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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!zazen!uwrf.edu!ph9991_manfr
- From: ph9991_manfr@rivers.acc.uwrf.edu
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.drwho
- Subject: Re: Your firsts
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.164804.370@rivers>
- Date: 22 Nov 92 16:48:04 -0600
- References: <81giuB1w164w@kryton.UUCP> <XR7muB2w165w@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca>
- Organization: University of Wisconsin - River Falls
- Lines: 93
-
- In article <XR7muB2w165w@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca>, yadallee@ersys.edmonton.ab.ca (Dave Shariff Yadallee) writes:
- >
- > - <IO21145@MAINE.MAINE.EDU> writes:
- > -
- > - > I would like to hear how some of my fellow "Whovians" were
- > - > first introduced into the series - It was quite a powerfull
- > - > experience for me (or as powerfull as a child might imagine!)
- > - > when I watched "Genesis of The Daleks" on channel 2. It was
- > - > the best show I'd ever seen ! - The mystery of the whole series
- > - > was a joy to unravel, to get to know the doctor and his interesting
- > - > happenings. In short - it's the last Televison show I'll watch!
- > - > But anyway, I'd like to hear from anyone on this...
- > - >
- > - >
- > - > Scorby...
-
-
- My turn.
-
- I first heard of DW at the age of nine in the first few weeks of December
- 1981. At this time, we (the family) were over at a neighbor's house
- and it was traditional for these neighbors to give us little Christmas
- presents and to give them to us at this time rather than waiting for
- Christmas. I was already a little into "Star Trek" (I emphasize the
- little) and heavily into science, and thus the gifts I received were
- books about science.
- One of them was a British publication they had found somewhere geared
- for the pre-teen audience called simply "Robots." In the sections
- where it talks about film and television robots, "Doctor Who" gets
- mentions for the Daleks, the Cybermen, K9, and Kettlewell's Robot.
- I had never heard of this show before (or many of the others mentioned)
- but the name stayed in my mind, particularly as some of these robots
- looked pretty interesting.
- Sometime in Mid-January, my mother, sister, and I got home from a little
- shopping excursion at about fifteen after five and I was anxious to
- find something on TV to watch, and so I paged through the newspaper
- TV listings. I noticed that at 5 pm on Channel 2 (KTCA in Minneapolis)
- there was a listing for "Dr. Who" and the name rung a bell. I wasn't
- certain, but I turned there anyway, and caught the last ten minutes
- of part three of "Terror of the Zygons." (At this time, KTCA was still
- showing the stories in episode format)
- For a reason I don't recall I missed the next day's installment, and
- picked up again with part one of "Pyramids of Mars" and sat hypnotized
- over all four episodes. (At this time, Time-Life was still distributing
- the series, or at least Lionheart hadn't yet got the episode order correct
- from the inherited wrongly-ordered Time-Life package. Of course I didn't
- know that at the time and for at least three years I kept thinking the
- sequence of stories I was seeing was always wrong!)
- And thus I was hooked, and have bee ever since, which I suppose is going
- on eleven years now.
-
- Ah, those were the days, getting home from school and watching the show
- in 25 minute episodes every day of the week, being annoyed when the
- picture reception was bad (pre-cable days too), being very annoyed at
- my regular Wednesday piano lesson for making me miss an episode of every
- serial except when the serial started on Thursdays, being surprised that
- "Seeds of Doom" was turning out to be longer than four parts, loving
- K9, not understanding what a Police Box was, not spelling TARDIS right
- (I always thought it was "Tautus"), trying to get other kids to watch
- the show too and being laughed at for it, being annoyed at pledge breaks
- (some things never change), and the list goes on.
-
- There are three occasions from those early days that always bring a smile
- to my face (OK, make it four) that I shall recall here, and these may
- possibly be the reason I still and probably always will like John
- Nathan-Turner as a Producer, as they all happened during his tenure and
- were his ideas, yet these are the things I remember most....
- (OK, it's probably going to go more than four)
-
- 1. Being at first mad when I thought "Doctor Who" had been replaced one
- day and then discovering to my great delight that the title
- sequence and music had been updated, and updated very well indeed.
- And I also *really* loved having the bridge of the theme music
- permanantly returned to the closing titles.
- 2. Liking Adric's introduction to the series, as he was nearer to my age.
- Also he was the "smart" kid that no one liked, and that was me too.
- 3. Loving the new incidental music.
- 4. Being very, very happy near the end of "The Keeper of Traken" when
- the thing inside Melkur turned around to reveal the withered
- Master....
- 5. Being excited and amazed at my first look at a Doctor's regeneration
- at the end of "Logopolis" and thinking "he's a kid!"
- 6. Being angry with my mother for paranoidically making me shut of
- "Castrovalva" (by now on at late night) as a thunderstorm passed
- overhead. I snuck it back on five minutes later though...
-
- And to this day, I still think the *best* story to get introduced to the
- series to is "Pyramids of Mars" for not only is it a classic, but it
- neatly reviews the series' history a little at the start and has some
- nice TARDIS scenes too.
-
- Steven.K.Manfred
-
-