Meet Tom Baker

Wednesday, 31 March 2010 - Reported by Marcus
The online retailer Play.com is giving its customers as chance to meet the Fourth Doctor, Tom Baker plus an overnight stay in London and £100 pounds towards travel. The competition is only open to those aged 18 or over and residing in the UK.

The meeting with Baker will take place just before he records the DVD commentary for the season 13 story The Seeds of Doom, which will be released in the UK in 2011.




FILTER: - Tom Baker - Competitions - Blu-ray/DVD

Blue Peter competition winner announced

Wednesday, 17 February 2010 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Today's edition of Blue Peter saw the announcement of the winners for their competition to design a Doctor Who console. Of the thousands of entries received, the eventual final three designs selected from the age categories were chosen by Blue Peter editor Tim Levell, Doctor Who production designer Edward Thomas, and head writer Steven Moffat; the overall winner was then picked by new Doctor Matt Smith, who chose the design by Susannah from the 11-12 year old category.


Susannah, from Lancashire, will see her design used in an episode of the forthcoming series (to be filmed in Block 7 over the next few weeks), and will get to visit the set with Blue Peter during the production.



The winners in the other categories were Joshua in the 6-7 and Laura in the 8-10 categories. A full list of the runners up is currently available on the Blue Peter competitions page, which also includes a video of the competition winners being announced.

The episode is available to UK viewers on the BBC iplayer for the next seven days.




FILTER: - Competitions - Series 5/31

More details of Blue Peter contest

Thursday, 8 October 2009 - Reported by Anthony Weight

As previously reported here on the Doctor Who News Page, the BBC children's magazine programme Blue Peter has officially launched its new competition for young fans to design a TARDIS console. The contest is for children aged between 6 and 12, and the final winning design will be chosen by Eleventh Doctor actor Matt Smith. It is specified that the design "must incorporate household objects," and entrants are advised to "make sure it really feels as if the Doctor has put it together."

Full details are available on the Blue Peter website.





FILTER: - Matt Smith - Competitions - Series 5/31

Blue Peter competition

Thursday, 17 September 2009 - Reported by Anthony Weight

The BBC Press Office's release of information regarding programmes on Tuesday the 6th of October contains a small snippet of interest to Doctor Who fans. The BBC's long-running children's magazine programme Blue Peter - which has enjoyed a close relationship with Doctor Who since the 1960s - will be launching "a Doctor Who competition, which will see one lucky viewer design a Tardis console that will feature in the new series."

It is not known in what context this "Tardis console" will be used in Doctor Who, nor when it may appear. Previous Blue Peter competitions have seen young fans design a monster (the Abzorbaloff from Love and Monsters in series two) and appear in the series (Utopia, in series three).





FILTER: - Competitions - Series 5/31

Studios Competition And Christmas Special Title

Tuesday, 23 September 2008 - Reported by DWNP Archive
Posted By John Bowman

A behind-the-scenes tour of the studios where Doctor WhoThe Sarah Jane Adventures and Torchwood are filmed is being offered as a prize in this year's BBC Children In Need appeal.

The BBC Press Office announced the competition today - and at the same time confirmed that the title of the 2008 Doctor Who Christmas special is The Next Doctor.

The BBC will be opening the studio doors just outside Cardiff to 100 competition winners and their friends and families onNovember 8 and 9, during a brief gap in the production schedule.

Russell T Davies said: "This is so exciting. Giving fans the opportunity to take a behind-the-scenes look at where we film Doctor Who, Torchwood and The Sarah Jane Adventures is just brilliant.

"It'll be the perfect opportunity for the whole family to experience something unique and truly extraordinary. It will be a once-in-a-lifetime experience - and the best thing is that all the money raised will go towards BBC Children in Need."

To be in with a chance of winning a place on the tour, people will have to correctly answer a multiple-choice question. This will be announced on Friday, September 26 on The Chris Moyles Show on BBC Radio 1 and on BBC Radio Wales and BBC Radio Cymru.

It will also be available on the official Doctor Who website, along with the full terms and conditions.

The competition phone lines will be open from 8am on September 26. Callers must be over 16 years old and have the bill-payers' permission. Each winner will be able to bring up to three guests, who must all be aged five or over.

The 2008 BBC Children in Need television show is on Friday, November 14.

Although not stated in the press release, the official website says that entrants must be UK residents.




FILTER: - Competitions

Contest Winners Announced

Tuesday, 19 June 2007 - Reported by Jarrod Cooper

The BBC have announced the winners of the Big Finish Short Story Contest. Michael Coen's What I Did On My Holidays has won the competition, aimed at previously unpublished new writers. The story - which features the second Doctor and his friends Jamie and Zoe - will be published in theDefining Patternsanthology in September of this year.

Norman's homework worries his teacher. Instead of a trip to the beach or the zoo, it's about meeting a man from the future. Norman of course knows better than to talk to strange men, but this is his own grown-up self. Surely he can't mean any harm... Can he?

"It's a lively, funny and strangely moving story," enthuses chief-judge Simon Guerrier. "Michael keeps you guessing all the way along. And, very importantly, he's really brings the second Doctor to life."

"To have actually won the competition is a huge surprise and an absolute delight," says Michael. "I can't wait to see my story in print and I'm also looking forward to reading the stories from other entrants, which I'm sure are equally deserving."

"We had an incredibly strong shortlist of the best 25 entries," explains Guerrier. "Defining Patterns will see Michael's story published alongside many established and well-known writers. But we felt our shortlist was of such quality that it deserved a whole book of its own."

This special anthology, deftly titled How The Doctor Changed My Life, will be published in late 2008. The 24 runners up are:

Violet Addison; Steven Alexander; Mike Amberry; Arnold T Blumberg; Anna Bratton; John Callaghan; Dann Chinn; Stephen Dunn; Richard Goff; Peter Hallbright; Tim Lambert; JR Loflin; Nick May; James C McFetridge; Simon Moore; Michael Montoure; LM Myles; Einar Olgeirsson; Bernard O'Toole; Andrew K Purvis; Michael Rees; Mark Smith; Chris Wing; Caleb Woodbridge.

Simon Guerrier has provided Outpost Gallifrey with some general feedback for contest entrants, which can be viewed by clicking the Spoiler link below, or viewed in our forum.

What follows are some common things I saw in the more than 1,000 stories we received. They're not necessarily things that people got 'wrong', but pointers that (I hope) might improve your next piece of writing.

These notes will not cure baldness or veruccas. Reading them won't automatically get your Doctor Who stories published, nor will they magically transform you into a professional writer. That takes practice and perseverance (well, not the baldness and veruccas). If you really want to write, you've probably got more rejections to come - I'm still collecting them, anyway.

These notes aren't rules or laws of physics. Others might disagree with any or all of them. I probably ignore at least some of them in my own published Doctor Who stories. Remember: these are the irrational prejudices of one crabby old editor, too dim to see the shiny brilliance of your story.

You may even feel having read the notes that your story did everything right. That just means we preferred other stories over yours. I said we were dim.

Please don't send us a revised version of your story. Big Finish simply don't have the time to read them. We're a small company and we've only limited resources. I was employed as a freelancer to read the competition entries, and now I'm off to do other things.

I don't know whether we'll run another competition like this one. It's been a huge success, but also entailed a great deal of time and effort on our part. The final decision isn't up to me, though, and if something like this happens again, I think it is somebody else's turn to run it. If that's the case, there'll be announcements - so keep an eye on www.bigfinish.com.

Lastly, some recommended reading. The Writers and Artists' Handbook is a must for anyone serious about this sort of thing. I'd also recommend William Goldman's Which Lie Did I Tell? and Robert McKee's Story. They're both about writing screenplays but a lot of the advice applies generally. (I was recommended Story in a letter rejecting an idea for a Doctor Who novel.)

The Turkey City Lexicon will help you spot and eliminate science-fiction clichés in your writing. The BBC's writersroom is full of useful advice, too. And here at Outpost Gallifrey's Mythmakers forum you can compare your stories and swap feedback with other competition entrants. Right then...

1. Classic Doctors...
There were only a few of these, but we had to disqualify stories with the ninth or tenth Doctors, Daleks, Cybermen, Rose, Grace Holloway, psychic paper, the Time War, etc. We don't have a licence for these things. No matter how brilliant your story, if your story depended on any of these there was no way you could win.

(We can't even include references to these things either - but in most cases such mentionings could have been removed easily.)

2. ...Brand new adventures
Some stories depended too much on stuff from previous Doctor Who stories. Some were even direct sequels. Often, without these recycled continuity elements, there wouldn't have been any story.

3. The plotters
Some stories didn't have enough of a plot. Although a single conversation or moment can give insight into character, we still need a story to drive it. The Doctor and companion discuss their favourite movies: no. The Doctor and companion discuss their favourite movies while on the run from some robot monsters: yes!

Taking those last two points together, there was one plot we saw a lot of: the Doctor sees some children playing. When he then sees their mother, she's his granddaughter Susan. The end.

That's not so much a story as a scene. Much better if when he sees the children, they're being attacked by a monster and he has to save them.

No, wait - even better! He charges in to save these poor children but they don't need his help. These kids are brilliant, and the monster's fallen into their trap. In fact, they have to save the Doctor. He's a bit shaken by all this, so they take him home for tea. And that's when he sees who their mum is!

Same idea, but now it's a story. (What do you mean, "corny"?)

4. A family show
Like not using new series stuff, we're not able to publish stories which feature swearing, sex and/or gratuitous violence. You don't have to write specifically for children, but you shouldn't exclude them, either.

5. Did the Doctor change my life?
We needed to see people affected by their encounters with the Doctor. In some stories, events would have turned out more or less the same if the Doctor hadn't been involved. In other stories, the Doctor stopped a monster or brought down a dictator, but we didn't get an insight into how life was then different - usually because these stories weren't told from one person's point of view.

6. A strong central idea
A simple, clever premise helped to make the 25 stories on our shortlist stand out. They were each easily memorable as "the one with...". Some stories just felt a bit generic - the Doctor presses some buttons and so sees off a monster.

7. In the telling
With so many entries, it wasn't enough for your prose just to be okay. Your story had to engage us immediately, then keep us hooked right up to the end. That magic spell can be broken by clumsy grammar and punctuation, by overly long sentences (especially when it's the very first one!), by overwrought or clichéd imagery, and by using too many adjectives. Some stories felt as if the authors were trying too hard to impress us (and so failed to do so). Much better to keep things simple.

8. Oomf from the get-go
There's a difference between the suspense of waiting for something to happen, and getting bored waiting for anything to happen. Some stories felt like they were just setting up a single, climactic ending. One way out of this: start with your brilliant climax, and then work upwards from there.

9. Lists
Descriptions shouldn't hold up the telling. We don't need to know every detail of what someone's wearing or what objects are in a room. We just need enough of a glimpse to know where we are.

10. I am the Doctor
In some stories it was difficult to tell which Doctor was involved. Sometimes a Doctor would be physically described as, for example, the second Doctor, but would behave and sound like the sixth. This was also sometimes true of the companions.

11. Waving not drowning
Doctor Who doesn't have to be all sunshine and fluffy bunnies, but it is a fun and lively show and the Doctor's a funny bloke. A sense of humour can also give depth to a scary or downbeat story. The Doctor ruining people's lives and driving them to suicide doesn't really match the feel of the series.

12. In the frame
Some stories used interesting and innovative framing devices which helped to hook the reader, before the "real" story was told. Often, though, these "real" stories weren't nearly so interesting.

13. Research
Some stories got their continuity wrong, or told stories that had been done before in books or comics or audio plays. And most galling of all: one or two stories were too like forthcoming stories... Annoyingly, there's nothing you can do about that. I've done it many times myself.




FILTER: - Audio - Competitions

Game Design Competition

Monday, 21 May 2007 - Reported by Jarrod Cooper

The Doctor Who Homepage has teamed up with BBC Blast to launch a competition that will give the winner the chance to design and create a Doctor Who game that will be placed on the Doctor Who and Blast websites.

The winner will have their Doctor Who game brought to life, with runners up receiving Blast and Doctor Who goodie bags.

You can find out more information about the contest here. Below is a brief synopsis of what they are looking for.
What we're looking for:
We're looking for a game offering about 5-10 minutes of game play. The winning game will be made using Flash.

The more addictive, magical and fantastic the game the better.

Try not to base the game on a specific episode - we're looking for something new, even though it should use existing monsters from the current (not Classic) series.

Remember that the Doctor uses his wits and his genius, rather than violence, to solve problems. So please don't give him a machine gun and send him on a killing spree!

Be prepared to be flexible - we can use most of the characters, monsters and situations from the new series of Doctor Who, but we may need to discuss using another monster.




FILTER: - Online - Competitions

Totally Competition Continues

Thursday, 10 May 2007 - Reported by Jarrod Cooper

Totally Doctor Who are continuing with their HANDPRINT COMPETITION
Every week on Totally we’re giving you the opportunity to win signed hand prints from our wall of fame.

Every week our celebrity Doctor Who guests are invited to give us a signed hand print. At the end of the series we’re going to give them all away to one lucky viewer.

If you want to win that amazing prize, you have tune in every week to Totally Doctor Who, and answer a question about the next episode of Doctor Who. You’ll need all 12 answers to stand a chance of winning this Totally exclusive prize.

Questions so far:

1.How many sides does the Globe Theatre have?
2.What kind of patch is Cheen wearing on her neck?
3.How much money is the Doctor offered to work in the sewers of New York?
4.What does the Doctor secretly hand to Martha before he goes to meet the Daleks?
5.Who does the Martha say the Doctor looks like when he’s dressed in black tie?

Send your answers to us at:

TOTALLY DOCTOR WHO
PO BOX 5158
CF5 9BD
or email us at: totallydoctorwho@bbc.co.uk

Remember, you have to answer all 12 questions to be in with a chance of winning.




FILTER: - Competitions

Win assorted goodies

Tuesday, 20 March 2007 - Reported by DWNP Archive

Design a monster or alien and you could win Doctor Who and Torchwood goodies courtesy ofLastbroadcast.co.uk. Click on the link for full details of the prizes.

Entrants must e-mail Lastbroadcast.co.uk with their details and design.

The organisers say: "The image can be a drawing/painting you've done and scanned in, a picture you've done on your computer, a photo of yourself making a scary face or dressed up in a costume - anything really.

"And the design can be as rubbish or amazing as you wish! The best and funniest entries will be displayed on the site - and don't forget to think of a name for your alien or monster."

The competition closes on June 25, 2007.

Also on the website is a link to an interview with Carole Ann Ford, who played the Doctor's granddaughter, Susan Foreman.




FILTER: - Competitions

This year's Blue Peter Doctor Who Competition

Sunday, 3 December 2006 - Reported by Chuck Foster
After the success of their Doctor Who Monster competition last year, Blue Peter and the Doctor Who production team decided to go one better this year with a new competition for a Blue Peter viewer to actually have aspeaking role in the new series!

Launched on the 16th October with an video introduction by David Tennant and other recent series actors, the following weeks saw thousands of videos submitted, choosing from three different scripts to act out.

As well as the top prize of appearing in Doctor Who, the next three runners up have an expenses-paid trip to the exhibition in Cardiff, all ten receive a signed boxed set for Season Two, and the 250 runners up receive a Doctor Who book and action figure.

Future editions of Blue Peter saw encouragement from Doctor Who's Casting Director Andy Pryor, and Stormbreaker film star Alex Pettyfer.

The competition closed on the 10th November, and the following Wednesday's show covered some of the 8057 entries that had been received! The top nine video finalists were then announced, plus an online poll run to enable viewers to select an additional finalist from ten other entrants by the end of the week.

The ten finalists will now be attending an acting workshop, and the eventual winners will be announced on a future programme.

Competition details online can still be seen on the CBBC website, with the original competition announcement and scripts, plus the voting results.




FILTER: - Competitions