Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Extant - 7 Facts You'll Want to Know


    Enable Dark Mode!

  • What's HOT
  • Premiere Calendar
  • Ratings News
  • Movies
  • YouTube Channel
  • Submit Scoop
  • Contact Us
  • Search
  • Privacy Policy
Support SpoilerTV
SpoilerTV.com is now available ad-free to for all premium subscribers. Thank you for considering becoming a SpoilerTV premium member!

SpoilerTV - TV Spoilers

Extant - 7 Facts You'll Want to Know

12 Jul 2014

Share on Reddit


The pilot episode of “Extant” was a fun journey into both the future and a world unknown. The science fiction series starring Halle Berry left a lot of mysteries to be explored throughout the season. What happened to Berry’s character Molly up in space? Was the “person” on the spaceship real? Is her robot son a violent volcano about to erupt? These are just some of the questions we hope to have answered as the season continues. But in the meantime, executive producers Mickey Fisher and Greg Walker are giving us a head start on what we should know about “Extant” now.

1. “Extant” takes place 20-30 years from now.

Did you see all that cool technology in the pilot? How could you miss it? The photograph of Molly and her old love, Marcus, wasn’t just a still photograph – it moved. The bathroom mirror in Molly’s home operated like a touchscreen, morphing from a looking glass into a live news broadcast. The small four-cylinder capsule of garbage fit into a glowing glass box that somehow seemed to disintegrate the trash in seconds. PowerPoint presentations have transformed into 3D, with words and corresponding laser lines surrounding the speaker. And the act of driving is a thing of the past. Cars apparently operate through a computerized system that enables you to sit back (or backwards, if you like) and spend more time on your transparent-screened tablet. Just watch out for that Lamborghini-like door.


Series creator Mickey Fisher confirms the world they’ve imagined takes place two to three decades from the present. But he says they didn’t want to put a specific date on it to lock themselves in. “We really wanted to just sort of set up the world, think about logically where we may be in terms of technology and space exploration, and make a little bit of a fictional leap,” he says. “We wanted to just boil it down to the characters.”

You’ll notice they haven’t put so much emphasis on the cool gadgets that they become the focus of the show. The story and characters remain the nucleus. But it’s hard not to be impressed by the imagined technology. “We do think the future is going to be cool,” says showrunner Greg Walker. “Kind of the general rule we had for technology on our show is we would want to play with it, we would want to have it in our lives.” In fact, the writing and producing team decided to focus on things they hoped existed in 30 years, whether the technology really might exist then or not.

2. There is no NASA any more.

In Fisher and Walker’s vision, the agency that sends Molly to space for a solo scientific mission is the International Space Exploration Agency, or ISEA. It is not run by the government. Fisher explains, “We started off thinking about a world in our story where space exploration had been privatized. NASA wouldn’t necessarily exist.” The agency is run by private businessmen who were so successful, they got involved with space exploration and now fund and operate space missions.

3. Marcus and Molly have an important history.

The pilot episode made this clear as we see the picture of the two of them together and follow Molly’s reaction when the mysterious Marcus appears on the spaceship. So far we don’t know how Marcus died. But Fisher explains his significance and backstory. “Marcus is a guy who is very important in Molly’s life,” he says. “He was kind of the first great love of her life. They met in the ISEA ascendance training program, a program for gifted young astronauts who were on their way up in the program. [They] fell in love, had a relationship and unfortunately he passed away early on.”

4. What happened to Molly in space may not be an isolated incident.

Molly’s strange experience in space is the central mystery of the show. And she is not the only one trying to figure out what happened. In fact, some people may have more knowledge than her. Walker explains, “What happened to Molly in space will be very much linked to a plan they have – a kind of secret plan at the ISEA. Over the course of the season, you’ll understand it through Molly’s own investigation into what happened up in space and how maybe it’s happened before… maybe not.”


5. What you think about Marcus’ appearance may or may not be the truth.

Walker says throughout the series they will take the viewer through different possibilities of Marcus’ presence on the spaceship. “How does a dead person come back to life?” he asks. “Is it a figment of [Molly’s] imagination? Is it an actual zombie in space coming back to life? Or is it a deeper mystery that Molly will have to solve over the course of the episode? All three of those are possible and at different times look like the final explanation.” I guess we will have to wait and see which account is the truth.

6. Ethan is creepy, and he is supposed to be.

No doubt about it, that scene with the dead bird was eerie. Is this child robot prone to violent behavior? He did, after all, beat up a friend over a ball. And his response to his mother finding him with the bird was to tell her that her hair looked pretty. It was chilling. But that’s the point. We don’t know what he is capable of yet. “What’s interesting about Ethan’s character,” explains Walker, “is that Ethan is going to be molded by human experience. It’s an artificial intelligence trying to take in human emotions, human experiences and processing them. And it can be very confusing. Sometimes you’re going to get aberrant outcomes, outcomes that aren’t predictable. I think the whole big stew that is Ethan allows for actions that aren’t great and actions that are great. That’s really the tension and struggle about the artificial intelligence trying to deal with the kind of crazy roller coaster ride of human emotions.”


Fisher does want to point out that no birds were actually harmed in the making of the episode. But he says the bird scene is pivotal: “The bird is kind of a moment where you see Ethan and you are not sure if he did or didn’t [kill it]. It’s sort of a prism to look at: ‘Is this kid going down the wrong path?’”

7. The baby inside Molly is real.

If Molly imagined Marcus on the spaceship, it’s hard to explain how she became pregnant. And she is pregnant. But the question is, with what? An alien baby? “Whatever is inside her is half her and half something else,” says Walker. “That is really interesting for us. What is that thing gonna be? What’s it gonna look like? Is it going to go full term? Is she going to be pushing it around a stroller or a park?”

We don’t know yet. But Walker encourages us to ask other questions as well – questions from the baby’s side. He previews, “What does it want? Why did it find her? Why did it choose her? All those questions are questions we wrestled with and that we hopefully provide answers that you find as exciting as we did.”

All these teasers have indeed left us excited for more. Next week’s episode of “Extant” can’t come soon enough.


What did you think of the technology in “Extant?” What predictions do you have for where the show is headed? Let us know in the comments below.


About the Author - Tonya Papanikolas
Tonya Papanikolas is a freelance journalist who loves covering entertainment and television. She spent more than 10 years as a broadcast news anchor and reporter. Now she does everything from hosting to writing. She especially loves writing TV articles and reviews for SpoilerTV.


6 comments:

  1. I've been looking forward to the pilot and it did not disappoint. (only disappointing thing was starting it work the next morning and not being able to stream to the end because CBS didn't upload it). thank you for this post. my biggest question was how far in the future the show is set.

    my guess about Marcus is that that was an alien using her memories...but having read this I'm not sure I'm right. and it is really interesting that the company is involved. they have me hooked....my only negative point is the sweaters her husband wears. I've found that actor hot since he showed up on ER and they made him frumpy. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Man I loved this show so much. I hope CBS keeps up this trend of having unique, sci-fi or fantasy driven shows each summer because their September-May schedule sucks big balls and I can't stomach any of it. Anyhoo, loved the premiere and series, mostly for all the reasons that are listed in this article. I love how mysterious and cool it is without trying to be hip or anything. And I really hope the DVR numbers are huge because I'm worried CBS won't renew it with that 1.7 it got in the demo. :/

    ReplyDelete
  3. Tonya Papanikolas12 July 2014 at 07:16

    I loved it, too! (That does suck to not have the video stream to the end, though. I hate technical difficulties like that!) Oooooh, interesting theory about Marcus. I had thought alien, too, but alien using her memories is even better. I like it. :) It is interesting that the company is involved. I wonder what they know. I'm also hooked - and I usually don't love sci-fi. You made me laugh about the sweaters her husband wears. I hadn't noticed that but now I will! (And how did I forget he was on ER? Thanks for reminding me.) I appreciate your great comments.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Tonya Papanikolas12 July 2014 at 07:20

    Glad you loved it! So did I, and I really didn't know what to expect. It's so fun to have great shows in the summer. I hope CBS keeps up that trend, too! (Lol. You made me laugh about their Fall schedule. Ha ha.) I love how you say it was mysterious and cool without trying to be hip. So accurate. I'm interested to see how the numbers pan out in the long run, but summer numbers are lower, anyway, so 1.7 isn't bad. It was number one in scripted shows, I believe, for the night. So that is great. :) Keep it coming, CBS. Thanks for the comments.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I loved everything about this show , Its great evidence to people that Halle Berry can not only act but carry a show . I always believed tv would be good for her if it had great writing her work on the miniseries Introducing Dorothy Dandridge was great. I loved all the cast in this and the writing is good.
    @ CGS - The problem with CBS's fall schedule is always that their shows seem too similar its like the procedural network , l might watch Stalker and Scorpion though.
    I think ISEA or at least someone there may know about her pregnancy that company is all kinds of shaddy LOL.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Tonya Papanikolas12 July 2014 at 09:14

    I'm glad Halle Berry is getting a chance to showcase her talents in this. It definitely proves she can carry a show. I also loved her and the whole cast and thought the writing was good, too. CBS really is the procedural network, isn't it? (Having said that, I've started to watch more of their shows in the last couple years and really like The Good Wife and The Mentalist and NCIS: Los Angeles.) I am also really looking forward to Stalker and Scorpion. Those ones look so intriguing! It does sound more and more like ISEA is shady ("all kinds of shady!" Love it.). You might just be right that they know about her pregnancy. Interested to see. Thanks for your comments.

    ReplyDelete

NOTE: Name-calling, personal attacks, spamming, excessive self-promotion, condescending pomposity, general assiness, racism, sexism, any-other-ism, homophobia, acrophobia, and destructive (versus constructive) criticism will get you BANNED from the party.