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216 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
216 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4240
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Title: HPR4240: The First Doctor, Part 1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4240/hpr4240.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 21:54:13
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4,240 for Friday the 1st of November 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, The First Dr. Park One.
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It is part of the series science fiction and fantasy.
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It is hosted by Ahu Kahn, and is about 15 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, a look at the first season of Dr. Hoo.
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Hello.
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This is Ahu Kahn, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio in another exciting episode in our
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new series on science fiction and fantasy.
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And I'm going to continue now with looking at the early Dr. Hoo, with taking a look at
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the first doctor in the first season.
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So last time we went into some detail about the very first episode and how that came to
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be and put in some background.
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But we're going to pick up the pace a little bit now.
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I'm actually going to cover the rest of season one in this episode.
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And so the next thing we're going to talk about, the next story we're going to talk about
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is called The Dollocks.
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Now, the intention of the show's creators was that they would alternate between historical
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stories and futuristic science stories.
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So following the historical story of the cavemen, they wanted some science fiction.
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This ended up being The Dollocks, even though Sidney Newman had said he didn't want any
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bug-eyed monsters in the show.
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But as it happened, they didn't have another script ready to go.
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This happened more frequently than you might imagine in the early days of the show.
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The weekly schedule was generally to rehearse the episode Monday through Thursday, videotape
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it on Friday and broadcast it on Saturday.
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Then the following week, do it again with the next episode.
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And they were on a relentless schedule since the first season was comprised of 42 weekly
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episodes.
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They did not have the luxury of a backlog of scripts that were ready to go, let alone
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a chance to get ahead in shooting the shows.
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In fact, this was extremely close to live television.
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It was videotape the day before it was broadcast, but the idea was that the cameras would
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roll without stopping because a stop would just cost more money.
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If an actor desperately wanted to stop and redo a scene, the trick they used was to utter
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an obscenity because then the director would be forced to stop shooting.
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Now the script that was available and ready was called the Dolex and was written by Terri
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Nation.
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He based the Dolex on the Nazis and their obsession with exterminating other races.
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But he had nothing to do with the look of the Dolex.
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This was originally going to be done by a designer named Ridley Scott, who went on to be
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a famous director.
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But when he had a schedule conflict, the job went to Raymond Cusik.
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Now the way copyrights worked at this point at the BBC, Terri Nation retained the copyright
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to the Dolex and he became very wealthy as a result.
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Cusik, on the other hand, got his weekly paycheck from the BBC.
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To this day, no one, not even the BBC, can use the Dolex without buying a license from
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the estate of Terri Nation.
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Just to the plot of the story, after escaping from the Stone Age, the Tartus, and Tartus
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is an acronym that stands for Time and Relative Dimensions in Space.
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And that's the name of that police call box they travel in.
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And it takes them to the far future where they meet the Dolex.
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It seems that the Tartus has landed on the planet Scarrow, where two opposed races have
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waged nuclear war, and one of those races has mutated into the Dolex, who live inside
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mechanical boxes.
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The other race, the Falls, are essentially blonde beauties who have become very pacifistic,
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which is an odd choice when facing the Dolex or out to exterminate you.
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So the Tartus crew has got to work on the Falls to get them to fight back against the
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danger of the Dolex, which they do, and then eventually they make their escape in the
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Tartus.
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Now, this story plays out over seven episodes, which I would say is at least one too many.
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There is, for instance, a long sequence of the Falls being led by Ian through a cave
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system to attack the Dolex, and that whole thing is seriously plotting.
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In any case, the story ends with the Dolex supposedly exterminated to themselves, but
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the characters were so popular that they had to be brought back.
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And ever since then, they have been supposedly wiped out many times, and always managed
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to come back as a horde of evil.
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Now, following the science fiction story of the Dolex, the next story should have been
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a historical one, but it was a sprawling seven-part story that was not quite ready.
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So the script editor, David Whitaker, whipped up a quick two-parter to fill the gap while
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the historical story was made ready, and that was the edge of destruction.
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In this story, there is a small explosion, which knocks out people in the Tartus, and when
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they come to, they have slight amnesia and start acting strangely.
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Early Barbara gathers enough clues to force the doctor to find the problem, which is a
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broken spring in the fast-return mechanism, which instead of taking them back to Earth,
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kept going and took them back to the beginning of time.
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The strange things happening to them are explained as the Tartus trying to warn them.
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The doctor fixes the switch and everything goes back to normal.
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In terms of story, this is completely skippable, but it is worth watching for seeing Susan
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turn violent and paranoid.
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There is a scene where she takes scissors and starts stabbing the bed.
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Initially, you think she's going to stab people.
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So after that, we get this historical story, which was Marco Polo, and that was the one
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that needed more time.
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The plot is that the doctor is supposed to be trying to get everyone back to 1963 London,
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but it seems he's not entirely capable of navigating the Tartus.
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So they kind of bounce around a lot.
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In this case, they end up in 13th century Central Asia, where they meet up with Marco Polo.
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Polo has been entrusted with admission for the Great Khan, but political infighting is
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the backdrop.
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Now, a difference in this story is that it takes place over a number of weeks in storytime,
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whereas most doctors whose stories are no more than a few days.
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Now this is one of the stories that no longer exists in video form.
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One of the things about the early stories is that the BBC at one point thought it would
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be a great idea to reuse the videotapes, because it would save money.
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Like I say, the BBC was very cheap in those days, and they were pension pennies everywhere
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they could.
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But because of that, a number of shows have been lost from the early days.
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People have been trying to recapture as many of these as they can, and every once in a
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while something shows up.
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For example, since Doctor Who was shown in a number of foreign markets, they would occasionally
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find a storeroom in Nigeria where this was supposed to either be destroyed or shipped
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back to the BBC, but it just sat in the storeroom, in other places, Hong Kong or wherever.
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Sadly, Marco Polo is not one of those rescued shows.
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Now there is a team that is working on recovery, primarily a company called Loose Cannon.
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What they do is they use production stills and audio recordings of the programs to put
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out reconstructed versions, which is how I watched this program.
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From what I can see, it was gorgeous, and to this day, I think it ranks as the number
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one story fans want to recover.
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In some missing episodes of other stories have been replaced by animations from Planet
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55 Studios, I've put links to some of these things here in the show notes if you want
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to follow up on any of that.
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What has enabled all of these alternatives is that many fans recorded the soundtracks
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of the episodes when they were first broadcast, and those soundtracks are the basis for
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animations and reconstructions.
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This problem has seriously affected the stories of the first two doctors, William Hartnell
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and Patrick Troutney.
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Starting with Doctor Three, who is John Pertwee, we have all of the episodes.
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Some of Pertwee's were what they had left was a black and white, even though the story
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was originally in color, but they have been able to go back and colorize those.
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We do have all of the stories more or less as they were broadcast.
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The story after this is the keys of Marinus.
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We just had a historical, so now we do a science fiction.
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The keys of Marinus is kind of a confused jumble of the story.
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It's set on the planet Marinus where you have a peaceful race, who have developed something
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called a conscience machine that erases all of the baser human emotions like greed, hatred
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and violence.
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But they are opposed by an evil race, the Voord, who are devoting themselves to taking
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over, but first they need to control the conscience machine.
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Five keys are necessary to operate it, and the five keys are dispersed.
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So our travelers have to regain all five, which means a travel log adventure where each
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episode is set in a different environment.
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You might notice that the doctor seems to be missing for a few episodes here, and when
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that happens, usually what it meant is they wanted to give the actor a vacation break.
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So when these stories were done, it was really pretty much a full year round schedule.
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Now fortunately Ian and Barbara carry things just fine.
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One of the episodes has brains and jars, and that's kind of a lot of fun.
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But doesn't the bad race out to destroy good race reminds you a bit of the dollocks?
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And wouldn't you know, Terry Nation is also the author of this one.
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Coming between two outstanding historical stories, Marco Polo and the Aztecs, does not
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improve the rank of this story.
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Pleasant enough, but not one of the milestones in Dr. Who history.
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Again, note the alternation in the season between science fiction stories and historical
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stories.
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And so following this, we have the Aztecs, which is another very good historical story that
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has the Tartus materialize in Aztec Mexico prior to the Spanish conquest, when the Aztecs
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were at the height of their power.
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It is interesting that they directly tackle the issue of human sacrifice, which of course
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both the Aztecs and the Maya were known to do.
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The author of finds an ornate bracelet and puts it on only to discover that it is for
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the goddess, and she is now taken for being this goddess.
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She tries to use the power this gives her to stop the practice of human sacrifice, but
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discovers that the social inertia of this society is too powerful.
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The practice of human sacrifice would not stop until the Aztecs were basically wiped
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out by a combination of disease and conquest.
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This is a story well worth watching.
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Carolyn Ford is mostly missing.
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She got her vacation time during this story, but the other three all deliver great performances.
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This really is the exemplar of the great Dr. Who historical.
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Now, after the previous historical story, we get the Sensorites, which is a science fiction
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story set on an alien planet with an alien race.
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Those being the Sensorites, of course, it starts with the Tartus materializing on a
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spaceship from Earth, with two people who were apparently dead, but then it turns out
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they aren't.
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They have been placed in a catatonic state by the Sensorites.
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Then the door locked to the Tartus is removed, stranding the travelers until they can get
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it back.
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It turns out the Sensorites have mental powers, and they communicate through Susan, who
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also now seems to have some unusual powers.
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Had the producers gone further with this idea, Carolyn Ford might well have stayed with the
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show longer.
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She was originally hired in on the premise that she was going to be playing an alien girl
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with unusual powers.
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Then they decided, you know, really, we just wanted to be a teenager who screams all the
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time.
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She got very disenchanted.
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Now, the costumes here are pretty hokey, but honestly, that's the case throughout classic
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Dr. Who.
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The basic plot is good, revolving around a people who are mostly transparently honest
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and trustworthy, but who have some evil appearing in their midst.
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But is the greater evil among the Sensorites or among the humans?
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And finally, after that science fiction story and historical story.
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And this time it's called the Rain of Terror, and it's set in revolutionary France during
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the ascendance of Robespierre.
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There is the first small appearance of outside locations shooting up until now everything
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was shot in studio.
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There would be more location shooting the next season, for instance, in the Dalek invasion
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of Earth.
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But this is another good story with the ever-present threat of the Gillotine hanging over everyone,
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which is pretty accurate for Robespierre's rule.
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Partinal, in particular, shines in this story.
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This is a story with a couple of missing episodes, which I saw as reconstructions that used
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production stills in the soundtrack.
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Now, this brings us to the end of the first season of Dr. Who.
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Like any TV show, it is a mixed bag.
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There were some very good stories, and a few not so good.
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But this is where it all began.
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So, this is Ahuka for Hacker Public Radio, signing off, and is always encouraging you
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to support Free Software.
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Bye-bye!
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, and Hacker Public Radio does work.
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how easy it really is.
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The hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive,
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and our sings.net.
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On the Sadois stages, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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