Overall Statistics

Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who Podcast

Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who Podcast
Description:
Brendan, Richard, Todd and Nathan discuss the entire history of Doctor Who, season by season.

Homepage: http://www.flightthroughentirety.com/

RSS Feed: http://feeds.podtrac.com/QivDlm8raO5C

Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who Podcast Statistics
Episodes:
1914
Average Episode Duration:
0:0:58:47
Longest Episode Duration:
0:2:46:16
Total Duration of all Episodes:
78 days, 3 hours, 4 minutes and 31 seconds
Earliest Episode:
26 May 2014 (12:00am GMT)
Latest Episode:
17 September 2023 (12:00am GMT)
Average Time Between Episodes:
1 days, 18 hours, 38 minutes and 44 seconds

Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who Podcast Episodes

  • Bring Back the Drahvins

    12 July 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 46 minutes and 13 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Our weekly flight through Tom Baker’s first season continues with an episode made entirely of thirty foot thick reinforced concrete. That’s right, it’s time for that 1975 classic, Genesis of the Daleks!

    Buy the story!

    Genesis of the Daleks was released on DVD way back in 2006. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Commedia dell’arte is a genre of theatrical comedy featuring an array of various stock characters. It dates from 16th century Italy, but is based on a tradition that goes all the way back to Greek New Comedy from the end of the fourth century BC. So does that make Davros just the latest iteration of Pantalone?

    Severin is the hero of Venus in Furs (1870), a novella written by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, who gave his name to something called masochism. Probably best not to look that word up on Google.

    The Time Lord is dressed as Death from Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal (1957). Here is a version by French and Saunders. And this version comes from the first season of The Micallef Programme.

    Fans of having no idea of what is going on will enjoy this article on Jacques Lacan from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

    Sadly, I’m unable to locate the Parliamentary speech made by a Conservative MP in the 1990s, in which he quoted Davros’s virus speech from Part 5 of this story. Fact fans will be able to corroborate its historicity, however, by referring to Miles and Wood’s About Time volume 4. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply enjoying the view. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll sneak into your house and steal all your etheric beam locators.

    And coming on 1 August…

    Check out our new project: Bondfinger. You can keep up with all the news on Twitter and Facebook. We’re very excited about it!



  • Bring Back the Drahvins

    12 July 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 46 minutes and 13 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Our weekly flight through Tom Baker’s first season continues with an episode made entirely of thirty foot thick reinforced concrete. That’s right, it’s time for that 1975 classic, Genesis of the Daleks!

    Buy the story!

    Genesis of the Daleks was released on DVD way back in 2006. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Commedia dell’arte is a genre of theatrical comedy featuring an array of various stock characters. It dates from 16th century Italy, but is based on a tradition that goes all the way back to Greek New Comedy from the end of the fourth century BC. So does that make Davros just the latest iteration of Pantalone?

    Severin is the hero of Venus in Furs (1870), a novella written by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, who gave his name to something called masochism. Probably best not to look that word up on Google.

    The Time Lord is dressed as Death from Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal (1957). Here is a version by French and Saunders. And this version comes from the first season of The Micallef Programme.

    Fans of having no idea of what is going on will enjoy this article on Jacques Lacan from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

    Sadly, I’m unable to locate the Parliamentary speech made by a Conservative MP in the 1990s, in which he quoted Davros’s virus speech from Part 5 of this story. Fact fans will be able to corroborate its historicity, however, by referring to Miles and Wood’s About Time volume 4. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply enjoying the view. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll sneak into your house and steal all your etheric beam locators.

    And coming on 1 August…

    Check out our new project: Bondfinger. You can keep up with all the news on Twitter and Facebook. We’re very excited about it!



  • Bring Back the Drahvins

    12 July 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 46 minutes and 13 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Our weekly flight through Tom Baker’s first season continues with an episode made entirely of thirty foot thick reinforced concrete. That’s right, it’s time for that 1975 classic, Genesis of the Daleks!

    Buy the story!

    Genesis of the Daleks was released on DVD way back in 2006. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Commedia dell’arte is a genre of theatrical comedy featuring an array of various stock characters. It dates from 16th century Italy, but is based on a tradition that goes all the way back to Greek New Comedy from the end of the fourth century BC. So does that make Davros just the latest iteration of Pantalone?

    Severin is the hero of Venus in Furs (1870), a novella written by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, who gave his name to something called masochism. Probably best not to look that word up on Google.

    The Time Lord is dressed as Death from Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal (1957). Here is a version by French and Saunders. And this version comes from the first season of The Micallef Programme.

    Fans of having no idea of what is going on will enjoy this article on Jacques Lacan from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

    Sadly, I’m unable to locate the Parliamentary speech made by a Conservative MP in the 1990s, in which he quoted Davros’s virus speech from Part 5 of this story. Fact fans will be able to corroborate its historicity, however, by referring to Miles and Wood’s About Time volume 4. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply enjoying the view. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll sneak into your house and steal all your etheric beam locators.

    And coming on 1 August…

    Check out our new project: Bondfinger. You can keep up with all the news on Twitter and Facebook. We’re very excited about it!



  • Episode 35: Bring Back the Drahvins

    12 July 2015 (1:59am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 46 minutes and 14 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Our weekly flight through Tom Baker's first season continues with an episode made entirely of thirty foot thick reinforced concrete. That's right, it's time for that 1975 classic, Genesis of the Daleks!

    Buy the story!

    Genesis of the Daleks was released on DVD way back in 2006. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Commedia dell'arte is a genre of theatrical comedy featuring an array of various stock characters. It dates from 16th century Italy, but is based on a tradition that goes all the way back to Greek New Comedy from the end of the fourth century BC. So does that make Davros just the latest iteration of Pantalone?

    Severin is the hero of Venus in Furs (1870), a novella written by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, who gave his name to something called masochism. Probably best not to look that word up on Google.

    The Time Lord is dressed as Death from Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal (1957). Here is a version by French and Saunders. And this version comes from the first season of The Micallef Programme.

    Fans of having no idea of what is going on will enjoy this article on Jacques Lacan from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

    Sadly, I'm unable to locate the Parliamentary speech made by a Conservative MP in the 1990s, in which he quoted Davros's virus speech from Part 5 of this story. Fact fans will be able to corroborate its historicity, however, by referring to Miles and Wood's About Time volume 4. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply enjoying the view. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll sneak into your house and steal all your etheric beam locators.

    And coming on 1 August...

    Check out our new project: Bondfinger. You can keep up with all the news on Twitter and Facebook. We're very excited about it!



  • Episode 35 Bring Back the Drahvins

    12 July 2015 (1:59am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 46 minutes and 14 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Our weekly flight through Tom Baker's first season continues with an episode made entirely of thirty foot thick reinforced concrete. That's right, it's time for that 1975 classic, Genesis of the Daleks!

    Buy the story!

    Genesis of the Daleks was released on DVD way back in 2006. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Commedia dell'arte is a genre of theatrical comedy featuring an array of various stock characters. It dates from 16th century Italy, but is based on a tradition that goes all the way back to Greek New Comedy from the end of the fourth century BC. So does that make Davros just the latest iteration of Pantalone?

    Severin is the hero of Venus in Furs (1870), a novella written by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, who gave his name to something called masochism. Probably best not to look that word up on Google.

    The Time Lord is dressed as Death from Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal (1957). Here is a version by French and Saunders. And this version comes from the first season of The Micallef Programme.

    Fans of having no idea of what is going on will enjoy this article on Jacques Lacan from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

    Sadly, I'm unable to locate the Parliamentary speech made by a Conservative MP in the 1990s, in which he quoted Davros's virus speech from Part 5 of this story. Fact fans will be able to corroborate its historicity, however, by referring to Miles and Wood's About Time volume 4. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply enjoying the view. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll sneak into your house and steal all your etheric beam locators.

    And coming on 1 August...

    Check out our new project: Bondfinger. You can keep up with all the news on Twitter and Facebook. We're very excited about it!



  • Bring Back the Drahvins

    12 July 2015 (1:59am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 46 minutes and 14 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Our weekly flight through Tom Baker's first season continues with an episode made entirely of thirty foot thick reinforced concrete. That's right, it's time for that 1975 classic, Genesis of the Daleks!

    Buy the story!

    Genesis of the Daleks was released on DVD way back in 2006. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Commedia dell'arte is a genre of theatrical comedy featuring an array of various stock characters. It dates from 16th century Italy, but is based on a tradition that goes all the way back to Greek New Comedy from the end of the fourth century BC. So does that make Davros just the latest iteration of Pantalone?

    Severin is the hero of Venus in Furs (1870), a novella written by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, who gave his name to something called masochism. Probably best not to look that word up on Google.

    The Time Lord is dressed as Death from Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal (1957). Here is a version by French and Saunders. And this version comes from the first season of The Micallef Programme.

    Fans of having no idea of what is going on will enjoy this article on Jacques Lacan from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

    Sadly, I'm unable to locate the Parliamentary speech made by a Conservative MP in the 1990s, in which he quoted Davros's virus speech from Part 5 of this story. Fact fans will be able to corroborate its historicity, however, by referring to Miles and Wood's About Time volume 4. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply enjoying the view. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll sneak into your house and steal all your etheric beam locators.

    And coming on 1 August...

    Check out our new project: Bondfinger. You can keep up with all the news on Twitter and Facebook. We're very excited about it!



  • Bring Back the Drahvins

    12 July 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 46 minutes and 13 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Our weekly flight through Tom Baker’s first season continues with an episode made entirely of thirty foot thick reinforced concrete. That’s right, it’s time for that 1975 classic, Genesis of the Daleks!

    Buy the story!

    Genesis of the Daleks was released on DVD way back in 2006. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Commedia dell’arte is a genre of theatrical comedy featuring an array of various stock characters. It dates from 16th century Italy, but is based on a tradition that goes all the way back to Greek New Comedy from the end of the fourth century BC. So does that make Davros just the latest iteration of Pantalone?

    Severin is the hero of Venus in Furs (1870), a novella written by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, who gave his name to something called masochism. Probably best not to look that word up on Google.

    The Time Lord is dressed as Death from Ingmar Bergman’s The Seventh Seal (1957). Here is a version by French and Saunders. And this version comes from the first season of The Micallef Programme.

    Fans of having no idea of what is going on will enjoy this article on Jacques Lacan from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

    Sadly, I’m unable to locate the Parliamentary speech made by a Conservative MP in the 1990s, in which he quoted Davros’s virus speech from Part 5 of this story. Fact fans will be able to corroborate its historicity, however, by referring to Miles and Wood’s About Time volume 4. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply enjoying the view. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll sneak into your house and steal all your etheric beam locators.

    And coming on 1 August…

    Check out our new project: Bondfinger. You can keep up with all the news on Twitter and Facebook. We’re very excited about it!



  • Episode 34 Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (10:26pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker's first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (10:26pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker's first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Episode 34: Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (10:26pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker's first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker’s first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker’s first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker’s first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker’s first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker’s first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Choc Bit Breast Plates

    4 July 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 32 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    This week, Flight Through Entirety is on location in Dartmoor, testing our resistance to fear, burning, pressure, fluid deprivation and immersion in liquids, as we discuss the third story of Tom Baker’s first season, The Sontaran Experiment.

    Buy the story!

    The Sontaran Experiment was released on DVD in 2006/2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of posh white people living in orbital space stations will enjoy The Ark in Space, of course, and also Elysium (2013), which makes reasonably good use of Jodie Foster, whatever Brendan says.

    Fans of dead teenagers will enjoy The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

    Dr Josef Mengele worked as an SS Officer in Auschwitz and performed brutal and sadistic experiments on some of the prisoners, as well as assigning many to the gas chambers.

    Fans of the Sontaran insectoid robot will enjoy this photograph of the Canada Water Library in Southwark, which looks remarkably like it.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is here too. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll hide an inflatable snake somewhere where you least expect to find it.



  • Episode 33: A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (11:30pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 27 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I'm afraid, and we've found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it's one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who's 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It's people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don't have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don't think I didn't spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin's God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) "Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarium", Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell's article.

    I'm not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn't stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven't yet managed to upload Todd's interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we're working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen's second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace's Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can't wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • Episode 33 A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (11:30pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 27 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I'm afraid, and we've found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it's one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who's 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It's people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don't have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don't think I didn't spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin's God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) "Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarium", Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell's article.

    I'm not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn't stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven't yet managed to upload Todd's interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we're working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen's second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace's Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can't wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (11:30pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 27 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I'm afraid, and we've found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it's one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who's 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Links and notes

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It's people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don't have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don't think I didn't spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin's God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) "Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarium", Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell's article.

    I'm not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn't stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven't yet managed to upload Todd's interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we're working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen's second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace's Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can't wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 27 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I’m afraid, and we’ve found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it’s one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who’s 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It’s people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don’t have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don’t think I didn’t spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin’s God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) “Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarians”, Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell’s article.

    I’m not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn’t stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven’t yet managed to upload Todd’s interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we’re working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen’s second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace’s Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can’t wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 27 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I’m afraid, and we’ve found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it’s one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who’s 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It’s people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don’t have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don’t think I didn’t spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin’s God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) “Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarians”, Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell’s article.

    I’m not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn’t stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven’t yet managed to upload Todd’s interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we’re working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen’s second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace’s Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can’t wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 26 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I’m afraid, and we’ve found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it’s one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who’s 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It’s people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don’t have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don’t think I didn’t spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin’s God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) “Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarians”, Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell’s article.

    I’m not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn’t stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven’t yet managed to upload Todd’s interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we’re working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen’s second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace’s Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can’t wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 26 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I’m afraid, and we’ve found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it’s one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who’s 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It’s people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don’t have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don’t think I didn’t spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin’s God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) “Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarians”, Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell’s article.

    I’m not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn’t stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven’t yet managed to upload Todd’s interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we’re working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen’s second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace’s Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can’t wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 26 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I’m afraid, and we’ve found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it’s one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who’s 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It’s people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don’t have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don’t think I didn’t spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin’s God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) “Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarians”, Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell’s article.

    I’m not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn’t stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven’t yet managed to upload Todd’s interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we’re working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen’s second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace’s Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can’t wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • A Beneficent God

    27 June 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 37 minutes and 26 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Todd has given that helmic regulator quite a twist, I’m afraid, and we’ve found ourselves in the year 16,087, on a space station being menaced by bubble wrap and fibreglass ants. And still it’s one of the best Doctor Who stories to date. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you The Ark in Space.

    Buy the story!

    The Ark in Space Special Edition was released on DVD in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The novelisation, Doctor Who and the Ark in Space, written by Ian Marter himself, was re-released to celebrate Doctor Who’s 50th anniversary in 2013. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of this story and of Revelation of the Daleks will enjoy a delicious serving of Soylent Green (1973). (Spoilers: It’s people.)

    Sorry, dear listeners, we don’t have any pictures of Ian Marter being giantly muscular. And don’t think I didn’t spend time looking.

    This article from the Darwin’s God blog discusses the life cycle of the ichneumon wasp and its impact on 19th-century theology.

    J. V. McConnell, (1962) “Memory transfer through cannibalism in planarians”, Journal of Neuropsychiatry 3 suppl 1 542-548. (See, we can be academically rigorous if we put our minds to it.)

    This article from the website of the American Psychological Association discusses the history of James McConnell’s article.

    I’m not sure that Ridley Scott has ever actually admitted to ripping off this story in his film Alien (1979), but that hasn’t stopped people from speculating about the possibility.

    We haven’t yet managed to upload Todd’s interview with Lis Sladen, but we promise we’re working on it. Keep an eye out for an announcement in the shownotes over the next few episodes. In the meantime, you can enjoy Lis Sladen’s second appearance in this 1972 episode of Z Cars, directed by The Underwater Menace’s Julia Smith.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard adores all of you and can’t wait to chat to each and every one of you in person. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll install an intruder defence mechanism in your wardrobe and blow up all your shoes.



  • Episode 32 Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (9:51pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker's first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks's novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Links and notes

    Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal's The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard's gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate's admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you're disappointed that Miss Bassey won't be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It's Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke's second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (9:51pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker's first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks's novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Links and notes

    Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal's The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard's gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate's admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you're disappointed that Miss Bassey won't be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It's Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke's second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Episode 32: Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (9:51pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker's first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks's novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Links and notes

    Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal's The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard's gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate's admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you're disappointed that Miss Bassey won't be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It's Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke's second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker’s first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks’s novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal’s The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard’s gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate’s admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you’re disappointed that Miss Bassey won’t be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It’s Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke’s second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker’s first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks’s novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal’s The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard’s gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate’s admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you’re disappointed that Miss Bassey won’t be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It’s Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke’s second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker’s first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks’s novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal’s The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard’s gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate’s admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you’re disappointed that Miss Bassey won’t be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It’s Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke’s second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker’s first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks’s novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal’s The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard’s gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate’s admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you’re disappointed that Miss Bassey won’t be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It’s Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke’s second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker’s first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks’s novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal’s The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard’s gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate’s admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you’re disappointed that Miss Bassey won’t be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It’s Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke’s second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Quentin Crisp Duck Face

    20 June 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 0 hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    We have a new Doctor, and a new release schedule. In the first weekly episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Nathan, Richard and Todd, the sort of girls who give motorcars pet names, discuss Tom Baker’s first ever Doctor Who story, Robot. Please do not resist. We do not wish to cause you unnecessary pain.

    Buy the story!

    Robot was released on DVD in 2007. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Terrance Dicks’s novelisation, Doctor Who and the Giant Robot, is available as an audiobook, read by Tom Baker. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) has an emotional artificial person with a complex relationship with his creator. Coincidence?

    Pearl White played the eponymous heroine in the 1914 film serial The Perils of Pauline. Apparently she never got tied to the railway tracks though.

    Fans of terribly judgemental robots will enjoy Gort from George Pal’s The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).

    Anyone appalled by Richard’s gingerphobia will perhaps be mollified by this video depicting Catherine Tate’s admission to the Ginger Hair Safe House.

    If, like me, you’re disappointed that Miss Bassey won’t be singing the theme to the next Bond film, SPECTRE, you can console yourself by remembering the valiant It’s Got To Be Bassey campaign. Bless you, boys.

    Some moments in this story are reminiscent of Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke’s second-season Avengers episode The Mauritius Penny, which exists on YouTube in its, er, entirety.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is just someone who loves life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll just keep nagging you about it every episode for the next few weeks.



  • Episode 31: One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (10:56pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 12 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they'd only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, The Dark Path, featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, The Face of the Enemy, in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman's butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn't, apparently.

    There's no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O'Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode Hollow Pursuits.

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • Episode 31 One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (10:56pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 13 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they'd only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, [The Dark Path](http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/The_Dark_Path_(novel)), featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, [The Face of the Enemy](http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/The_Face_of_the_Enemy_(novel)), in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman's butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn't, apparently.

    There's no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O'Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode [Hollow Pursuits](http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Hollow_Pursuits_(episode)).

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (10:56pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 13 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they'd only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, [The Dark Path](http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/The_Dark_Path_(novel)), featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, [The Face of the Enemy](http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/The_Face_of_the_Enemy_(novel)), in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman's butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn't, apparently.

    There's no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O'Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode [Hollow Pursuits](http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Hollow_Pursuits_(episode)).

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 13 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they’d only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, [The Dark Path](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Dark_Path_(novel)), featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, [The Face of the Enemy](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Face_of_the_Enemy_(novel)), in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman’s butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn’t, apparently.

    There’s no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode [Hollow Pursuits](http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Hollow_Pursuits_(episode)).

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 13 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they’d only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, [The Dark Path](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Dark_Path_(novel)), featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, [The Face of the Enemy](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Face_of_the_Enemy_(novel)), in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman’s butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn’t, apparently.

    There’s no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode [Hollow Pursuits](http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Hollow_Pursuits_(episode)).

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 12 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they’d only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, [The Dark Path](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Dark_Path_(novel)), featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, [The Face of the Enemy](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Face_of_the_Enemy_(novel)), in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman’s butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn’t, apparently.

    There’s no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode [Hollow Pursuits](http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Hollow_Pursuits_(episode)).

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 12 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they’d only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, [The Dark Path](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Dark_Path_(novel)), featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, [The Face of the Enemy](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Face_of_the_Enemy_(novel)), in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman’s butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn’t, apparently.

    There’s no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode [Hollow Pursuits](http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Hollow_Pursuits_(episode)).

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 12 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they’d only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, [The Dark Path](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Dark_Path_(novel)), featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, [The Face of the Enemy](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Face_of_the_Enemy_(novel)), in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman’s butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn’t, apparently.

    There’s no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode [Hollow Pursuits](http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Hollow_Pursuits_(episode)).

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • One Knee Up For Pertwee

    13 June 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 48 minutes and 12 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In yet another Very Special Episode, Todd joins Brendan, Richard and Nathan for a retrospective of the Pertwee Era. Liz, Jo or Sarah? Peladon, Spiridon or Exxilon? And, the most important question of all, which 70s sitcom would have been most improved if they’d only had the foresight to cast our very own Richard Stone?

    Linx

    We mention, with frank admiration, two novels by David McIntee: a Virgin Missing Adventure, [The Dark Path](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Dark_Path_(novel)), featuring the Second Doctor, Jamie, Victoria and the Master, as well as a BBC Past Doctor Adventure, [The Face of the Enemy](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Face_of_the_Enemy_(novel)), in which, while the Doctor and Jo are visiting Peladon, the UNIT team join up with Barbara and Ian to fight the Master.

    Mark Gatiss reads the novelisation of Planet of the Daleks. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Birds of Prey (2002) was a short-lived American TV series in which three female superheroes join with Batman’s butler to fight metahuman crime in New Gotham City. Which sounds fantastic, but isn’t, apparently.

    There’s no need for you to watch Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal in Love Story (1970) now that Richard has given away the ending.

    The Queen Spider pays a pivotal role in the appalling 2002 South Park episode Red Hot Catholic Love. She sounds like Eric Cartman doing an impression of the Great One: take a look.

    Meanwhile, on the French and Saunders Shopping Channel, delightful demi-precious diamonique jewellery is selling like hot cakes!

    Lis Sladen reads the novelisation of Planet of the Spiders. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    The sweet but awkward Lt Barclay makes the members of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew look like horrible, horrible people in the Season 3 episode [Hollow Pursuits](http://en.memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Hollow_Pursuits_(episode)).

    Geoffrey Beevers reads the novelisation of Colony in Space, Doctor Who and the Doomsday Weapon. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Fans of the very worst things imaginable will enjoy the robot dog from Battlestar Galactica (1978), which is, alarmingly, played by a chimp in a suit. You can read the appalling history of this character here.

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, Todd is @toddbeilby, and Richard is simply nowhere to be found. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or a long-shanked rascal with a mighty nose will come round to your house and eat every last one of your sandwiches.



  • Episode 30: Evil Buddhists

    30 May 2015 (11:31pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 30 minutes and 59 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In an alternately languid and lachrymose episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Richard and Nathan spend a hilarious 30 minutes moaning about The Monster of Peladon, before farewelling Jon Pertwee's Doctor in Planet of the Spiders. Tears, Sarah Jane? Of course they are!

    Buy the stories!

    If, after everything we've just said, you want to revisit The Monster of Peladon, you'll be delighted to learn that it was released as part of the box set Peladon Tales in the UK and Australia, and on its own in the US. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Spiders was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Monster of Peladon

    Well, we were too busy trashing the story to make any references to anything very much. Richard brings up ITC Entertainment, which was actually making good television at the time, but we've talked about it before. So why not enjoy Sue Perryman's take on the story from the Wife in Space blog? She gives it 2 out of 10, which is sweet of her.

    Oh, okay, and here's a lovely picture of Vega Nexos. Check out that back hair!

    Planet of the Spiders

    Fans of the way Jon Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises things will enjoy the Buddha's Flower Sermon again.

    Here's Jenny Laird's obituary in the Guardian, from November 2001. A huge loss to the acting profession, apparently.

    Gareth Hunt played Mike Gambit in The New Avengers in 1976-1977, while the role of Steed was played by Patrick Macnee in a corset.

    Jon Pertwee's final memoir I am the Doctor! was published postumously in 1996. It's out of print, but still available for fabulous amounts of money. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Whodunnit? was a 1970s panel game show thing, which ran on for six seasons on ITV. A murder mystery was acted out, and the celebrity panellists would have to work the identity of the murderer. Jon Pertwee took over from Edward Woodward as compere at the start of the second season. You can get a taste of it from this clip on YouTube. The first five seasons have also been released on DVD.

    Picks of the Week

    Nathan

    In the Trust Your Doctor podcast, Dylan and Kiyan work their way through every episode of Doctor Who, which sounds like an excellent idea for a podcast. Here's Brendan and Nathan's recent guest appearance, in which all four of us discuss Last of the Gaderene by Mark Gatiss.

    Brendan

    In the 1990s, BBC Radio released two new audio stories, written by Barry Letts and starring Jon Pertwee, Elisabeth Sladen and Nick Courtney. There were The Paradise of Death and The Ghosts of N-Space, both of which are available on iTunes.

    Richard

    In 1971, ITC released Jason King, starring Planet of Fire's Peter Wyngarde as the dashing and indescribably ugly Jason. Buy it on DVD! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is currently still a meatspace exclusive. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or I'll come round to your house and draw a picture of a little girl on one of the pages of your favourite Ladybird book.



  • Episode 30 Evil Buddhists

    30 May 2015 (11:31pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 31 minutes and 0 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In an alternately languid and lachrymose episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Richard and Nathan spend a hilarious 30 minutes moaning about The Monster of Peladon, before farewelling Jon Pertwee's Doctor in Planet of the Spiders. Tears, Sarah Jane? Of course they are!

    Buy the stories!

    If, after everything we've just said, you want to revisit The Monster of Peladon, you'll be delighted to learn that it was released as part of the box set Peladon Tales in the UK and Australia, and on its own in the US. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Spiders was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Monster of Peladon

    Well, we were too busy trashing the story to make any references to anything very much. Richard brings up ITC Entertainment, which was actually making good television at the time, but we've talked about it before. So why not enjoy Sue Perryman's take on the story from the Wife in Space blog? She gives it 2 out of 10, which is sweet of her.

    Oh, okay, and here's a lovely picture of Vega Nexos. Check out that back hair!

    Planet of the Spiders

    Fans of the way Jon Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises things will enjoy the Buddha's Flower Sermon again.

    Here's Jenny Laird's obituary in the Guardian, from November 2001. A huge loss to the acting profession, apparently.

    Gareth Hunt played Mike Gambit in The New Avengers in 1976-1977, while the role of Steed was played by Patrick Macnee in a corset.

    Jon Pertwee's final memoir I am the Doctor! was published postumously in 1996. It's out of print, but still available for fabulous amounts of money. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Whodunnit? was a 1970s panel game show thing, which ran on for six seasons on ITV. A murder mystery was acted out, and the celebrity panellists would have to work the identity of the murderer. Jon Pertwee took over from Edward Woodward as compere at the start of the second season. You can get a taste of it from this clip on YouTube. The first five seasons have also been released on DVD.

    Picks of the Week

    Nathan

    In the Trust Your Doctor podcast, Dylan and Kiyan work their way through every episode of Doctor Who, which sounds like an excellent idea for a podcast. Here's Brendan and Nathan's recent guest appearance, in which all four of us discuss [Last of the Gaderene](http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/Last_of_the_Gaderene_(novel)) by Mark Gatiss.

    Brendan

    In the 1990s, BBC Radio released two new audio stories, written by Barry Letts and starring Jon Pertwee, Elisabeth Sladen and Nick Courtney. There were The Paradise of Death and The Ghosts of N-Space, both of which are available on iTunes.

    Richard

    In 1971, ITC released Jason King, starring Planet of Fire's Peter Wyngarde as the dashing and indescribably ugly Jason. Buy it on DVD! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is currently still a meatspace exclusive. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or I'll come round to your house and draw a picture of a little girl on one of the pages of your favourite Ladybird book.



  • Evil Buddhists

    30 May 2015 (11:31pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 31 minutes and 0 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In an alternately languid and lachrymose episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Richard and Nathan spend a hilarious 30 minutes moaning about The Monster of Peladon, before farewelling Jon Pertwee's Doctor in Planet of the Spiders. Tears, Sarah Jane? Of course they are!

    Buy the stories!

    If, after everything we've just said, you want to revisit The Monster of Peladon, you'll be delighted to learn that it was released as part of the box set Peladon Tales in the UK and Australia, and on its own in the US. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Spiders was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Monster of Peladon

    Well, we were too busy trashing the story to make any references to anything very much. Richard brings up ITC Entertainment, which was actually making good television at the time, but we've talked about it before. So why not enjoy Sue Perryman's take on the story from the Wife in Space blog? She gives it 2 out of 10, which is sweet of her.

    Oh, okay, and here's a lovely picture of Vega Nexos. Check out that back hair!

    Planet of the Spiders

    Fans of the way Jon Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises things will enjoy the Buddha's Flower Sermon again.

    Here's Jenny Laird's obituary in the Guardian, from November 2001. A huge loss to the acting profession, apparently.

    Gareth Hunt played Mike Gambit in The New Avengers in 1976-1977, while the role of Steed was played by Patrick Macnee in a corset.

    Jon Pertwee's final memoir I am the Doctor! was published postumously in 1996. It's out of print, but still available for fabulous amounts of money. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Whodunnit? was a 1970s panel game show thing, which ran on for six seasons on ITV. A murder mystery was acted out, and the celebrity panellists would have to work the identity of the murderer. Jon Pertwee took over from Edward Woodward as compere at the start of the second season. You can get a taste of it from this clip on YouTube. The first five seasons have also been released on DVD.

    Picks of the Week

    Nathan

    In the Trust Your Doctor podcast, Dylan and Kiyan work their way through every episode of Doctor Who, which sounds like an excellent idea for a podcast. Here's Brendan and Nathan's recent guest appearance, in which all four of us discuss [Last of the Gaderene](http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/Last_of_the_Gaderene_(novel)) by Mark Gatiss.

    Brendan

    In the 1990s, BBC Radio released two new audio stories, written by Barry Letts and starring Jon Pertwee, Elisabeth Sladen and Nick Courtney. There were The Paradise of Death and The Ghosts of N-Space, both of which are available on iTunes.

    Richard

    In 1971, ITC released Jason King, starring Planet of Fire's Peter Wyngarde as the dashing and indescribably ugly Jason. Buy it on DVD! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is currently still a meatspace exclusive. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or I'll come round to your house and draw a picture of a little girl on one of the pages of your favourite Ladybird book.



  • Evil Buddhists

    30 May 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 31 minutes and 0 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In an alternately languid and lachrymose episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Richard and Nathan spend a hilarious 30 minutes moaning about The Monster of Peladon, before farewelling Jon Pertwee’s Doctor in Planet of the Spiders. Tears, Sarah Jane? Of course they are!

    Buy the stories!

    If, after everything we’ve just said, you want to revisit The Monster of Peladon, you’ll be delighted to learn that it was released as part of the box set Peladon Tales in the UK and Australia, and on its own in the US. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Spiders was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Monster of Peladon

    Well, we were too busy trashing the story to make any references to anything very much. Richard brings up ITC Entertainment, which was actually making good television at the time, but we’ve talked about it before. So why not enjoy Sue Perryman’s take on the story from the Wife in Space blog? She gives it 2 out of 10, which is sweet of her.

    Oh, okay, and here’s a lovely picture of Vega Nexos. Check out that back hair!

    Planet of the Spiders

    Fans of the way Jon Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises things will enjoy the Buddha’s Flower Sermon again.

    Here’s Jenny Laird’s obituary in the Guardian, from November 2001. A huge loss to the acting profession, apparently.

    Gareth Hunt played Mike Gambit in The New Avengers in 1976–1977, while the role of Steed was played by Patrick Macnee in a corset.

    Jon Pertwee’s final memoir I am the Doctor! was published postumously in 1996. It’s out of print, but still available for fabulous amounts of money. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Whodunnit? was a 1970s panel game show thing, which ran on for six seasons on ITV. A murder mystery was acted out, and the celebrity panellists would have to work the identity of the murderer. Jon Pertwee took over from Edward Woodward as compere at the start of the second season. You can get a taste of it from this clip on YouTube. The first five seasons have also been released on DVD.

    Picks of the Week

    Nathan

    In the Trust Your Doctor podcast, Dylan and Kiyan work their way through every episode of Doctor Who, which sounds like an excellent idea for a podcast. Here’s Brendan and Nathan’s recent guest appearance, in which all four of us discuss [Last of the Gaderene](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/Last_of_the_Gaderene_(novel)) by Mark Gatiss.

    Brendan

    In the 1990s, BBC Radio released two new audio stories, written by Barry Letts and starring Jon Pertwee, Elisabeth Sladen and Nick Courtney. There were The Paradise of Death and The Ghosts of N-Space, both of which are available on iTunes.

    Richard

    In 1971, ITC released Jason King, starring Planet of Fire’s Peter Wyngarde as the dashing and indescribably ugly Jason. Buy it on DVD! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is currently still a meatspace exclusive. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or I’ll come round to your house and draw a picture of a little girl on one of the pages of your favourite Ladybird book.



  • Evil Buddhists

    30 May 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 31 minutes and 0 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In an alternately languid and lachrymose episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Richard and Nathan spend a hilarious 30 minutes moaning about The Monster of Peladon, before farewelling Jon Pertwee’s Doctor in Planet of the Spiders. Tears, Sarah Jane? Of course they are!

    Buy the stories!

    If, after everything we’ve just said, you want to revisit The Monster of Peladon, you’ll be delighted to learn that it was released as part of the box set Peladon Tales in the UK and Australia, and on its own in the US. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Spiders was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Monster of Peladon

    Well, we were too busy trashing the story to make any references to anything very much. Richard brings up ITC Entertainment, which was actually making good television at the time, but we’ve talked about it before. So why not enjoy Sue Perryman’s take on the story from the Wife in Space blog? She gives it 2 out of 10, which is sweet of her.

    Oh, okay, and here’s a lovely picture of Vega Nexos. Check out that back hair!

    Planet of the Spiders

    Fans of the way Jon Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises things will enjoy the Buddha’s Flower Sermon again.

    Here’s Jenny Laird’s obituary in the Guardian, from November 2001. A huge loss to the acting profession, apparently.

    Gareth Hunt played Mike Gambit in The New Avengers in 1976–1977, while the role of Steed was played by Patrick Macnee in a corset.

    Jon Pertwee’s final memoir I am the Doctor! was published postumously in 1996. It’s out of print, but still available for fabulous amounts of money. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Whodunnit? was a 1970s panel game show thing, which ran on for six seasons on ITV. A murder mystery was acted out, and the celebrity panellists would have to work the identity of the murderer. Jon Pertwee took over from Edward Woodward as compere at the start of the second season. You can get a taste of it from this clip on YouTube. The first five seasons have also been released on DVD.

    Picks of the Week

    Nathan

    In the Trust Your Doctor podcast, Dylan and Kiyan work their way through every episode of Doctor Who, which sounds like an excellent idea for a podcast. Here’s Brendan and Nathan’s recent guest appearance, in which all four of us discuss [Last of the Gaderene](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/Last_of_the_Gaderene_(novel)) by Mark Gatiss.

    Brendan

    In the 1990s, BBC Radio released two new audio stories, written by Barry Letts and starring Jon Pertwee, Elisabeth Sladen and Nick Courtney. There were The Paradise of Death and The Ghosts of N-Space, both of which are available on iTunes.

    Richard

    In 1971, ITC released Jason King, starring Planet of Fire’s Peter Wyngarde as the dashing and indescribably ugly Jason. Buy it on DVD! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is currently still a meatspace exclusive. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or I’ll come round to your house and draw a picture of a little girl on one of the pages of your favourite Ladybird book.



  • Evil Buddhists

    30 May 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 30 minutes and 59 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In an alternately languid and lachrymose episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Richard and Nathan spend a hilarious 30 minutes moaning about The Monster of Peladon, before farewelling Jon Pertwee’s Doctor in Planet of the Spiders. Tears, Sarah Jane? Of course they are!

    Buy the stories!

    If, after everything we’ve just said, you want to revisit The Monster of Peladon, you’ll be delighted to learn that it was released as part of the box set Peladon Tales in the UK and Australia, and on its own in the US. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Spiders was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Monster of Peladon

    Well, we were too busy trashing the story to make any references to anything very much. Richard brings up ITC Entertainment, which was actually making good television at the time, but we’ve talked about it before. So why not enjoy Sue Perryman’s take on the story from the Wife in Space blog? She gives it 2 out of 10, which is sweet of her.

    Oh, okay, and here’s a lovely picture of Vega Nexos. Check out that back hair!

    Planet of the Spiders

    Fans of the way Jon Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises things will enjoy the Buddha’s Flower Sermon again.

    Here’s Jenny Laird’s obituary in the Guardian, from November 2001. A huge loss to the acting profession, apparently.

    Gareth Hunt played Mike Gambit in The New Avengers in 1976–1977, while the role of Steed was played by Patrick Macnee in a corset.

    Jon Pertwee’s final memoir I am the Doctor! was published postumously in 1996. It’s out of print, but still available for fabulous amounts of money. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Whodunnit? was a 1970s panel game show thing, which ran on for six seasons on ITV. A murder mystery was acted out, and the celebrity panellists would have to work the identity of the murderer. Jon Pertwee took over from Edward Woodward as compere at the start of the second season. You can get a taste of it from this clip on YouTube. The first five seasons have also been released on DVD.

    Picks of the Week

    Nathan

    In the Trust Your Doctor podcast, Dylan and Kiyan work their way through every episode of Doctor Who, which sounds like an excellent idea for a podcast. Here’s Brendan and Nathan’s recent guest appearance, in which all four of us discuss [Last of the Gaderene](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/Last_of_the_Gaderene_(novel)) by Mark Gatiss.

    Brendan

    In the 1990s, BBC Radio released two new audio stories, written by Barry Letts and starring Jon Pertwee, Elisabeth Sladen and Nick Courtney. There were The Paradise of Death and The Ghosts of N-Space, both of which are available on iTunes.

    Richard

    In 1971, ITC released Jason King, starring Planet of Fire’s Peter Wyngarde as the dashing and indescribably ugly Jason. Buy it on DVD! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is currently still a meatspace exclusive. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or I’ll come round to your house and draw a picture of a little girl on one of the pages of your favourite Ladybird book.



  • Evil Buddhists

    30 May 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 30 minutes and 59 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In an alternately languid and lachrymose episode of Flight Through Entirety, Brendan, Richard and Nathan spend a hilarious 30 minutes moaning about The Monster of Peladon, before farewelling Jon Pertwee’s Doctor in Planet of the Spiders. Tears, Sarah Jane? Of course they are!

    Buy the stories!

    If, after everything we’ve just said, you want to revisit The Monster of Peladon, you’ll be delighted to learn that it was released as part of the box set Peladon Tales in the UK and Australia, and on its own in the US. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Spiders was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Monster of Peladon

    Well, we were too busy trashing the story to make any references to anything very much. Richard brings up ITC Entertainment, which was actually making good television at the time, but we’ve talked about it before. So why not enjoy Sue Perryman’s take on the story from the Wife in Space blog? She gives it 2 out of 10, which is sweet of her.

    Oh, okay, and here’s a lovely picture of Vega Nexos. Check out that back hair!

    Planet of the Spiders

    Fans of the way Jon Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises things will enjoy the Buddha’s Flower Sermon again.

    Here’s Jenny Laird’s obituary in the Guardian, from November 2001. A huge loss to the acting profession, apparently.

    Gareth Hunt played Mike Gambit in The New Avengers in 1976–1977, while the role of Steed was played by Patrick Macnee in a corset.

    Jon Pertwee’s final memoir I am the Doctor! was published postumously in 1996. It’s out of print, but still available for fabulous amounts of money. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Whodunnit? was a 1970s panel game show thing, which ran on for six seasons on ITV. A murder mystery was acted out, and the celebrity panellists would have to work the identity of the murderer. Jon Pertwee took over from Edward Woodward as compere at the start of the second season. You can get a taste of it from this clip on YouTube. The first five seasons have also been released on DVD.

    Picks of the Week

    Nathan

    In the Trust Your Doctor podcast, Dylan and Kiyan work their way through every episode of Doctor Who, which sounds like an excellent idea for a podcast. Here’s Brendan and Nathan’s recent guest appearance, in which all four of us discuss [Last of the Gaderene](http://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/Last_of_the_Gaderene_(novel)) by Mark Gatiss.

    Brendan

    In the 1990s, BBC Radio released two new audio stories, written by Barry Letts and starring Jon Pertwee, Elisabeth Sladen and Nick Courtney. There were The Paradise of Death and The Ghosts of N-Space, both of which are available on iTunes.

    Richard

    In 1971, ITC released Jason King, starring Planet of Fire’s Peter Wyngarde as the dashing and indescribably ugly Jason. Buy it on DVD! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is currently still a meatspace exclusive. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or I’ll come round to your house and draw a picture of a little girl on one of the pages of your favourite Ladybird book.



 
Dormant Podcasts