The Elysium – Season One

The Elysium was a spinoff series which would have aired in May of 2015. Please note that although Season 1’s episodes would have aired before Season 50, I am covering them now, with season 2 following in the next video, as I believe I didn’t cover them well enough in the Season 49 – Recap and Update video. So, without further ado, I’ll be taking you through both Season 1 the Elysium, released from 31 May 2015.

The Elysium’s roots were founded in the finale of Panopticon, Doctor. Ronald D. Moore purposely wrote the ending to Panopticon to be open-ended enough to be revisited sometime in the future, as by that point, he was deep into planning his era in-charge of Doctor Who and intended to bring back the Vex/Time Lord fleet. With Panopticon coming to an end, as well as Cold Front’s lack of renewal for a Season 3, CBS were looking to produce a brand-new spinoff show, and ideally a show which could be a bit more self-contained than Panopticon, and stand out as a major CBS show, with it possibly rivalling the likes of HBO’s Game of Thrones, in terms of scale.

Meanwhile, Ronald D. Moore commissioned Ira Steven Behr to write a follow-up episode, Remnants, in Season 49, showing what happened to the Vex/Time Lord fleet, after the events of Panopticon. This episode was largely written before The Elysium was even conceived.

When CBS approached Moore, and co-showrunner, Jane Espenson, about the possibility of a new spinoff, two major concepts went into development, based upon stories from Season 49. The first was a spinoff set on Earth during the Gaian regime, linking in with the story arc in Season 49, and it would’ve featured Amanda Theodore as the main character. The second was what became The Elysium, originally titled The 1252, which focused upon the arrival of the Vex/Time Lord fleet on the planet, they set off for in Doctor.

After a few months of development, Moore and Espenson pitched The Elysium to CBS, and it was formally green-lit. The pitch for the show outlined the main character as an improvised single mother, while also focusing on a stressed-out civil servant, an eager but extremely curious history teacher and an especially gifted scientist. The concept continued to develop more in the process of writing the pilot script, differing from the initial pitch in some areas.

Intending to make The Elysium a very big show, with the appetite to rival the likes of Game of Thrones, CBS looked to give The Elysium a larger budget than they’d usually give to a show like it. This resulted in a partnership with streaming service, Netflix, who partly-funded the series, in return for exclusive international distribution rights. Left Bank Pictures were also brought onto the show to handle the physical production of the show, instead of BBC Scotland, as with Doctor Who.

With a release date of May 2015 set in stone, production for the show began in November 2014, lasting until early April 2015. The show was filmed in two blocks, the first covering episodes 1-3, directed by Nick Hurran and the second covering episodes 4-6, directed by Anna Foerster.

Despite his intention to also ‘showrun’ The Elysium, as well as Doctor Who, Moore realised that this wouldn’t be realistic. Instead, Jane Espenson decided to step down from the day-to-day showrunning of Doctor Who for Season 50 and move onto The Elysium as the showrunner. Ronald D. Moore served as an Executive Producer, with Espenson, although he was only just over-seeing the process, while Toni Graphia joined as an Executive Producer, with the unofficial title of Lead Storyliner, working directly with Espenson to ‘break’ the series’ plot. Ken MacQuarrie was not an Executive Producer on the show, as BBC Scotland wasn’t involved in the making of it.

Espenson decided to bring on board a whole host of new Co-Executive Producers, with the only one with any Doctor Who experience was Matthew B. Roberts, who worked on Season 49 and had already been commissioned to write the opening episode for Season 50. Andy Harries, Jim Kohlberg and Anne Kenney, were brought on board the show to offer a fresh and new perspective on the Doctor Who Universe while also forging a new path for The Elysium.

The main title sequence for the Elysium was designed and produced by Imaginary Forces, and was by design very simplistic, simply taking the viewers into a serif title card and then showing production credits for the writer, director and creators before returning to the episode. Unusually for Doctor Who productions, the actual episode title was held off until the opening of the closing credits, where it joined by the Based upon “Doctor Who” Created by credit, before entering into the 30-second closing credit sequence.

The music for the Elysium was composed by Rolf Løvland, under the supervision of Bear McCreary. On request from Jane Espenson and Ronald D. Moore, the music was heavily influenced by Celtic music and gave the series an Earthian and very natural sound, to reflect the setting of the show on the Elysium.

The Elysium’s first episode was broadcast on BBC One and CBS on 31 May 2015 and was released internationally on Netflix the following morning.

THE PROMISE

Season 1, Episode 1
Written by JANE ESPENSON
Directed by NICK HURRAN
TX Date – 31 May 2015

This episode is the first episode of the show and mainly acts to build the world and establish the characters of the show. It has four main plot lines throughout: the first focusing on the protagonist, Julie Yannis Karter, on her mining ship, the Valkyrie, as she lands on the planet; the second focusing on two other main characters, Richard Davksy Geon and his adopted sister Lea Davska Gea-Navvyl; the third focussing on Eddie Nickos Kyprinanos, who is a leading reporter on the Scallatti fleet, and the fourth focussing on our final main character Calem Ell Arcon, who is the assistant to the president’s chief of staff and we see the whole political angle of the show through her eyes. I’ll go through each plot individually, for now, as they all act separately, at the moment.

Julie’s plot, this episode, sees her experience of the fleet landing on the planet, Taoter III. She has a 7-year-old son, called Jan Danvoid Yannis, and is just one of the miners on the Valkyrie, where she’s lived her entire life, and it’s all she’s ever known. The miners have all been promised, for as long as history goes back, that when they reach this planet, all their hard work will have paid off and they will have a new and better life. Julie’s story, in the first episode, mainly sees her reiterating this and beginning to learn that things aren’t going to be so black and white. The episode ends with Julie focusing on that fact that she’s freighted that her son is going to end up living an even worse life than her.

Richard and Lea’s plot, similar establishes them, and a lot of the runtime of this episode shows us their sibling relationship, as the rest of the season has them largely split up. Richard, who is a teacher, ends up taking Lea outside to see the planet, but has to rush off to teach a class. We also find out in these scenes that Lea is a leading scientist and is in charge of a think-tank that the government has set with solving an impossible problem, but we don’t yet know what that problem is. Lea walks off into the forest, after seeing something and finds herself coming into contact with an alien girl, Kalagisah, who is in fact a native of the planet, and a member of a race called the Cizzaurans. At the end of the episode, Kalagisah takes Lea back to her village. Meanwhile, Richard teaches a class about an event called the Invitation of Destination, which is the starting point of their history, just 556 years ago and it describes a folk-lore type version of the Season 49-episode Remnants. Later in the episode, Richard meets with an elder, called Utnapishtim and they have a conversation about the past, and Richard starts asking about events before the Invitation of Destination, but Utnapishtim closes up and makes Richard promise that he won’t ask about it again.

Eddie’s plot also establishes him, by showing him reporting on the landing on the planet. Eddie ends up interviewing the Attorney General, Claude, about whether it’s true that there’s no way of generating power on this planet, which some of Eddie’s sources have told him, but Claude, flat-out denies it. Eddie goes on to meet with his producer, Dani, and he wants to her about the fact that he knows Claude lied directly to his face. Dani asks Eddie to take a rest, as he’s getting to worked up, but Eddie lashes out and says he will find the truth out.

Finally, Calem probably gets most of the plot this episode, as she firstly visits a refugee camp full of survivors of the destruction of a ship, the previous year, the Barrac and she has a small argument with Administrator Lieonotis, the administrator of the camp. She goes onto become part of a task force, the President, Ajacos, sets up to explore the immediate area on the planet, to assess the resources and find out whether or not their issue, which Lea has been helping fix, the fact that they have no power, is truly an issue. During the expedition, Calem and one of the tech assistants, Joh, are kidnapped by an indigenous species to the planet, but not the same one as Lea’s, as these look completely different. They are taken back to the village and they awaken to find themselves bound to the ground, by a raced called the Rhaighrs.

UNALII

Season 1, Episode 2
Written by TONI GRAPHIA
Directed by NICK HURRAN
TX Date – 7 June 2015

This episode begins focusing on Jan, Julie’s son, as he is involved in an accident on the Valkyrie, as all the power turns off, all of a sudden, on the ship and suddenly the ceiling caves in as electronics, equipment, lights and all the outdated junk the ship is equipped with comes crashing down. This plot continues throughout the episode as the Vice President, Roddy, is given the task of dealing with the accident, which we find out is as a result of a decision, Claude influenced President Ajacos into making, of cutting off power to the less important ships, to save energy. Roddy tries to empty the ship, but Julie refuses to leave with Jan’s whereabouts unknown. The two then get trapped on board the ship, as the entrance caves in, and the two spend the rest of the episode, climbing through the ship, to firstly escape, and secondly (but most importantly for Julie) find Jan. During these scenes, Julie and Roddy form a mother and son-like dynamic, as they get to know each other. After making it out of the Valkyrie, with Jan, Roddy takes Julie and him to the refugee camp, where now survives of the Barrac and the Valkyrie are residing.

The second plot line is about the two indigenous races on the planet: the Cizzaurans (who Lea is with) and the Rhaighrs (who Calem is with). Calem and Joh are interrogated throughout the episode by the Rhaighrs, before making an escape from the Rhaighr village, and warning the Scallatti of them. Lea has a much different experience with the Cizzaurans, and gets to know one called Begass, and we find out a lot more details about them, and also about Lea in the process. During this, the Cizzaurans tell Lea of a resource in the Kanonhsa (their word for the planet), called Kheqren, which would solve the Energy Exhaustion Crisis the Scallatti are facing. Lea thanks them and asks whether they can use it, to which Meithekk, the village leader, says they can, as long as they do not use it for harm, but for the good of their people. Lea returns to the fleet and explains the situation to the President and the Think-Tank, to which they all applaud. She also informs them of the fact that their seem to be two indigenous races, or more, on the planet.

Richard takes a backseat this episode as he is just interviewed by the police, about the events leading up to Lea’s disappearance and he also gets a touching reunion scene with Lea when she returns to the fleet, as they embrace each other.

Finally, Eddie’s plot sees him writing a report on the Rhaighrs, after Calem and Joh return to the fleet, which is put to a stop by his producer, Dani, who says that it’s a matter for the government to control, which angers Eddie. He then decides to ignore Dani, and secretly record an ‘off-the-record’ conversation he has with Joh about what happened, to use in a report.

The episode then ends with Ajacos, Claude and Roddy having a meeting and they raise the issue that now they know about Kheqren, they are going to have to start a whole new mining operation here, on the planet. They say that they don’t have any miners anymore, but Roddy isn’t interested as he tries to change the subject onto the treatment of the refugees in the refugee camp. However, Claude takes this and suggests that they use the refugees as miners to mine the Kheqren. Ajacos, reluctantly agrees, and says they have no other option, much to Roddy’s alarm.

BROKEN

Season 1, Episode 3
Written by JANE ESPENSON
Directed by NICK HURRAN
TX Date – 14 June 2015

This episode opens with a television programme: Callista’s Questions, where we see Eddie hosting a Question Time like show with Calem and Lea on the panel, as well as a couple of other guests. They discuss and argue about the latest decisions of the president including the decision know the ally the Scallatti with the Cizzaurans, the decision to put the Barrac and Valkyrie survivors into the mines, despite the fact that they were promised a new start when they arrived, and that the Barrac wasn’t even a mining ship, the decision to keep the fact that the fleet may not have had any power, when they arrived on the planet quiet, for five years, and the decision to start mining this Kheqren. The whole thing descends and spirals into  large argument. We see Julie watching on in the refugee camp, on a screen, throughout this. We also find out that Ajacos is holding a state dinner with Meithekk, the Chief of the Horretz tribe of the Cizzaurans.

Julie takes more of a backseat this episode as she spends it in the refugee camp as she buts heads with the Administrator who tells her that the decision to put them in the mines is final, and it might actually be a good thing as they will be doing something more useful than sitting around all day. The plot then descends into an outbreak of some sort of disease in the camp which starts killing everyone off, before they are shipped out to go into the mines.

Richard meets a new teacher, in this episode, called Tena, who has just started as the new Business Teacher at Richard’s school. We find out that she in fact used to be the principal of the Barrac High School, but managed to move over to Ramanujan High, as a normal teacher. Richard and Tena bond over the episode, and they both discuss each others lives and jovially bicker throughout. By the end of the episode, we see the two of them in a bar, having a drink together, looking very intimate.

Eddie’s plot continues on from Callista’s Questions, as Dani is delighted as she finds out the viewing figures, which are huge and she says that for once she’s really impressed with his work. Eddie asks if he could get an interview with Meithekk, before the banquet, and she, in a good mood, says that he can try, at least asking the government for permission. Eddie’s plot for the rest of the episode sees him covering the state visit of Meithekk, which I’ll cover more when I talk about Calem’s plotline. However, Eddie breaks away, during the banquet and hijacks the broadcast showing everyone the horrors of whats happening with the refugees as he films them being put into the mines, against their will, as slaves. Dani flips out in the gallery, frantically trying to change the feed back to the banquet.

Lea’s plot line sees her in the Horretz village, working on investigating the properties of the Kheqren. She also develops a automatic translator for the Cizzauran language, which she gives everyone, after she worked out and learnt the language for herself, in the last episode. When she leaves the village, she meets a female Cizzauran called Saganseh who is the Caretaker of the Clan, who takes over as Meithekk leaves for the state banquet.

Calem spends the first half of this episode getting things ready for the banquet, and trying to do the impossible task of making a seating plan for the event, which Syd ends up having to help her out on. When Meithekk arrives, he has a grand welcome before he has a private meeting with Ajacos, which Calem, Syd, Claude and Roddy listen at the door, to try and hear what’s going on. The banquet then takes place, in all its glory, and everything and everyone seems to be going well and getting on well.

Finally the episode ends with Julie and Jan standing in the wasteland, readied for the mines, completely hopeless and broken.

DAWN

Season 1, Episode 4
Written by ANNE KENNEY
Directed by ANNA FOERSTER
TX Date – 21 June 2015

This episode takes place a whole three months after the last, opening with a caption which says exactly that. The episode sets up the plots for the second half of the season, which while link to the first half, they almost have their own beginning/middle/end.

So, let’s start with Julie’s plot, which sees her now in the mines, after working there for three months. However, things come to a turn when Roddy arrives at the mines, after being sent on a state visit by the President. He soon bumps into Jan who tells him that his ‘mummy’ hates him. Soon he finds Julie, who shows that she does in fact hate him and she has a large argument with him, telling him not to show his face there again. Roddy apologies,  but Julie won’t have any of it. Roddy then calls for the attention of all the miners and tells them that he argued strongly against putting them in the mines, he says that he is appalled by the lack of pay and the terrible decisions but he will do everything he can to change that. Julie and the miners still aren’t happy but then Roddy says that perhaps they could do something that will make the President notice – and he suggests they hold a strike, and he promisees he will fully support them through this. Later on, we see Roddy and Julie planning the strike and Roddy says he knows the perfect way of getting the President’s attention.

Moving onto Richard, and we find him, three months later, in bed with Tena, as it seems they are now in a relationship. They walk over to the new school building together, but Richard says that he needs to collect a few things from his old classroom on the Ramanujan (the ship he used to be on). After collecting a few boxes from the school on the Ramanujan, Richard walks onto the, now empty, bridge, reminiscing about his whole life he has spent on the ship. However, a strange message lights up on one of the screens, as he turns to leave. Richard walks over to it, glitching out, reading: “Convalesce Gone”. He notes it down, curiously.  Later on, after Richard finishes one of his classes, Tena comes to see him, and Richard seems on edge, moaning more about his student’s ignorance. As he and Tena go to the staff room, Richard asks if she perhaps knows what the word “Convalesce” means. Tena is unsure as she’s not heard of the word before, but she has heard of similar words and terms. Richard then goes onto explain his experience of seeing it on the monitor.

Lea’s plot line finds her still in the Horretz village, bonding with Begass, who is making a piece of Kheqren jewellery. We find out she’s here for some sort of purpose, but we’re not sure as to why. She goes onto have a conversation with one of her scientists, Dien, and they discuss how everyone in the fleet is in a false state of happiness but she says what they don’t know won’t hurt them. Soon after, however, they are interrupted by a high pitched noise, which makes all the Cizzaurans burst out of their huts. Seganseh says that they must ready themselves for an attack. The Rhaighrs soon draw in as a battle breaks out, and Lea is caught in the middle of it. She fights back, but she falls to the ground injured, towards the end of the battle, and is kidnapped by the Rhaighrs.

Calem and Eddie’s storylines are intertwined more this episode as we begin with a meeting of the Scallatti and Meithekk, now appointed emissary of the Cizzaurans. We then see Eddie entering the Callista Daily offices, after arriving back from his three-month suspension, due to his hijacking of the feed last episode. Dani is unimpressed seeing him. Eddie remains smug, and a small argument ends up breaking out between them as Dani threatens Eddie. As Meithekk leaves the Government Building, after his meeting, Eddie grabs hold of him and asks if he’d grant him a proper interview. Meithekk says that he has a better idea and says that he wants him to make a documentary about the Cizzaurans, to show the Scallatti what they are really like. Eddie agrees, and Meithekk takes him back through the forest back to the Horretz village. However, while on the journey, which Eddie is filming for the doc, Meithekk spots a Rhaighr troop heading towards the Horretz village. Meithekk lets out a high-pitched scream to warn them of this fact. They then head back to the Scallatti clearing and demands that Ajacos gives his people back-up. Ajacos, however, makes the decision, under the advisement of Claude, to leave the Cizzaurans to themselves and not grant help. They quickly head back to the Horretz village, angry. Ajacos, Claude, Syd and Calem have a meeting and Ajacos changes his mind, and decides to send 20 or so troops to be permanently stationed in the Horretz village, which he tells Claude they can spare. Calem is alarmed throughout at Claude’s inhumanity. However, this meeting is interrupted by a transmission from the mines as Roddy appears on screen, introducing Julie who tells them that they are going on strike until they are paid, recognised, given good conditions and the freedom to choose if they want to be a miner or not otherwise the fleet will not be getting any Kheqren.  Finally, we see Meithekk and Eddie arrive at the village to find it devastated, and Eddie finds out that Lea has been kidnapped.

The episode then ends with Roddy chanting over camera, ‘strike’ over and over again, and we see Ajacos visibly uncomfortable.

KNIFE’S EDGE

Season 1, Episode 5
Written by MATTHEW B. ROBERTS
Directed by ANNA FOERSTER
TX Date – 28 June 2015

This episode begins with us a flashback to twelve years earlier when we see Julie’s first daughter, Collie, die on board the Valkyrie. Then we cut to her in the present day, repeating her strike message over the transmission to President Ajacos. Julie’s plot line in this episode continues with her discussing the plan with Roddy in the mines, as they decide to barricade the entrance with a load of Kheqren. Julie ends up turning into a hero for the miners in these scenes, and over the episode rises to becoming their leader. Julie ends up taking a wrong turn, later in the episode, and falls down a hole in the ground of one of the tunnels falling into a huge cavern. When she regains consciousness she  finds a Cizzauran, all on his own, roaming the cavern. She tries to communicate with him, but nothing seems to work. After a few hours, Roddy and the miners manage to find Julie and get her out of the cavern, along with this new Lone Cizzauran. Roddy is delighted by this, as he sees the Lone Cizzauran as the perfect hostage for negotiations. Roddy begins another transmission to the President, towards the climax of the episode, whereby he says that if their demands aren’t met, they will kill the Cizzauran and risk a war with them.

Lea’s plot sees her in the Rhaighr village, after being kidnapped during the Battle of Horretz. Khrrasssrr intimidates her for a while, before she is taken to see the Almighty. When she arrives in the Almighty’s palace, she is introduced to Thrreodhrirr: the Almighty. She refers to Lea as the Equal of the Lesser, and treats Lea with respect and humanity, apologising for how she’s been treated. Thrreodhrirr asks where the Scallatti come from, and Lea graciously explains. It turns out however, that she is just trying to mine Lea for information about the Scallatti so she can launch an assault, to which Lea is then removed from the palace and taken back to Khrrasssrr. What follows is an intense scene with Khrrasssrr as he interrogates Lea, very harshly and messes with her head. However, Lea does not respond to any of his methods, and thus Thrreodhrirr stabs and kills him, for his failure.

As this episode takes place over just one night, Richard and Tena spend all of it in their flat. We get a lot of scenes with Richard being tense, because of him worrying about Lea, and Tena calming him down. He also is confused about the message he found on the Ramanujan, in the last episode. They end up watching the news, of the coverage of the miner’s strike, and see Ajacos saying that they expect as a result there will be power cuts, but then the power cuts out in Richard’s flat, and so they don’t get to hear the rest. Tena ends up lighting some candles so they can see, and Richard starts asking more about the Barrac, but Tena tries to change the subject, before breaking down into tears about everyone that she lost, and that all 400,000 people who died, make her grieve every day, as it was everyone that she knew. Richard proceeds to comfort her. Richard then asks exactly how did the Barrac get destroyed, as the news was always vague about it, but Tena again changes the subject.

Eddie spends the episode in the Horretz village, making the documentary, and seeing the aftermath of the battle. Meithekk is furious that they didn’t get any help from the Scallatti troops when he asked for it. Eddie later picks up Roddy’s transmission holding the Lone Cizzauran hostage and Seganseh and Meithekk say that they must get him back at all costs, even if it means war.

Finally, Calem’s plot directly ties to the miner’s plot, this episode, as she tries to negotiate with Roddy. She ends up ordering soldiers to break into the mines, but the entrance is blocked up with Kheqren, so they are unable to. She then sends for reinforcements, reluctantly, as she wanted to sort this out on her own.

The episode finally ends with us seeing the miners sitting the Lone Cizzauran looking at him, with all their hope riding on a complete and total stranger.

BREAKING GROUND

Season 1, Episode 6
Written by JANE ESPENSON & TONI GRAPHIA
Directed by ANNA FOERSTER
TX Date – 5 July 2015

The final episode of the season opens with a flashback to five weeks ago, here its revealed that Lea has found out that Kheqren energy can’t be transported over any long distance, and it dilutes very quickly. We find out that Lea took residence in the Horretz village in Episode 4, to try and find a solution to this problem. Claude orders this and tells Lea not to tell the President.

The plot of this episode from here on is really in two sections, the main plot with the strike and the three species and then a separate plot with Richard and Tena. I shall be going through the B plot first. So Richard and Tena arrive for school, in the morning, but when they get to the staff room they find Utnapishtim standing there. He says that he knows Richard has seen something she shouldn’t have and tells him to leave t and keep the past secret. It’s also revealed that the President’s Chief of Staff, Syd, is working with Utnapishtim and is there with him. Utnapishtim takes Tena away to have a word with her, and Richard manages to persuade Syd into telling him what’s going on. She explains that she’s a member of an organisation called ‘The Three’ and that Utnapishtim was trying to recruit him, but now she’s been instructed to kill him instead. However, Richard manages to persuade Syd not to and go on the run with him, while it’s also revealed that Tena was in on it and Utnapishtim had planted her as a spy with Richard. By the end of the episode, Richard and Syd, on the run, find themselves in a Rhaighr settlement, after running through the forest.

So, the main plot of this episode sees the big three sided confrontation between the Scallatti, the Cizzaurans and the Rhaighrs. Ajacos groups the Scallatti together outside the mines and then has a private word with Roddy, whereby Roddy makes Ajacos understand why he’s doing what he’s doing, but Ajacos still feels incredibly betrayed. Roddy manages to make Ajacos then agree to his terms, of making the miners, proper, well-treated and paid workers, with rights, before Ajacos slyly fires Roddy as Vice President. We also find out, that the Lone Cizzauran can communicate through music, and song (at least how humans perceive it) when the Cizzaurans arrive and Roddy manages to cool the situation down by taking Meithekk down the mines. The Rhaighrs, led by Thrreodhrirr arrive, but Ajacos stops the battle emerging with the Cizzaurans and suggests a one-to-one duel instead, to settle things. Ajacos duels Thrreodhrirr but he is defeated. Before the duel can be ended, however, Calem in a mad impulse takes over and fights, before stopping and making a speech saying that while they may very well win this battle, every mother, father, brother, sister, son and daughter will defend their home as the Scallatti has worked far too hard to live here, on Taoter III. She then pauses and says that this planet isn’t just the third planet in the Taoter system, it’s their Destination, their Elysium – it’s the Elysium. Berzhrr, another Rhaighr, then tells Thrreodhrirr that Calem is right and if the Rhaighrs are to survive they must make peace with the Scallatti. Calem then suggests dividing the planet up equally between all three races. But she instead just retreats, with some persuasion by Lea (who earlier in the episode manages to find some cabling in the Rhaighr village which solves her Kheqren problem), to just retreat, and she leaves warning the Scallatti.

Finally, the episode ends with all the Scallatti gathered around the Government Building, one month later. Ajacos invited Julie to speak on a podium, along with Lea and Calem. They all make speeches and then Calem steps forward and officially renames the planet, Taoter III to the Elysium, before the crowd applause, the Scallatti anthem plays, and the episode ends.

So, there you have it, the Elysium Season 1. Next video will actually be season 2, because of the fact that this season comes out before Season 50, so if you are watching, later after this video released, the next video you need to watch is Season 50: Part One, but if you’re watching right now, then it’s the Elysium Season 2, and then Season 52. Until the next time, goodbye.

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