“We’ve had examples of shows and movies that had a very slow build and then became cult classics. “They’re not operating the way that other streamers seem to be operating right now where something has to do amazingly well in the first two weeks or it never gets a second season,” she says. Writer Sara Lynn Michener is glad that Silo is being produced by Apple TV+, which has a strong track record of supporting their science fiction shows. “So at least we have that security blanket, unlike with Lost and Battlestar Galactica, where they were clearly writing and producing it as they went along, and they didn’t really know where it was going.” “I do feel like the truth about these mysteries is satisfying, assuming they keep the same answers from the books,” he says. Science fiction editor John Joseph Adams, who has collaborated with Howey on multiple projects, promises that Silo is building toward a satisfying conclusion in future seasons. Science fiction shows often tantalize viewers with intriguing mysteries but then fail to deliver satisfying explanations. “So it’s something I really, really liked.” “For years any time someone says, ‘Oh you do a science fiction podcast? What’s a good science fiction book I should read?’ I’ve very often said Wool,” he says. Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy host David Barr Kirtley was excited to see one of his favorite books turned into a big-budget series. Silo is based on the 2011 novel Wool by self-publishing star Hugh Howey.
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