Sure, the show goes with a less than creative presence; it's an easy story to make characters behave in atypical ways.
The premise of the campaign is that the character, who works in an office, behaves as if he were a football player.
"The characters behave themselves in such an absolutely truthful human way," he said recently.
Heinlein's characters may not behave in bed the way you do - so what?
At times, the characters we have come to know and love behave in ways that seem utterly unlike them.
On leave or in action the characters behave with a fine disregard for the laws of probability.
His characters behave in 1960 as if members of a very conventional mid-19th-century novel.
I see their faces and body language when I try to imagine how that character is behaving.
As in Neuromancer, characters must behave according to their profiles.
The big problem came when no one could get the characters to behave properly.