Latest Podcast Episodes
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TDP 436: Dark Eyes 2 - Part 3 - Times Horizon
Tin Dog PodcastPart 3: Time's Horizonby Matt Fitton The Doctor and Molly find themselves at the very edge of creation. But something dangerous seems to be heading back into the known universe from the very end of time.The crew of the cryo-ship Orpheus, including its medical officer Liv Chenka, have their mission parameters to adhere to; but the arrival of the Doctor and Molly changes everything. An ancient and terrible force is on a collision course with them all and the outcome seems to be a matter of divine destiny.
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10th December Whostrology
Tin Dog Podcast10th December Whostrology #WHOSTROLOGY #DOCTORWHO #TinDogPodcast #COMEDY #ASTROLOGY #Podcast www.whostrology.com #DrWho
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The Doctor Who Podcast Episode #287 - Geek Out (and maybe some Big Finish), (and perhaps some talk of Pringles)
The Doctor Who PodcastAn old fashioned Geek Out is to be had in this episode of the DWP, wherein Trevor and Michele try and resist the urge to talk about Series 8 of Doctor Who, and instead talk about Big Finish, Series 8 and Pringles. Warning – episode may contain unreasonably large amounts of talk about Pringles.
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The Doctor Who Podcast Episode #287 - Geek Out (and maybe some Big Finish), (and perhaps some talk of Pringles)
The Doctor Who PodcastAn old fashioned Geek Out is to be had in this episode of the DWP, wherein Trevor and Michele try and resist the urge to talk about Series 8 of Doctor Who, and instead talk about Big Finish, Series 8 and Pringles. Warning - episode may contain unreasonably large amounts of talk about Pringles.
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Episode 206 - The Quicker the Fix, the Faster It Breaks
Traveling the VortexIn this week’s show we tackle two more Big Finish audios each featuring The Fifth Doctor, Peri and Erimem. First, we review the audio play, Nekromanteia. Then, we’ll we will share our opinions on the following adventure, The Axis of Insanity.
Also, we get a special treat from Traveling the Vortex correspondent, Time Lord Ben. He is fresh back from Chicago TARDIS with a full report of the three day event.
Plus, more convention news and announcements, as well as some of the rumblings in the Doctor Who world of news.
And, of course, your feedback.
Enjoy!
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Episode 132: Discussing Doctors' Debuts
The Blue Box PodcastThe Blue Box Podcast - Episode 132: Discussing Doctors' Debuts Brought to you every Saturday by Starburst Columnist - JR Southall, Lee Rawlings, Mark Cockram and Simon Brett.
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Episode 125: Countdown to Christmas, Part 4
The TARDIS TavernWe continue our Countdown to Christmas in a familiar animated Colorado hamlet, joining a group of friendly adorable schoolchildren on their way to school. This, of course, is just set dressing for our discussion of the next holiday special on our list (they're in no particular order), "A Christmas Carol". Will Dumbledore find redemption in this science fiction twist on the Dickens classic? Will true love be found at the end? Will fish fly? If you don't know the answers to these questions, you probably haven't seen the epiosde...so go watch it before you listen to these drunken fools yammer on about it!
Find out page on Facebook (it's really the latest thing!) or email us at tardistavern@gmail.com. You can also follow Sean on Twitter via @tardistavern and Steve via @tardistaverntit.
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Episode 125: Countdown to Christmas, Part 4
The TARDIS TavernWe continue our Countdown to Christmas in a familiar animated Colorado hamlet, joining a group of friendly adorable schoolchildren on their way to school. This, of course, is just set dressing for our discussion of the next holiday special on our list (they're in no particular order), "A Christmas Carol". Will Dumbledore find redemption in this science fiction twist on the Dickens classic? Will true love be found at the end? Will fish fly? If you don't know the answers to these questions, you probably haven't seen the epiosde...so go watch it before you listen to these drunken fools yammer on about it!
Find out page on Facebook (it's really the latest thing!) or email us at tardistavern@gmail.com. You can also follow Sean on Twitter via @tardistavern and Steve via @tardistaverntit.
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Episode 47: Interference: Book Two
The Doctor Who Book Club PodcastWe apologize for the lateness of November's episode, it being December and all, but real life and the holidays have just seemed to get the better of us last month. Nevertheless, we're here to present our discussion on Lawrence Miles' Interference, Book Two. From the back cover:
They call it the Dead Frontier. It's as far from home as the human race ever went, the planet where mankind dumped the waste of its thousand year empire and left its culture out in the sun to rot.
But while one Doctor faces both his past and his future on the Frontier, another finds himself on Earth in 1996, where the seeds of the empire are only just being sown. The past is meeting the present, cause is meeting effect, and the TARDIS crew is about to be caught in the crossfire.
The Third Doctor. The Eighth Doctor. Sam. Fitz. Sarah Jane Smith. Soon, one of them will be dead; one of them will belong to the enemy; and one of them will be something less than human...
Clean up the dust, load your shotgun, and sit back and relax as we discuss Interference, Book Two
Be sure to look for us on Facebook, email us at dwbcpodcast@gmail.com, and follow us on Twitter via @dwbcpodcast. You can also follow Erik via @sjcuaustenite and Sean via @tardistavern.
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Episode 47: Interference, Book 2
The Doctor Who Book Club PodcastWe apologize for the lateness of November's episode, it being December and all, but real life and the holidays have just seemed to get the better of us last month. Nevertheless, we're here to present our discussion on Lawrence Miles' Interference, Book Two. From the back cover:
They call it the Dead Frontier. It's as far from home as the human race ever went, the planet where mankind dumped the waste of its thousand year empire and left its culture out in the sun to rot.
But while one Doctor faces both his past and his future on the Frontier, another finds himself on Earth in 1996, where the seeds of the empire are only just being sown. The past is meeting the present, cause is meeting effect, and the TARDIS crew is about to be caught in the crossfire.
The Third Doctor. The Eighth Doctor. Sam. Fitz. Sarah Jane Smith. Soon, one of them will be dead; one of them will belong to the enemy; and one of them will be something less than human...
Clean up the dust, load your shotgun, and sit back and relax as we discuss Interference, Book Two
Be sure to look for us on Facebook, email us at dwbcpodcast@gmail.com, and follow us on Twitter via @dwbcpodcast. You can also follow Erik via @sjcuaustenite and Sean via @tardistavern.
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9th December Whostrology
Tin Dog Podcast9th December Whostrology #WHOSTROLOGY #DOCTORWHO #TinDogPodcast #COMEDY #ASTROLOGY #Podcast www.whostrology.com #DrWho
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Episode #248
The 20mb Doctor Who PodcastOur Favourite All Time Doctor Who
Adam, Debbie (with a little help from Isla), Mary, Rhys and Matthew are joined by Ben Shoveller for what is known in the podcasting fraternity as a 'geek out'.
We look at our top 3 stories from each Doctor and then decide on our favourite of all time.
We also have feedback and news.
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Episode #27: What Up, I Got a Big Sleigh
The Impossible GirlsErin and Kara discuss photos, synopses, and quotes pertaining to the upcoming Christmas special, "Last Christmas"!
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Episode 27: Rise Of The Cyberman
Stories From The Vortex: A Doctor Who Audio Adventures Podcast
Originally recorded in early November 2014 and finally made available after a hectic November and some technical difficulties, episode twenty- seven finds Matthew Kresal and Mary Lang are reviewing the first season of Big Finish's Doctor Who spin-off series Cyberman. Topics discussed include its harkening back to other sci-fi stories, the way how stories are recorded can effect the finished product and of course the Cybermen themselves.
You can find the podcast via our website storiesfromthevortex.blogspot.com or on iTunes. If you'd like to send in feedback to the podcast you can do so at feedback.vortex@yahoo.com and you can join the podcasts's Facebook group. We're a proud member of the Doctor Who Podcast Alliance.
Stories From The Vortex is an unofficial and unlicensed Doctor Who podcast and is not affiliated to the British Broadcasting Company (BBC), AudioGo or Big Finish Productions in any way. Doctor Who is a registered trademark of the BBC. No copyright infringement intended.
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New Doctor, Looking for Patience
Gallifrey Public Radio - A Doctor Who PodcastThe question of how Peter Capaldi would live up to his predecessors was on the minds of every Whovian leading up to series 8. But once we all watched “Deep Breath” the question shifted to, “Ok, but now what?” This … Continue reading
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TDP 435: Dark Eyes 2 - Part 2 Whiteroom
Tin Dog PodcastPart 2: The White Roomby Alan Barnes Molly O'Sullivan is still trying to help people, but now she is back in London, staying in Baker Street.But there are dangerous forces abroad. Where are the young deserters disappearing to? Who are the Huntsmen? And what is really going on at the Blackwell Convalescent Home?Perhaps the mysterious 'Surgeon General' has the answers. To find out, the Doctor must tackle an old and baffling enemy.
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8th December Whostrology
Tin Dog Podcast8th December Whostrology #WHOSTROLOGY #DOCTORWHO #TinDogPodcast #COMEDY #ASTROLOGY #Podcast www.whostrology.com #DrWho
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Who's He? Podcast #185 Come and keep your comrade warm
Who's He?In this weeks episode of the Who's He? Podcast, Phil and Paul return to the audio stories of Big Finish with a look at the 7th Doctor story Thin Ice, the first in the Lost Stories series. What will Phil and Paul make of this cold war era story featuring Ice Warriors, East End spivs, phony Russian accents and fish fingers? Tune in to find out!
And in the news this week, this years Christmas special has a name and air time and it's the return of the dreaded stats!! Plus in Omega's Tat corner, some very expensive and cheap tat!
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Come and keep your comrade warm
Who's He?In this weeks episode of the Who's He? Podcast, Phil and Paul return to the audio stories of Big Finish with a look at the 7th Doctor story Thin Ice, the first in the Lost Stories series. What will Phil and Paul make of this cold war era story featuring Ice Warriors, East End spivs, phony Russian accents and fish fingers? Tune in to find out!
And in the news this week, this years Christmas special has a name and air time and it's the return of the dreaded stats!! Plus in Omega's Tat corner, some very expensive and cheap tat!
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Come and keep your comrade warm
Who's He?In this weeks episode of the Who's He? Podcast, Phil and Paul return to the audio stories of Big Finish with a look at the 7th Doctor story Thin Ice, the first in the Lost Stories series. What will Phil and Paul make of this cold war era story featuring Ice Warriors, East End spivs, phony Russian accents and fish fingers? Tune in to find out!
And in the news this week, this years Christmas special has a name and air time and it's the return of the dreaded stats!! Plus in Omega's Tat corner, some very expensive and cheap tat!
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Radio Free Skaro #451 - Celsius 451
Radio Free SkaroWith the Three Who Rule firmly back in place and order restored to the galaxy, there was great rejoicing and much waffling about next to nothing, not to mention the controversial and wrong headed use of the terms "P-Cap", "J-Co," and "S-Claw." in reference to the upcoming Doctor Who Christmas Special "Last Christmas". But wait! The main feature is an interview with Mickey Smith himself, Noel Clarke, by our very own Steven recorded live on stage at Chicago TARDIS. And and and....nerd rage from Warren about the highly important matter of the 3.75 inch dolly. Blasphemy!
Check out the show notes at http://www.radiofreeskaro.com
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Radio Free Skaro #451 - Celcius 451
Radio Free SkaroWith the Three Who Rule firmly back in place and order restored to the galaxy, there was great rejoicing and much waffling about next to nothing, not to mention the controversial and wrong headed use of the terms “P-Cap”, “J-Co,” and “S-Claw.” in reference to the upcoming Doctor Who Christmas Special "Last Christmas". But wait! The main feature is an interview with Mickey Smith himself, Noel Clarke, by our very own Steven recorded live on stage at Chicago TARDIS. And and and….nerd rage from Warren about the highly important matter of the 3.75 inch dolly. Blasphemy!
Check out the show notes at http://www.radiofreeskaro.com
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Episode 161: Siege Mode and Other Newness
The Sonic ToolboxThis past Series 8 saw a lot of changes. Some of which were to the TARDIS herself. This week we're taking a look at those changes. There are only three (we thought there had been a lot more) but they are very cool additions to the already complicated ship and home of our beloved Doctor.
WARNING: Contains rabbit chasing
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Episode 161: Siege Mode and Other Newness
The Sonic ToolboxThis past Series 8 saw a lot of changes. Some of which were to the TARDIS herself. This week we're taking a look at those changes. There are only three (we thought there had been a lot more) but they are very cool additions to the already complicated ship and home of our beloved Doctor.
WARNING: Contains rabbit chasing
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Episode 46: You Have to Believe it Doesn't Exist
Trust Your DoctorFeaturing The Doctor vs The Master! (No, not that Master.)
This week Kiyan and Dylan discuss The Mind Robber, that serial that almost could have been the return of the Celestial Toymaker. The Mind Robber was written by Peter Ling and aired in September and October of 1968.
Doctor Who (c) The BBC
Any other references belong to their respective owners, no copyright infringement is intended by this podcast.
The Doctor Who title music was originally composed by Ron Grainer. The version used in this episode was arranged by Delia Derbyshire.Subscribe on iTunes!
Check us out on Facebook!
Check us out on YouTube!
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Episode 46: You Have to Believe it Doesn't Exist
Trust Your DoctorFeaturing The Doctor vs The Master! (No, not that Master.)
This week Kiyan and Dylan discuss The Mind Robber, that serial that almost could have been the return of the Celestial Toymaker. The Mind Robber was written by Peter Ling and aired in September and October of 1968.
Doctor Who (c) The BBC
Any other references belong to their respective owners, no copyright infringement is intended by this podcast.
The Doctor Who title music was originally composed by Ron Grainer. The version used in this episode was arranged by Delia Derbyshire.Subscribe on iTunes!
Check us out on Facebook!
Check us out on YouTube!
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N015 New Earth
Who Back WhenDoc and Rose see a familiar face each, and then square off against cat-nun-nurses and a horde of gross zombies
The post N015 New Earth appeared first on Who Back When | A Doctor Who Podcast.
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A016 The Beast of Orlok
Who Back WhenIt's Frankenstein meets The Wolfman meets H.C. Andersen meets Jewish folklore meets aliens, set in Germany. Ok...
The post A016 The Beast of Orlok appeared first on Who Back When | A Doctor Who Podcast.
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Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe’ve reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I’ll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim’s Too Many Cooks. I can’t tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton’s own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton’s long–time partner and one–time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote’s 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here’s Elizabeth Sandifer’s review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott–style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It’s beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It’s in German. It’s fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner’s wonderful series of Doctor Who–related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there’s anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There’s even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play. (Sadly, these apps no longer exist.)
Richard
Victor Pemberton’s novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father’s Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television’s Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate it.
-
Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe’ve reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I’ll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim’s Too Many Cooks. I can’t tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton’s own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton’s long–time partner and one–time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote’s 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here’s Elizabeth Sandifer’s review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott–style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It’s beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It’s in German. It’s fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner’s wonderful series of Doctor Who–related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there’s anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There’s even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play. (Sadly, these apps no longer exist.)
Richard
Victor Pemberton’s novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father’s Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television’s Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate it.
-
Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe’ve reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I’ll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim’s Too Many Cooks. I can’t tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton’s own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton’s long–time partner and one–time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote’s 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here’s Elizabeth Sandifer’s review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott–style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It’s beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It’s in German. It’s fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner’s wonderful series of Doctor Who–related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there’s anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There’s even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play. (Sadly, these apps no longer exist.)
Richard
Victor Pemberton’s novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father’s Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television’s Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate it.
-
Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe’ve reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I’ll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim’s Too Many Cooks. I can’t tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton’s own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton’s long–time partner and one–time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote’s 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here’s Elizabeth Sandifer’s review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott–style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It’s beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It’s in German. It’s fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner’s wonderful series of Doctor Who–related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there’s anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There’s even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play. (Sadly, these apps no longer exist.)
Richard
Victor Pemberton’s novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father’s Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television’s Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate it.
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Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe’ve reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I’ll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim’s Too Many Cooks. I can’t tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton’s own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton’s long–time partner and one–time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote’s 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here’s Elizabeth Sandifer’s review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott–style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It’s beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It’s in German. It’s fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner’s wonderful series of Doctor Who–related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there’s anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There’s even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play. (Sadly, these apps no longer exist.)
Richard
Victor Pemberton’s novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father’s Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television’s Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate it.
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EPISODE280 - Doctor Who Series 8 Review
The Cultdom CollectiveFirstly, News catch-up, followed by our Review of Doctor Who: Series 8. Spoilers for any of the 12 episodes included. Sorry for the delay in bringing you this review.
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Staggering Stories Podcast #199: Calm Before the Celebrations
Staggering Stories PodcastSummary:
Adam J Purcell, Andy Simpkins, and Keith Dunn discuss the unbroadcast 1980 Doctor Who story ‘Shada’ and the 1987 comedy film ‘Spaceballs’, find some general news and a variety of other stuff, specifically:
- 00:00 – Intro and theme tune.
- 01:26 — Welcome!
- 02:52 – News:
- 03:02 — Doctor Who: Female writer for new season?
- 05:39 — Jekyll and Hyde: ITV making a new TV series.
- 08:44 — Westworld: HBO creating TV series.
- 11:28 — Doctor Who: New Statesman Doctor Who spoof cover.
- 13:46 — Reboot: Animated CGI series coming back with The Guardian Code.
- 16:44 — Star Trek: You can now buy Klingon Blood Wine.
- 19:04 — Star Wars: The Force Awakens teaser trailer out.
- 20:57 — BBC Sci-Fi Season: My Life in Science Fiction.
- 22:01 – Doctor Who: Shada.
- 40:11 – Spaceballs.
- 53:58 – Emails and listener feedback.* Hit us yourself at
- 76:29 – Farewell for this podcast!
- 77:42 — End theme, disclaimer, copyright, etc.
Vital Links:
- Staggering Stories.
- Staggering Stories: Podcast Drinking Game, Fifth edition.
- BBC: Doctor Who.
- Wikipedia: Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
- Wikipedia: Westworld.
- New Statesman.
- Film Review Online: New Statesman Doctor Who Cover.
- Wikipedia: Reboot (TV Series).
- Star Trek.
- Vinport: Buy Klingon Blood Wine.
- Star Wars.
- BBC iPlayer: My Life in Science Fiction.
- Geek Syndicate Podcast.
- BBC: Doctor Who – Shada.
- Wikipedia: Doctor Who – Shada.
- Wikipedia: Spaceballs.
- YouTube: Doctor Who – Bad Days – Season 3 Ep 3.
- Soundcloud: The Infinity Archives podcast.
- Doctor Who Podcast Alliance.
- Stitcher: Smartphone podcast streaming app.
- Facebook: Staggering Stories Group.
- Google+: Staggering Stories Page.
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EPISODE280 - Doctor Who Series 8 Review
The Cultdom CollectiveFirstly, News catch-up, followed by our Review of Doctor Who: Series 8. Spoilers for any of the 12 episodes included. Sorry for the delay in bringing you this review.
-
EPISODE280 - Doctor Who Series 8 Review
The Cultdom CollectiveFirstly, News catch-up, followed by our Review of Doctor Who: Series 8. Spoilers for any of the 12 episodes included. Sorry for the delay in bringing you this review.
-
EPISODE280 - Doctor Who Series 8 Review
The Cultdom CollectiveFirstly, News catch-up, followed by our Review of Doctor Who: Series 8. Spoilers for any of the 12 episodes included. Sorry for the delay in bringing you this review.
-
Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe've reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I'll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim's Too Many Cooks. I can't tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton's own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton's long-time partner and one-time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote's 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here's Elizabeth Sandifer's review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott-style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It's beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It's in German. It's fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner's wonderful series of Doctor Who-related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there's anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There's even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play.
Richard
Victor Pemberton's novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father's Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television's Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate it.
-
Episode 16 Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe've reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I'll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim's Too Many Cooks. I can't tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton's own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton's long-time partner and one-time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote's 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here's Philip Sandifer's review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott-style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It's beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It's in German. It's fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner's wonderful series of Doctor Who-related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there's anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There's even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play.
Richard
Victor Pemberton's novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father's Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television's Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate it.
-
Episode 16: Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe've reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I'll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim's Too Many Cooks. I can't tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton's own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton's long-time partner and one-time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote's 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here's Philip Sandifer's review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott-style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It's beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It's in German. It's fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner's wonderful series of Doctor Who-related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there's anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There's even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play.
Richard
Victor Pemberton's novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father's Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television's Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate it.
-
7th December Whostrology
Tin Dog Podcast7th December Whostrology #WHOSTROLOGY #DOCTORWHO #TinDogPodcast #COMEDY #ASTROLOGY #Podcast www.whostrology.com #DrWho
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Too Many Cooks
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastWe’ve reached the end of Season 5, so pull up a bernalium rod, switch on the sexual air supply, and get ready to discuss the last two stories of the season, Fury from the Deep and The Wheel in Space. And just you watch your lip or I’ll put you across my knee and larrup you.
Buy the stories!
No full episodes of Fury from the Deep survive. Which is terribly sad, obviously. Still, you can get the soundtrack, narrated, as always, by Frazer Hines. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
The two surviving episodes of The Wheel in Space, Episodes 3 and 6, are available on the Lost in Time box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK). An audio version is also available, beautifully narrated by the delightfully pert Wendy Padbury. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fury from the Deep
Richard mentions Adult Swim’s Too Many Cooks. I can’t tell you anything about it. Just watch it.
Richard and Brendan both use Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971) to illustrate what TV Tropes calls the Muck Monster trope.
Fury from the Deep is based on ideas from Victor Pemberton’s own 1966 radio drama, The Slide, starring future Time Lords Maurice Denham and Roger Delgado, as well as Pemberton’s long–time partner and one–time Buddhist monk David Spenser. You can read a review of it here. And you can even buy it! (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Fans of murderous gay couples should check out Diamonds are Forever (1971), Rope (1948), and Truman Capote’s 1966 novel In Cold Blood.
H. P. Lovecraft is a twentieth-century racist and horror writer, who is a huge influence on Doctor Who, particularly in the Hinchcliffe Era. His most famous short story is The Call of Cthulhu.
Fans of people walking out in to the sea should check out the last episode of Series 1 of The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, and the second episode of the TV series of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
Victor Pemberton also wrote The Pescatons, an audio drama starring Tom Baker and Lis Sladen, which was released as an LP in 1976. Here’s Elizabeth Sandifer’s review.
The Wheel in Space
Iz Skinner (aka TardisTimegirl) created some beautiful animations which were used in the Loose Cannon reconstructions of these episodes. Here is her Ridley Scott–style trailer for The Wheel in Space. It’s beautiful. She also animated a version of a special trailer broadcast the week before The Web of Fear starring Patrick Troughton.
Brendan theorises that Star Trek was a possible influence on Wheel. But, fascinatingly, Richard mentions two possible influences on Star Trek itself. The first is Raumpatrouille Orion, a German science-fiction precursor to Trek from the 1960s. You can watch the entire first episode online. It’s in German. It’s fabulously modernist and spectacular. The second is Conquest of Space (1955).
Victoria Waterfield meets the Doctor again in the crazy multicoloured form of Colin Baker in the Big Finish audio Power Play.
Picks of the week
Brendan
Iz Skinner’s wonderful series of Doctor Who–related animations.
Nathan
FACT FANS! If there’s anything at all you need to know about Doctor Who in any of its incarnations, consult the TARDIS Data Core. There’s even an app for it on the iOS App Store, and an Android app on Google Play. (Sadly, these apps no longer exist.)
Richard
Victor Pemberton’s novelisation of Fury from the Deep is out of print, and mysteriously unavailable as an e-book on Amazon. However, there is an audio version, read by David Troughton, who does a lovely impression of his father’s Doctor Who. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
Nathan again
An audiobook of Carnival of Monsters has recently been released, read by television’s Katy Manning. (Audible US) (Audible UK)
We have a competition!
If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode.
Follow us!
Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate it.
-
100.5 - Trock Talk With Legs Nose Robinson
Arrow of TimeOn this monumental Time and a Half, Matt and Dave talk with the acclaimed Trock band and composers of the new Arrow of Time theme song, Legs Nose Robinson! They discuss Trock music, Whovians, their various music styles, and their recent recognition from Anglophenia and The Nerdist. Among other exciting things! Now get ready to TROCK OUT with The Arrow Of Time and Legs Nose Robinson!
Be sure to download Legs Nose Robinson’s EP The Oncoming Storm for FREE at: http://www.reverbnation.com/legsnoserobinson
You can watch their videos on YouTube at: http://www.youtube.com/user/legsnoserobinson
And you can LIKE them on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/legsnoserobinson
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TDP 434: Dark Eyes 2 - Part 1 Traitor
Tin Dog PodcastSynopsis When the Doctor defeated the Dalek Time Controller and its Time Lord ally, the timelines shifted and events changed... but the danger is far from over. And new threats to the continued safety of the universe are emerging. Molly O'Sullivan carried on with her life as a nursing assistant in World War One. She probably thought she would never see the Doctor in his 'Tardy-box' again... From the Dalek occupied planet Nixyce VII through Earth's history and to the very edge of the universe, the Doctor's footprints across eternity are being tracked by foes old and new. But when did it all begin and when will it end? Living his life through the complexities of time travel, the Doctor can never be quite sure if he's experiencing his life in the most helpful order. The only certainty appears to be the advance of the powers of evil and the oncoming threat of a fight to the death against forces that would destroy everything the Doctor holds dear. Part 1: The Traitorby Nicholas Briggs Nixyce VII is under Dalek occupation. For many, their only hope of survival is decent medical care, as slave working conditions under the Dalek regime are appalling. But when you help people to survive under the rule of the Daleks, are you actually helping the Daleks? Med-tech Liv Chenka doesn't have the luxury of pondering these dilemmas. She must just do what she feels is right.But then there are the soldiers of last resort... The freedom fighters left behind to cause maximum damage to the Dalek war effort, at whatever cost. To them, anyone who seems to be helping the Daleks is a traitor.And when the Doctor arrives, his secret agenda throws him into conflict with everyone.
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6th December Whostrology
Tin Dog Podcast6th December Whostrology #WHOSTROLOGY #DOCTORWHO #TinDogPodcast #COMEDY #ASTROLOGY #Podcast www.whostrology.com #DrWho
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Dr Who Livecast - Episode 48: 42
Dr Who LivecastThis week @Sayomarav and @BiomedAlchemist talk about the Series 3 episode 7, "42" Thanks everyone that listens each week!
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Dr Who Livecast - Episode 48: 42
Dr Who LivecastThis week @Sayomarav and @BiomedAlchemist talk about the Doctor Who Series 3 episode 7, "42." Thanks everyone that listens each week!