It started, I suppose, with the feeling I wasn't as engaged with "live-action" movies and television as I "ought" to be. I knew enough about the original Battlestar Galactica to be interested in the thought of a "modern remake," but that awareness was abstract enough that I couldn't see myself being worried over this new version not being the "original." (Nowadays, too, it's somehow amusing to remember back to the days when the differences seemed the most notable thing about the new version...) Too, perhaps, the new version becoming a show sometime after its original "mini-series" seemed to give me a second chance to get into it, and I may well be more concerned than I need to be about constantly missing the chance to take an initial description and commit to a broadcast series that "has" to be seen from the very first episode or you won't understand anything. (For that matter, too, I had to see the initial episodes via "disapproved methods" before finally subscribing to the next cable tier and getting the science fiction channel...)
The very first regular-length episode of Battlestar Galactica made a strong impression on me; I might even have been briefly worried it was going to displace everything else from my affections... although as time passed, just following the discussions of others began to strengthen my unfortunate impression that certain people nowadays get one really good season out of a television show, and then what the creators really want to show diverges from what they first became interested in. Maybe that impression has soothed my previous feelings of having "missed out" on other shows. Still, I stuck with Battlestar Galactica... I'm aware of how it seemed to drift away from "tackling contemporary issues," but was able to adjust. There were certainly some twists in the final episode, but also time enough, it seemed, to get used to the final major developments. I'm not quite sure if I'm stuck with a "so what do I do now?" feeling; perhaps that has to do with having managed to start watching "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" (as with the new Doctor Who, deciding to commit to it seemed somehow less of a major commitment than starting out with Battlestar Galactica), which is still running on Fridays for however many more episodes it has left. Even so, it may be that I'm still not as engaged with "live-action" movies and television as I "ought" to be... but now that doesn't seem to bother me as much as it did before.
The very first regular-length episode of Battlestar Galactica made a strong impression on me; I might even have been briefly worried it was going to displace everything else from my affections... although as time passed, just following the discussions of others began to strengthen my unfortunate impression that certain people nowadays get one really good season out of a television show, and then what the creators really want to show diverges from what they first became interested in. Maybe that impression has soothed my previous feelings of having "missed out" on other shows. Still, I stuck with Battlestar Galactica... I'm aware of how it seemed to drift away from "tackling contemporary issues," but was able to adjust. There were certainly some twists in the final episode, but also time enough, it seemed, to get used to the final major developments. I'm not quite sure if I'm stuck with a "so what do I do now?" feeling; perhaps that has to do with having managed to start watching "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" (as with the new Doctor Who, deciding to commit to it seemed somehow less of a major commitment than starting out with Battlestar Galactica), which is still running on Fridays for however many more episodes it has left. Even so, it may be that I'm still not as engaged with "live-action" movies and television as I "ought" to be... but now that doesn't seem to bother me as much as it did before.