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By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

To this day, Ronald D. Moore’s Battlestar Galactica reboot is remembered as a peak example of sci-fi storytelling. There are plenty of reasons for this: the cast was full of insanely talented actors, for example, and every single action scene kept fans on the edge of their seats. But the greatest strength of the show was its writing. The entire premise of the show was that humanity was trying to survive a genocidal attack by the Cylons, enemies who could potentially wipe everyone out at any given moment. It’s a very bleak story, and the tight writing of the show ensured that we felt every single heartwrenching decision.
Moore got his start by writing for Star Trek: The Next Generation. While that franchise is all about hope and optimism for humanity’s future, Moore ensured Galactica was the anti-Trek, with dark storylines about paranoia and desperation. This filtered into the design philosophy of the show, which is why Galactica feels like a submarine and the Enterprise-D felt like a flying Holiday Inn. However, what most fans don’t realize is that Moore borrowed one aspect of Star Trek’s design: in the Galactica episode “Tigh Me Up and Tigh Me Down,” he introduced an observation deck that was very clearly inspired by Ten Forward from The Next Generation!

This story comes to us courtesy of the commentary track for “Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down,” just in case you needed a special incentive to bust out your Blu-rays. While this episode had plenty of the show’s signature paranoia (including Adama suspecting that Ellen Tigh is a Cylon and Roslin suspecting Adama was a Cylon), it had plenty of lighthearted moments designed to give audiences a break from the relentless drama of Season 1. It was also an episode that gave its characters a break, as it introduced the Observation Deck, an area where characters could stargaze and generally contemplate the cosmos.
On the commentary track for this episode, Ronald D. Moore said that “It did feel right that, perhaps…there was one area of the ship, which accepted a window or a port to look out and that it would be a fairly confined space for the crew on these very long, deep space missions.” This would be a place “where they can go to and just stargaze. And in this situation, it seemed like there would be a lot of people lining up to try and look out at the stars, you know, a break from the monotony of staring at metal walls.”
If this sounds a bit familiar, it’s because he’s basically describing Ten Forward from Star Trek: The Next Generation!

Star Trek: The Next Generation was, to put it mildly, a more hopeful and optimistic show than Battlestar Galactica. Nonetheless, the Enterprise-D crew still experienced a fair amount of stress. Any given week, they could be tossed to the Borg by Q, get caught in a Klingon Civil War, or simply killed on an Away Team mission gone wrong. Because of this, the crew liked to relax in Ten Forward, a bar where they could look at the stars. It is located on Deck 10 in the forward section (hence, the name), offering everyone glorious, panoramic views of the cosmos around them.
Now, Ronald D. Moore didn’t explicitly name-drop Ten Forward during the commentary track. However, the idea of a ship section where beleaguered crew members can relax by gazing at the stars through big windows is very clearly inspired by everyone’s favorite spot to hang out on the Enterprise-D. That means that the showrunner never fully escaped his television roots and that his acclaimed anti-Trek show has a powerful echo of Star Trek: The Next Generation hidden deep within the Battlestar Galactica.