Overall Statistics

Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who Podcast

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

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

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

Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who Podcast Statistics
Episodes:
1944
Average Episode Duration:
0:0:58:47
Longest Episode Duration:
0:2:46:16
Total Duration of all Episodes:
79 days, 8 hours, 30 minutes and 45 seconds
Earliest Episode:
1 March 2025 (12:11am GMT)
Latest Episode:
1 January 2025 (12:00am GMT)
Average Time Between Episodes:
1 days, 23 hours, 48 minutes and 53 seconds

Flight Through Entirety: A Doctor Who Podcast Episodes

  • Internal Pink Wobbly Bits

    30 November 2014 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 5 minutes and 54 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Recently unearthed in a Nigerian television station by a former oil company employee, Episode 15 of Flight Through Entirety covers the middle stories of Patrick Troughton’s middle season: The Enemy of the World and The Web of Fear. Crank up the foam machine, boys (as usual)!

    Buy the stories!

    And, for once (I Love You Philip Morris), eleven out of the twelve episodes we discuss this episode are still in existence. And you can buy them all on DVD.

    The Enemy of the World is one of seven Patrick Troughton stories that exist in their entirety. Praise Amdo! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Web of Fear is missing episode 3, but the DVD contains a brilliant reconstruction which actually works pretty well. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Enemy of the World

    For those of you who are hanging out for us to abandon this silly children’s science fiction programme so that we can discuss the Bond films, can I whet your appetite with an incredible trip through the Bond oeuvre by a brilliant film critic? Here’s BlogalongaBond by The Incredible Suit. Read it all.

    It wouldn’t be an episode of Flight Through Entirety without numerous references to The Avengers. Fans should check out The Avengers TV website. The episode The Living Dead is available online, probably illegally, here. (Sadly but predictably, this video is no longer available.)

    In The Great Dictator (1940), Charlie Chaplin plays the hero, a character only known as A Jewish Barber, as well as the villain, a weird over-the-top version of Adolf Hitler called Adenoid Hynkel. I’ve never seen it, but it sounds incredible.

    The Web of Fear

    Some rare and wonderful photos of the Yeti, from both The Abominable Snowmen and The Web of Fear were published in The Mirror in 2012. Check them out here.

    In this story, Jon Rollason played David Frost analogue Harold Chorley. He was also Dr Martin King in three episodes of season 2 of The Avengers.

    Elizabeth Sandifer explains her views on the UNIT Dating Controversy in a strange psychogeographic review of The Invasion. She agrees with Nathan. Which is why Nathan has put her in these show notes.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. And, as Missy says, say something nice.

    Follow us!

    Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate it.



  • Episode 15 Internal Pink Wobbly Bits

    30 November 2014 (4:49am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 5 minutes and 54 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Recently unearthed in a Nigerian television station by a former oil company employee, Episode 15 of Flight Through Entirety covers the middle stories of Patrick Troughton's middle season: The Enemy of the World and The Web of Fear. Crank up the foam machine, boys (as usual)!

    Buy the stories!

    And, for once (I Love You Philip Morris), eleven out of the twelve episodes we discuss this episode are still in existence. And you can buy them all on DVD.

    The Enemy of the World is one of seven Patrick Troughton stories that exist in their entirety. Praise Amdo! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Web of Fear is missing episode 3, but the DVD contains a brilliant reconstruction which actually works pretty well. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Enemy of the World

    For those of you who are hanging out for us to abandon this silly children's science fiction programme so that we can discuss the Bond films, can I whet your appetite with an incredible trip through the Bond oeuvre by a brilliant film critic? Here's BlogalongaBond by The Incredible Suit. Read it all.

    It wouldn't be an episode of Flight Through Entirety without numerous references to The Avengers. Fans should check out The Avengers TV website. The episode The Living Dead is available online, probably illegally, here.

    In The Great Dictator (1940), Charlie Chaplin plays the hero, a character only known as A Jewish Barber, as well as the villain, a weird over-the-top version of Adolf Hitler called Adenoid Hynkel. I've never seen it, but it sounds incredible.

    The Web of Fear

    Some rare and wonderful photos of the Yeti, from both The Abominable Snowmen and The Web of Fear were published in The Mirror in 2012. Check them out here.

    In this story, Jon Rollason played David Frost analogue Harold Chorley. He was also Dr Martin King in three episodes of season 2 of The Avengers.

    Philip Sandifer explains his views on the UNIT Dating Controversy in a strange psychogeographic review of The Invasion. He agrees with Nathan. Which is why Nathan has put him in these show notes.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. And, as Missy says, say something nice.

    Follow us!

    Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate it.



  • Internal Pink Wobbly Bits

    30 November 2014 (4:49am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 5 minutes and 54 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Recently unearthed in a Nigerian television station by a former oil company employee, Episode 15 of Flight Through Entirety covers the middle stories of Patrick Troughton's middle season: The Enemy of the World and The Web of Fear. Crank up the foam machine, boys (as usual)!

    Buy the stories!

    And, for once (I Love You Philip Morris), eleven out of the twelve episodes we discuss this episode are still in existence. And you can buy them all on DVD.

    The Enemy of the World is one of seven Patrick Troughton stories that exist in their entirety. Praise Amdo! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Web of Fear is missing episode 3, but the DVD contains a brilliant reconstruction which actually works pretty well. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Enemy of the World

    For those of you who are hanging out for us to abandon this silly children's science fiction programme so that we can discuss the Bond films, can I whet your appetite with an incredible trip through the Bond oeuvre by a brilliant film critic? Here's BlogalongaBond by The Incredible Suit. Read it all.

    It wouldn't be an episode of Flight Through Entirety without numerous references to The Avengers. Fans should check out The Avengers TV website. The episode The Living Dead is available online, probably illegally, here.

    In The Great Dictator (1940), Charlie Chaplin plays the hero, a character only known as A Jewish Barber, as well as the villain, a weird over-the-top version of Adolf Hitler called Adenoid Hynkel. I've never seen it, but it sounds incredible.

    The Web of Fear

    Some rare and wonderful photos of the Yeti, from both The Abominable Snowmen and The Web of Fear were published in The Mirror in 2012. Check them out here.

    In this story, Jon Rollason played David Frost analogue Harold Chorley. He was also Dr Martin King in three episodes of season 2 of The Avengers.

    Elizabeth Sandifer explains her views on the UNIT Dating Controversy in a strange psychogeographic review of The Invasion. She agrees with Nathan. Which is why Nathan has put her in these show notes.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. And, as Missy says, say something nice.

    Follow us!

    Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate it.



  • Episode 15: Internal Pink Wobbly Bits

    30 November 2014 (4:49am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 5 minutes and 54 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Recently unearthed in a Nigerian television station by a former oil company employee, Episode 15 of Flight Through Entirety covers the middle stories of Patrick Troughton's middle season: The Enemy of the World and The Web of Fear. Crank up the foam machine, boys (as usual)!

    Buy the stories!

    And, for once (I Love You Philip Morris), eleven out of the twelve episodes we discuss this episode are still in existence. And you can buy them all on DVD.

    The Enemy of the World is one of seven Patrick Troughton stories that exist in their entirety. Praise Amdo! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Web of Fear is missing episode 3, but the DVD contains a brilliant reconstruction which actually works pretty well. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Enemy of the World

    For those of you who are hanging out for us to abandon this silly children's science fiction programme so that we can discuss the Bond films, can I whet your appetite with an incredible trip through the Bond oeuvre by a brilliant film critic? Here's BlogalongaBond by The Incredible Suit. Read it all.

    It wouldn't be an episode of Flight Through Entirety without numerous references to The Avengers. Fans should check out The Avengers TV website. The episode The Living Dead is available online, probably illegally, here.

    In The Great Dictator (1940), Charlie Chaplin plays the hero, a character only known as A Jewish Barber, as well as the villain, a weird over-the-top version of Adolf Hitler called Adenoid Hynkel. I've never seen it, but it sounds incredible.

    The Web of Fear

    Some rare and wonderful photos of the Yeti, from both The Abominable Snowmen and The Web of Fear were published in The Mirror in 2012. Check them out here.

    In this story, Jon Rollason played David Frost analogue Harold Chorley. He was also Dr Martin King in three episodes of season 2 of The Avengers.

    Philip Sandifer explains his views on the UNIT Dating Controversy in a strange psychogeographic review of The Invasion. He agrees with Nathan. Which is why Nathan has put him in these show notes.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. And, as Missy says, say something nice.

    Follow us!

    Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate it.



  • Internal Pink Wobbly Bits

    30 November 2014 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 5 minutes and 54 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Recently unearthed in a Nigerian television station by a former oil company employee, Episode 15 of Flight Through Entirety covers the middle stories of Patrick Troughton’s middle season: The Enemy of the World and The Web of Fear. Crank up the foam machine, boys (as usual)!

    Buy the stories!

    And, for once (I Love You Philip Morris), eleven out of the twelve episodes we discuss this episode are still in existence. And you can buy them all on DVD.

    The Enemy of the World is one of seven Patrick Troughton stories that exist in their entirety. Praise Amdo! (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Web of Fear is missing episode 3, but the DVD contains a brilliant reconstruction which actually works pretty well. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Enemy of the World

    For those of you who are hanging out for us to abandon this silly children’s science fiction programme so that we can discuss the Bond films, can I whet your appetite with an incredible trip through the Bond oeuvre by a brilliant film critic? Here’s BlogalongaBond by The Incredible Suit. Read it all.

    It wouldn’t be an episode of Flight Through Entirety without numerous references to The Avengers. Fans should check out The Avengers TV website. The episode The Living Dead is available online, probably illegally, here. (Sadly but predictably, this video is no longer available.)

    In The Great Dictator (1940), Charlie Chaplin plays the hero, a character only known as A Jewish Barber, as well as the villain, a weird over-the-top version of Adolf Hitler called Adenoid Hynkel. I’ve never seen it, but it sounds incredible.

    The Web of Fear

    Some rare and wonderful photos of the Yeti, from both The Abominable Snowmen and The Web of Fear were published in The Mirror in 2012. Check them out here.

    In this story, Jon Rollason played David Frost analogue Harold Chorley. He was also Dr Martin King in three episodes of season 2 of The Avengers.

    Elizabeth Sandifer explains her views on the UNIT Dating Controversy in a strange psychogeographic review of The Invasion. She agrees with Nathan. Which is why Nathan has put her in these show notes.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win one of three 1970s Target novelisations from our personal collection, just post a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. And, as Missy says, say something nice.

    Follow us!

    Follow us on Twitter, or on Facebook. Check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate it.



  • Sand in Your Parrinium

    19 May 2015 (5:32am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 49 minutes and 9 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    So, we've changed the desktop theme, and we're ready to start on the delightful Jon Pertwee's final year on Doctor Who, as we discuss the first three stories of Season 11: The Time Warrior, Invasion of the Dinosaurs and Death to the Daleks. Oh, beshrew me, but I grow fond of this fellow!

    Buy the stories!

    The Time Warrior was released on DVD in 2007/2008, including an option to watch a version of the story with acceptable special effects. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Invasion of the Dinosaurs, sadly, has no such option. It was released as part of the UNIT Files box set in 2012. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    And finally, Death to the Daleks was released on DVD in 2012. So there's that. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Warrior

    Mark Gatiss and Katy Manning are among the contributors to the BBC Radio 4 documentary Black Aquarius, which discusses the wave of interest in the occult which washed over British popular culture in the 1970s. Or if that's no longer available, fans of the 1970s might enjoy Cilla Black singing Aquarius instead.

    I searched and searched for the interview with Peter Cushing posted on our Facebook page by friend-of-the-podcast John Edwards Davies. But I couldn't find it. In the meantime, here's Peter Cushing being interviewed about the Hammer Horror films by Terry Wogan in 1988.

    Brendan mentions John Dorney's audio drama Special Features, which is a single-episode story released by Big Finish as part of The Demons of Red Lodge and Other Stories.

    Moonbase 3 was a BBC science-fiction series designed to be Terrance Dicks and Barry Letts's escape route from Doctor Who. Dr Elizabeth Sandifer is less than impressed with it.

    Like Linx, Eddie Izzard is aware of the importance of having a flag when conquering new territories.

    Invasion of the Dinosaurs

    Here's Barry Letts hating on the dinosaurs from Invasion of the Dinosaurs.

    I wish I could find John Molyneux's video of dinosaurs snogging to the tune of Je t'aime, but just I can't. I remember seeing it in the 90s, and it was superb. Anyone who knows where it is, please, please, let me know the URL and I promise I'll post it.

    Here's a hilarious (and somewhat racist) taste of the Disney classic One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing (1975), starring, oh, okay, featuring television's Jon Pertwee.

    Fans of truly terrible things will enjoy this clip from Blue Peter in 1974, featuring the Whomobile, Jon Pertwee and Peter Purvis.

    The novelisation of this story is called The Dinosaur Invasion, and it's brilliant. It was originally released in 1976 with a fab pop-art cover by Chris Achilleos, and then it was re-released in 1978 with a more conventional cover by Jeff Cummins. You can compare the two here. The audiobook is read by Martin Jarvis, and it's great as well. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Death to the Daleks

    We discussed Erich Von Daniken's crazy Chariots of the Gods? a few episodes back. This story, with its tales of Exxilon astronauts building pyramids in Peru, is not the last time that this book will be relevant.

    Fans of romping adventure romps will enjoy She, by H. Rider Haggard, first published in 1886. Fans of Ursula Andress will enjoy the film version starring Ursula Andress, first released in 1965.

    Nathan was right. Famously terrible British novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton was responsible for the opening line "It was a dark and stormy night". Fans of terrible opening lines will enjoy the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest. Fans of somewhat shorter opening lines will enjoy Adam Cadre's Little Lytton Contest.

    And here's some more exuberant crossplay from Brendan. SEE Bonnie Langford seeing Brendan dressed as Bonnie Langford!

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is angry about Twitter and just wishes you kids would get off his lawn. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast. Bless them.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Or Linx will come around to your house and criticise the construction of your thorax.



  • Episode 29: Sand in Your Parrinium

    19 May 2015 (5:32am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 49 minutes and 9 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    So, we've changed the desktop theme, and we're ready to start on the delightful Jon Pertwee's final year on Doctor Who, as we discuss the first three stories of Season 11: The Time Warrior, Invasion of the Dinosaurs and Death to the Daleks. Oh, beshrew me, but I grow fond of this fellow!

    Buy the stories!

    The Time Warrior was released on DVD in 2007/2008, including an option to watch a version of the story with acceptable special effects. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Invasion of the Dinosaurs, sadly, has no such option. It was released as part of the UNIT Files box set in 2012. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    And finally, Death to the Daleks was released on DVD in 2012. So there's that. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Warrior

    Mark Gatiss and Katy Manning are among the contributors to the BBC Radio 4 documentary Black Aquarius, which discusses the wave of interest in the occult which washed over British popular culture in the 1970s. Or if that's no longer available, fans of the 1970s might enjoy Cilla Black singing Aquarius instead.

    I searched and searched for the interview with Peter Cushing posted on our Facebook page by friend-of-the-podcast John Edwards Davies. But I couldn't find it. In the meantime, here's Peter Cushing being interviewed about the Hammer Horror films by Terry Wogan in 1988.

    Brendan mentions John Dorney's audio drama Special Features, which is a single-episode story released by Big Finish as part of The Demons of Red Lodge and Other Stories.

    Moonbase 3 was a BBC science-fiction series designed to be Terrance Dicks and Barry Letts's escape route from Doctor Who. Dr Philip Sandifer is less than impressed with it.

    Like Linx, Eddie Izzard is aware of the importance of having a flag when conquering new territories.

    Invasion of the Dinosaurs

    Here's Barry Letts hating on the dinosaurs from Invasion of the Dinosaurs.

    I wish I could find John Molyneux's video of dinosaurs snogging to the tune of Je t'aime, but just I can't. I remember seeing it in the 90s, and it was superb. Anyone who knows where it is, please, please, let me know the URL and I promise I'll post it.

    Here's a hilarious (and somewhat racist) taste of the Disney classic One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing (1975), starring, oh, okay, featuring television's Jon Pertwee.

    Fans of truly terrible things will enjoy this clip from Blue Peter in 1974, featuring the Whomobile, Jon Pertwee and Peter Purvis.

    The novelisation of this story is called The Dinosaur Invasion, and it's brilliant. It was originally released in 1976 with a fab pop-art cover by Chris Achilleos, and then it was re-released in 1978 with a more conventional cover by Jeff Cummins. You can compare the two here. The audiobook is read by Martin Jarvis, and it's great as well. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Death to the Daleks

    We discussed Erich Von Daniken's crazy Chariots of the Gods? a few episodes back. This story, with its tales of Exxilon astronauts building pyramids in Peru, is not the last time that this book will be relevant.

    Fans of romping adventure romps will enjoy She, by H. Rider Haggard, first published in 1886. Fans of Ursula Andress will enjoy the film version starring Ursula Andress, first released in 1965.

    Nathan was right. Famously terrible British novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton was responsible for the opening line "It was a dark and stormy night". Fans of terrible opening lines will enjoy the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest. Fans of somewhat shorter opening lines will enjoy Adam Cadre's Little Lytton Contest.

    And here's some more exuberant crossplay from Brendan. SEE Bonnie Langford seeing Brendan dressed as Bonnie Langford!

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is angry about Twitter and just wishes you kids would get off his lawn. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast. Bless them.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Or Linx will come around to your house and criticise the construction of your thorax.



  • Sand in Your Parrinium

    19 May 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 49 minutes and 8 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    So, we’ve changed the desktop theme, and we’re ready to start on the delightful Jon Pertwee’s final year on Doctor Who, as we discuss the first three stories of Season 11: The Time Warrior, Invasion of the Dinosaurs and Death to the Daleks. Oh, beshrew me, but I grow fond of this fellow!

    Buy the stories!

    The Time Warrior was released on DVD in 2007/2008, including an option to watch a version of the story with acceptable special effects. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Invasion of the Dinosaurs, sadly, has no such option. It was released as part of the UNIT Files box set in 2012. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    And finally, Death to the Daleks was released on DVD in 2012. So there’s that. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Warrior

    Mark Gatiss and Katy Manning are among the contributors to the BBC Radio 4 documentary Black Aquarius, which discusses the wave of interest in the occult which washed over British popular culture in the 1970s. Or if that’s no longer available, fans of the 1970s might enjoy Cilla Black singing Aquarius instead.

    I searched and searched for the interview with Peter Cushing posted on our Facebook page by friend-of-the-podcast John Edwards Davies. But I couldn’t find it. In the meantime, here’s Peter Cushing being interviewed about the Hammer Horror films by Terry Wogan in 1988.

    Brendan mentions John Dorney’s audio drama Special Features, which is a single-episode story released by Big Finish as part of The Demons of Red Lodge and Other Stories.

    Moonbase 3 was a BBC science-fiction series designed to be Terrance Dicks and Barry Letts’s escape route from Doctor Who. Dr Elizabeth Sandifer is less than impressed with it.

    Like Linx, Eddie Izzard is aware of the importance of having a flag when conquering new territories.

    Invasion of the Dinosaurs

    Here’s Barry Letts hating on the dinosaurs from Invasion of the Dinosaurs.

    I wish I could find John Molyneux’s video of dinosaurs snogging to the tune of Je t’aime, but just I can’t. I remember seeing it in the 90s, and it was superb. Anyone who knows where it is, please, please, let me know the URL and I promise I’ll post it.

    Here’s a hilarious (and somewhat racist) taste of the Disney classic One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing (1975), starring, oh, okay, featuring television’s Jon Pertwee.

    Fans of truly terrible things will enjoy this clip from Blue Peter in 1974, featuring the Whomobile, Jon Pertwee and Peter Purvis.

    The novelisation of this story is called The Dinosaur Invasion, and it’s brilliant. It was originally released in 1976 with a fab pop-art cover by Chris Achilleos, and then it was re-released in 1978 with a more conventional cover by Jeff Cummins. You can compare the two here. The audiobook is read by Martin Jarvis, and it’s great as well. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Death to the Daleks

    We discussed Erich Von Däniken’s crazy Chariots of the Gods? a few episodes back. This story, with its tales of Exxilon astronauts building pyramids in Peru, is not the last time that this book will be relevant.

    Fans of romping adventure romps will enjoy She, by H. Rider Haggard, first published in 1886. Fans of Ursula Andress will enjoy the film version starring Ursula Andress, first released in 1965.

    Nathan was right. Famously terrible British novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton was responsible for the opening line “It was a dark and stormy night”. Fans of terrible opening lines will enjoy the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest. Fans of somewhat shorter opening lines will enjoy Adam Cadre’s Little Lytton Contest.

    And here’s some more exuberant crossplay from Brendan. SEE Bonnie Langford seeing Brendan dressed as Bonnie Langford!

    Follow us!

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Nathan is @nathanbottomley, and Richard is angry about Twitter and just wishes you kids would get off his lawn. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast, while The Trust Your Doctor podcast is on Twitter as @TYDpocast. Bless them.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Or Linx will come around to your house and criticise the construction of your thorax.



  • Episode 28: You're Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (11:52pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 48 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That's right: it's Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks's Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope's chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It's by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you've been warned.

    And here's a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks's novelisation and Clayton Hickman's loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson's 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android's brain using the Liar's Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here's Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It's a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • Episode 28 You're Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (11:52pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 49 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That's right: it's Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks's Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope's chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It's by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you've been warned.

    And here's a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks's novelisation and Clayton Hickman's loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson's 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android's brain using the Liar's Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here's Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It's a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • You're Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (11:52pm GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 49 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That's right: it's Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks's Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope's chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It's by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you've been warned.

    And here's a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks's novelisation and Clayton Hickman's loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson's 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android's brain using the Liar's Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here's Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It's a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • You’re Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 49 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That’s right: it’s Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks’s Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope’s chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It’s by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you’ve been warned.

    And here’s a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks’s novelisation and Clayton Hickman’s loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson’s 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android’s brain using the Liar’s Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here’s Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It’s a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • You’re Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 49 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That’s right: it’s Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks’s Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope’s chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It’s by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you’ve been warned.

    And here’s a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks’s novelisation and Clayton Hickman’s loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson’s 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android’s brain using the Liar’s Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here’s Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It’s a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • You’re Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 48 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That’s right: it’s Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks’s Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope’s chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It’s by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you’ve been warned.

    And here’s a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks’s novelisation and Clayton Hickman’s loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson’s 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android’s brain using the Liar’s Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here’s Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It’s a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • You’re Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 48 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That’s right: it’s Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks’s Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope’s chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It’s by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you’ve been warned.

    And here’s a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks’s novelisation and Clayton Hickman’s loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson’s 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android’s brain using the Liar’s Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here’s Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It’s a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • You’re Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 48 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That’s right: it’s Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks’s Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope’s chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It’s by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you’ve been warned.

    And here’s a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks’s novelisation and Clayton Hickman’s loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson’s 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android’s brain using the Liar’s Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here’s Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It’s a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • You’re Not Katharine Hepburn

    25 April 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 48 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    In a heartbreaking series finale, Brendan, Todd and Nathan say goodbye to Katy Manning, as we discuss naked aliens, two-syllable names, dog-headed maggots and patronising the Welsh. That’s right: it’s Planet of the Daleks and The Green Death. Goodbye, Jo. You were fantastic.

    Buy the stories!

    Planet of the Daleks was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Green Death: Special Edition was released on DVD in (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Planet of the Daleks

    Mark Gatiss gets to read his very favourite Target novelisation, Terrance Dicks’s Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks. Which is nice. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    David Graham was once of the original Daleks way back in 1964. In 2015, at the age of 88, he reprises his role as Lady Penelope’s chauffer Parker in Thunderbirds Are Go. You can see the trailer for it here.

    The Seventh Doctor returns to deal with the frozen Dalek army in the Big Finish audio Return of the Daleks.

    Brendan mentions a very rude re-edit of Jon Pertwee reading the Planet of the Daleks novelisation. It’s by the Doctor Who Breastoration Team, so you’ve been warned.

    And here’s a comparison of the 1976 cover of Terrance Dicks’s novelisation and Clayton Hickman’s loving tribute to it for the 2009 DVD release.

    The Green Death

    Rachael Carson’s 1962 novel Silent Spring talks about the damage caused to the environment by the use of pesticides. We talked about it when we discussed Planet of the Giants, oh, so long ago. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The giant flying bird feet on Metebelis 3 reminds Brendan of the worst monster fight ever in a Godzilla movie. Watch it: it makes Planet of the Dinosaurs look like Jurassic Park III.

    Harry Mudd and Captain Kirk explode an android’s brain using the Liar’s Paradox in the 1967 Star Trek episode I, Mudd.

    And, of course, here’s Peter Cushing Lives in Whitstable by the Jellybottys.

    Picks of the Week

    Todd

    Todd picked the Sarah Jane Adventures season 4 serial The Death of the Doctor. It’s a DVD extra on The Green Death: Special Edition, so you might already have a copy without even realising it!

    Brendan

    The Big Finish Companion Chronicle Find and Replace, features Katy Manning playing both a future Jo Grant and the inimitable Iris Wildthyme.

    Nathan

    In 2015, Russell T Davies had three linked shows on Channel 4 in the UK: Cucumber, Banana and Tofu. Cucumber follows the story of Henry Best, a 46-year-old gay man living in Manchester, Banana is an anthology show, mostly featuring younger queer characters from Cucumber, and Tofu consists of actors from the other two shows and ordinary people discussing issues of sex and sexuality.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We just love it when you say lovely things about us.



  • Bessie Doesn’t Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the Doctor’s tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we’ll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn’t actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we’ve mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here’s an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and its only survivor, India Fisher’s Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Bessie Doesn’t Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the Doctor’s tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we’ll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn’t actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we’ve mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here’s an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and its only survivor, India Fisher’s Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Bessie Doesn’t Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the Doctor’s tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we’ll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn’t actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we’ve mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here’s an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and its only survivor, India Fisher’s Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Bessie Doesn’t Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the Doctor’s tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we’ll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn’t actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we’ve mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here’s an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and its only survivor, India Fisher’s Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Bessie Doesn’t Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (10:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the Doctor’s tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we’ll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn’t actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we’ve mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here’s an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and its only survivor, India Fisher’s Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Episode 27 Bessie Doesn't Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (3:04am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It's the Doctor's tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we'll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 -- by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 -- by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn't actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we've mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here's an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and its only survivor, India Fisher's Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Bessie Doesn't Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (3:04am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It's the Doctor's tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we'll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 -- by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 -- by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn't actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we've mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here's an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and its only survivor, India Fisher's Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Episode 27: Bessie Doesn't Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (3:04am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It's the Doctor's tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we'll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 -- by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 -- by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn't actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we've mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here's an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and it's only survivor, India Fisher's Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We'd really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Bessie Doesn’t Say Very Much

    12 April 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 43 minutes and 18 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the Doctor’s tenth birthday, but we get the presents, as we discuss non-existent Time Lord heroes, the inestimable Cheryl Hall, and large and savage reptiles in The Three Doctors, Carnival of Monsters and Frontier in Space. Thank you Miss Grant, we’ll let you know!

    Buy the stories!

    The Three Doctors was released as a Special Edition in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 3 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Similarly, Carnival of Monsters was released in 2012 — by itself in the US (Amazon US), and as part of the Revisitations 2 box set in the UK and Australia (Amazon UK).

    Frontier in Space was released in 2009/2010 as part of the Dalek War box set. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Three Doctors

    Guy Crayford, from The Android Invasion, is famous for never looking under his eyepatch to discover that his eye isn’t actually missing. Is he as careless about his personal appearance as Omega is?

    The Gell Guards look like a slightly more cuddly version of Sigmund the Sea Monster, a horrifying Saturday morning TV show from the 70s by the equally horrifying Sid and Marty Krofft.

    Fans of Chris Achilleos will be appalled by the similarities between his cover for the Three Doctors novelisation and the cover of Fantastic Four issue 49.

    The Fifth and the Tenth Doctor team up for the 2007 Children in Need special, Time Crash.

    Carnival of Monsters

    I think we’ve mentioned the Bechdel test before, as a back-of-the-envelope way of assessing the sexism of a film or TV show. Here’s an analysis of how Doctor Who has stood up to the Bechdel test over the last 50 years or so.

    Fans of inexplicable time paradoxes that drive Todd crazy will enjoy the first Big Finish Paul McGann audio Storm Warning, which features the real-life doomed airship R101, and its only survivor, India Fisher’s Charley Pollard.

    Frontier in Space

    Fans of the Hammond Organ will enjoy the Doctor Who theme: Delaware version.

    Follow us!

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’d really appreciate your (gushingly positive) feedback!



  • Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it’s time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone’s favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven’t mentioned this for a while, so I guess it’s time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake’s watercolours. Fans of William Blake’s watercolours will also enjoy Elizabeth Sandifer’s crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords’ box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard’s beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone’s lips: Why didn’t the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha’s Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer’s final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it’s not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’ve got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it’s time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone’s favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven’t mentioned this for a while, so I guess it’s time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake’s watercolours. Fans of William Blake’s watercolours will also enjoy Elizabeth Sandifer’s crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords’ box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard’s beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone’s lips: Why didn’t the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha’s Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer’s final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it’s not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’ve got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it’s time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone’s favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven’t mentioned this for a while, so I guess it’s time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake’s watercolours. Fans of William Blake’s watercolours will also enjoy Elizabeth Sandifer’s crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords’ box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard’s beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone’s lips: Why didn’t the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha’s Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer’s final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it’s not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’ve got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it’s time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone’s favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven’t mentioned this for a while, so I guess it’s time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake’s watercolours. Fans of William Blake’s watercolours will also enjoy Elizabeth Sandifer’s crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords’ box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard’s beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone’s lips: Why didn’t the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha’s Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer’s final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it’s not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’ve got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it’s time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone’s favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven’t mentioned this for a while, so I guess it’s time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake’s watercolours. Fans of William Blake’s watercolours will also enjoy Elizabeth Sandifer’s crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords’ box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard’s beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone’s lips: Why didn’t the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha’s Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer’s final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it’s not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’ve got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • Episode 26: Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (4:42am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it's time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone's favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven't mentioned this for a while, so I guess it's time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake's watercolours. Fans of William Blake's watercolours will also enjoy Philip Sandifer's crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords' box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard's beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone's lips: Why didn't the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha's Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer's final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it's not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We'll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We've got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • Episode 26 Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (4:42am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it's time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone's favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven't mentioned this for a while, so I guess it's time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake's watercolours. Fans of William Blake's watercolours will also enjoy Philip Sandifer's crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords' box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard's beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone's lips: Why didn't the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha's Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer's final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it's not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We'll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @critiqaltheory, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We've got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (4:42am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it's time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone's favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven't mentioned this for a while, so I guess it's time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake's watercolours. Fans of William Blake's watercolours will also enjoy Elizabeth Sandifer's crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords' box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard's beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone's lips: Why didn't the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha's Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer's final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it's not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We'll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We've got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • Flouncy Trouncy Bouncy Busty

    29 March 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 17 minutes and 34 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    And it’s time for the end of Season 9 of Doctor Who, and so Brendan, Richard and Nathan explore the weighty themes of colonialism and utter nonsense, as we discuss The Mutants and The Time Monster. Simmer down, Stu!

    Buy the stories!

    The Mutants was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    The Time Monster was relesed in the US in 2010 (Amazon US). In the UK and Australia, it was only released as part of the Myths and Legends Box Set, which also includes the rightfully unloved Underworld and The Horns of Nimon, which I secretly quite like. Shut up. (Amazon UK)

    The Mutants

    The Marshal of Solos is eerily reminiscent of everyone’s favourite wartime reactionary cartoon character, Colonel Blimp.

    We haven’t mentioned this for a while, so I guess it’s time for About Time by Tat Wood. His Pertwee volume is in its second edition, with heaps more information, and, sadly, heaps less Lawrence Miles. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    Fans of the glowy rainbow cave on Solos will also enjoy William Blake’s watercolours. Fans of William Blake’s watercolours will also enjoy Elizabeth Sandifer’s crazy Blakean review of The Three Doctors.

    The Time Lords’ box is eerily reminiscent of Nathan and Richard’s beloved childhood toy, the wonderfully-named Tupperware Shape-O-Ball.

    And, of course, the question on everyone’s lips: Why didn’t the Eagles just drop the One Ring into Mount Doom?

    The Time Monster

    In his conversation with Jo in episode 6, Pertwee shamelessly plagiarises the Buddha’s Flower Sermon.

    Princess Peach becomes the hero in Super Princess Peach, overcoming her enemies with the power of her womanly emotions. Her tiresome habit of being kidnapped so that she can be rescued by Mario is deconstructed in Tropes vs Women in Video Games, Damsel in Distress (Part 1).

    Cat People (1942) is an early horror film directed by Jacques Tourneur. You can watch the scary stalking scene mentioned by Brendan here. You can watch the entire film here, and its sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944), here.

    Fans of the new TARDIS console room will enjoy redirecorating their houses with furtinure designs by Cappellini and Luigi Colani.

    Picks of the Week!

    Nathan

    Sandifer’s final TARDIS Eruditorum entry on Silence in the Library takes the form of a 100,000 word history of Doctor Who. Brilliant.

    Richard

    The Curse of Peladon novelisation is out of print, and it’s not available as an ebook either. (And why on Earth not?) However, the audiobook is available, narrated by David Troughton. (Audible US) (Audible UK)

    Brendan

    Reeltime Pictures has rebranded, and it is now selling its video back catalogue as Time Travel TV. Mythmakers #73, which is a 45-minute interview with Robert Sloman can be found here.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

    Brendan is on Twitter as @brandybongos, Todd is @toddbeilby and Nathan is @nathanbottomley. Richard is only available in real life. You can follow the podcast on Twitter as @FTEpodcast.

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. We’ve got a couple of lovely reviews already, but more reviews will help people to find our podcast and will help us to achieve our ambitions of internet fame. So off you go!



  • A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 59 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the start of Season 9, and so it’s time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here is a photo of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there’s that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis’s plan to save details about every Australian’s online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here’s Clayton Hickman’s tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won’t want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you’re doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here’s Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia’s triple husbandoid, in Blackadder’s Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri’s appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour’s brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 59 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the start of Season 9, and so it’s time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here is a photo of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there’s that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis’s plan to save details about every Australian’s online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here’s Clayton Hickman’s tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won’t want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you’re doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here’s Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia’s triple husbandoid, in Blackadder’s Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri’s appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour’s brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the start of Season 9, and so it’s time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here is a photo of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there’s that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis’s plan to save details about every Australian’s online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here’s Clayton Hickman’s tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won’t want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you’re doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here’s Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia’s triple husbandoid, in Blackadder’s Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri’s appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour’s brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the start of Season 9, and so it’s time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here is a photo of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there’s that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis’s plan to save details about every Australian’s online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here’s Clayton Hickman’s tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won’t want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you’re doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here’s Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia’s triple husbandoid, in Blackadder’s Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri’s appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour’s brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the start of Season 9, and so it’s time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here is a photo of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there’s that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis’s plan to save details about every Australian’s online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here’s Clayton Hickman’s tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won’t want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you’re doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here’s Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia’s triple husbandoid, in Blackadder’s Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri’s appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour’s brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • Episode 25: A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (1:13am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 minutes and 0 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It's the start of Season 9, and so it's time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here are some photos of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there's that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis's plan to save details about every Australian's online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here's Clayton Hickman's tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won't want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you're doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here's Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia's triple husbandoid, in Blackadder's Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri's appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour's brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We'll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • Episode 25 A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (1:13am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 59 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It's the start of Season 9, and so it's time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here are some photos of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there's that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis's plan to save details about every Australian's online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here's Clayton Hickman's tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won't want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you're doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here's Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia's triple husbandoid, in Blackadder's Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri's appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour's brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We'll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (1:13am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 59 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It's the start of Season 9, and so it's time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here are some photos of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there's that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis's plan to save details about every Australian's online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here's Clayton Hickman's tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won't want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you're doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here's Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia's triple husbandoid, in Blackadder's Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri's appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour's brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We'll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • A Hessian Sack Full of Candy Canes

    15 March 2015 (12:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 44 minutes and 58 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    It’s the start of Season 9, and so it’s time for Brendan, Richard and Nathan to grow a terrorist moustache or stick on a military-issue UNIT one and settle back with a sardonic wine and a runny brie to watch Day of the Daleks, The Curse of Peladon and The Sea Devils. Oh, Centauri, stop it!

    Buy the stories!

    Day of the Daleks was released in 2011 as a Special Edition DVD, with an excitingly remastered version which we discuss in the episode. (Amazon US) (Amazon UK)

    In the UK and Australia, The Curse of Peladon was released in 2010 as part of the decreasingly impressive Peladon Tales Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Again, in the UK and Australia, The Sea Devils was released in 2008 as part of the Beneath the Surface Boxset (Amazon UK). It was released separately in the US. (Amazon US)

    Day of the Daleks

    Once again, here is a photo of Brendan dressed as Katy Manning from Day of the Daleks.

    And there’s that old Vulcan saying: Only Nixon could go to China.

    Earlier this month, Australian activist group Beyond Green responded to Attorney-General George Brandis’s plan to save details about every Australian’s online activity, by suggesting that we should CC him into every email conversation we have.

    (Not that) Louis Marx was responsible for a range of toy Daleks in the 1960s, some of which later found their way into the programme to represent armies of Daleks that the production could actually afford. (See, among others, Planet of the Daleks.)

    Here’s Clayton Hickman’s tweet about the poor condition of the Dalek props in Day of the Daleks.

    You won’t want to miss Aubrey Woods singing The Candyman Can from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971).

    Brendan mentions Flight of the Darned, by farmageddon71, the person behind the 1990s special edition of The Five Doctors. No spoilers, but stop whatever you’re doing right now and watch it immediately.

    Here’s Sean Pertwee dressed up as his father dressed up as the Doctor for Halloween 2014.

    The Curse of Peladon

    The Radio Times review of The Curse of Peladon has a lovely publicity shot of Katy Manning complete with a stray hair roller. (Katy claims that these were actually shots from rehearsals rather than specially-staged publicity shots.)

    Arcturus, apparently, went on to have a prolific television career, starring as Bernard, part of Queen Asphyxia’s triple husbandoid, in Blackadder’s Christmas Carol.

    I am proud to announce that I have been unable to find all of Alpha Centauri’s appearance on The Black and White Minstrel Show, although a brief clip can be seen here, as part of BabelColour’s brilliant Every Doctor Who Story video.

    The Sea Devils

    Here are some lovely episodes of The Clangers for you to enjoy.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. And please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes. Go on.



  • Punching Terry Walsh in the Face

    1 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 23 minutes and 6 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Brendan, Nathan and Todd return to space after a two-year absence in our last episode on Jon Pertwee’s second season. It’s time to don a hippie frock and visit Colony in Space, and then take a relaxing two-week holiday on location at a sleepy country village beset by The Dæmons!

    Buy the stories!

    Colony in Space was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    The Dæmons was released on DVD in 2012. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    (That was dull. Sorry.)

    Colony in Space

    The Good Life stars The Chief Caretaker and Lady Clemency Eddison as lovable middle-class eccentrics who decide, much like this story’s colonists, to opt out of the capitalist rat-race and live self-sufficiently. You can find Vyvyan’s take on the programme here.

    Hornets’ Nest is a five-story audio drama series starring Tom Baker, Richard Franklin as Mike Yates and Captain Dent’s almost-henchwoman Susan Jameson as Mrs Wibbsey. You can watch the official trailer for the series here.

    The Dæmons

    Fans of weirdly incorrectly used Latin pronouns will enjoy this dictionary entry for the word qui quae quod. Doctor Which?

    Fans of sleepy English villages with a dark secret will enjoy the 1967 novel Ritual and its film adaptation The Wicker Man (1973), as well as the 1967 novel The Owl Service and its 1969 ITV adaptation. Fans of things that are fabulous will enjoy watching the entire Avengers episode for free online somehow.

    Fans of crackpot theories about human mythology being inspired by aliens will enjoy Erich Von Däniken’s Chariots of the Gods?

    Picks of the week

    Brendan

    The story of Liz Shaw and the Doctor continues in the Big Finish Companion Chronicle The Sentinels of the New Dawn.

    Nathan

    The Randomiser, again, obviously.

    Check out this excellent new Doctor Who blog Crater of Needles, and follow it on Twitter at @CraterOfNeedles. It’s edited by Stephen Wood, who can be found on Twitter at @StephenWood_UK.

    Todd

    The Sixth Doctor and Evelyn Smythe return to Axos in the Big Finish audio The Feast of Axos.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes: we would really appreciate your help with publicising the show!



  • Punching Terry Walsh in the Face

    1 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 23 minutes and 6 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Brendan, Nathan and Todd return to space after a two-year absence in our last episode on Jon Pertwee’s second season. It’s time to don a hippie frock and visit Colony in Space, and then take a relaxing two-week holiday on location at a sleepy country village beset by The Dæmons!

    Buy the stories!

    Colony in Space was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    The Dæmons was released on DVD in 2012. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    (That was dull. Sorry.)

    Colony in Space

    The Good Life stars The Chief Caretaker and Lady Clemency Eddison as lovable middle-class eccentrics who decide, much like this story’s colonists, to opt out of the capitalist rat-race and live self-sufficiently. You can find Vyvyan’s take on the programme here.

    Hornets’ Nest is a five-story audio drama series starring Tom Baker, Richard Franklin as Mike Yates and Captain Dent’s almost-henchwoman Susan Jameson as Mrs Wibbsey. You can watch the official trailer for the series here.

    The Dæmons

    Fans of weirdly incorrectly used Latin pronouns will enjoy this dictionary entry for the word qui quae quod. Doctor Which?

    Fans of sleepy English villages with a dark secret will enjoy the 1967 novel Ritual and its film adaptation The Wicker Man (1973), as well as the 1967 novel The Owl Service and its 1969 ITV adaptation. Fans of things that are fabulous will enjoy watching the entire Avengers episode for free online somehow.

    Fans of crackpot theories about human mythology being inspired by aliens will enjoy Erich Von Däniken’s Chariots of the Gods?

    Picks of the week

    Brendan

    The story of Liz Shaw and the Doctor continues in the Big Finish Companion Chronicle The Sentinels of the New Dawn.

    Nathan

    The Randomiser, again, obviously.

    Check out this excellent new Doctor Who blog Crater of Needles, and follow it on Twitter at @CraterOfNeedles. It’s edited by Stephen Wood, who can be found on Twitter at @StephenWood_UK.

    Todd

    The Sixth Doctor and Evelyn Smythe return to Axos in the Big Finish audio The Feast of Axos.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes: we would really appreciate your help with publicising the show!



  • Punching Terry Walsh in the Face

    1 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 23 minutes and 5 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Brendan, Nathan and Todd return to space after a two-year absence in our last episode on Jon Pertwee’s second season. It’s time to don a hippie frock and visit Colony in Space, and then take a relaxing two-week holiday on location at a sleepy country village beset by The Dæmons!

    Buy the stories!

    Colony in Space was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    The Dæmons was released on DVD in 2012. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    (That was dull. Sorry.)

    Colony in Space

    The Good Life stars The Chief Caretaker and Lady Clemency Eddison as lovable middle-class eccentrics who decide, much like this story’s colonists, to opt out of the capitalist rat-race and live self-sufficiently. You can find Vyvyan’s take on the programme here.

    Hornets’ Nest is a five-story audio drama series starring Tom Baker, Richard Franklin as Mike Yates and Captain Dent’s almost-henchwoman Susan Jameson as Mrs Wibbsey. You can watch the official trailer for the series here.

    The Dæmons

    Fans of weirdly incorrectly used Latin pronouns will enjoy this dictionary entry for the word qui quae quod. Doctor Which?

    Fans of sleepy English villages with a dark secret will enjoy the 1967 novel Ritual and its film adaptation The Wicker Man (1973), as well as the 1967 novel The Owl Service and its 1969 ITV adaptation. Fans of things that are fabulous will enjoy watching the entire Avengers episode for free online somehow.

    Fans of crackpot theories about human mythology being inspired by aliens will enjoy Erich Von Däniken’s Chariots of the Gods?

    Picks of the week

    Brendan

    The story of Liz Shaw and the Doctor continues in the Big Finish Companion Chronicle The Sentinels of the New Dawn.

    Nathan

    The Randomiser, again, obviously.

    Check out this excellent new Doctor Who blog Crater of Needles, and follow it on Twitter at @CraterOfNeedles. It’s edited by Stephen Wood, who can be found on Twitter at @StephenWood_UK.

    Todd

    The Sixth Doctor and Evelyn Smythe return to Axos in the Big Finish audio The Feast of Axos.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes: we would really appreciate your help with publicising the show!



  • Punching Terry Walsh in the Face

    1 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 23 minutes and 5 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Brendan, Nathan and Todd return to space after a two-year absence in our last episode on Jon Pertwee’s second season. It’s time to don a hippie frock and visit Colony in Space, and then take a relaxing two-week holiday on location at a sleepy country village beset by The Dæmons!

    Buy the stories!

    Colony in Space was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    The Dæmons was released on DVD in 2012. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    (That was dull. Sorry.)

    Colony in Space

    The Good Life stars The Chief Caretaker and Lady Clemency Eddison as lovable middle-class eccentrics who decide, much like this story’s colonists, to opt out of the capitalist rat-race and live self-sufficiently. You can find Vyvyan’s take on the programme here.

    Hornets’ Nest is a five-story audio drama series starring Tom Baker, Richard Franklin as Mike Yates and Captain Dent’s almost-henchwoman Susan Jameson as Mrs Wibbsey. You can watch the official trailer for the series here.

    The Dæmons

    Fans of weirdly incorrectly used Latin pronouns will enjoy this dictionary entry for the word qui quae quod. Doctor Which?

    Fans of sleepy English villages with a dark secret will enjoy the 1967 novel Ritual and its film adaptation The Wicker Man (1973), as well as the 1967 novel The Owl Service and its 1969 ITV adaptation. Fans of things that are fabulous will enjoy watching the entire Avengers episode for free online somehow.

    Fans of crackpot theories about human mythology being inspired by aliens will enjoy Erich Von Däniken’s Chariots of the Gods?

    Picks of the week

    Brendan

    The story of Liz Shaw and the Doctor continues in the Big Finish Companion Chronicle The Sentinels of the New Dawn.

    Nathan

    The Randomiser, again, obviously.

    Check out this excellent new Doctor Who blog Crater of Needles, and follow it on Twitter at @CraterOfNeedles. It’s edited by Stephen Wood, who can be found on Twitter at @StephenWood_UK.

    Todd

    The Sixth Doctor and Evelyn Smythe return to Axos in the Big Finish audio The Feast of Axos.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes: we would really appreciate your help with publicising the show!



  • Punching Terry Walsh in the Face

    1 March 2015 (11:00am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 23 minutes and 5 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Brendan, Nathan and Todd return to space after a two-year absence in our last episode on Jon Pertwee’s second season. It’s time to don a hippie frock and visit Colony in Space, and then take a relaxing two-week holiday on location at a sleepy country village beset by The Dæmons!

    Buy the stories!

    Colony in Space was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    The Dæmons was released on DVD in 2012. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    (That was dull. Sorry.)

    Colony in Space

    The Good Life stars The Chief Caretaker and Lady Clemency Eddison as lovable middle-class eccentrics who decide, much like this story’s colonists, to opt out of the capitalist rat-race and live self-sufficiently. You can find Vyvyan’s take on the programme here.

    Hornets’ Nest is a five-story audio drama series starring Tom Baker, Richard Franklin as Mike Yates and Captain Dent’s almost-henchwoman Susan Jameson as Mrs Wibbsey. You can watch the official trailer for the series here.

    The Dæmons

    Fans of weirdly incorrectly used Latin pronouns will enjoy this dictionary entry for the word qui quae quod. Doctor Which?

    Fans of sleepy English villages with a dark secret will enjoy the 1967 novel Ritual and its film adaptation The Wicker Man (1973), as well as the 1967 novel The Owl Service and its 1969 ITV adaptation. Fans of things that are fabulous will enjoy watching the entire Avengers episode for free online somehow.

    Fans of crackpot theories about human mythology being inspired by aliens will enjoy Erich Von Däniken’s Chariots of the Gods?

    Picks of the week

    Brendan

    The story of Liz Shaw and the Doctor continues in the Big Finish Companion Chronicle The Sentinels of the New Dawn.

    Nathan

    The Randomiser, again, obviously.

    Check out this excellent new Doctor Who blog Crater of Needles, and follow it on Twitter at @CraterOfNeedles. It’s edited by Stephen Wood, who can be found on Twitter at @StephenWood_UK.

    Todd

    The Sixth Doctor and Evelyn Smythe return to Axos in the Big Finish audio The Feast of Axos.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We’ll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We’re also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes: we would really appreciate your help with publicising the show!



  • Episode 24 Punching Terry Walsh in the Face

    1 March 2015 (3:13am GMT)
    Episode Duration: 0 days, 1 hours, 23 minutes and 6 seconds

    Direct Podcast Download

    Brendan, Nathan and Todd return to space after a two-year absence in our last episode on Jon Pertwee's second season. It's time to don a hippie frock and visit Colony in Space, and then take a relaxing two-week holiday on location at a sleepy country village beset by The Daemons!

    Buy the stories!

    Colony in Space was released on DVD in 2011. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    The Daemons was released on DVD in 2012. (Amazon US)
    (Amazon UK)

    (That was dull. Sorry.)

    Colony in Space

    The Good Life stars The Chief Caretaker and Lady Clemency Eddison as lovable middle-class eccentrics who decide, much like this story's colonists, to opt out of the capitalist rat-race and live self-sufficiently. You can find Vyvyan's take on the programme here.

    Hornets' Nest is a five-story audio drama series starring Tom Baker, Richard Franklin as Mike Yates and Captain Dent's almost-henchwoman Susan Jameson as Mrs Wibbsey. You can watch the official trailer for the series here.

    The Daemons

    Fans of weirdly incorrectly used Latin pronouns will enjoy this dictionary entry for the word qui quae quod. Doctor Which?

    Fans of sleepy English villages with a dark secret will enjoy the 1967 novel [Ritual](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritual_(Pinner_novel])) and its film adaptation The Wicker Man (1973), as well as the 1967 novel The Owl Service and its 1969 ITV adaptation. Fans of things that are fabulous will enjoy [watching the entire Avengers episode Murdersville for free online somehow](http://www.zimbio.com/watch/YYnqL0CgoKR/Murdersville/The+Avengers+(1961)).

    Fans of crackpot theories about human mythology being inspired by aliens will enjoy Erich Von Daniken's Chariots of the Gods?

    Picks of the week

    Brendan

    The story of Liz Shaw and the Doctor continues in the Big Finish Companion Chronicle The Sentinels of the New Dawn.

    Nathan

    The Randomiser, again, obviously.

    Check out this excellent new Doctor Who blog Crater of Needles, and follow it on Twitter at @CraterOfNeedles. It's edited by Stephen Wood, who can be found on Twitter at @StephenWood_UK.

    Todd

    The Sixth Doctor and Evelyn Smythe return to Axos in the Big Finish audio The Feast of Axos.

    We have a competition!

    If you would like to win a Target novelisation from our personal collection, just write a comment on our website underneath the post for this episode. We'll be giving away three books every time we reach the end of a season.

    Follow us

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

    We're also on Facebook, and you can check out our website at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on iTunes: we would really appreciate your help with publicising the show!



 
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