the RfC is for outside editors, not those of us who participated in the other discussion. Please respect that. --] (]) 18:52, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::::::Obviously you're not assuming good faith. I am willing to concede that your DVR which recorded the telecast in New South Wales, recorded as one long episode, but you some how cannot concede that it aired in the United States as two separate episodes. That is basically calling me a liar. Its uncivil and unfair to me and all other editors who disagreed with you because they too saw the last two episodes air the same way as I did. I conceded that if you wish to add this to the "international" broadcast section, you are free to do so. Its trivial, but if it will end this long drawn out debate, please feel free to add it. Yet your assertion now is that the infobox should reflect the international broadcast and not the American one. Thats not going to happen. Its 13 episodes. Plenty of sources confirm 13. even the cast members say it was 13.--] ]</font> 19:16, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::::::Perhaps you should read what is written more thoroughly: "The DVR copy (which is from a US broadcast)" - It wasn't recorded in New south Wales. --] (]) 19:32, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::::::::And how are we to know that?--] ]</font> 19:59, 28 May 2013 (UTC)


*Agree with Mr. Shiney. A ''mention'' that the first 2 and last two were aired back to back is fine. By that, I mean a single sentence in the article. I does ''not'' belong in the infobox. As a side note, even though the author of MOSTV clarified that the "entire history" part is meant to apply to the whole MOS (and he admits it is written in a manner that does make it look like it applies to a section), ill contend it's being misused. "Entire history" doesn't mean every minute detail and despite all the hoopla and fussing about this, the fact that the first two episodes were shown together is trivial. ] (]) 11:23, 28 May 2013 (UTC) :The two-hour pilot for ''Fringe'' had only a single production code. Production codes don't necessarily mean whether it is a single episode or a double. In this case, two different production codes, as Jojhutton pointed out, combined with the fact that the episode has two sets of writing credits and were identified as being in two parts in the opening credits would seem to indicate that it is two episodes. On top of all of that, the DVD release identifies that the series contains thirteen episodes, which includes the double-length pilot. -- ] (]) 09:14, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
::The first episode had a single title (Genesis) and press releases advertised it as an episode, not episodes. It contained a single set of credits with no discernible transition between part 1 & part 2. It was only broken into separate episodes later. The episode as aired didn't mention parts in the opening credits. --] (]) 09:34, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
:::*Still 13 episodes in my view. Nothing has changed to make me see it otherwise. ] (]) 19:49, 23 September 2013 (UTC)


12 episodes were produced. The first was produced as a two-hour episode. It had two production codes because that is how dramas are produced. People get paid by the hour. If any video cameras were used in the production, the people working with that equipment would had 4 paycodes for the two-hour episode (because they normally work in sitcoms and their guild does insurance, etc. by the half-hour). Hence, the codes are meaningless. What matters is the end product. If two people worked on the pizza you ordered, would you call it two pizzas?
*If the episodes were broadcast together then they should be listed together in the episode table, as Neilsen rating would be based on the entire broadcast and too difficult to say that someone that came in during the last 10 minutes of the first hour and watched the last hour did anymore more than watch the last hour (yet the ratings will reflect otherwise). In other words, most shows do not maintain the same rating from one hour to the next, yet you're claiming on the episode table that both hours got the same rating. That's inaccurate, especially when the source you're using is saying that during the entire broadcast it averaged 7.24 million viewers. To be true to your own source, you need to keep it as a single entry on the episode table. As was done with ], which was 2 episodes merged together (as well as ]), the info is set as 2 episodes, but the plot is presented as one cohesive story. This is better for reading and also more accurate to how it was released. You should then indicate that it is two episodes, and on the DVD was broken up into two separate entries. That is a reflection of the history of the series, yet still satisfies both (as the episode count can still be 13). ] ] 12:25, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
{{ec}}::*Neilsen will often break the ratings into two parts, hour 1 and hour 2. Just like you see done here with NBA games or that is done every week by WWE wrestling . And which sources are we talking about being true to?] (]) 12:34, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::The source that you have on the LoE page for the ratings for the episode. You have 7.24 listed for both, yet the source lists one broadcast, indicating that it was a 2 hour broadcast. It doesn't break them up. ] ] 12:52, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::*This source does break them into two parts and lists the same rating for both. May or may not be correct, but it still lists the same number for both. Thsi source shows different numbers .] (]) 13:13, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::That isn't the source on the LoE page, and that number is also not the number in the source on the LoE page. So, you guys can figure out which you want to use, but I can tell you that there is no way it is the same figure for both hours, as I've never seen a show keep the same figure in both hours. They either go up or they go down. I cannot think of the last time they stayed the same outside of the fact that someone didn't have a true breakdown of the hours and listed one figure for each individual hour (which is probably what happened on that page, and why the other source only lists one figure for a 2 hour broadcast). ] ] 13:20, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::*It's not the same source? Really? Obviously it isn't the source used there. I offered them up as possible alternatives. I figured that was obvious enough and didn't think you'd need it explained. ] (]) 13:28, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::Well its possible that they had the same numbers. Its not out of the realm of possibility, nor is there any proof that these are the same number used twice. As far as the source is concerned, they are separate ratings that are simply the same number, not duplicated numbers.--] ]</font> 13:25, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::Wow, who'd have thunk that coming to a debate to provide a second opinion would lead to ] from others? Niteshift, I think you're being a little rude in your comment to me. The "realm of possibility" Jojhutton is based on the evidence. If you look at any other show that spans multiple hours you'll clearly see that the ratings change. The point is, it was presented as one cohesive episode upon broadcast, and it should be presented as such in the episode table. That is the history of the broadcast, and it should be reflected as such. The DVD does nothing more than indicate that we should show that the episode has two titles, two production codes, two sets of creative teams, etc. Again, ''Smallville'' had this same issue in season 9 and season 10. It works better when written as one cohesive story (that removes those poorly worded--"In the first hour...."--starts. It is better for readers to when reviewing the plot, and again it's reflective of the history of the show. It was presented as 1 episode, and that is how it should be presented in the LoE table. ] ] 16:02, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::*Um, when you start off by talking down to me by stating the glaringly obvious like I didn't know it, it sets a tone. Why would you feel the need to tell me that isn't the source being used? Of course it isn't. Who ''can't'' see that? Did you ever think that "informing" me of something that obvious can come off as sounding sarcastic? Regardless, they were separate episodes. That they were aired back to back can be noted in the article, but that does not change the number of episodes. ] (]) 16:11, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::*(ec) So since you have never seen two episodes run back to back have the same ratings, it is impossible? Hardly scientific and not reliable enough to say that the ratings are separate figures that happen to be the same number.--] ]</font> 16:14, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
{{od}} Niteshift, I think you're making an assumption regarding my intentions or my "tone", if you will. I wasn't talking down to you, I was merely stating that they are different sources with different figures and the one on the page being used does not have 2 timeslots being represented. It has a single timeslot. I didn't realize that you would be that sensitive to my comment. I apologize if I offended you. As for their airing, they were more than just aired back to back, they were aired seamlessly. We are not talking about a show that literally airs back to back episodes with two separate credits. It was a single broadcast, with a single set of credits. By separating them, you're implying that they aired separately, when they did not. Yes, they are two separate episodes, but they were merged into a single broadcast, and that is how it should be represented on the page. You should not ] because the DVD separates them. That goes against representing the page from a historic viewpoint. You wouldn't change the events in the plot section of one film just because a second film retcons those events. You represent what happened at the time, and what happened at the time would be two episodes being merged into a single entry with a single broadcast. ] ] 19:18, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
==== Arbitrary break ====
:"Genesis" aired as one long episode, although its been split on the DVD, but not on iTunes. Yet it has two production codes and two writers. But its incorrect to say that "Occupation" and "Resistance" aired without a break. Each aired with its own opening and closing credits and each has its own production code and writer. Thats why they are referred to as episodes 12 and 13. Thats also why the producers and cast members say the show has 13 episodes. Thats also why the sources say that Fox ordered 13 episodes. Its because there are 13 episodes.--] ]</font> 19:32, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::Nobody is denying that there are 13 episodes now. I don't know why you're still on about this. It's how they originally aired that is the issue. --] (]) 19:35, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::I don't recall the finale having two sepate intros, but if that's the case then I would side with that being broken up, as it was treated as two separate episodes that happened to air on the same day. But, Genesis should be put together because it was aired as a single entry. Yes, there are two sets of creative teams, and I again I point to ''Smallville''. Story-wise, it's more cohesive to write it as a single entry, which was how it was broadcast then to try and split it up when it wasn't set that way originally. There is nothing wrong with having "1/2" under Episode count, and a note explaining that these were 2 episodes that were merged into a single broadcast. ] ] 20:02, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::I think the reason that you don't remember two separate intros for the finale is because Jojhutton is mistaken. As I've said above, the US copy of the finale that I have shows it as one episode, it even matches the time that Fox says it should be (it's dfferent by 1 second but that's neither here nor there) and Fox says it's one episode. I don't have any problems accepting the Fox and Futon Crtic sources. --] (]) 20:44, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::I'm not mistaken, it aired as two episodes. I remember very well. And after a bit more research, it seems that the Futon Critic is a foreign, meaning non American website, which means that it most likely is stating the overseas broadcast order and not the American one.--] ]</font> 20:50, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::Clutching at straws are we? The Futon Critic is widely used as a reference for US TV shows (1,309 uses as of right now) and the press releases that it reproduces are straight from US studios. As I've already said more than once, you can google the text of the press releases and find them on multiple US sites. I'm sorry, but you do appear to be mistaken. Bignole doesn't remember separate credits, I don't remember separate credits, Fox says the finale is 1:27:48 long and the US DVR copy that I have is the same length. It doesn't show separate credits and I've given you time codes for the various elements. All the evidence points to a single episode finale except for your memory. --] (]) 04:44, 29 May 2013 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' RFC's should written neutrally. This is written so badly and with so much bias, it makes my head spin just looking at it. How does the writer of this RFC expect to get unbiased participation in the RFC? I'll tell you, he doesn't. He wants to get his way. This has already been discussed at length. This is just another attempt at ] by and obviously ] editor who just doesn't seem to ].--] ]</font> 12:44, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:*Agreed that this was not neutral and smells like forum shopping. ] (]) 13:08, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::As I've pointed out below, that is the question that needs to be addressed so it's the question that needs to be asked. I'll remind you too you that you had an opportunity to participate in the DRN discussion, which you refused to do so, even after being warned that an RfC was a possibility. The purpose of an RfC is to obtain comment from outside editors, not to continue the previous discussion with the same editors. --] (]) 13:13, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::*You need not remind me of your trip to DRN. I clearly knew it was there and saw no reason for it. As for your "warning" (love that choice of wording), nobody is shocked at your refusal to accept consensus. ] (]) 13:24, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::The RfC question was asked neutrally. There is no bias; the separate "background" and "further notes" sections provide RfC participants with ''sourced'' background information about how the series was aired originally and how it is presented now, so that they may make an informed decision. --] (]) 12:51, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::You don't even see it do you? Asking ''or should it ignore the original airing of the series and list only the 13 episodes'', is biased because you are stating in the RFC that it is a fact that the article is ignoring MOSTV. Its not. Its just your bias that thinks it is.--] ]</font> 12:56, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::::No, I don't see how it is biased, since that is the question that needs to be addressed. May I remind you that you had an opportunity to participate in the DRN discussion, which you refused to do so, even after being warned that an RfC was a possibility? Please do not continue to make allegations against another editor, this is not the place for it. The purpose of an RfC is to obtain comment from outside editors, not to continue the previous discussion with the same editors. --] (]) 13:07, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::Its all the same, its simple forum shopping. You are going to do this until you get the decision you want.--] ]</font> 13:16, 28 May 2013 (UTC)


The last two episodes were produced as two separate episodes. FOX decided to join them later. The only edit is pretty much to just show only one set of opening/closing titles. There is no producer input because they've all ready prepared for the possibility. Hence, the canon versions of these episodes are as separate episodes, which should be pretty obvious given their separate titles.
{{od}} Regardless of the neutrality of the RfC. It comes down to two things when simplified like this. I would also like to stress that RfC is for new editors and not old editors spouting the same old tedious stuff. Also, you had the opportunity to try and resolve this with the DNR, but you refused to take part. --<span style="border:2px solid black;margin-top:2px;bottom:2px;font- verdana;background:orange" > ] ]</span> 13:36, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
*If the old editor the started this gets to spout his same old tedious stuff, why should others be excluded? ] (]) 16:14, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
**I agree that this is suppose to be a forum for new editors, but the biased diatribe by AussieLegend demanded a response because it wasn't written from a neutral point of view.--] ]</font> 18:37, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
'''Question:''' Why does how they were aired (ie together or back to back) change the number of episodes? There are 13 epsidoes, with 13 names, 13 production codes. Airing times aside, can we at least agree on that simple, basic fact? ] (]) 11:23, 29 May 2013 (UTC)
*This question has been answered several times. The premiere and finale were aired as single episodes, per the reliable sources that have been presented, including the Fox website (that you argued was dead and therefore no longer verifiable, which is not the case since it has been archived), so the series was aired as 11 episodes, not 13. You know, we did discuss this way back when the series aired, in a discussion you started. --] (]) 11:35, 29 May 2013 (UTC)
:*Let me try this one more time. I am '''NOT''' asking about '''AIRING'''. I asked if we agree that there were 13 episodes produced. That is the simple question. Can you please stop your endless soapboxing for one freakin minute and answer what I actually asked? ] (]) 11:41, 29 May 2013 (UTC)
::*I suggest you read what you actually asked: "Why does how they were '''aired''' (ie together or back to back) change the number of episodes?" Airing was an integral part of your question. How they aired shows that they aired as 11 episodes. That's part of the series' history. --] (]) 19:44, 29 May 2013 (UTC)
::::*If I eat 2 sandwiches at one sitting or one sandwich at each of two sittings, how many sandwiches did I eat? I didn't ask how many sittings there were, I asked how many sandwiches there were. Get it? How many episodes were there. That is the freakin question. Can you answer that single, simple question with a single number? ] (]) 20:30, 29 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::*The answer to your question is there are now 13 episodes that were originally aired as 11 episodes. You see, it depends on the definition of an episode. According to ], an episode is "an installment of a drama told in parts, as in a TV series" so Genesis is an episode, as is Occupation/Resistance. To most of us, an installement of a TV series, with one set of opening credits and one set of closing credits is an episode. That's probably why Fox refers to them as individual episodes. What is your definition of an episode? --] (]) 12:25, 30 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::*I knew you couldn't answer it with a simple answer. I didn't ask about airings. I made it very clear that I wasn't asking about airings. I didn't ask for your ] of the definition of "episode". But you're so wrapped up in your battlefield mentality that you can't even answer a simple question. Talking to you is pointless. ] (]) 13:07, 30 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::*You can't ask "Why does how they were aired" and then say you aren't interested in airings because how the episodes aired is an integral part of your question. If you aren't interested, then you have to ask a different question. And please, stop aggressively indenting. You only need to indent one level, not four. --] (]) 10:44, 1 June 2013 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}


Any series that has double-length episodes will have those episodes prepared in advance for syndication and the need to have double-length episodes air as two parts. That's why the DVD's are released that way. The people who put out the DVD often have nothing to do with the production. Often, shows are released with syndicated versions of a show by mistake simply because no one who knew or cared had anything to do with the DVD release.
== Merger proposal ==


So the answer is there are 12 episodes. That's the official number. That's what belongs in an encyclopedia. Calling the first episode two episodes is a obsessive-compulsive desire to have everything fit into a nice chart (with one production code, set of writers, etc.) at the expense of accuracy. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 01:14, 25 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
13 episodes of '']'' is 13 episodes. Why is arguing about how to edit the episode list worth everybody's time? Since it is cancelled, like ], merging the list into the main won't hurt, even when the main article is big. <small>'''Relisted'''. --] (]) 17:02, 1 July 2013 (UTC)</small> --] (]) 19:26, 28 May 2013 (UTC)


:We have an interesting situation here. We had a long-standing consensus that the episode list should show the episodes as aired, that is as 11 episodes. Then we had three editors who decided to overturn that consensus and insist there were 13 episodes. Uninvolved editors at the RfC indicated that if the episodes aired as single episodes then that should be mentioned, but that has been ignored. Now we have another editor who claims 12 episodes, and has introduced sources to prove it. This demonstrates that the 3-editor consensus from May is not strong at all, so this really needs further discussion. I know that certain people don't want to discuss it, as evidenced by the refusal to participate in the DRN discussion, but there really is no way around it. --] (]) 13:17, 27 September 2013 (UTC)
:I can't work out if this is a serious proposal or a joke...? --<span style="border:2px solid black;margin-top:2px;bottom:2px;font- verdana;background:orange" > ] ]</span> 19:34, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
::*The "long standing consensus" is gone. I was part of it. Aside from you, who has expressed support for that defunct consensus? As for your RfC, you don't win by default. We all ignored it because you had nothing new to say. Just hearing you say the same thing over and over wasn't going to change anything. In short, that RfC was pointless and it serves as NO indicator or anything other than a lack of interest in duplicating this discussion. ] (]) 22:46, 27 September 2013 (UTC)
::*At least he has the number of episodes correct. ] (]) 20:31, 29 May 2013 (UTC)
:::*I agree that there is very little new information being presented by the ip or by AussieLegend. The fact that there are 13 production codes, 13 writer credits, 13 episodes on the DVD, 13 episodes in syndication, and 13 episodes on Netflix are what I believe motivated the change last May. Nobody argues that the first episode aired as a single entity, but that is not the only factor that was considered. I believe that the stronger argument was for 13 over 12 or even 11, and having AussieLegend or even a new anon ip come here regurgitating the same old tired argument, isn't going to change anyones mind. Unless there is some new information that hasn't been discussed before, there is no point in continuing to go though this again and again.--] ] 00:53, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
::::*The IP has presented exactly the same type of evidence that you used to overturn the original consensus. He even presented a source to demonstrate that there are 12 episodes. It wasn't just me who commented at the RfC, there were others and their posts demonstrated that your three-editor consensus is not really a consensus at all. That somebody has come along only three months after the last discussion clearly demonstrates that we're going to have to discuss it whether you like it or not. We need to look at the suggestions from the RfC and incorporate them in order to stop this happening again and again. There is evidence that that the series aired originally as both 11 & 12 episodes in the USA but has since been split into 13 episodes - All of that needs to be incorporated, whether you like it or not. If you ignore it, then you're not acting responsibly or encyclopaedically. --] (]) 04:07, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
:::::*By all means, mention that episodes 1/2 and 12/13 aired together, but, since May when this last came to light, there has been no new evidence to suggest that the episode count is any different that what it is now, 13. ] (]) 09:24, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
::::::*The "consensus" at the previous discussion was to ignore how they aired the articles were edited accordingly. It's not true that no new evidence has been presented. The IP added to ], which lists 12 episodes, not 13, but it was reverted. That source is a US source, not the UK source currently used in the article. When dealing with US TV programs, US sources have more weight than foreign sources when it comes to issues such as the number of episodes. --] (]) 11:52, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
:::::::*AussieLegend, why, in may, did you seem adamant that 11 was the nimber of episodes and the only possibility, when now it seems that you are quite happy for it to be 12? ] (]) 17:03, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
::::::::*@AussieLegend. The reason why nobody wants to constantly take part in your umpteenth attempt at trying to overturn consensus is because there is nothing new being brought to the table. The Amazon.com link is still the same old tired argument. The Amazon link is invalid anyway because it's just the POV of some random seller and not a reliable source. The original consensus to consider the number 11, last year was formed because most people decided to go with the number of air dates decided by Fox, and not by production codes decided by producers. But last May new information was presented that changed consensus to 13. Those include the DVD release with 13 episodes written directly on the cover, the syndication of 13 episodes, and Netflix airing the show as 13 episodes. Even an editor who agreed with you last year, changed his mind when the new information was presented. You can't stand in a corner by yourself and continue to scream at the rest of the room that they are wrong and you alone are right. Now an anon ip comes along and wants to go against the consensus and you seem to see that as an opportunity to open up the same old argument that was considered, but dismissed last May. ] ] 20:09, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
:::::::::*"''why, in may, did you seem adamant that 11 was the nimber of episodes and the only possibility, when now it seems that you are quite happy for it to be 12?''" - The US copy of the final episode that I have shows the finale aired as a single episode, with one set of credits, as I've previously stated. Even the press release referred to it as a single episode. The IP has now provided evidence that it's being treated as 12 episodes so I'm willing to compromise, provided that we still mention how the episodes originally aired.
:::::::::*"''your umpteenth attempt at trying to overturn consensus''" - There is no valid consensus. The agreement that you three came to, to completely ignore the way that the episodes were originally aired was a weak consensus at best. the comments by uninvolved editors at the RFC, e.g. "as 4 episodes were aired back to back in the states, this should be reflected in the broadcasting section" and "If the episodes were broadcast together then they should be listed together in the episode table" weakens that to the point where it's clearly not a consensus.
:::::::::*"''The Amazon.com link is still the same old tired argument. The Amazon link is invalid anyway because it's just the POV of some random seller''" - An Amazon link is being used in the episode list as "proof" of 13 episodes. Using your own argument, that link is invalid.
:::::::::*"''But last May new information was presented that changed consensus to 13''" - There was no new evidence presented. The notion of 13 episodes was discussed when the episodes aired, and disregarded because we list episodes a they aired, not as they are later broken down for distribution on other media.
:::::::::*"''You can't stand in a corner by yourself''" - Clearly I'm not. There's an IP who disagrees with you and the opinions of outside editors at the RfC have to be considered.
:::::::::*"''Now an anon ip comes along and wants to go against the consensus''" - Normally, I'd reply with ] but there never really was a valid consensus in May, as I've explained above. --] (]) 12:11, 29 September 2013 (UTC)


== "nonsensical" to remove trivia from the overview section of an article ==
:An RfC for this seems a little premature considering there has been no previous discussion about merging the two articles. It's a totally different subject to what we've been discussing above, so I don't see what it's an alternative to. In any case, I'd have to oppose any such merge until we get the above RfC out of the way. --] (]) 00:19, 1 June 2013 (UTC)


===Subject===
*'''Neutral'''. This is the second or third time that rfcbot has tried to induce me to comment on this article. I agree with Mister Shiney. It seems impossible to tell if these proposals are some kind of postmodern satire on Misplaced Pages drama or if they're serious. ] (]) 19:50, 12 July 2013 (UTC)


The following EDIT:
*'''Neutral'''. I also cannot tell if this is serious or a joke. ] (]) 21:28, 21 July 2013 (UTC)
*'''Not a good RFC'''. This seems like a misuse of the RFC tag to forum shop. <span style="font-family:Bradley Hand ITC;">]]</span> 17:22, 23 July 2013 (UTC)


<pre>
== Merger proposal 2 ==
It premiered on September 26, 2011 with a two-hour premiere,
and concluded on December 19, 2011 with a two-hour,
two-episode finale.
</pre>


was "improved" into:
{{archive top|No consensus to merge. ]&nbsp;(]) 03:16, 6 September 2013 (UTC)}}
Seems to me that the prior proposal did not make sense to you. I hope I've done better here than above; here goes. ''Terra Nova'' lasted only one season, and I don't see why the episode list must be stand-alone, like ]. Merging list into parent article could make the article longer, but I would rather have a longer article than a poor-quality list. To make matters complicated, ] about formatting both parent and list articles without considering merger. Like ], ''Terra Nova'' lasted only 13 episodes. --] (]) 06:59, 4 August 2013 (UTC)
*'''Agreed'''. Put the list into the article, it's just 13 episodes, it's not a very long list. Since it was cancelled it wont need to be udpated anyway. Doesnt hurt anybody to put it in. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— comment added by ] (]) 11:16, 11 August 2013 (UTC)</span>


<pre>
* This is an inappropriate use of the RfC process. RfCs are part of dispute resolution, used when prior discussion has failed to arrive at a suitable resolution, but the merge proposal has never been discussed. Instead, RfC was used as the first method of discussion. The subsequent poorly attended RfC expired, but was almost immediately relisted. That discussion also expired, and has now been relisted again. If there was a serious attempt at discussing this, instead of jumping straight to RfC for a third time, there might be a better response. --] (]) 07:57, 15 August 2013 (UTC)
It aired one season from September 26 to December 19, 2011.
** Removed RFC tag. --] (]) 15:36, 15 August 2013 (UTC)
</pre>
*'''Oppose''' some points are well received, but there is no real harm in keeping the list separate.--] ]</font> 23:15, 20 August 2013 (UTC)
:* If we leave the list separate from parent articles of one-season programs, then we may encourage editors to do the same, and we would worsen parent articles' qualities. --] (]) 23:19, 20 August 2013 (UTC)
::*There is a lot of information in that parent article. Unless there were separate articles for each episode, a separate article that can list specific plot information from each of this episodes is appropriate, even if for only one season. I don't see any evidence that the parent article will suffer.--] ]</font> 00:15, 21 August 2013 (UTC)
:::* Maybe plot summaries could be skimmed down by removing trivial info. Well, I don't see why we must separate episode list from ] again; people favored merger there. --] (]) 03:41, 21 August 2013 (UTC)
* '''Oppose''' - I was neutral on this, as it doesn't really matter whether the episode list is here or at its current location. Convention is to place episode lists at "List of <foo> episodes", so we would keep the redirect for readers who might search there. We need to anyway, as we need to maintain the edit history of the episode list in order to provide attribution. For these reasons, I don't see justification in moving the episode list here. --] (]) 04:51, 24 August 2013 (UTC)
* '''Oppose''': ] suggest an article be of "readable prose" length, up to 50k bytes in length. If you add the episode list in with the main article, we're talking 72k bytes in size, based on what is contained in the Episodes table itself. There could be some overall trimwork to get this number down, but some things will suffer for it. Leave it as is. —''']]''' 13:01, 27 August 2013 (UTC)
::While I respect your right to oppose, you seem to misunderstand what constitutes readable prose. "]" is "all viewable text in the main sections only, not including any viewable text in a table or a list, and not including any footer sections" and it is not the same as the file size of the article. This article is 47.5kB but contains only 17kB of readable prose. Strictly speaking, episode summaries are not classed as readable prose because they are contained in the episode table. However, using a very loose interpretation of the definition of readable prose, the amount of readable prose in the episode article is 15.4kB, while the article's file size is 28.6kB. This gives a combined total of 32.4kB of readable prose, not 72kB. Not also that ] provides guidance on when to split an article, it does not concern itself with combining articles. --] (]) 15:40, 27 August 2013 (UTC)
'''*Support'''. Even if it goes a little long (which I don't think it will), the series is cancelled, so it won't really be growing. ] (]) 15:54, 27 August 2013 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}


with the following reason being given for the change:
== Ip is changing the number of episodes and ordering at List of Terra Nova Episodes. ==


<pre>
Consensus was to have the episodes as 13, but an ip is changing it to 12 at ] and will not discuss the issue. I want to report the ip, but thought I'd try here first. ] ]</font> 22:08, 22 September 2013 (UTC)
one, two, 10 seasons this is relevant, NOBODY asks
:Comments by outside editors in the RfC were that the first episode should be listed as a single episode. There is no valid consensus to list them as 13. I can see the IP's point that they should be listed as 12. The final episode was aired as one in Canada and some places in the US but as two back to back episodes in other parts of the US. This is how it was originally listed but some people took exception. --] (]) 03:10, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
"I wish I knew if it ended with a double episode finale"
</pre>
<hr/>
The "improvement" was very quickly reverted to the original EDIT with the following reasoning:


<pre>
== The correct number of episodes is 12. ==
Nonsensical reason for removal of valid content.
</pre>


===Argument===
There are officially 12 episodes of Terra Nova. The first episode was 2 hours. The final two episodes aired on the same date back to back but were separate episodes. Amazon.com, itunes, the Library of Congress lists them this way. Other Misplaced Pages articles on shows with double-length episodes list hour long episodes as one episode (i.e., Seinfeld).
<pre>
"two-hour premiere", "two-hour, two-episode finale" is valid content.
</pre>


<pre>To put "two-hour premiere", "two-hour, two-episode finale",
Production codes are for business use. All episodes of double-length of any series have 2 production codes. That way people get paid for two episodes (since a double-length episode is twice the work).
however, in the overview section of an article is "non-sensical",
because it defeats its purpose: to summarize the essentials of a series.
</pre>
===Conclusion===
Whoever upholds, defends the following text:


<pre>
I'm going to change the information to reflect the correct information, which is 12. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 23:58, 22 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
It premiered on September 26, 2011 with a two-hour premiere,
:If you took the time to read the previous discussion, you may realize that those two episodes that originally aired as one episode, have two production codes and two writers and are billed as part one and part two. Also, those episides air seperatly in syndication. This was brought up in the last discussion and the agreement was to go by production codes. Unfortunately uour edit warring is going to get your up address blocked from editing. ] ]</font> 00:16, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
and concluded on December 19, 2011 with a two-hour,
two-episode finale.
</pre>


defends or argues for the following principles:
How the episodes air in syndication is irrelevant. The fact is there were 12 episodes. If it were decided to air them in syndication in half-hour blocks, would there now be 26 episodes? That wouldn't make any sense. The last 2-hour-long block was produced as two episodes. That's why it's 12 and not 11. Just check the sources. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 01:05, 23 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


# the overview section of an article should/or '''can contain trivia'''
:The two-hour pilot for ''Fringe'' had only a single production code. Production codes don't necessarily mean whether it is a single episode or a double. In this case, two different production codes, as Jojhutton pointed out, combined with the fact that the episode has two sets of writing credits and were identified as being in two parts in the opening credits would seem to indicate that it is two episodes. On top of all of that, the DVD release identifies that the series contains thirteen episodes, which includes the double-length pilot. -- ] (]) 09:14, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
# it is impossible decide what essential or trivial information is,<br />thus '''more information is "always" better than less information'''
::The first episode had a single title (Genesis) and press releases advertised it as an episode, not episodes. It contained a single set of credits with no discernible transition between part 1 & part 2. It was only broken into separate episodes later. The episode as aired didn't mention parts in the opening credits. --] (]) 09:34, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
:::*Still 13 episodes in my view. Nothing has changed to make me see it otherwise. ] (]) 19:49, 23 September 2013 (UTC)


<hr/>
12 episodes were produced. The first was produced as a two-hour episode. It had two production codes because that is how dramas are produced. People get paid by the hour. If any video cameras were used in the production, the people working with that equipment would had 4 paycodes for the two-hour episode (because they normally work in sitcoms and their guild does insurance, etc. by the half-hour). Hence, the codes are meaningless. What matters is the end product. If two people worked on the pizza you ordered, would you call it two pizzas?
] (]) 04:33, 27 April 2015 (UTC)
<hr/>


:The edit summary used for the edit that was reverted was {{tq|one, two, 10 seasons: this is relevant, NOBODY asks I wish I knew if it ended with a double episode finale}}. This makes no sense, hence "nonsensical". Your argument that the content is trivia, might be true for a series that lasted for several more than one season, but that is not the case for a single, 11/13 episode season. Please note that per ] and ], when an edit of yours is reverted in good faith, do not immediately revert as you did. Instead, discuss on the article's talk page to gain consensus for your edits and, while discussion is underway, the status quo prevails. --] (]) 05:22, 27 April 2015 (UTC)
The last two episodes were produced as two separate episodes. FOX decided to join them later. The only edit is pretty much to just show only one set of opening/closing titles. There is no producer input because they've all ready prepared for the possibility. Hence, the canon versions of these episodes are as separate episodes, which should be pretty obvious given their separate titles.


== factually false statements "defended" by ] ==
Any series that has double-length episodes will have those episodes prepared in advance for syndication and the need to have double-length episodes air as two parts. That's why the DVD's are released that way. The people who put out the DVD often have nothing to do with the production. Often, shows are released with syndicated versions of a show by mistake simply because no one who knew or cared had anything to do with the DVD release.
{{collapse top|a mess of a post}}
the series is about


<pre>
So the answer is there are 12 episodes. That's the official number. That's what belongs in an encyclopedia. Calling the first episode two episodes is a obsessive-compulsive desire to have everything fit into a nice chart (with one production code, set of writers, etc.) at the expense of accuracy. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 01:14, 25 September 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
the Shannon family's life and adventures as they establish themselves as members of a colony,
set up 85 million years in the earth's past
</pre>


it is not about
:We have an interesting situation here. We had a long-standing consensus that the episode list should show the episodes as aired, that is as 11 episodes. Then we had three editors who decided to overturn that consensus and insist there were 13 episodes. Uninvolved editors at the RfC indicated that if the episodes aired as single episodes then that should be mentioned, but that has been ignored. Now we have another editor who claims 12 episodes, and has introduced sources to prove it. This demonstrates that the 3-editor consensus from May is not strong at all, so this really needs further discussion. I know that certain people don't want to discuss it, as evidenced by the refusal to participate in the DRN discussion, but there really is no way around it. --] (]) 13:17, 27 September 2013 (UTC)

<pre>
the Shannon family's travel 85 million years into the past
</pre>

it is not a '''travel adventure series''', it is a series about colonists in a foreign, remote "country", in a "terra nova".

<hr />
] (]) 17:47, 29 April 2015 (UTC)
<hr />

:Firstly, the statement that you claim is "factually false" is not being defended by the "original editor". This statement has been in the lead for years. Secondly, nobody has claimed that the series is a "travel adventure series". You changed the original statement to "follows the Shannon family's life and adventures as they establish themselves as members of a colony, set up ], to escape the dystopian present of the 22nd century". "life and adventures" is the sort of thing you'd see in a press release. It's not an encyclopaedic tone. "85 million years in the earth's past" ''is'' factually incorrect. It was established less than 33 minutes into the first episode that they travelled to an Earth in a parallel universe, not to their own Earth. There's even a citation in the plot section for that. You need to start looking at edit summaries, which explain why your edits are actually being challenged (), and not why you think they are being challenged. --] (]) 18:06, 29 April 2015 (UTC)

<hr />
'''Firstly,'''

the statement that you claim is "factually false"

<pre>
is not being defended by the "original editor".
</pre>

:: so it is even worse, not a writer defending his writing, but a ''']''' doubling as '''wikipedia editor''':

<pre>
This statement has been in the lead for years.
</pre>

<hr/>
'''Secondly,'''
<pre>
nobody has claimed that the series is a "travel adventure series".
</pre>

:: read the following sentence to anyone who does not know the series:

<pre>
follows the Shannon family as they travel 85 million years into the past
</pre>

:: what do you think '''they think''' the series is about

<pre>
the traveling or the staying
</pre>

:: the travel, of course, hence my assumption that '''readers of the article in its present form will make the factually false assumption''' that

<pre>
TERRA NOVA is a "travel adventure series"
</pre>

:: is correct, describing the series as

<pre>
follows the Shannon family as they travel 85 million years into the past
</pre>

:: is tantamount to describing it as a

<pre>
"travel adventure series"
</pre>

<hr />
'''Thirdly,'''

you changed the original statement to "follows the Shannon family's life and adventures as they establish themselves as members of a colony, set up ], to escape the dystopian present of the 22nd century". "life and adventures" is the sort of thing you'd see in a press release.

<pre>
"life and adventures" ... It's not an encyclopedic tone.
</pre>

:: '''I agree''', this would probably be better

<pre>
documents the Shannon family's experiences as they ...
</pre>

:: but, apart from its tone, it is, '''you must admit''', factually correct

:: actually, you probably did not check the factual correctness of the different text versions, at all,
:: rather you '''only''' checked the '''tone''', and instead of admitting this '''now''',
:: you prefer to save your face and defend your '''papal infallibility''',
:: defending the indefensible: the number one virtue, of course, any wikipedia editor should have.

<hr />

'''Fourthly,'''

<pre>
"85 million years in the earth's past" ''is'' factually incorrect.
</pre>

:: What do you think, why I removed the term '''parallel universe,''' just for fun? or because I just watched the series in its entirety and concluded that

<pre>
"parallel universe" is non-constitutive plot point.
</pre>

:: put another way:

<pre>
there is no episode where the concept of parallel universe is of any relevance for its plot.
</pre>

:: put another way:

<pre>
The concept is merely used to explain, diffuse the question viewers might have, as to why the colony
could receive multiple waves of colonists (essential plot point) from the future if, what is the subject
of so many other scifi-movies in this genre, the past changes the futures.
</pre>

:: in other words

<pre>
summarizing the series as a
travel 85 million years into the past to an Earth of a parallel universe
creates false expectations, and associations in the readers' mind,
and makes them think of Terra Nova as something similar to FRINGE.
</pre>

<hr />

:: so far, to simplify my argument, I "acted" as if the term '''"parallel universe"''' is actually used in the series, it is not, of course:

:: in episode 1 they talk about the "fact" that going back in time through a time fracture "creates" a new time stream: the exact quote from the episode being:

<pre>
this (because they could not find the beacon they sent into the past in the present) is how they knew they were dealing with new time stream
</pre>

:: and this is how ] '''correctly''' puts it:

<pre>
scientists use a time fracture allowing people to travel 85 million years back in time to prehistoric Earth in an alternate timeline.
</pre>

:: in other words

<pre>
the term "parallel universe" is not used in the series.
It is rather a "misleading", "easy" inference, interpretation of an "uninformed" editor.
</pre>

:: the authors, creators of Terra Nova, I think, quite intentionally, scrupulously avoided the term "parallel universe",
:: because of its connotations, non-representative of the series,
:: and so should the corresponding wikipedia article.

<hr />
<hr />

:: but it gets worse, the wikipedia editor neither watched the episode for verification,
:: nor did he even closely read the ] he advises me to consult,
:: how else to explain the following, as we now know, '''factually false statement''':

<pre>
It was established less than 33 minutes into the first episode that they travelled
to an Earth in a parallel universe, not to their own Earth.
There's even a citation in the plot section for that.
</pre>

:: so you, and the original editor "boldly" assume:

<pre>
that going through a time fracture and creating a new time stream,
is exactly the same
as going into the past of parallel universe
</pre>

:: if that is the case,
:: '''please be consistent,'''
:: '''correct the "false" summary of the first episode in the corresponding wikipedia article and'''
:: '''merge it into the time stream of ''your "personal" "private" parallel universe'''''.

<hr />
{{collapse bottom}}
] (]) 02:04, 1 May 2015 (UTC)


:::When responding to a post, please do not tear apart the post you're replying to and intersperse your comments amongst the fragments of the previous post. That's a breach of the talk page guidelines. If you want to respond to a post, quote the parts that you wish to, but leave the original post intact. There is no need for your persistent overuse of <nowiki><pre> and </pre></nowiki> tags. Just use {{tl|tq}} or quote using quotation marks. You're using far too much page space for what you're trying to achieve and it turns people off reading what you've written, as well as making it harder to understand. Have a look at threads above the ones that you've started for examples. And please, don't use horizontal rules around your signature. Horizontal rules are used in headings to separate one section from another. ] specifically says not to use them in signatures. --] (]) 02:52, 1 May 2015 (UTC)

== "The series is based on an idea by British writer Kelly Marcel" ==

{{talkquote|
by British writer Kelly Marcel
}}

it is not factually false, but '''misleading''', writers write books, Marcel
has not written any book, she is a '''screenwriter'''.

{{talkquote|
The series is based on an idea
}}

it is not factually false, but misleading, Marcel created the series,
she is credited as creator/writer of the series on
.

<blockquote>
quickly penned a 15-page treatment outlining her characters, the world they were living in and a story arc for the first season – as well as '''a 30-page "bible", which summarised how the show would pan out over five seasons.'''
<ref>{{Cite web
| title = Kelly's heroics: How the British writer behind TV's most expensive drama cracked LA
| website = The Independent
| date = September 21, 2011
| url = http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/features/kellys-heroics-how-the-british-writer-behind-tvs-most-expensive-drama-cracked-la-2362573.html
}}</ref>
</blockquote>

To, thus, describe her contribution as "giving an idea for a series" seems to intentionally minimize her role.

] (]) 11:42, 6 July 2015 (UTC)

{{Reflist-talk}}
:Imdb is not considered to be a ]. The article you've cited is correct but your opinion, and new edit to the article is ]. She is is not credited as a writer so you can't claim that "The series was written by former actress and British screenwriter ]". You need a source that explicitly states that she wrote it, not just the idea for the series. --] (]) 12:26, 6 July 2015 (UTC)

== opening sentence of article ==

Currently, the opening sentence of the article is:
::''Terra Nova (English: New Earth) is an American science fiction drama television series.''

To me, this incorrectly implies that the show was called "Terra Nova" in some regions, but for broadcast to English speaking audiences, the show used the alternate title "New Earth". i want to be bold and edit that opening, but i'm not sure what a clearer way to present the information would be.

] (]) 05:22, 13 June 2017 (UTC)

== Mido Hamada’s status ==

According to a press release which can be found , Mido Hamada was only a guest star. However, on the actual show, Mido Hamada was listed as “starring” (i.e. main cast, not a guest star) in the first episode. To be specific, Mido Hamada was listed in the credits between Naomi Scott and Alana Mansour. His name appears on screen at 18:22. The first credited guest star’s name (Simone Kessell) appears ten seconds later, at 18:32. Which takes precedence on Misplaced Pages: the press release or the credits shown on the series? --] (]) 21:01, 27 August 2018 (UTC)
:Interesting. When the article was changed I checked the episode but didn't see a cast listing (I didn't think it would be so far in!) and the press release showed him only as guest. The source that was used in the article said he was going to be a regular, but "regular" does not necessarily mean "starring". I've checked now that you've provided the time and you are correct. Interestingly, the credits of the first part don't show Rod Hallet, so he shouldn't be where he is listed. Cast are listed per ], which gives on-air credit precedence, so I'll fix this now. --] (]) 21:16, 27 August 2018 (UTC)

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The correct number of episodes is 12.

There are 12 episodes of Terra Nova. The first 2 hours were produced as one episode but of course are split in syndication to fit into an hour slot. The last 2 were shown back to back but separately produced. A 13-episode order is common and so you will see people associated with a show referring to "13 episodes" or "13 hours" for brevity, but a 2 hour episode is still just a single episode if it's produced that way. Amazon.com, itunes, and FOX all list it this way. I would like to change it to 12 but will wait for discussion before I do.68.102.150.123 (talk) 23:43, 15 September 2014 (UTC)

There are officially 12 episodes of Terra Nova. The first episode was 2 hours. The final two episodes aired on the same date back to back but were separate episodes. Amazon.com, itunes, the Library of Congress lists them this way. Other Misplaced Pages articles on shows with double-length episodes list hour long episodes as one episode (i.e., Seinfeld).

Production codes are for business use. All episodes of double-length of any series have 2 production codes. That way people get paid for two episodes (since a double-length episode is twice the work).

I'm going to change the information to reflect the correct information, which is 12. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.179.154.161 (talk) 23:58, 22 September 2013 (UTC)

If you took the time to read the previous discussion, you may realize that those two episodes that originally aired as one episode, have two production codes and two writers and are billed as part one and part two. Also, those episides air seperatly in syndication. This was brought up in the last discussion and the agreement was to go by production codes. Unfortunately uour edit warring is going to get your up address blocked from editing. JOJ 00:16, 23 September 2013 (UTC)

How the episodes air in syndication is irrelevant. The fact is there were 12 episodes. If it were decided to air them in syndication in half-hour blocks, would there now be 26 episodes? That wouldn't make any sense. The last 2-hour-long block was produced as two episodes. That's why it's 12 and not 11. Just check the sources. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.179.154.161 (talk) 01:05, 23 September 2013 (UTC)

The two-hour pilot for Fringe had only a single production code. Production codes don't necessarily mean whether it is a single episode or a double. In this case, two different production codes, as Jojhutton pointed out, combined with the fact that the episode has two sets of writing credits and were identified as being in two parts in the opening credits would seem to indicate that it is two episodes. On top of all of that, the DVD release identifies that the series contains thirteen episodes, which includes the double-length pilot. Check it. -- SchrutedIt08 (talk) 09:14, 23 September 2013 (UTC)
The first episode had a single title (Genesis) and press releases advertised it as an episode, not episodes. It contained a single set of credits with no discernible transition between part 1 & part 2. It was only broken into separate episodes later. The episode as aired didn't mention parts in the opening credits. --AussieLegend () 09:34, 23 September 2013 (UTC)

12 episodes were produced. The first was produced as a two-hour episode. It had two production codes because that is how dramas are produced. People get paid by the hour. If any video cameras were used in the production, the people working with that equipment would had 4 paycodes for the two-hour episode (because they normally work in sitcoms and their guild does insurance, etc. by the half-hour). Hence, the codes are meaningless. What matters is the end product. If two people worked on the pizza you ordered, would you call it two pizzas?

The last two episodes were produced as two separate episodes. FOX decided to join them later. The only edit is pretty much to just show only one set of opening/closing titles. There is no producer input because they've all ready prepared for the possibility. Hence, the canon versions of these episodes are as separate episodes, which should be pretty obvious given their separate titles.

Any series that has double-length episodes will have those episodes prepared in advance for syndication and the need to have double-length episodes air as two parts. That's why the DVD's are released that way. The people who put out the DVD often have nothing to do with the production. Often, shows are released with syndicated versions of a show by mistake simply because no one who knew or cared had anything to do with the DVD release.

So the answer is there are 12 episodes. That's the official number. That's what belongs in an encyclopedia. Calling the first episode two episodes is a obsessive-compulsive desire to have everything fit into a nice chart (with one production code, set of writers, etc.) at the expense of accuracy. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.179.154.161 (talk) 01:14, 25 September 2013 (UTC)

We have an interesting situation here. We had a long-standing consensus that the episode list should show the episodes as aired, that is as 11 episodes. Then we had three editors who decided to overturn that consensus and insist there were 13 episodes. Uninvolved editors at the RfC indicated that if the episodes aired as single episodes then that should be mentioned, but that has been ignored. Now we have another editor who claims 12 episodes, and has introduced sources to prove it. This demonstrates that the 3-editor consensus from May is not strong at all, so this really needs further discussion. I know that certain people don't want to discuss it, as evidenced by the refusal to participate in the DRN discussion, but there really is no way around it. --AussieLegend () 13:17, 27 September 2013 (UTC)
  • The "long standing consensus" is gone. I was part of it. Aside from you, who has expressed support for that defunct consensus? As for your RfC, you don't win by default. We all ignored it because you had nothing new to say. Just hearing you say the same thing over and over wasn't going to change anything. In short, that RfC was pointless and it serves as NO indicator or anything other than a lack of interest in duplicating this discussion. Niteshift36 (talk) 22:46, 27 September 2013 (UTC)
  • I agree that there is very little new information being presented by the ip or by AussieLegend. The fact that there are 13 production codes, 13 writer credits, 13 episodes on the DVD, 13 episodes in syndication, and 13 episodes on Netflix are what I believe motivated the change last May. Nobody argues that the first episode aired as a single entity, but that is not the only factor that was considered. I believe that the stronger argument was for 13 over 12 or even 11, and having AussieLegend or even a new anon ip come here regurgitating the same old tired argument, isn't going to change anyones mind. Unless there is some new information that hasn't been discussed before, there is no point in continuing to go though this again and again.--JOJ 00:53, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
  • The IP has presented exactly the same type of evidence that you used to overturn the original consensus. He even presented a source to demonstrate that there are 12 episodes. It wasn't just me who commented at the RfC, there were others and their posts demonstrated that your three-editor consensus is not really a consensus at all. That somebody has come along only three months after the last discussion clearly demonstrates that we're going to have to discuss it whether you like it or not. We need to look at the suggestions from the RfC and incorporate them in order to stop this happening again and again. There is evidence that that the series aired originally as both 11 & 12 episodes in the USA but has since been split into 13 episodes - All of that needs to be incorporated, whether you like it or not. If you ignore it, then you're not acting responsibly or encyclopaedically. --AussieLegend () 04:07, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
  • By all means, mention that episodes 1/2 and 12/13 aired together, but, since May when this last came to light, there has been no new evidence to suggest that the episode count is any different that what it is now, 13. Frogkermit (talk) 09:24, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
  • The "consensus" at the previous discussion was to ignore how they aired the articles were edited accordingly. It's not true that no new evidence has been presented. The IP added this to List of Terra Nova episodes, which lists 12 episodes, not 13, but it was reverted. That source is a US source, not the UK source currently used in the article. When dealing with US TV programs, US sources have more weight than foreign sources when it comes to issues such as the number of episodes. --AussieLegend () 11:52, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
  • @AussieLegend. The reason why nobody wants to constantly take part in your umpteenth attempt at trying to overturn consensus is because there is nothing new being brought to the table. The Amazon.com link is still the same old tired argument. The Amazon link is invalid anyway because it's just the POV of some random seller and not a reliable source. The original consensus to consider the number 11, last year was formed because most people decided to go with the number of air dates decided by Fox, and not by production codes decided by producers. But last May new information was presented that changed consensus to 13. Those include the DVD release with 13 episodes written directly on the cover, the syndication of 13 episodes, and Netflix airing the show as 13 episodes. Even an editor who agreed with you last year, changed his mind when the new information was presented. You can't stand in a corner by yourself and continue to scream at the rest of the room that they are wrong and you alone are right. Now an anon ip comes along and wants to go against the consensus and you seem to see that as an opportunity to open up the same old argument that was considered, but dismissed last May. JOJ 20:09, 28 September 2013 (UTC)
  • "why, in may, did you seem adamant that 11 was the nimber of episodes and the only possibility, when now it seems that you are quite happy for it to be 12?" - The US copy of the final episode that I have shows the finale aired as a single episode, with one set of credits, as I've previously stated. Even the press release referred to it as a single episode. The IP has now provided evidence that it's being treated as 12 episodes so I'm willing to compromise, provided that we still mention how the episodes originally aired.
  • "your umpteenth attempt at trying to overturn consensus" - There is no valid consensus. The agreement that you three came to, to completely ignore the way that the episodes were originally aired was a weak consensus at best. the comments by uninvolved editors at the RFC, e.g. "as 4 episodes were aired back to back in the states, this should be reflected in the broadcasting section" and "If the episodes were broadcast together then they should be listed together in the episode table" weakens that to the point where it's clearly not a consensus.
  • "The Amazon.com link is still the same old tired argument. The Amazon link is invalid anyway because it's just the POV of some random seller" - An Amazon link is being used in the episode list as "proof" of 13 episodes. Using your own argument, that link is invalid.
  • "But last May new information was presented that changed consensus to 13" - There was no new evidence presented. The notion of 13 episodes was discussed when the episodes aired, and disregarded because we list episodes a they aired, not as they are later broken down for distribution on other media.
  • "You can't stand in a corner by yourself" - Clearly I'm not. There's an IP who disagrees with you and the opinions of outside editors at the RfC have to be considered.
  • "Now an anon ip comes along and wants to go against the consensus" - Normally, I'd reply with consensus can change but there never really was a valid consensus in May, as I've explained above. --AussieLegend () 12:11, 29 September 2013 (UTC)

"nonsensical" to remove trivia from the overview section of an article

Subject

The following EDIT:

It premiered on September 26, 2011 with a two-hour premiere,
and concluded on December 19, 2011 with a two-hour,
two-episode finale. 

was "improved" into:

It aired one season from September 26 to December 19, 2011.

with the following reason being given for the change:

one, two, 10 seasons this is relevant, NOBODY asks
"I wish I knew if it ended with a double episode finale"

The "improvement" was very quickly reverted to the original EDIT with the following reasoning:

Nonsensical reason for removal of valid content.

Argument

"two-hour premiere", "two-hour, two-episode finale" is valid content.
To put "two-hour premiere", "two-hour, two-episode finale",
however, in the overview section of an article is "non-sensical",
because it defeats its purpose: to summarize the essentials of a series.

Conclusion

Whoever upholds, defends the following text:

It premiered on September 26, 2011 with a two-hour premiere,
and concluded on December 19, 2011 with a two-hour,
two-episode finale. 

defends or argues for the following principles:

  1. the overview section of an article should/or can contain trivia
  2. it is impossible decide what essential or trivial information is,
    thus more information is "always" better than less information

Quessler (talk) 04:33, 27 April 2015 (UTC)


The edit summary used for the edit that was reverted was one, two, 10 seasons: this is relevant, NOBODY asks I wish I knew if it ended with a double episode finale. This makes no sense, hence "nonsensical". Your argument that the content is trivia, might be true for a series that lasted for several more than one season, but that is not the case for a single, 11/13 episode season. Please note that per WP:BRD and WP:STATUSQUO, when an edit of yours is reverted in good faith, do not immediately revert as you did. Instead, discuss on the article's talk page to gain consensus for your edits and, while discussion is underway, the status quo prevails. --AussieLegend () 05:22, 27 April 2015 (UTC)

factually false statements "defended" by AussieLegend

a mess of a post

the series is about

the Shannon family's life and adventures as they establish themselves as members of a colony,
set up  85 million years in the earth's past

it is not about

the Shannon family's travel 85 million years into the past

it is not a travel adventure series, it is a series about colonists in a foreign, remote "country", in a "terra nova".


Quessler (talk) 17:47, 29 April 2015 (UTC)


Firstly, the statement that you claim is "factually false" is not being defended by the "original editor". This statement has been in the lead for years. Secondly, nobody has claimed that the series is a "travel adventure series". You changed the original statement to "follows the Shannon family's life and adventures as they establish themselves as members of a colony, set up 85 million years in the earth's past, to escape the dystopian present of the 22nd century". "life and adventures" is the sort of thing you'd see in a press release. It's not an encyclopaedic tone. "85 million years in the earth's past" is factually incorrect. It was established less than 33 minutes into the first episode that they travelled to an Earth in a parallel universe, not to their own Earth. There's even a citation in the plot section for that. You need to start looking at edit summaries, which explain why your edits are actually being challenged (it was established in the first episode that it was the past in a parallel universe (see the citation in the prose)), and not why you think they are being challenged. --AussieLegend () 18:06, 29 April 2015 (UTC)

Firstly,

the statement that you claim is "factually false"

is not being defended by the "original editor".
so it is even worse, not a writer defending his writing, but a scriptural literalist doubling as wikipedia editor:
This statement has been in the lead for years. 

Secondly,

nobody has claimed that the series is a "travel adventure series".
read the following sentence to anyone who does not know the series:
follows the Shannon family as they travel 85 million years into the past
what do you think they think the series is about
the traveling or the staying
the travel, of course, hence my assumption that readers of the article in its present form will make the factually false assumption that
TERRA NOVA is a "travel adventure series"
is correct, describing the series as
follows the Shannon family as they travel 85 million years into the past
is tantamount to describing it as a
"travel adventure series"

Thirdly,

you changed the original statement to "follows the Shannon family's life and adventures as they establish themselves as members of a colony, set up 85 million years in the earth's past, to escape the dystopian present of the 22nd century". "life and adventures" is the sort of thing you'd see in a press release.

"life and adventures" ... It's not an encyclopedic tone.
I agree, this would probably be better
documents the Shannon family's experiences as they ...
but, apart from its tone, it is, you must admit, factually correct
actually, you probably did not check the factual correctness of the different text versions, at all,
rather you only checked the tone, and instead of admitting this now,
you prefer to save your face and defend your papal infallibility,
defending the indefensible: the number one virtue, of course, any wikipedia editor should have.

Fourthly,

"85 million years in the earth's past" ''is'' factually incorrect.
What do you think, why I removed the term parallel universe, just for fun? or because I just watched the series in its entirety and concluded that
"parallel universe" is non-constitutive plot point.
put another way:
there is no episode where the concept of parallel universe is of any relevance for its plot.
put another way:
The concept is merely used to explain, diffuse the question viewers might have, as to why the colony
could receive multiple waves of colonists (essential plot point) from the future if, what is the subject
of so many other scifi-movies in this genre, the past changes the futures.
in other words
summarizing the series as a
                      travel 85 million years into the past to an Earth of a parallel universe
creates false expectations, and associations in the readers' mind,
and makes them think of Terra Nova as something similar to FRINGE.

so far, to simplify my argument, I "acted" as if the term "parallel universe" is actually used in the series, it is not, of course:
in episode 1 they talk about the "fact" that going back in time through a time fracture "creates" a new time stream: the exact quote from the episode being:
this (because they could not find the beacon they sent into the past in the present) is how they knew they were dealing with new time stream
and this is how the article about the episode correctly puts it:
scientists use a time fracture allowing people to travel 85 million years back in time to prehistoric Earth in an alternate timeline. 
in other words
the term "parallel universe" is not used in the series.
It is rather a "misleading", "easy" inference, interpretation of an "uninformed" editor.
the authors, creators of Terra Nova, I think, quite intentionally, scrupulously avoided the term "parallel universe",
because of its connotations, non-representative of the series,
and so should the corresponding wikipedia article.


but it gets worse, the wikipedia editor neither watched the episode for verification,
nor did he even closely read the episode article he advises me to consult,
how else to explain the following, as we now know, factually false statement:
It was established less than 33 minutes into the first episode that they travelled
to an Earth in a parallel universe, not to their own Earth.
There's even a citation in the plot section for that. 
so you, and the original editor "boldly" assume:
that going through a time fracture and creating a new time stream,
is exactly the same
as going into the past of parallel universe
if that is the case,
please be consistent,
correct the "false" summary of the first episode in the corresponding wikipedia article and
merge it into the time stream of your "personal" "private" parallel universe.

Quessler (talk) 02:04, 1 May 2015 (UTC)


When responding to a post, please do not tear apart the post you're replying to and intersperse your comments amongst the fragments of the previous post. That's a breach of the talk page guidelines. If you want to respond to a post, quote the parts that you wish to, but leave the original post intact. There is no need for your persistent overuse of <pre> and </pre> tags. Just use {{tq}} or quote using quotation marks. You're using far too much page space for what you're trying to achieve and it turns people off reading what you've written, as well as making it harder to understand. Have a look at threads above the ones that you've started for examples. And please, don't use horizontal rules around your signature. Horizontal rules are used in headings to separate one section from another. WP:SIGAPP specifically says not to use them in signatures. --AussieLegend () 02:52, 1 May 2015 (UTC)

"The series is based on an idea by British writer Kelly Marcel"

by British writer Kelly Marcel

it is not factually false, but misleading, writers write books, Marcel has not written any book, she is a screenwriter.

The series is based on an idea

it is not factually false, but misleading, Marcel created the series, she is credited as creator/writer of the series on imdb.

quickly penned a 15-page treatment outlining her characters, the world they were living in and a story arc for the first season – as well as a 30-page "bible", which summarised how the show would pan out over five seasons.

To, thus, describe her contribution as "giving an idea for a series" seems to intentionally minimize her role.

Quessler (talk) 11:42, 6 July 2015 (UTC)

References

  1. "Kelly's heroics: How the British writer behind TV's most expensive drama cracked LA". The Independent. September 21, 2011.
Imdb is not considered to be a reliable source. The article you've cited is correct but your opinion, and new edit to the article is WP:SYNTH. She is is not credited as a writer so you can't claim that "The series was written by former actress and British screenwriter Kelly Marcel". You need a source that explicitly states that she wrote it, not just the idea for the series. --AussieLegend () 12:26, 6 July 2015 (UTC)

opening sentence of article

Currently, the opening sentence of the article is:

Terra Nova (English: New Earth) is an American science fiction drama television series.

To me, this incorrectly implies that the show was called "Terra Nova" in some regions, but for broadcast to English speaking audiences, the show used the alternate title "New Earth". i want to be bold and edit that opening, but i'm not sure what a clearer way to present the information would be.

71.121.143.195 (talk) 05:22, 13 June 2017 (UTC)

Mido Hamada’s status

According to a press release which can be found here, Mido Hamada was only a guest star. However, on the actual show, Mido Hamada was listed as “starring” (i.e. main cast, not a guest star) in the first episode. To be specific, Mido Hamada was listed in the credits between Naomi Scott and Alana Mansour. His name appears on screen at 18:22. The first credited guest star’s name (Simone Kessell) appears ten seconds later, at 18:32. Which takes precedence on Misplaced Pages: the press release or the credits shown on the series? --185.73.100.19 (talk) 21:01, 27 August 2018 (UTC)

Interesting. When the article was changed I checked the episode but didn't see a cast listing (I didn't think it would be so far in!) and the press release showed him only as guest. The source that was used in the article said he was going to be a regular, but "regular" does not necessarily mean "starring". I've checked now that you've provided the time and you are correct. Interestingly, the credits of the first part don't show Rod Hallet, so he shouldn't be where he is listed. Cast are listed per WP:TVCAST, which gives on-air credit precedence, so I'll fix this now. --AussieLegend () 21:16, 27 August 2018 (UTC)
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