Latest Podcast Episodes
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RRR 45, Inc. Doctor Who (1st Doctor, Series 2, 9 The Time Meddler 1-4, 1965), SciFi/Fantasy/Horror/Tech UK
Roy's Rocket RadioNews: Podcast Recording Equipment, Writing Update, TV: Doctor Who (1st Doctor, Series 2, 9 The Time Meddler 1-4, 1965), Aftershow: Rate the Show, Visit the Blog, Email Me/Tweet Me
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RRR45 Doctor Who: The Time Meddler (1965)
Roy's Rocket RadioNews: Podcast Recording Equipment, Writing Update, TV: Doctor Who (1st Doctor, Series 2, 9 The Time Meddler 1-4, 1965), Aftershow: Rate the Show, Visit the Blog, Email Me/Tweet Me
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TDP 787: Diary of River Song Volume 4 from @BigFinish
Tin Dog Podcast@TinDogPodcast reviews the magical Diary of River Song Volume 4 from @BigFinish When River Song visits a place where time has vanished, a genie escapes its bottle... the Discordia are freed - nihilistic time pirates, in devilish form, altering the past to make sure they never lose. This time, River may have met her match. And involving the Doctor can only make things worse... 4.1 Time in a Bottle by Emma Reeves and Matt Fitton River is recruited by a rival to explore a star system where time no longer exists. Professor Jemima Still has picked up a signal from an impossible source and takes an expert team to investigate. But their mission is about to unleash hell upon the universe... 4.2 Kings of Infinite Space by Donald McLeary With the Discordia on their tail, River and her friends run for their lives across time and space. But when your opponent can twist cause and effect to ensure victory at every turn, then escape may well be impossible. 4.3 Whodunnit? by Matt Fitton Melody Malone finds herself in a castle, with an assortment of strange companions. But guests are being murdered, one by one. Time is running out for a mystery to be solved. And Franz Kafka is hiding something in the attic. 4.4 Someone I Once Knew by John Dorney River has tried in vain to keep the Discordia away from the Doctor. Now, as devils run riot through universal spacetime, her own past with her husband is being rewritten. There is one last hope for the universe. A love story - but one that must find an ending... Written By: Emma Reeves, Matt Fitton, Donald McLeary, John Dorney Directed By: Ken Bentley Cast Alex Kingston (River Song), Tom Baker (The Doctor), Adele Lynch (Gammarae), Fenella Woolgar (Professor Jemima Still / Formidian Queen), Josh Bolt (Spod), George Asprey (Melak), Nicholas Asbury (Dante), Ewan Bailey (Human / Alien / Robot Voices), Tim Bentinck (Franz Kafka / Samsa), Alex Tregear (Miss Vermillion / Vermillion), Christopher Naylor (Lord Simon Whist / Captain Bartholomew / Discordia Underling), Shvorne Marks (Cissy / Thelma Sketch), Nigel Anthony (Rakkezar / Drayl), Nathalie Buscombe (Garen / Galerayna). Other parts played by members of the cast. Producer David Richardson Script Editors Matt Fitton, John Dorney Executive Producers Jason Haigh-Ellery and Nicholas Briggs
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TDP 787: Diary of River Song Volume 4 from @BigFinish
Tin Dog Podcast@TinDogPodcast reviews the magical Diary of River Song Volume 4 from @BigFinish When River Song visits a place where time has vanished, a genie escapes its bottle... the Discordia are freed - nihilistic time pirates, in devilish form, altering the past to make sure they never lose. This time, River may have met her match. And involving the Doctor can only make things worse... 4.1 Time in a Bottle by Emma Reeves and Matt Fitton River is recruited by a rival to explore a star system where time no longer exists. Professor Jemima Still has picked up a signal from an impossible source and takes an expert team to investigate. But their mission is about to unleash hell upon the universe... 4.2 Kings of Infinite Space by Donald McLeary With the Discordia on their tail, River and her friends run for their lives across time and space. But when your opponent can twist cause and effect to ensure victory at every turn, then escape may well be impossible. 4.3 Whodunnit? by Matt Fitton Melody Malone finds herself in a castle, with an assortment of strange companions. But guests are being murdered, one by one. Time is running out for a mystery to be solved. And Franz Kafka is hiding something in the attic. 4.4 Someone I Once Knew by John Dorney River has tried in vain to keep the Discordia away from the Doctor. Now, as devils run riot through universal spacetime, her own past with her husband is being rewritten. There is one last hope for the universe. A love story - but one that must find an ending... Written By: Emma Reeves, Matt Fitton, Donald McLeary, John Dorney Directed By: Ken Bentley Cast Alex Kingston (River Song), Tom Baker (The Doctor), Adele Lynch (Gammarae), Fenella Woolgar (Professor Jemima Still / Formidian Queen), Josh Bolt (Spod), George Asprey (Melak), Nicholas Asbury (Dante), Ewan Bailey (Human / Alien / Robot Voices), Tim Bentinck (Franz Kafka / Samsa), Alex Tregear (Miss Vermillion / Vermillion), Christopher Naylor (Lord Simon Whist / Captain Bartholomew / Discordia Underling), Shvorne Marks (Cissy / Thelma Sketch), Nigel Anthony (Rakkezar / Drayl), Nathalie Buscombe (Garen / Galerayna). Other parts played by members of the cast. Producer David Richardson Script Editors Matt Fitton, John Dorney Executive Producers Jason Haigh-Ellery and Nicholas Briggs
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RRR45 Doctor Who: The Time Meddler (1965)
Roy's Rocket RadioNews: Podcast Recording Equipment, Writing Update, TV: Doctor Who (1st Doctor, Series 2, 9 The Time Meddler 1-4, 1965), Aftershow: Rate the Show, Visit the Blog, Email Me/Tweet Me
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Radio Free Skaro #427 - The Perils of Tharils
Radio Free SkaroWith no Chris this week, Steven and Warren enlisted the help of erstwhile scribe, podcaster and gentleman japesman Kyle Anderson of the Nerdist, Doctor Who: The Writer's Room, WTF Are You Watching, and Awesomely Bad Movies fame. Much fun was had as news of comics, schedules, and action dollies (oh so many dollies) was discussed with great gusto. And as a bonus, we also have an interview with Stephen Gallagher, writer of 1980s Doctor Who stories "Warriors' Gate" and "Terminus"! Ever had questions about time-jumping lions? You bet you do, and they’re about to get answered!
Check out the show notes at http://www.radiofreeskaro.com
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Radio Free Skaro #427 - The Perils of Tharils
Radio Free SkaroWith no Chris this week, Steven and Warren enlisted the help of erstwhile scribe, podcaster and gentleman japesman Kyle Anderson of the Nerdist, Doctor Who: The Writer's Room, WTF Are You Watching, and Awesomely Bad Movies fame. Much fun was had as news of comics, schedules, and action dollies (oh so many dollies) was discussed with great gusto. And as a bonus, we also have an interview with Stephen Gallagher, writer of 1980s Doctor Who stories "Warriors' Gate" and "Terminus"! Ever had questions about time-jumping lions? You bet you do, and they're about to get answered!
Check out the show notes at http://www.radiofreeskaro.com
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Radio Free Skaro #427 - The Perils of Tharils
Radio Free SkaroWith no Chris this week, Steven and Warren enlisted the help of erstwhile scribe, podcaster and gentleman japesman Kyle Anderson of the Nerdist, Doctor Who: The Writer's Room, WTF Are You Watching, and Awesomely Bad Movies fame. Much fun was had as news of comics, schedules, and action dollies (oh so many dollies) was discussed with great gusto. And as a bonus, we also have an interview with Stephen Gallagher, writer of 1980s Doctor Who stories "Warriors' Gate" and "Terminus"! Ever had questions about time-jumping lions? You bet you do, and they’re about to get answered!
Check out the show notes at http://www.radiofreeskaro.com
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TDP 787: Diary of River Song Volume 4 from @BigFinish
Tin Dog Podcast@TinDogPodcast reviews the magical Diary of River Song Volume 4 from @BigFinish When River Song visits a place where time has vanished, a genie escapes its bottle… the Discordia are freed – nihilistic time pirates, in devilish form, altering the past to make sure they never lose. This time, River may have met her match. And involving the Doctor can only make things worse… 4.1 Time in a Bottle by Emma Reeves and Matt Fitton River is recruited by a rival to explore a star system where time no longer exists. Professor Jemima Still has picked up a signal from an impossible source and takes an expert team to investigate. But their mission is about to unleash hell upon the universe… 4.2 Kings of Infinite Space by Donald McLeary With the Discordia on their tail, River and her friends run for their lives across time and space. But when your opponent can twist cause and effect to ensure victory at every turn, then escape may well be impossible. 4.3 Whodunnit? by Matt Fitton Melody Malone finds herself in a castle, with an assortment of strange companions. But guests are being murdered, one by one. Time is running out for a mystery to be solved. And Franz Kafka is hiding something in the attic. 4.4 Someone I Once Knew by John Dorney River has tried in vain to keep the Discordia away from the Doctor. Now, as devils run riot through universal spacetime, her own past with her husband is being rewritten. There is one last hope for the universe. A love story – but one that must find an ending… Written By: Emma Reeves, Matt Fitton, Donald McLeary, John Dorney Directed By: Ken Bentley Cast Alex Kingston (River Song), Tom Baker (The Doctor), Adele Lynch (Gammarae), Fenella Woolgar (Professor Jemima Still / Formidian Queen), Josh Bolt (Spod), George Asprey (Melak), Nicholas Asbury (Dante), Ewan Bailey (Human / Alien / Robot Voices), Tim Bentinck (Franz Kafka / Samsa), Alex Tregear (Miss Vermillion / Vermillion), Christopher Naylor (Lord Simon Whist / Captain Bartholomew / Discordia Underling), Shvorne Marks (Cissy / Thelma Sketch), Nigel Anthony (Rakkezar / Drayl), Nathalie Buscombe (Garen / Galerayna). Other parts played by members of the cast. Producer David Richardson Script Editors Matt Fitton, John Dorney Executive Producers Jason Haigh-Ellery and Nicholas Briggs
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TDP 787: Diary of River Song Volume 4 from @BigFinish
Tin Dog Podcast@TinDogPodcast reviews the magical Diary of River Song Volume 4 from @BigFinish When River Song visits a place where time has vanished, a genie escapes its bottle… the Discordia are freed – nihilistic time pirates, in devilish form, altering the past to make sure they never lose. This time, River may have met her match. And involving the Doctor can only make things worse… 4.1 Time in a Bottle by Emma Reeves and Matt Fitton River is recruited by a rival to explore a star system where time no longer exists. Professor Jemima Still has picked up a signal from an impossible source and takes an expert team to investigate. But their mission is about to unleash hell upon the universe… 4.2 Kings of Infinite Space by Donald McLeary With the Discordia on their tail, River and her friends run for their lives across time and space. But when your opponent can twist cause and effect to ensure victory at every turn, then escape may well be impossible. 4.3 Whodunnit? by Matt Fitton Melody Malone finds herself in a castle, with an assortment of strange companions. But guests are being murdered, one by one. Time is running out for a mystery to be solved. And Franz Kafka is hiding something in the attic. 4.4 Someone I Once Knew by John Dorney River has tried in vain to keep the Discordia away from the Doctor. Now, as devils run riot through universal spacetime, her own past with her husband is being rewritten. There is one last hope for the universe. A love story – but one that must find an ending… Written By: Emma Reeves, Matt Fitton, Donald McLeary, John Dorney Directed By: Ken Bentley Cast Alex Kingston (River Song), Tom Baker (The Doctor), Adele Lynch (Gammarae), Fenella Woolgar (Professor Jemima Still / Formidian Queen), Josh Bolt (Spod), George Asprey (Melak), Nicholas Asbury (Dante), Ewan Bailey (Human / Alien / Robot Voices), Tim Bentinck (Franz Kafka / Samsa), Alex Tregear (Miss Vermillion / Vermillion), Christopher Naylor (Lord Simon Whist / Captain Bartholomew / Discordia Underling), Shvorne Marks (Cissy / Thelma Sketch), Nigel Anthony (Rakkezar / Drayl), Nathalie Buscombe (Garen / Galerayna). Other parts played by members of the cast. Producer David Richardson Script Editors Matt Fitton, John Dorney Executive Producers Jason Haigh-Ellery and Nicholas Briggs
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Episode 22: They Didn't Put an Off Switch!
Trust Your DoctorAnd then we concluded The Daleks’ Master Plan
This week Kiyan and Dylan finished off The Daleks’ Master Plan, with the final 6 episodes, aired between 23 December, 1965 and 29 January, 1966. These episodes were also written by Dennis Spooner and Terry Nation. The Doctor also breaks the 4th wall in episode 7.
Doctor Who (c) The BBC
Any other references belong to their respective owners, no copyright infringement is intended by this podcast.
The Doctor Who title music was originally composed by Ron Grainer. The version used in this episode was arranged by Delia Derbyshire.Subscribe on iTunes!
Check us out on Facebook!
Check us out on YouTube!
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Episode 325: Tom Talks Turnout
The Blue Box PodcastThe Blue Box Podcast - Episode 325: Tom Talks Turnout Brought to you every Saturday by Starburst Columnist - JR Southall, Lee Rawlings, Matt Barber and Simon Brett.
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Episode 325: Tom Talks Turnout
The Blue Box PodcastThe Blue Box Podcast - Episode 325: Tom Talks Turnout Brought to you every Saturday by Starburst Columnist - JR Southall, Lee Rawlings, Matt Barber and Simon Brett.
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Episode 22: They Didn't Put an Off Switch!
Trust Your DoctorAnd then we concluded The Daleks’ Master Plan
This week Kiyan and Dylan finished off The Daleks’ Master Plan, with the final 6 episodes, aired between 23 December, 1965 and 29 January, 1966. These episodes were also written by Dennis Spooner and Terry Nation. The Doctor also breaks the 4th wall in episode 7.
Doctor Who (c) The BBC
Any other references belong to their respective owners, no copyright infringement is intended by this podcast.
The Doctor Who title music was originally composed by Ron Grainer. The version used in this episode was arranged by Delia Derbyshire.Subscribe on iTunes!
Check us out on Facebook!
Check us out on YouTube!
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RDP219 What's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry?
Roy's Rocket RadioWhat's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry? Explicit It, Shut It Elon! Kick Fascists, Nazis, and Racists Off Every Social Media Platform, No Stream of Twitter, American Animals, Rock the Kasbah, Summer of 84, Hereditary, Marrowbone, Down a Dark Hall, Upgrade, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Mandy, The Bastard Executioner, The Purge, Mayans M.C., Black Earth Rising, Chance, You, How We're Not Dealing With Putin's Russia, Still No Gigabit Internet, NES Classic, Very Ancient Doodles, Apple Event, How to Kill Paywalls, The Return of My Writing Circle? And the Submissions Go On and On
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RDP219 What's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry?
Roy's Rocket RadioWhat's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry? Explicit It, Shut It Elon! Kick Fascists, Nazis, and Racists Off Every Social Media Platform, No Stream of Twitter, American Animals, Rock the Kasbah, Summer of 84, Hereditary, Marrowbone, Down a Dark Hall, Upgrade, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Mandy, The Bastard Executioner, The Purge, Mayans M.C., Black Earth Rising, Chance, You, How We're Not Dealing With Putin's Russia, Still No Gigabit Internet, NES Classic, Very Ancient Doodles, Apple Event, How to Kill Paywalls, The Return of My Writing Circle? And the Submissions Go On and On
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304 - Doctor Who: Podshock
Podshock
Doctor Who: Podshock - Episode 304
Running time: 2:03:54We review the Doctor Who story, 'The Claws of Axos' starring Jon Pertwee as the Doctor and Katy Manning as Jo Grant, plus news, your feedback, and more. Hosted by Louis Trapani, Dave Cooper, and Ian Bisset.
Presented to you by the Gallifreyan Embassy and is a production of Art Trap Productions.
This podcast is made possible in part by and is brought to you by Podshock Supporting Subscribers and from donations from listeners like you.
Get the DWP Podcast Companion App for iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.
This episode is also brought to you by Audible. Visit http://podshock.net for the link to your FREE audio-book download with free trial.
Do you want the Enhanced Podcast AAC file format? Get our Enhanced Podcast version of this episode using our feed at http://www.gallifreyanembassy.org/podshock/podshock.xml.
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RDP219 What's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry?
Roy's Rocket RadioWhat's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry? Explicit It, Shut It Elon! Kick Fascists, Nazis, and Racists Off Every Social Media Platform, No Stream of Twitter, American Animals, Rock the Kasbah, Summer of 84, Hereditary, Marrowbone, Down a Dark Hall, Upgrade, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Mandy, The Bastard Executioner, The Purge, Mayans M.C., Black Earth Rising, Chance, You, How We're Not Dealing With Putin's Russia, Still No Gigabit Internet, NES Classic, Very Ancient Doodles, Apple Event, How to Kill Paywalls, The Return of My Writing Circle? And the Submissions Go On and On
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RDP219 What's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry?
Roy's Rocket RadioWhat's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry? Explicit It, Shut It Elon! Kick Fascists, Nazis, and Racists Off Every Social Media Platform, No Stream of Twitter, American Animals, Rock the Kasbah, Summer of 84, Hereditary, Marrowbone, Down a Dark Hall, Upgrade, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Mandy, The Bastard Executioner, The Purge, Mayans M.C., Black Earth Rising, Chance, You, How We're Not Dealing With Putin's Russia, Still No Gigabit Internet, NES Classic, Very Ancient Doodles, Apple Event, How to Kill Paywalls, The Return of My Writing Circle? And the Submissions Go On and On
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RDP219 What's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry?
Roy's Rocket RadioWhat's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry? Explicit It, Shut It Elon! Kick Fascists, Nazis, and Racists Off Every Social Media Platform, No Stream of Twitter, American Animals, Rock the Kasbah, Summer of 84, Hereditary, Marrowbone, Down a Dark Hall, Upgrade, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Mandy, The Bastard Executioner, The Purge, Mayans M.C., Black Earth Rising, Chance, You, How We're Not Dealing With Putin's Russia, Still No Gigabit Internet, NES Classic, Very Ancient Doodles, Apple Event, How to Kill Paywalls, The Return of My Writing Circle? And the Submissions Go On and On
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RDP219 What's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry?
Roy's Rocket RadioWhat's Up at Roy's Dread Tower of Wizardry? Explicit It, Shut It Elon! Kick Fascists, Nazis, and Racists Off Every Social Media Platform, No Stream of Twitter, American Animals, Rock the Kasbah, Summer of 84, Hereditary, Marrowbone, Down a Dark Hall, Upgrade, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Mandy, The Bastard Executioner, The Purge, Mayans M.C., Black Earth Rising, Chance, You, How We're Not Dealing With Putin's Russia, Still No Gigabit Internet, NES Classic, Very Ancient Doodles, Apple Event, How to Kill Paywalls, The Return of My Writing Circle? And the Submissions Go On and On
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EPISODE261 - Most Popular Dr Who Stories Part 3
The Cultdom CollectiveMost Popular Dr Who Stories Part 3 - based on the DWM 474 2014 Updated list This episode covers 60 up to number 1
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Reality Bomb Episode 061
Reality Bomb - a Doctor Who podcastOn the sixty-first edition of Reality Bomb, Joy Piedmont talks to Den of Geek's staff editor Kayti Burt and The Guardian's senior social correspondent Martin Belam about the latest news of Doctor Who's move to Sundays and the recent announcement of new writers and directors and what all this might mean for the series. Graeme Burk explores the question of whether Doctor Who fandom is toxic or could become toxic with Angelique Roche, Sage Young and Felicity Kuzinitz. And emeritus producer Alex Kennard returns to Reality Bomb in order that he might bring the now-forgotten revolutionary 2002 webcast Death Comes To Time. Plus, some anthropologists attempt to flush out some middle aged Doctor Who fans in the wild and more!
Reality Bomb is going to be doing a live show in Toronto on Saturday October 20th at 3pm at the Imperial Pub at 54 Dundas Street west. Details are on our website or our Facebook event page for more details!
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Reality Bomb Episode 061
Reality Bomb - a Doctor Who podcastOn the sixty-first edition of Reality Bomb, Joy Piedmont talks to Den of Geek's staff editor Kayti Burt and The Guardian's senior social correspondent Martin Belam about the latest news of Doctor Who's move to Sundays and the recent announcement of new writers and directors and what all this might mean for the series. Graeme Burk explores the question of whether Doctor Who fandom is toxic or could become toxic with Angelique Roche, Sage Young and Felicity Kuzinitz. And emeritus producer Alex Kennard returns to Reality Bomb in order that he might bring the now-forgotten revolutionary 2002 webcast Death Comes To Time to the Gallery of the Underrated. Plus, some anthropologists attempt to flush out some middle aged Doctor Who fans in the wild and more!
Reality Bomb is going to be doing a live show in Toronto on Saturday October 20th at 3pm at the Imperial Pub at 54 Dundas Street west. Details are on our website or our Facebook event page for more details!
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Staggering Stories Podcast #187: Forbidden Oculus of Evil
Staggering Stories Podcast
Summary:Adam J Purcell, Andy Simpkins, Fake Keith, Jean Riddler, the Real Keith Dunn and Scott Fuller review the 1956 classic film ‘Forbidden Planet’, plus the 1975 Doctor Who story ‘The Planet of Evil’ and Karen Gillan’s 2014 film Oculus, talk about our Evening with Sophie Aldred, find some general news and a variety of other stuff, specifically:
- 00:00 – Intro and theme tune.
- 01:34 — Welcome!
- 02:23 – News:
- 02:34 — Doctor Who: World Tour.
- 04:28 — DEAD: Sam Kelly.
- 05:15 — DEAD: Rik Mayall.
- 06:14 — DEAD: Casey Kasem.
- 07:42 — DEAD: Francis Matthews.
- 08:25 — MAIMED: Harrison Ford.
- 09:40 — Radio 4: Sci-Fi season – Dangerous Visions.
- 10:39 — Doctor Who RPG: Unofficial Doctor guides for non-canon stories.
- 12:15 — DC Films: A whole slew of superhero films coming.
- 13:41 – Forbidden Planet.
- 29:56 – An Evening with Sophie Aldred.
- 37:26 – Doctor Who: Planet of Evil.
- 51:20 – Oculus.
- 60:21 – Emails and listener feedback.* Hit us yourself at
- 64:44 – Farewell for this podcast!
- 65:15 — End theme, disclaimer, copyright, etc.
Vital Links:
- Staggering Stories.
- Staggering Stories: Podcast Drinking Game, Fifth edition.
- BBC: Doctor Who.
- Wikipedia: Sam Kelly.
- Wikipedia: Rik Mayall.
- Wikipedia: Casey Kasem.
- Wikipedia: Francis Matthews.
- Wikipedia: Harrison Ford.
- BBC: Dangerous Visions.
- Cubicle 7 (Makers of the Doctor Who: Adventures in Time and Space RPG).
- Wikipedia: Doctor Who RPG Forum (expanded universe source books).
- Wikipedia: Sophie Aldred.
- Facebook: An Evening with Sophie Aldred.
- BBC: Doctor Who – Planet of Evil.
- Wikipedia: Doctor Who – Planet of Evil.
- Wikipedia: Oculus (film).
- Soundcloud: The Infinity Archives podcast.
- Twitter: The Infinity Archives podcast.
- Doctor Who Podcast Alliance.
- Stitcher: Smartphone podcast streaming app.
- Facebook: Staggering Stories Group.
- Google+: Staggering Stories Page.
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Reality Bomb Episode 061
Reality Bomb - a Doctor Who podcastOn the sixty-first edition of Reality Bomb, Joy Piedmont talks to Den of Geek's staff editor Kayti Burt and The Guardian's senior social correspondent Martin Belam about the latest news of Doctor Who's move to Sundays and the recent announcement of new writers and directors and what all this might mean for the series. Graeme Burk explores the question of whether Doctor Who fandom is toxic or could become toxic with Angelique Roche, Sage Young and Felicity Kuzinitz. And emeritus producer Alex Kennard returns to Reality Bomb in order that he might bring the now-forgotten revolutionary 2002 webcast Death Comes To Time. Plus, some anthropologists attempt to flush out some middle aged Doctor Who fans in the wild and more!
Reality Bomb is going to be doing a live show in Toronto on Saturday October 20th at 3pm at the Imperial Pub at 54 Dundas Street west. Details are on our website or our Facebook event page for more details!
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Reality Bomb Episode 061
Reality Bomb - a Doctor Who podcastOn the sixty-first edition of Reality Bomb, Joy Piedmont talks to Den of Geek's staff editor Kayti Burt and The Guardian's senior social correspondent Martin Belam about the latest news of Doctor Who's move to Sundays and the recent announcement of new writers and directors and what all this might mean for the series. Graeme Burk explores the question of whether Doctor Who fandom is toxic or could become toxic with Angelique Roche, Sage Young and Felicity Kuzinitz. And emeritus producer Alex Kennard returns to Reality Bomb in order that he might bring the now-forgotten revolutionary 2002 webcast Death Comes To Time to the Gallery of the Underrated. Plus, some anthropologists attempt to flush out some middle aged Doctor Who fans in the wild and more!
Reality Bomb is going to be doing a live show in Toronto on Saturday October 20th at 3pm at the Imperial Pub at 54 Dundas Street west. Details are on our website or our Facebook event page for more details!
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EPISODE261 - Most Popular Dr Who Stories Part 3
The Cultdom CollectiveMost Popular Dr Who Stories Part 3 - based on the DWM 474 2014 Updated list This episode covers 60 up to number 1
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Bigger on the Inside - Episode 155
Bigger on the InsideThe guys are back to look at three episodes. Before that, though, they play catch-up with Doctor Who news, including trailers, The Doctor's new sonic, and the Twitch live-stream. Then it's all about a three-part story in which The Doctor finds himself trapped in virtual reality ("Extremis"), preventing World War III ("The Pyramid at the End of the World"), then saving the planet from alien overlords ("The Lie of the Land"). Please visit our Patreon page at patreon.com/edge.
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Dent Captain Dent
Radio Free SkaroBeginnings and endings this week as the build-up to Series 11 continues with the official premiere in Sheffield on September 24 - and you could be there! (But not to actually see the screening). And we tip our toque to the Doctor Who Information Network, Canada's longest running Doctor Who fan organization, closing its doors at the end of October. But the main event is a trip back to 1971 and the planet Uxarieus as we commentate overtop of the first three episodes of "Colony In Space"!
Links:
- Support Radio Free Skaro on Patreon! - Doctor Who Information Network ceasing operations October 31 - Series 11 Premiere Red Carpet event contest - Season 19 Blu-Ray available for preorder in Canada - Shada available for US digital download - New K-9 series in the works
Commentary:
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Dent Captain Dent
Radio Free SkaroBeginnings and endings this week as the build-up to Series 11 continues with the official premiere in Sheffield on September 24 – and you could be there! (But not to actually see the screening). And we tip our toque to the Doctor Who Information Network, Canada’s longest running Doctor Who fan organization, closing its doors at the end of October. But the main event is a trip back to 1971 and the planet Uxarieus as we commentate overtop of the first three episodes of “Colony In Space”!
Links:
– Support Radio Free Skaro on Patreon! – Doctor Who Information Network ceasing operations October 31 – Series 11 Premiere Red Carpet event contest – Season 19 Blu-Ray available for preorder in Canada – Shada available for US digital download – New K-9 series in the works
Commentary:
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Bigger on the Inside - Episode 155
Bigger on the InsideThe guys are back to look at three episodes. Before that, though, they play catch-up with Doctor Who news, including trailers, The Doctor's new sonic, and the Twitch live-stream. Then it's all about a three-part story in which The Doctor finds himself trapped in virtual reality ("Extremis"), preventing World War III ("The Pyramid at the End of the World"), then saving the planet from alien overlords ("The Lie of the Land"). Please visit our Patreon page at patreon.com/edge.
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Dent Captain Dent
Radio Free SkaroBeginnings and endings this week as the build-up to Series 11 continues with the official premiere in Sheffield on September 24 - and you could be there! (But not to actually see the screening). And we tip our toque to the Doctor Who Information Network, Canada's longest running Doctor Who fan organization, closing its doors at the end of October. But the main event is a trip back to 1971 and the planet Uxarieus as we commentate overtop of the first three episodes of "Colony In Space"!
Links:
- Support Radio Free Skaro on Patreon! - Doctor Who Information Network ceasing operations October 31 - Series 11 Premiere Red Carpet event contest - Season 19 Blu-Ray available for preorder in Canada - Shada available for US digital download - New K-9 series in the works
Commentary:
-
Dent Captain Dent
Radio Free SkaroBeginnings and endings this week as the build-up to Series 11 continues with the official premiere in Sheffield on September 24 – and you could be there! (But not to actually see the screening). And we tip our toque to the Doctor Who Information Network, Canada’s longest running Doctor Who fan organization, closing its doors at the end of October. But the main event is a trip back to 1971 and the planet Uxarieus as we commentate overtop of the first three episodes of “Colony In Space”!
Links:
– Support Radio Free Skaro on Patreon! – Doctor Who Information Network ceasing operations October 31 – Series 11 Premiere Red Carpet event contest – Season 19 Blu-Ray available for preorder in Canada – Shada available for US digital download – New K-9 series in the works
Commentary:
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Episode 217: Anything is Better than Traveling with Adric
Trust Your DoctorE-space kind of sucked tho so I’ll give him a pass for trying to escape.
I looked up how to paint once. But it was really difficult and kind of expensive and so I decided it would be better to look up how to digitally paint since I already had photoshop. But then I found out that it’s easier with one of those art tablets so I gave up on that too and started a podcast. It’s Vincent and the Doctor, written by Richard Curtis and aired on June 5, 2010.
Show-notes:
9:48 Vincent and Theo is a 1990 movie. Wonder who ok-ed that poster.
15:10 Apparently it is pronounced “Nye.”
18:43 The Musee d’Orsay is indeed in Paris.
21:55 The “Van Gogh only sold 1 painting in his lifetime” thing has been called into question. Some people say he sold more. Some say he only sold the one – The Red Vineyard. There are plenty of theories out there, and we’ll probably never know how many he really sold for sure.
32:42 Fun fact we had the bipolar to manic depressive in reverse, it used to be called manic depressive and now it’s called bipolar. Basically, “manic depressive” has bigger negative connotations than “bipolar,” so the DSM officially changed the name in the 80s. Also, DSM stands for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
48:22 Can’t believe I actually found the blog post again.
Doctor Who (c) The BBC
Any other references belong to their respective owners, no copyright infringement is intended by this podcast.
The Doctor Who title music was originally composed by Ron Grainer. The version used in this episode was arranged by Murray Gold.Subscribe on Apple Podcasts!
Subscribe on Google Play!
Check us out on Facebook!
Check us out on YouTube!
Check us out on Twitter!
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who's last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success -- it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993's Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer's Tale, Russell T Davies's account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It's very candid and informative -- an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world's media in RTD's brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) -- this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It's brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by "precisely modulated gastric emissions", and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat's first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we'll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven't yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015's SPECTRE, but while you're waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Episode 217: Anything is Better than Traveling with Adric
Trust Your DoctorE-space kind of sucked tho so I’ll give him a pass for trying to escape.
I looked up how to paint once. But it was really difficult and kind of expensive and so I decided it would be better to look up how to digitally paint since I already had photoshop. But then I found out that it’s easier with one of those art tablets so I gave up on that too and started a podcast. It’s Vincent and the Doctor, written by Richard Curtis and aired on June 5, 2010.
Show-notes:
9:48 Vincent and Theo is a 1990 movie. Wonder who ok-ed that poster.
15:10 Apparently it is pronounced “Nye.”
18:43 The Musee d’Orsay is indeed in Paris.
21:55 The “Van Gogh only sold 1 painting in his lifetime” thing has been called into question. Some people say he sold more. Some say he only sold the one – The Red Vineyard. There are plenty of theories out there, and we’ll probably never know how many he really sold for sure.
32:42 Fun fact we had the bipolar to manic depressive in reverse, it used to be called manic depressive and now it’s called bipolar. Basically, “manic depressive” has bigger negative connotations than “bipolar,” so the DSM officially changed the name in the 80s. Also, DSM stands for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
48:22 Can’t believe I actually found the blog post again.
Doctor Who (c) The BBC
Any other references belong to their respective owners, no copyright infringement is intended by this podcast.
The Doctor Who title music was originally composed by Ron Grainer. The version used in this episode was arranged by Murray Gold.Subscribe on Apple Podcasts!
Subscribe on Google Play!
Check us out on Facebook!
Check us out on YouTube!
Check us out on Twitter!
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
-
Men in Massive Suits
Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who PodcastThis week, Nathan and James are joined by friend-of-the-podcast Max Jelbart to discuss perennial fan favourite and stone-cold classic Aliens of London. Spoiler alert: we all like it.
Notes and links
Doctor Who’s last soap-genre mashup was not an unqualified success — it was the thirtieth anniversary special that none of us had been dreaming of, as the Doctor and his friends collide with the cast of EastEnders in 1993’s Dimensions in Time.
Not for the last time, one of us mentions The Writer’s Tale, Russell T Davies’s account of his last few years as Doctor Who showrunner. It’s very candid and informative — an absolute must-read.
A massive supernatural event is also covered by the world’s media in RTD’s brilliant miniseries The Second Coming (2003), starring Christopher Eccleston and Lesley Sharp (Midnight).
RTD returned to commenting on the lives of gay men in Cucumber (2015) — this time looking at the differences between gay men in their forties and younger queer people in their twenties. It’s brilliant, but utterly harrowing.
Before the Weeping Angels, before the Silence, before the Monks, Steven Moffat brought us the Tersurons, unseen aliens who communicated by “precisely modulated gastric emissions”, and who were the butt of a number of jokes in Moffat’s first ever Doctor Who story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
After the untimely death of Lis Sladen, RTD and Phil Ford created Wizards vs Aliens, to take the place of The Sarah Jane Adventures in the BBC children’s television schedules. Among the cast were Annette Badland, Gwendoline Christie and TV’s Brian Blessed. It’s usually good, and sometimes actually great.
Follow us!
Nathan is on Twitter as @nathanbottomley, James is @ohjamessellwood, and Max Jelbart is @max_jelbart. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam, and the strings performance was by Jane Aubourg. You can follow the podcast on Twitter at @FTEpodcast. You can also find intermittently amusing and incredibly accurate facts about Doctor Who at @FTEwhofacts.
We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes, or we’ll write a blistering satire of your most cherished political opinions and fill it with farting green aliens.
Bondfinger
Over on Bondfinger, we haven’t yet got around to recording our commentary on 2015’s SPECTRE, but while you’re waiting for that, why not check out our commentaries on the Daniel Craig era, the Pierce Brosnan era or the Timothy Dalton era?
We also have plenty of Rodgecasts online, and there are other Bonds available, as well. Even fake ones.
You can keep up with the Bondfinger news on Twitter and Facebook.
