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Archive for the ‘Discussion’ CategoryHello Porters, fans of Traveler and any folks who may have randomly found this page. First off, on behalf of the cast, writers and everyone involved in Traveler, I want to thank all those who fought so hard over the past two months to get our show back on the air. It was inspiring to see your effort and devotion. And you fought valiantly. But in the end, I think the same thing that doomed our show — lack of awareness — also made it impossible to muster the kind of numbers needed to save it. So, while I will never forget the great — albeit frustrating — experience of Traveler, the time has come for all of us to move on to new season passes, new Web page bookmarks and new "save the show" campaigns, as I’m sure there will be some deserving series this fall that will get the short end of the marketing/ratings stick. But before I get to your much-deserved (and lengthy) Traveler answers, I also wanted to say that it’s been a blast interacting with you here and on the Traveler IMDb message board. Speaking with you and answering your questions was the best and most fulfilling part of the show’s summer season. I hope our discussions can continue with my next show, Darwin’s Law, a one-hour action comedy about a CIA hit man who becomes a homicide detective, which you will hopefully see on ABC (yes, I aim to woo all angry Porters back to the network) in the fall of ‘08. Now, in my efforts to provide closure before people have completely forgotten what happened in our fun and fast eight-episode run, I offer this final blog entry… the once promised and now delivered closure that you guys deserve. Q1. What is the Fourth Branch? But what if the founding fathers were also scared of the common man’s power? Would they have perhaps put safeguards into place? A branch that sits above the people’s three official branches of government? That, my friends, is the Fourth Branch. A group comprised of the oldest families in America that implements checks and balances on the government to guide the true course of our country. Think about the iconic families of American politics. The Kennedys. The Tafts. The Bushes. Did you ever wonder how they managed to wield so much power and influence? Their membership in the Fourth Branch plays a big part. And while our founding fathers believed in using the branch to foster a youthful nation, today the branch has become a shadow government that uses economic, political, social and legal influence to maintain strict control. Right now, their senators are making sure that their latest Supreme Court nominee gets appointed. Their members on the New York Stock Exchange are keeping the price of oil high so we support the effort to bring democracy to the Middle East. What is the Fourth Branch? It is the realization of one of our worst fears, that though we live in the world’s greatest democracy, we are not the ones steering the ship. Q2. What’s with the Painting? Trumbull is a fascinating figure. In 1773 he graduated Harvard at the age of 17. He went on to fight in the Revolutionary War. Then he traveled to London in 1780 and studied painting under Benjamin West. There, he was captured and imprisoned as an American spy. Later he returned to the United States, where he went on to become one of the most famous painters and politicians of his time, including a stint as governor of Connecticut. He died at the age of 88 and was interred beneath the Art Gallery at Yale University… a crypt that Will, Jay and Tyler would most certainly have visited in Season 2. If you have looked into "The Declaration of Independence" painting, you know that the "signing" was a complete fabrication in regard to the document itself, and historians have always wondered why there are five people in the painting who were not actual signers of the Declaration of Independence. This sent our little hyper-creative minds spinning in the writers room, though I will admit that the painting was the object of much debate. But we came up with the idea that the painting was in fact the Holy Grail of the Fourth Branch. Because in truth, this painting does not depict the signing of the Declaration of Independence, but rather it captures the formation of the Fourth Branch itself. And looking into the families of the men present in the painting holds the key to finding the current members of the branch. At the time of our story, rumors of the Fourth Branch have increased in the corridors of Washington. Freed and others have decided to start a campaign to increase their control of the country with the Drexler bombing. A bombing that would serve two purposes: to strike a new chord of fear in the American public, as suddenly young, well-educated white males would be seen turning against their own country; and to destroy a piece of evidence, which if discovered, could expose the existence of the branch itself. Q3. Who is the Porter? As with most multilevel Hydras, the Fourth Branch had fractured due to infighting. After a lengthy battle from the 1960s through the 1990s, two factions emerged: One, led by Jack Freed’s family, wanted to completely wrest control of this country away from the people. The other, led by the Baron, had hoped to return the branch to the benevolent presence it held at our nation’s birth. And if that did not work, the Baron was ready to disband the branch altogether. In exchange for compensation to the families of the men Anselmo lost, Anselmo became the Porter, a man bent on destroying the corrupt side of the Fourth Branch. His first mission was to follow Will Traveler to the men who were giving him his orders. That leads us to the next question…. Q4. Is Jack Freed dead? The Season 2 premiere was meant to begin with the same scene that ended Season 1, only this time we would see it from a new perspective. We would open on a small, remote control bomb packed with C4 as it tore down the damp, dark streets of New York. Unnoticed, it would zip past Jay, Tyler and Will as they had their final conversation at the phone booth. Then it would slip underneath the parked limo, and we’d cut to the person controlling the bomb… the Porter. As the Porter clicks the kill switch, Boom! the limo, Freed and our boys’ alibi, would again go up in smoke. Why did the Porter kill Freed? Because the Baron had given him orders that once he had identified the tyrant, the cancer had to be removed before evidence of the branch could leak to the public. Which leads us to… Q5: You can’t just keep the guys on the run forever, can you? A mining town in Colorado. A news report in a locker room tells us that another month has passed without any sign of the Drexler bombing suspects, and officials now believe that the three "Ivy League Terrorists" have surfaced in the Middle East. Amongst the workers getting ready to head into the mine, we find Will Traveler…. And yes, his appearance has finally changed! It turns out that Jay, Will and Tyler have not left the country. They have laid low in a middle-of-nowhere town. And now that people have moved on to other current events, like more domestic bombings and the approaching election, Jay, Will and Tyler are ready to start their search into uncovering the truth behind the Drexler bombing and the Fourth Branch. Q6: Did Carlton Fog survive the season finale? Q7: What happens to Chambers and Marlow? Now, Marlow is on her own hunt to find out how Chambers was involved in the Drexler bombing. Meanwhile, Chambers has been promoted to head of the entire New York Field Office. Everything is going great, except for the fact that Chambers’ daughter — the one mentioned in Season 1 — becomes suspicious of her father’s involvement in the Drexler conspiracy. His daughter, another new character for Season 2, would eventually become convinced that her father had framed Jay, Tyler and Will. And when the boys resurface, she would reach out to them, eventually becoming a new love interest for Tyler. The Fourth Branch would learn of Chambers’ daughter’s indiscretion. And Jack Freed’s mother, the woman now pulling the strings, would tell Chambers that his daughter would have to be removed. Through flashback, we would learn that Chambers faced the same situation when he was stationed in Israel. His wife discovered he was pulling off covert raids, kidnapping Palestinian soldiers on behalf of the branch. And that time, he sacrificed his wife in hopes that it would help return his family to prominence in the branch. This time though, Chambers will choose his child over his loyalty to the cause, allowing one of our great villains to end his arc on a redemptive note. Q8: Is Kim still alive? Jay has attempted to find her, risking everything to return to New York and reach out to Mr. Doherty for help. Unbeknownst to Jay, Kim was pregnant when he was forced to flee New York. And while in custody, being tortured, she miscarried. A major storyline for Season 2 was to be Kim’s struggle to stay alive, while Jay slowly and surely tracked her down. Q9: What is Jay’s connection to the Fourth Branch? The person in the government who betrayed Tom Burchell? Jack Freed. With Freed dead, Jay will seek revenge from the person they find to be running Freed’s half of the Fourth Branch — Freed’s mother, a Washington socialite who shares more than a few characteristics with Angela Lansbury in The Manchurian Candidate. Rosalind Freed will offer to return everything Jay lost after the Drexler bombing: his high-power life as a New York lawyer, a normal life with Kim and his freedom. But by this point, Jay will have found Kim and will know the endgame of the Fourth Branch, and Jay will refuse Rosalind Freed’s offer, ultimately having her arrested as the first step in bringing down the families that feel they can control our country. Q10. Who was Will Traveler? In a long ago reality, Will Traveler was Stephen Mailer. (Not even Aaron Stanford knew that name.) You are hearing it here first. Stephen was a lonely kid who was raised by a single mother in a small town in Arizona. Stephen was not the biggest kid in the bunch, so he had to learn to defend himself early. He was aided in this by his uncle, who moved to the small town when Stephen was 12. This uncle gave Stephen’s mother money. Soon, they’d upgraded from a trailer park to a two-bedroom condo. This uncle also knew martial arts. He taught Stephen the fighting style of Krav Maga. And it was not long before young Stephen Mailer was the one to be feared on the playground. While Stephen’s mother was frightened by her son’s violent nature, his uncle seemed to foster it, using hypnosis and behavior modification to prepare Stephen for a life of service. To what end? Stephen never knew. All he knew is that he and his uncle were patriots. When Stephen turned 17, his mother said goodbye to him, and his uncle took him to join the military. Stephen understood weapons, combat and battlefield strategy 10 times better than the officers who taught him. But he was meant to be a foot soldier. Nothing more. He had always been taught to obey commands. And though overqualified for his service in Afghanistan and Iraq, he felt his uncle placed him there with a purpose: to save lives. He was known, jokingly, as Nightingale. Because when you were about to die on the battlefield, Stephen would swoop in and get you the hell out. But, amazingly, Stephen never was promoted and was never given medals for his heroics. Instead, he simply moved from unit to unit, and with each move, he was given new dog tags and a different name. During his three years in combat, he saw his uncle three times. The last time was in Baghdad’s Green Zone, when his uncle arrived to take him home for his final patriotic assignment. A man named Jack Freed had started an FBI program called Operation Hometown. Something that was essential to winning the war on terror. It seems that domestic terrorism cells were on the rise. People who appeared to be normal citizens were in fact fomenting revolution. Taking a page out of the CIA’s Family Jewels, Freed had established a covert operation to use human intelligence assets to infiltrate and spy on American citizens. Stephen would be one of Freed’s best recruits. He helped bust up a Chechnyan sleeper cell before it could attack the Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C. He stopped a group of neo-Nazis from assassinating a black governor in the South. And then he was sent to Deer Harbor to train for what would be his most important assignment. By then, Stephen went by the name Daniel Taft. Against every rule in the book, he fell in love with the woman who ran the Operation Hometown safe house in the small town that was used to ferry Hometown operatives in and out of the country. Maya helped Daniel create his new alias. And though it was exceedingly reckless, he picked his new name to remind him of the woman he loved. In the summer of 2005, "Will Traveler" left for New Haven, Connecticut, where he would live with two men with serious bones to pick with President Shears and the U.S. government. He was gradually given his orders, always by his handler, Joseph. He needed to get video of Tyler Fog speaking his true mind about President Shears. Jay Burchell was writing for the law review, and Will needed to make sure Jay wrote about the illegal detention of enemy combatants at Guantanamo Bay. Will had been raised to obey orders, not to question them, but even he knew something was not right. In secret trips to Deer Harbor, he began to make preparations to leave Operation Hometown and the country with Maya. And when the final directive came, his worst fears were confirmed. He was being asked to murder Jay and Tyler, innocent American civilians, while framing them for an attack on New York’s oldest art museum. All efforts to reach his uncle were unsuccessful. So, Will decided he would have to improvise. He would let Jay and Tyler live and then blow up the museum. But while researching the plan to blow up the Drexler, Will discovered that the Drexler bomb was to be placed in a gallery filled with paintings by John Trumbull, right below the crown jewel of the Shears’ Collection, Trumbull’s Declaration of Independence. He began to suspect that the bombing might also be connected to the paintings. Knowing that he’d be punished for betraying his orders, Will decided to steal the painting as a piece of leverage should his plan fail. The rest, as they say… well, you saw the rest in Season 1. Obviously, when Maya was killed (and yes, Maya is dead), everything changed for Will. Like Jason Bourne, he set out on a path to avenge his girlfriend’s death and find out who was really running the corrupt government program. This led Will back to his old roommates, and ultimately to Freed. Season 2: In Season 2 the driving question becomes: "What is the Fourth Branch?" The Season 2 flashbacks reveal how Will was raised and groomed to become a leader in the secret society that has now turned against him (yes, Porters, Will is in fact the heir of the Colorado Real Estate Baron mentioned in the Porter paragraph above). And Jay, Tyler and Will set out on a journey to find and expose members of the society, and this time they will have the help of Agent Marlow, who wants revenge for her partner’s murder. The return of Tyler’s brother leads to Tyler’s murder. And Marlow will ultimately fall at the hands of her former boss Chambers. But in the Season 2 finale, Will and Jay are miraculously saved from a brutal beating at the hands of Fourth Branch forces. When they wake up, they find themselves in the middle of the Oval Office. President Shears enters and they reveal everything they know. Unfortunately for them, it’s here that we learn that Shears is not just our head of state, he’s also the heir apparent of the Fourth Branch. Season 3: In Season 3 we learn the truth about the Fourth Branch’s plan. They have used the bombings against the Shears family interests (and there would be more bombings besides the Drexler) to instill fear in the country and create sympathy towards the administration. And just as they hoped for, a movement has arisen to change the constitution, allowing President Shears to stay in the White House for good. In order to stop Shears, Jay and Will pretend to turn sides and effectively infiltrate the Fourth Branch on behalf of the Porter — Jon Anselmo — and his unknown boss. But in the Season 3 finale, their efforts are thwarted when Anselmo is killed and President Shears successfully wins election for a third term. The Endgame The word "traveler" evokes an image of a wanderer, a man without a country. In a way, that’s how many Americans feel today. The Fourth Branch is really a metaphor for today’s divisive political climate, the current disconnect between the people and their elected politicians. But Will Traveler is not willing to settle for a false government. He does what we all wish we could do: He changes things. In the final episode of our show, whenever that day would have come, Will sacrifices himself to save Jay from the corrupt Shears administration. The End And, yes, sadly, this really is the end. Thank you guys again for your passion. It was inspirational. And while this conclusion can not please everyone, I hope it at least answers your questions and allows you to move forward down the road. Source http://community.tvguide.com/ Tags: Email This Post
The last episode "The Out" was amazing, it was even better than the pilot. The only think that disappoints me is that there are only 4 episodes left. Hope they are planning the next season. The question now is what happens next. My guess is that that Will is being blackmailed, but he will start fighting against the people blackmailing him and will get back with his friends. The key that Maya (Will’s girlfriend) gave them should be for evidence that prove that someone else is involved in the bombing. And since Will has passion for cameras I bet that the evidence will be a video recording. Will see next week Email This Post
Please note that the next lines contain information about the next episode that could ruin the surprise of watching the next episode. This is the short story of the episode: Jay and Tyler head to Deer Harbor, Maine, Will’s hometown. The FBI discovers new evidence regarding the museum bombing. Meanwhile, Jay and Tyler talk to a woman who had planned to leave her hometown with Will after the bombing. I’m wandering what this women will say to them Tags: Discussion, e, episodes, The Out Email This Post
As the most of us expected Will Traveler is alive. Even has stolen a painting from the museum. What a big surprise. I had big hopes for the show - it is so dynamic and the plot is intriguing, but it starts to become a trumped up story. Finding secret doors in the library, finding stashed money and evidence in such way when everything else is so perfect - this makes me a little bit disappointed. Nevertheless I’m still curious what is going on so I’ll continue following the show. Let’s hope that the next episode will be better. Tags: Discussion Email This Post
Who is this guy? Is he a CIA agent? Or a friend of Jay’s father? Or a secret bodyguard of Tyler Fog? Here is the place where you can share your answer of the question. Tags: Discussion, Hotel porter Email This Post
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