The Comic Con 2015 Edition of TV Guide is out and one of the many features is a preview of Person of Interest season five. Among the preview is the "Burning Questions" interview with executive producers Jonathan Nolan and Greg Plageman. The interview takes a look at what we saw in the season four finale and has some small teasers about what can be expected for season five. The below interview is from TV Guide writer Mike Flaherty.The TV Guide section also has a profile on Root, and a great look at what went into building the new subway station set that serves as the hideout now. It's a 4500 square foot set that sits on a four-foot platform in Queens, New York. The show's set decorator, Alyssa Winter, found all the set pieces at auctions and antique sales. It's quite a fascinating look!Withintense season finale leaving malevolent supercomputer Samaritan triumphant, the Machine stuffed into a briefcase, and our heroes on the run, it was time to grill the show’s masterminds – executive producers Jonathan Nolan and Greg Plageman – for a post season debrief and a look at the perilous road ahead in Season 5.Plageman: It means[the Hebrew name for God]. It’s called the tetragrammation. The ancient Israelites didn’t want to spell out the word [for religious reasons], so they often used YHWH.Nolan: He who shall not be named.Nolan: Yes. For the moment, I would say the Machine has been vanquished. Pretty much down, though not necessarily out.Plageman: Well, it’s pretty fresh insofar as our guys are completely hosed right now.Nolan: Next season will really deal with the idea of rebuilding the Machine in the face of a superior threat. And assuming they can get it back in the game, how will it fight back?Plageman: It will explore what it means for Samaritan to have that firm a grip on things. If an artificial intelligence were actually to appear, would humanity even notice?Nolan: You don’t build a god and then dispose of it conveniently in one season. A lot of fiction has treated artificial intelligence as a singularity – one mind that absorbs other minds into it. But this show presents AI proliferation as similar to nuclear proliferation – an idea that intelligence begets other intelligences. It’s an arms race that the Machine is currently losing.Nolan: Season 4’s storyline forced our guys into hiding as normal people. And with Reese, it was like your mom telling you not to make a face too often because it might stick. So Reese is maybe starting to enjoy being a normal person and being emotionally involved with other people on a level he hasn’t been in decades.Nolan: I reached out to Taraji last year. There’s really nobody who can engage with Reese on an emotional level like Carter can. From their first scene together in the pilot, she always had the goods on him in a way that no one else did.Reese clearly has strong feelings toward Iris, but given his occupation and the activities he’s engaged in, it’s always fraught with peril, so…Nolan: It’s baby steps. Baby steps.Plageman: Whether it was amorous or more a platonic sense of respect for a friend, we haven’t had a chance to explore.Nolan: I think there’s definitely an amorous streak between the two of them. Root feels it, and Shaw is maybe a little bit in denial about it.Nolan: It’s an ongoing conversation. We hope to get her back on the show sometime soon.Plageman: Well, yeah. A couple of those ladies are certainly people we brought back because we were interested in them.Nolan: That said, nobody replaces Sarah. We just love having firecracker women on our show.