New Earth Commentary plus TARDISODE 2

Saturday, 15 April 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The official Doctor Who website today tied into the debut of "New Earth" with a commentary track (in MP3 format) by David Tennant and executive producer Russell T Davies, as well as photo features and videos.

Meanwhile, also now available on the site is the second installment of theTARDISODES "mini episodes", this one a precursor to "Tooth and Claw" featuring an alien crashlanding on Earth.




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Online - Series 2/28

TARDISODE One Online, Tie-In Sites Update

Friday, 31 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

A surprising development this evening: episode one of theTARDISODES, the mini-episode tie-ins to the forthcoming second series of Doctor Who, has just gone live on the BBC's official Doctor Whowebsite. Originally announced as being intended solely for viewing on mobile phones, the intention is now to webcast each one on the official site. The available feature, streamed via RealMedia or Windows Media Player, is the first official new Doctor Who footage screened since December's "The Christmas Invasion".
Also now online is an update and revamp to Who Is Doctor Who, the official tie-in website ostensibly 'written' by Mickey Smith, Noel Clarke's character in the series. The site last year featured amusing anecdotes and 'conspiracy theories' related to the Doctor's trips to Earth.
Finally, a new BBC tie-in site has materialized today for the Leamington Spa Lifeboat Museum, another in the new series of tie-in sites created by the BBC team to complement the debut of the series.




FILTER: - Online - Series 2/28

TARDISODES Details

Thursday, 30 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The BBC Press Office and the BBC's official Doctor Who website have both released further information today on the forthcoming TARDISODES, reported in the new DWM and on OG yesterday. Says the release, "In addition to watching 13 new, gripping and exciting adventures - with David Tennant as the Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose - viewers will be given the opportunity to download 13 60-second mini-episodes via their mobile phones, or stream them on broadband as part of the BBC's TV Plus trials. The TARDISODES, which are part of the BBC's trials exploring ways of broadening the output of leading brands, offer the audience an exclusive insight into what's going on in the Doctor Who universe that week. These individual and unique downloads will be available on Saturdays after the main show has gone out. They will include footage that won't be seen on TV, and back story about the characters and adventures coming up inthe next episode - from meeting the Cat Women who can cure all illnesses, joining Mickey as he discovers some alien activity in a local school, to witnessing the Cybermen upgrade process! Jana Bennett, BBC Director of Television, says: 'What better way of travelling with the Time Lord than to have a TARDISODE come to you on your phone or PC? The TARDISODES are an exciting development, delivering mini-episodes which will let viewers access the vortex and explore new worlds before the Doctor arrives himself. We know that there is a huge appetite for Doctor Who and we want to make the whole experience bigger and better for viewers. These TV Plus trials will continue to help us understand more about the different ways in which viewers want to enjoy Doctor Who.' Created by the team behind Attack of the Graske, the highly successful Christmas interactive mission, the mini-episodes will have the same high quality elements as the main show. TARDISODES co-producer Jo Pearce says: 'Our aim, when planning the development of all these projects, is to make the interactive content around Doctor Who series two compelling, exciting and intriguing as well as enticing a broader audience to Doctor Who by positioning it on different platforms.' The mini-episodes are written by Gareth Roberts and directed by Ashley Way. Executive Producers are Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner (Head of Drama, BBC Wales). Producers are Sophie Fante and Jo Pearce. Made in Cardiff, by New Media and BBC Wales, the TARDISODES are part of the BBC's TV Plus pilots, offering audiences a new way of engaging with BBC TV programmes to enhance their viewing experience."
This clarifies that after each episode is broadcast on Saturdays on BBC One, the TARDISODE for the next week's episode will be made available, to both mobile and broadband users. According to the press release, "From 1 April the audience can text the word TARDIS to 81010 to subscribe to the service. The user will then be sent a text message with a link to the download. They will then be asked to bookmark the link and to come back every Saturday at the end of the Doctor Who programme to see the new TARDISODE. If the user does not have a compatible handset they will be told before they download the content and asked to go to the Doctor Who website to watch the TARDISODE." There is no charge for BBC content for mobile phones, although regular service provider call charges will obviously still apply. The press release also notes: "Total audience for 'Attack of the Graske' via the red button was 496,000, with an average of 41,000 requests per week to play the game on the Doctor Who website."




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Online - DWM - Press

Shockeye's Kitchen 17

Tuesday, 28 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Issue 17 (or, rather "Course 17") of the fanzine Shockeye's Kitchen is now available for download at their website. Says the details, "Ahead of the premiere of Series Two, the new issue celebrates (and occasionally mourns) the changing landscape of Doctor Who. Will 2006 be better than 2005? Can Big Finish survive in this brave new world? And, most importantly, is Doctor Who now cool?" (Thanks to Simon Kinnear)




FILTER: - Online

More on Totally Doctor Who

Friday, 3 March 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The official Doctor Who website this morning has further details about the forthcoming childrens' series Totally Doctor Who. It says that the show is "recruiting cadets for a Companion Academy. Eight Cadets will be picked, but only the best will make it through the gruelling physical and mental challenges of the Academy. The prize? A day on the Doctor Who set. Or if you think you're the biggest Who brainbox around, take the Who-ru challenge. Stump the Totally Doctor Who studio guests with your Who knowledge and you'll walk away with some serious prizes. And Totally Doctor Who also want to hear how much you love Doctor Who. Have you built your own time machine or held a Doctor Who fancy dress party? Send in your photos, videos, stories, pictures, or anything else. Plus, if you've got a burning question you want to put to Doctor Who cast or crew, send it in and the Totally team will do their best to get an answer." There are instructions at the site for how to get involved.
As well as the details in the announcement on the official site, email correspondents are currently receiving an automated reply that mentions a couple more things about the forthcoming series. The message states that the first Totally Doctor Who show will be on BBC2 in mid-April and the series will then be "on CBBC"; this implies that the programme will not be on BBC One but on the digital channel CBBC. It also advises us to "keep checking the CBBC website" for updates, suggesting that TDW might actually be getting its own website, separate from the main Doctor Who site.




FILTER: - Online - Series 2/28

Doctor Who on Orange Mobile

Wednesday, 8 February 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Today the Orange mobile phone company announced that customers would soon be able to experience wireless access to a range of popular BBC television programmes on their phone, including Doctor Who. "Some of Britain's best-loved shows including The Office, Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps, Little Britain, The League of Gentlemen, Goodness Gracious Me and classic-series Doctor Who will now be available to watch on mobile phones following a breakthrough deal between Orange and BBC Worldwide. From this month, Orange World users will be able to watch video clips of classic scenes and use famous catchphrases from the shows as ringtones. Images of characters from the shows can also be used as wallpapers for phones. Mark Hird, Director of Multimedia Operations for Orange, said: 'Delivering great broadcast content on mobiles is central to our plans for 2006 and beyond, and there's nobody bigger and better than BBC Worldwide as a partner to get our customers excited. Orange customers will now be able to access some of their favourite programmes from the BBC on their mobile. Beyond watching scenes from the shows, they'll also be able to use classic catchphrases as ringtones.' Jason Blain, Director of Business Development, BBC Worldwide, said: 'For the first time, we're giving mobile customers the chance to watch their favourite shows on their phone. More and more, BBC Worldwide is looking to move toward non-traditional broadcasting vehicles, and this partnership with Orange is a testimony to that.' The first wave of content is live on Orange World from 9 February. The range of BBC Worldwide content available will include video clips, ringtones and still images from The Office, Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps, Little Britain, The League of Gentlemen, Goodness Gracious Me and classic-series Doctor Who." There is currently no word on which episodes can specifically be found, although the image at right does show Patrick Troughton and Jon Pertwee in "The Three Doctors". More details as we get them. (Thanks to Stuart Jackson)




FILTER: - Online

Attack of the Graske Online, But Only For UK

Wednesday, 18 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The official Doctor Who website has made available today the interactive Doctor Who 'episode' Attack of the Graskestarring David Tennant... but only for UK viewers. The mini-adventure was broadcast via BBC digital services using the 'red button' on their satellite remotes. The FAQ explains that this is a test of BBC broadband service and they have elected to only allow UK residents to view it because of their payment of TV licence fees.




FILTER: - Online

Best Of 2005 Drama Winners

Monday, 16 January 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The results have been announced of BBC.co.uk's online Drama: Best of 2005 survey. Best drama, a runaway victory with 55.86% of the vote, isDoctor Who, with Bleak House in second place with 15.95%. Russell T Davies's Casanova starring David Tennant has taken equal sixth place with Holby City. In the Best Actor category, David Tennant is in second place (9.15%), while Christopher Eccleston romps home with 59.42%. Anna Maxwell Martin ('The Long Game') is third-placed Best Actress for her lead role in Bleak House, and the same show's Gillian Anderson came second, butBillie Piper's 59.76% proved unbeatable.

Another double win comes in the Favourite Moment category: the Doctor's regeneration is in second place (6.23%), but the return of the Daleks ('Dalek', 8.63%) led the field. Favourite Villain: the Emperor Dalek manages only fifth place (3.29%)... perhaps because the Daleks take first place with 46.40%. The villains chart also includes the Empty Child and Margaret Slitheen in joint eighth place (1.42%), the Slitheen in equal tenth (with EastEnders' Dirty Den), the Editor ('The Long Game') is equal thirteenth, and Cassandra ('The End of the World') is equal fifteenth.

The category for Most Desirable Star has Doctor Who seeing off all opposition: John Barrowman's Captain Jack is in fourth place; Christopher Eccleston comes third; David Tennant is second; and, of course, Billie Piper takes the top spot with 26.47% of the vote. Also, with a huge 71.17%, theofficial Doctor Who website takes first position as Best Drama Website. Worst Drama also features Doctor Who, with 1.55% of the vote securing it equal eleventh place in a category easily won by Rome (22.69%).

An interesting footnote: on the Best Website list... beyond the top ten -- all BBC or ITV official sites -- the top-rated fan site is Outpost Gallifrey, at #11... one of only two fan sites to make the top 20 list. (We're honored!)

The full results and comments from voters are available at the Best of 2005website. (Thanks to Steve Tribe)




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Online - Awards/Nominations

Official Site Banner

Sunday, 25 December 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
Outpost Gallifrey sends our kudos to our friends at the official Doctor Whowebsite for a terrific splash page during the transmission of today's episode, The Christmas Invasion (a smaller version of which is below!)




FILTER: - Online

TARDIS Report: Tuesday

Tuesday, 20 December 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Among the updates to the official Doctor Who website in recent days, two new games have been added: "Slitheen Surfer", in which the player helps guide Margaret Slitheen and her extrapolator through the debris of an exploded Earth; and "SuDocWho", a variation on current puzzle fad Sudoku, using pictures of the first nine Doctors instead of (or as well as) numbers to complete the grids.

Prospect magazine today calls the return of the Daleks this year as one of the "ten highlights from 2005." "It was a great year for comebacks: Hugh Laurie in House, the two Ronnies (all too briefly), Bob Dylan... Nothing, though, could match the Daleks. This is partly about nostalgia. But even new viewers respond to the strange mix of pure evil ('Exterminate!') and absurdity (creatures with silly voices who want to take over the universe but have only just learned to climb stairs and always lose). They are a sci-fi version of Hitler, which perhaps explains their popularity in the 1960s when British culture was still trying to make sense of Nazism while keeping it at a distance."

The Scottish Daily Record today listed David Tennant as #1 on its list of "100 Hottest Scots" in the men category. "The 34-year-old from Paisley is the hottest man on TV at the moment after bagging the coveted role of Doctor Who Despite appearing in pyjamas in the Christmas special of the sci-fi show, he is sure to set hearts racing with his quirky good looks and brilliant acting. He's sizzling because... more than 10 million viewers will tune in on Christmas Day to witness his debut in the Tardis. He also turned in a superb performance as a sinister stalker in ITV drama Secret Smile and did a credible singing turn in BBC1 musical drama Blackpool. Memorable moment of 2005 was when he cut a swathe through the women of Europe as Casanova in the BBC3 series of the samename - despite being the son of a Churchof Scotland minister."

The Times today says of the Radio 2 documentary, Doctor Who: Regeneration, "Was it the special effects that made the new Who so memorable, or the scripts by Russell T. Davies, or the acting of Billie Piper and, in particular, Christopher Eccleston? And now that Eccleston (above, with Piper) has gone, desperate not to be typecast, can David Tennant hope to match him? Gatiss gets the facts - well, at least some informed conjecture."

Also, a writer in today's Financial Times says that "A TV-deprived childhood has left me impervious to Doctor Who. After hearing Doctor Who: Regeneration, I feel tempted to brand the whole phenomenon as self- important claptrap. This 'celebration', BBC navel-gazing at its most complacent, rolls out Who types starting with writer Russell T. Davies, apparently challenged both adenoidally and glottally - the latter a common complaint among mediafolk such as exec prod Julie who says you know you go' a hi' when you see the viewing figures. This level of insight is continued by the BBC1 controller who notes that the Doctor has brought younger viewers to the BBC in tones that suggest he expected OAPs. Jane (head of drama, BBCTV) talks portentously of Christopher Eccleston 'kicking open the door, and the new Doctor, David Tennant, taking us somewhere we hadn't quite expected'. This is kids' TV, for heaven's sake, not a breakthrough in biological ethics."

Monday's The Sentinel has a feature article about India Fisher of Big Finish. "Gallivanting around the universe in a time machine, tackling the Daleks and imitating pop-brat Kelly Osbourne. These are some of the ways in which the daughter of a Stoke-on-Trent MP has carved out a career for herself. For while ex-Arts Minister Mark Fisher is busy representing Stoke Central as a Labour MP, his daughter, India, has got involved in something far less down-to-earth. The 31-year-old has become an international superstar in the cult programme Dr Who - the audio version. Playing the role of Charlotte Pollard, Dr Who's assistant, India has for the last six years starred in the tape and CD version of the smash-hit drama, which has just kicked off a new series on the small-screen. Much to her amazement, India has achieved superstar status among the worldwide followers of the cult series. The tapes and CDs have winged their way to obsessed fans all over the world, and she has been invited to countless international conventions. And she has also gained fame as a star of TV - acting as Welsh singing sensation Charlotte Church and Kelly Osbourne in the Dead Ringers show which stars John Culshaw. .. 'My brother Rhydian is a businessman so he's the sensible one and I guess we should have followed his lead. But we've always been quite the arty family and I've always had a passion for acting. If I hadn't given it a go, I'd never have forgiven myself - although I might have been much better off financially.' A year and a half ago, Nev Fountain, the writer of Dead Ringers, spotted India at a Dr Who convention in Los Angeles and asked her to play a part in their series. She was an immediate hit. Since then, she has done impressions of Kelly Osbourne, Charlotte Church and even Sonia and Sharon from EastEnders. India said: 'It's tough - they often give you a character they want you to do on the Friday and you have to get it ready in just 48 hours. Sometimes I wonder how on earth I'm going to do it - but it's not an opportunity I can possibly turn down. They needed someone to do the younger characters. I look a little like Kelly Osborne I guess - I've got my dad to thank for that - so I guess I was perfect for the part.' ... But if there's one thing India was, as a Stoke-on-Trent schoolgirl ever-so-slightly irritated by, it was her name. 'My brother's called Crispin, another one is called Rhydian and I'm India so it's an interesting collection of names. Whenever my name came up in the school register, the teacher always used to pause before saying it - she expected the pronunciation to be unique somehow. And the kids in the playground used to jokingly things like: 'So what's your middle name, Pakistan?' I used to wish I was just called something nice and simple like Jane. But I love it now."

An article at Ekklesia comments on the anti-war message apparently to be seen in "The Christmas Invasion". "Journalists who have previewed the episode say that a later scene also recalls ex-PM Margaret Thatcher's decision to sink the Argentine warship the General Belgrano during the Falklands/Malvinas war in 1982. Responding to pre-broadcast comments, award-winning scriptwriter Russell T Davies declared: 'It's Christmas Day, a day of peace. There is absolutely an anti-war message - because that's what I think.' Meanwhile, looking up somewhat wearily from his computer, Doctor Who commentator and fiction writer Mark Clapham told Ekklesia: 'The Doctor has usually been a character who advocates peaceful means before violent solutions. He's not a particularly dedicated pacifist though - he often finds himself having to apply violent solutions sooner or later.' Author and Who analyst Jim Smith, who co-authored the Virgin Books guide Who's Next? with Clapham and Eddie Robson, went on: 'There are many stories which are definitely anti-war. Not a particular war - just war itself. ‘The Crusade' (1965) is specifically about the futility of religious warfare and is even set in Basra. While it's adventure fiction and thus has fighting in it, the whole show is deeply suspicious of politicians, soldiers, military means, military objectives, and so on.' Doctor Who long ago cast an eye on terrorism and possible superpower reactions to it. Says Smith: 'In 1970 ‘The Ambassadors of Death' featured a xenophobic political group trying to scare the whole human race into attacking some harmless aliens.' Whether the Christmas day episode will feature Doctor Who's iconic enemies, the Daleks, remains to be seen. But if it does, the spiritual head of the world's 77 million Anglicans will be on-hand to comment."

Contact Music says that Kaiser Chiefs frontman Ricky Wilson claims he was offered the role of Doctor Who before David Tennant. "The 'I Predict a Riot' hitmaker believes Tennant looks too youthful for the part, and is determined to get his hands on the role. He says, 'It's the kind of thing I've got down for my autumn years. I'm worried David's too young for the part. Eddie Izzard would be perfect. The BBC offered it to me but I was so busy they got a lookalike.'" Uh, right...

(Thanks to Paul Engelberg and Steve Tribe)




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Online - Press - Radio Times