November 23rd 1963 - November 23rd 2013
November 23rd 2013 - November 23rd 1963
5:16pm - The Time when the very first Doctor Who episode began
7:30pm - The time when the 50th anniversary began
7:30pm - The time when the last Doctor Who episode began
Doctor Who is a British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC. As of 25 December 2013, 800 individual episodes, including one television movie of Doctor Who, have been aired, encompassing 241 stories. Additionally, four charity specials and two animated serials have also been aired. The show's high episode count resulted in Doctor Who holding the world record for the highest number of episodes for a science-fiction programme.[1] For comparison, the Guinness World Record holder for the highest number of consecutive episodes, Smallville,[2] aired 218 episodes.
Doctor Who ceased airing in 1989 and began again in 2005. Each story in the original series (1963–89) is a multi-episode serial, with two exceptions: the 1965 cutaway episode "Mission to the Unknown" and the 20th anniversary story The Five Doctors. The characters in the column after the serial titles indicate the code used by the production team to designate the serial, where applicable, and are followed either by the titles of the individual episodes where given or by the number of episodes otherwise. Unless otherwise noted, episodes in this period are 25 minutes long. During the early seasons of the programme most serials were linked together and one would usually lead directly into the next. Starting with the 2005 revival, the production team abandoned the traditional serial format for a largely self-contained episodic format with occasional multi-part stories and loose story arcs. Unless otherwise noted, the new episodes are 45 minutes long.
Due to the BBC's 1970s junking policy, 97 episodes from the 1960s are missing, with the result that 26 serials are incomplete, although all of these still exist as audio recordings, and some have been reconstructed. In the first two seasons and most of the third, each episode of a serial had an individual title; no serial had an overall on-screen title until The Savages. The serial titles given below are the most common title for the serials as a whole, used in sources such as the Doctor Who Reference Guide and the BBC's classic episode guide, and are generally those used for commercial release. The practice of individually titled episodes resurfaced with the show's 2005 revival, when Doctor Who's serial nature was abandoned in favour of an episodic format.
The three-digit story numbers are not official designations but are merely to serve as a guide to where the story stands in the overall context of the programme. There is some dispute about, for example, whether to count Season 23's The Trial of a Time Lord as one or four serials,[3] and whether the uncompleted Shada should be included.[4] The numbering scheme used here reflects the current internal practice of describing "Planet of the Dead" (2009) as the 200th story, used in the official magazine's 407th issue.[5] Other sources, such as the Region 1 DVDs of classic Doctor Who serials, use different numbering schemes which diverge after the 108th story, The Horns of Nimon (1979/80).
Maastricht University Confessions
DJ Axolotl will soon take over Maastricht
Harry Brookman
Welcome to the start of my 'holiday' I've had 2 hours sleep and now I'm off on a 6:30am flight to a bloody cold place. How relaxing
Rob Whippy
1 January near Hanworth via Mobile
Happy New Year everyone. 2013 was a good year but I hope 2014 is much better. Let's get this party started
Alex Masoon and Bradley Whufc Spokes like this.
Bradley Whufc Spokes
1 January near Hanworth
Great start to the year, spending it with two of the best people Blake Davis Rob Whippy. And knowing there are people at home tht are brilliant also. Do anything for u guys. Bring it on 2014
Bradley Whufc Spokes
1 January
Paaaarrrrrttttttayyyy in London. Not long to go now my peeps. Happy new year to u all on here — with Blake Davis and Rob Whippy at Hippodrome Kingston Upon Thames.
Bradley Whufc Spokes
31 December 2013
So much better than eastbourne — with Blake Davis and Rob Whippy at Hippodrome Kingston Upon Thames.
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News, Facts & Trivia Archive 1912
Page 3531 of 13159
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posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who - Season 8
posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who - Season 7
posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who - Season 6
posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who - Season 5
posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who - Season 4
posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who - Season 3
posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who - Season 2
posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who - Season 1
posted on 11/1/14
November 23rd 1963
posted on 11/1/14
November 23rd 2013
posted on 11/1/14
November 23rd 1963 - November 23rd 2013
posted on 11/1/14
November 23rd 2013 - November 23rd 1963
posted on 11/1/14
5:16pm - The Time when the very first Doctor Who episode began
posted on 11/1/14
7:30pm - The time when the 50th anniversary began
posted on 11/1/14
7:30pm - The time when the last Doctor Who episode began
posted on 11/1/14
Pepe Mel
posted on 11/1/14
Doctor Who is a British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC. As of 25 December 2013, 800 individual episodes, including one television movie of Doctor Who, have been aired, encompassing 241 stories. Additionally, four charity specials and two animated serials have also been aired. The show's high episode count resulted in Doctor Who holding the world record for the highest number of episodes for a science-fiction programme.[1] For comparison, the Guinness World Record holder for the highest number of consecutive episodes, Smallville,[2] aired 218 episodes.
Doctor Who ceased airing in 1989 and began again in 2005. Each story in the original series (1963–89) is a multi-episode serial, with two exceptions: the 1965 cutaway episode "Mission to the Unknown" and the 20th anniversary story The Five Doctors. The characters in the column after the serial titles indicate the code used by the production team to designate the serial, where applicable, and are followed either by the titles of the individual episodes where given or by the number of episodes otherwise. Unless otherwise noted, episodes in this period are 25 minutes long. During the early seasons of the programme most serials were linked together and one would usually lead directly into the next. Starting with the 2005 revival, the production team abandoned the traditional serial format for a largely self-contained episodic format with occasional multi-part stories and loose story arcs. Unless otherwise noted, the new episodes are 45 minutes long.
Due to the BBC's 1970s junking policy, 97 episodes from the 1960s are missing, with the result that 26 serials are incomplete, although all of these still exist as audio recordings, and some have been reconstructed. In the first two seasons and most of the third, each episode of a serial had an individual title; no serial had an overall on-screen title until The Savages. The serial titles given below are the most common title for the serials as a whole, used in sources such as the Doctor Who Reference Guide and the BBC's classic episode guide, and are generally those used for commercial release. The practice of individually titled episodes resurfaced with the show's 2005 revival, when Doctor Who's serial nature was abandoned in favour of an episodic format.
The three-digit story numbers are not official designations but are merely to serve as a guide to where the story stands in the overall context of the programme. There is some dispute about, for example, whether to count Season 23's The Trial of a Time Lord as one or four serials,[3] and whether the uncompleted Shada should be included.[4] The numbering scheme used here reflects the current internal practice of describing "Planet of the Dead" (2009) as the 200th story, used in the official magazine's 407th issue.[5] Other sources, such as the Region 1 DVDs of classic Doctor Who serials, use different numbering schemes which diverge after the 108th story, The Horns of Nimon (1979/80).
posted on 11/1/14
James Greene
posted on 11/1/14
Maastricht University Confessions
DJ Axolotl will soon take over Maastricht
posted on 11/1/14
Harry Brookman
Welcome to the start of my 'holiday' I've had 2 hours sleep and now I'm off on a 6:30am flight to a bloody cold place. How relaxing
posted on 11/1/14
Rob Whippy
1 January near Hanworth via Mobile
Happy New Year everyone. 2013 was a good year but I hope 2014 is much better. Let's get this party started
posted on 11/1/14
Alex Masoon and Bradley Whufc Spokes like this.
posted on 11/1/14
Bradley Whufc Spokes
1 January near Hanworth
Great start to the year, spending it with two of the best people Blake Davis Rob Whippy. And knowing there are people at home tht are brilliant also. Do anything for u guys. Bring it on 2014
posted on 11/1/14
Bradley Whufc Spokes
1 January
Paaaarrrrrttttttayyyy in London. Not long to go now my peeps. Happy new year to u all on here — with Blake Davis and Rob Whippy at Hippodrome Kingston Upon Thames.
posted on 11/1/14
Bradley Whufc Spokes
31 December 2013
So much better than eastbourne — with Blake Davis and Rob Whippy at Hippodrome Kingston Upon Thames.
Page 3531 of 13159
3532 | 3533 | 3534 | 3535 | 3536