Fringe: The Cure - HD Screencaps
By Austin Email Post 10/22/2008 07:08:00 PM Categories: Fringe, J.J. Abrams, Photos, Screencaps, The Cure
High-Definition screen captures of Fringe Episode 1.06 "The Cure", are now available in our Galley section.
Some of the most interesting screenshots are already up in our Screencaps / Easter Egg section, but if there's something you can't find there or in our Gallery, you can request a screenshot here.
Fox Fringe: Walter's Lab Notes #6
By Edward Email Post 10/22/2008 04:02:00 AM Categories: Fox, Fringe, J.J. Abrams, Walter's Lab Notes
Fringe Episode 106 - The Cure
By Dennis Email Post 10/21/2008 09:00:00 PM Categories: Fringe, Season 1
After weeks of being reported missing, a woman with a rare disease resurfaces in suburban Massachusetts and inexplicably causes excruciating pain and subsequent death to those she encounters...
Which major science fiction themes would you like Fringe to explore?
Fringe Episode 106 - 'The Cure' Airs Tonight
By Edward Email Post 10/21/2008 02:25:00 PM Categories: ARG, Easter Eggs, Fringepedia, J.J. Abrams
...at 9/8 Central on FOX. If, ...
We also have some previews and spoilers for tonight's episode, and as always, Fringepedia will be a hivemind of activity.
...appeals to you, be sure to join us starting at 9:00 Eastern for our easter egg hunt and episode discussion where this week's poll asks, "Which major science fiction themes would you like Fringe to explore?"Doing something online, I was watching a show and something was mentioned I'd be able to go online and see it. This just provides another level of discovery and interaction. Often there are clues that connect to things in the story if you care to pursue those or examine them or discover them. It's something as a viewer I like to do, so it really comes from my, and the team's, desire to create entertainment that goes elsewhere than just the TV or movie screen. That elsewhere might be online or places yet to be discovered. It's not about trying to blur the line, it's about creating an experience that is more than just the narrative that you are watching in front of you. -- J.J. Abrams
We also have some previews and spoilers for tonight's episode, and as always, Fringepedia will be a hivemind of activity.
TV Guide: Jasika Nicole Interview
By Dennis Email Post 10/21/2008 10:50:00 AM Categories: Fringe, Interview, J.J. Abrams, Jasika Nicole, Spoiler-free
TV Guide has an exclusive interview with Jasika Nicole, who plays Astrid Farnsworth on Fringe. Jasika reveals some interesting information about her character, and some theories about William Bell. There are some mild-spoilers in the article, so you can read the spoiler-free version below, or head over to Spoilers.FringeTelevision.com to read the spoliers.Click here to read the Spoiler-Free article
Fringe Dwellers - Episode 7 - "Power Hungry"
By Dennis Email Post 10/20/2008 09:01:00 AM Categories: Audio, Fringe, FringeDwellers, J.J. Abrams, Podcast
In episode seven of the Fringe Dwellers Podcast, Jen and Adele try a slightly new format to tackle the electrifying fifth FRINGE episode - Power Hungry. They respond to your emails, report on the newest Kurt-ci news and bring your some spoilers.Also, listen out for David Wu's parody of Gold Digger that summarizes the events of episode 4 before the spoilers.
Listen now:
You can also subscribe to the podcast on iTunes.
If you have a comment or question for Adele & Jen, you can email them at fringedwellers@gmail.com. You can also leave a voicemail for them at (206) 333-0072, or reach them on Twitter as fringedwellers, or Facebook as Gene the Cow Worshippers
J.J. Abrams: Fringe proudly and squarely exists in the science fiction world.
By Edward Email Post 10/18/2008 12:40:00 AM Categories: Interview, J.J. Abrams, MassiveDynamic.com
J.J. Abrams talked to Starwars.com about Fringe (and Star Wars).
Read the full interview at Starwars.com: J.J. Abrams Talks Fringe, Cattle and Star WarsI read that Fringe had an interesting bovine problem because you couldn't use the same cow from the pilot so you had to bring in another cow and paint it to look like the original.
I wish that had been the biggest problem on the show. [laughs] We had an issue with the cow not being able to cross the border from Canada where we shot the pilot. Apparently, cows are contraband.
Did you have any other obstacles with Fringe that you hadn't come across being a TV show veteran? How has your experience working on this show differed than that of something like Alias or Lost?
I have relatively speaking very little experience, so every time I'm involved in a movie or a TV show it always feels like a brand new set of challenges. On this show, among others, it's a question of pacing the show and how much we reveal. We are obviously taking scientific notions and pushing them into insanity so this is not a documentary or a course on science. It's supposed to be taken as Frankenstein was -- an entertaining narrative that takes the ideas that surround us and push them much farther than they are currently able to go. When Star Trek first came out with communicators and the idea of a laser shooting something, these were scientific notions that didn't exist. And now 40 years later there actually are lasers that can shoot as weapons, and there are communicators that we have in our pockets. The idea that some of the stuff we're talking about potentially could come to pass is a fascinating one, but we're not pretending that this is all real and happening now. The fun of Fringe is that it's a "what if" scenario. Every episode gets to play with the impossible idea that something might happen and how do we deal with those ramifications and consequences? What does it mean to live in a world where science has run amok?
Even TV shows that are supposed to be based in fact like C.S.I. and House aren't exactly using proper science; you can't get DNA results in two hours.
Most legal or medical shows stretch the truth. There are trials and treatments that come to resolution at hyper speed and the reality is much different, but that reality isn't always entertaining. Fringe proudly and squarely exists in the science fiction world.
You often create Web sites for fictional companies like Massive Dynamic for Fringe and The Hanso Foundation for Lost to draw the viewer online and give them another experience outside the TV show. Why is a transmedia experience important to envision in all your properties?
Doing something online, whether it's stuff we did on Lost or Alias and even on Felicity -- one of the characters, Noel Crane, had a Web site -- the idea is more that, if I was watching a show and something was mentioned I'd be able to go online and see it. This just provides another level of discovery and interaction. Often there are clues that connect to things in the story if you care to pursue those or examine them or discover them. It's something as a viewer I like to do, so it really comes from my, and the team's, desire to create entertainment that goes elsewhere than just the TV or movie screen. That elsewhere might be online or places yet to be discovered. It's not about trying to blur the line, it's about creating an experience that is more than just the narrative that you are watching in front of you.
Power Hungry Postmortem
By Edward Email Post 10/15/2008 05:52:00 PM Categories: Fringebusters, J.J. Abrams, Ratings
Popular Mechanics is back at it, Fringebusting the science in Fringe. But more interesting than the debunking:
- The product placement. Not in Fringe, but in the Popular Mechanics articles about Fringe. Perhaps we should do a weekly critique of how well PC disguises their paid links as journalism.
- Still no acknowledgment of The Arrival's PC shout out that we can see. Perhaps Fringe should try again, only this time send the shout out the recurring fringebuster, Kate Schweitzer.
- "And regarding Joseph's ability to levitate in the elevator? Park compared this to the urban legend that if you jump in a careening elevator, right at its moment of impact, you'd survive. It's just not true."
Fringe: Power Hungry - HD Screencaps
By Dennis Email Post 10/15/2008 02:44:00 PM Categories: Fringe, J.J. Abrams, Photos, Power hungry, Screencaps
High-Definition screencaps of Fringe Episode 105 "Power Hungry", are now available in our Galley section.Some of the most interesting screenshots are already up in our Screencaps / Easter Egg section, but if there's something you can't find there or in our Gallery, you can request a screenshot here.
Fringe Photos: Episode 105 - Power Hungry
By Dennis Email Post 10/15/2008 02:37:00 PM Categories: Fringe, J.J. Abrams, Photos, Power hungry, Promotional Photos
Fringe Scenemaker 105: Power Hungry
By Dennis Email Post 10/15/2008 10:18:00 AM Categories: Behind The Scenes, Fringe, J.J. Abrams, Scenemaker, Video
Fringe Scenemaker is a behind the scenes look at the filming of Fringe Episode 105 - Power Hungry.
Fox Fringe: Walter's Lab Notes #5
By Edward Email Post 10/15/2008 03:37:00 AM Categories: Fox, Fringe, J.J. Abrams, Walter's Lab Notes

Walter's King of Cups card is a tarot card. Interpreting the King of Cups really depends on which source you favor, but one we found might allude to Olivia's relationship with John Scott.
The King of Cups does not repress his emotions and unconscious impulses but has learned to accept and deal with them in a mature and balanced manner. -- biddytarot.comMost notable however, the face of the king is covered (or scratched out?) by a bird dropping?
Among a few crime scene photos of the elevator crash are two feathers, presumably those of the pigeons responsible for the mess. Also seemingly out of place, what appears to be a childhood art project "By: Peter!!"
There is also a diagram of the device used to reorient the pigeon's internal compasses so they could home in on Joseph Meegar's location.
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