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Jan 02, 2009 00:40

Oh Aaron.

I mean. Honestly. It is not often that I feel the need to call Stanford "Aaron", but sometimes I just want to pat him on the head and give him a cookie and a nice shiny book about punctuation instead of a cookie. Oh Aaron, Aaron, Aaron.

What am I "Oh Aaron"-ing about?

I ran across the blog he wrote for the Traveler fans. I mean, obvs, this shit (anagrams, yay!) is like.. A year and a half old and most people have forgotten about Traveler and everyone's already read it anyway.. But it's just like.. Aw. Sweetie. That's.. Endearingly cute.

It's here.

Or you can find it under the cut.

Hello friends, fans and those of you just trying to stave off boredom for a few more moments by reading this blog. First, I would like to thank you all for caring enough about the show to continue watching it and to continue voicing your support. It’s nice to know that all the time and effort spent in production wasn’t for nothing. Dave asked me to scribble down a few words for you all about what it was like to play Will Traveler: a double-dealing, backstabbing, low-down snake in the grass. My answer? It was liberating! But seriously, there’s not a whole lot I can tell you without revealing tidbits and kernels of information that you’re meant to work for and sweat over in the course of the eight episodes that will (hopefully) all be airing.

Preparation for playing Will proved complicated. This was my first real experience with TV (aside from a few day-player parts) and the insanely fast pace of production caught me completely off guard. I would be given a backstory and a history for Will one day, begin researching and coming up with ideas, only to be told a week later that the backstory had been revised. Dialogue could be changed five minutes before we began shooting it. I soon realized that the best thing to do was learn to roll with the punches. I focused on moment-to-moment interactions between Will and Jay and Tyler, and tried to work with the basic unchanging elements of Will’s character such as his duality and the fact that he had been living a lie every day for the past two years of his life.

The most important thing I learned - and for you to know about Will Traveler - is that he is a survivor, as illustrated at the end of Episodes 3 and 4. The details of how he managed to survive the Drexler bombing, along with other key facts about Will’s identity, will be revealed in the next episode, "The Tells," this Wednesday, June 20. Yes, fans! The namesake of the series will actually have a sizable role this week, thus proving to my friends and family that I actually do have a part in the series beyond flashback cameos dripping with suspicious subtext and hidden double meanings.

When all is said and done, Will is an interesting and complex character and, if I’ve done my job correctly (along with the writers), he will end up surprising the lot of you… unless you are so terribly clever that you’ve already figured out where this twisted plot of dark shadows and deep rabbit holes is ultimately headed. Which is entirely possible. Audiences are extremely clever these days, and I have an especially high estimation of the Traveler audience. However, I hope we have stayed one step ahead of you.

Once again, thank you all for supporting the show. A lot of people worked very hard under difficult circumstances to make a show that we hoped would be worthwhile. I, for one, am very happy that you have deemed it worthy of your time. If you keep on watching, and writing in, they’ll keep showing them. I hope you all enjoy the next episode, where the real Will Traveler is finally revealed. Till then! - Aaron

It's just so.. Enthusiastic. Exclamation points! Semi-incomplete sentences (stylistically, so it doesn't count)! Strange adjective use! Four syllable words where there could've been one! Complex punctuation!

It's sweet, really. Mind-numbingly endearing. Someone pinch this kid's cheeks.

I was going to say we should campaign for Stanford to come write a blog for us but I'm pretty sure you'd all die of sarcasm withdrawal.

Then again.... Maybe not.

A blog about your job isn't really the best place to exercise your sarcasm.

Unless you work in customer service. Because how can you not be sarcastic about that?

But I digress.

Only not really.

Peace out, kids!
Ashe

erudite clanishness, blog, dave digilio, tiny!articulate!stanford, 2009, traveler

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