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        <title><![CDATA[‘The Mandalorian’ boss admits Baby Yoda was inspired by E.T.]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">‘The Mandalorian’ boss admits Baby Yoda was inspired by E.T.</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;The Mandalorian&#8221; show boss has admitted <strong>Baby Yoda</strong> was inspired by E.T and revealed the challenge of following in George Lucas’ footsteps.</p><p>Jon Favreau is the creator of the <strong>hit Disney+ series</strong>, which follows a bounty hunter in the years following the events of &#8220;Return of the Jedi.&#8221;</p><p>One of the most popular characters in the series is The Child — or Baby Yoda as fans have named him — and Jon has revealed more about introducing him to the story.</p><p>His first scene sees Mando open his futuristic egg-shaped home and the pair look at each other, before reaching one finger out to touch the other.</p><p>Jon told <strong>Deadline</strong>: “[Executive Producer] Dave [Filoni] had done a sketch of kind of a Michelangelo/E.T. moment, and that was a source of inspiration.</p><p>Jon and the team drew parallels between Michelangelo’s “The Creation of Adam” and Steven Spielberg’s famous alien with his on-screen introduction, with Jon adding: “Then, Doug Chiang and the whole art department started generating drawings of it, and the Legacy [Effects] people built it.”</p><p>As well as <strong>introducing new characters</strong>, Jon also revealed how he had the chance to tell an intimate story in a grand setting, as well as striking the balance between Star Wars creator George Lucas’ legacy and taking it in new directions.</p><p>“This was an opportunity to prune everything back to the beginnings again, and having new characters allowed us to do that, he said. “To have a way to create a freshness, while still being respectful of what came before, I think is one of the challenges of storytellers in this moment, because we’re inundated with so much content.”</p><p>He continued: “Now, everything’s at the touch of a finger, so everybody has a tremendous cultural context … You know, everybody’s checking your work.”</p><p>Jon then used The Beatles as an analogy for how he dealt with the pressure of working within the Star Wars universe George created in 1977 with his first film, &#8220;A New Hope.&#8221;</p><p>He said: “We’re DJs, playing Beatles songs. He’s The Beatles, and the trick is, how do you recombine that?”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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