In 1989, Doctor Who was cancelled with little hope of reprieve. In 1996, a one-off Doctor Who TV movie renewed the legend. In 2005 Doctor Who returned to TV triumphantly, and the BBC quickly made plans for several spin-off series. In between, fandom came to the rescue. With fan-produced amateur films and audio stories, the Doctor and friends actually had more adventures while the show was off the air than they could have while it was in production When Doctor Who returned, it was these fans who were now writing some of his TV adventures. VWORP 2 covers the years that Doctor Who was heard and...
In 1989, Doctor Who was cancelled with little hope of reprieve. In 1996, a one-off Doctor Who TV movie renewed the legend. In 2005 Doctor Who returned...
UPDATED, REVISED AND EXPANDED Includes newly written reviews of the recovered episodes of Galaxy Four, The Enemy Of The World and The Web Of Fear With nearly 50 years of adventures recorded across several media, the BBC's international smash hit DOCTOR WHO is one of the most deeply explored fictional "universes" in TV or literary history - partly because it intersects our own in so many places. Writter, media critic and unabashed Doctor Who fan Earl Green has been writing about the series in all of its forms for over two decades on theLogBook.com, one of the longest running science fiction...
UPDATED, REVISED AND EXPANDED Includes newly written reviews of the recovered episodes of Galaxy Four, The Enemy Of The World and The Web Of Fear Wit...
A book about changing times, changing technology, and changing diapers. Teenage fandom and creativity led to a life working in the media. And then that took a back seat to growing up and being Dad. This book collects choice cuts from Earl Green's long-running blog, Scribblings From The Public Restroom Stalls Of The Gods, and juicy morsels and tidbits from his disturbingly long-running, self-published 'zine, all contained in one handy volume, waiting...watching...biding its time until it can attack again. (Wait, this sales pitch needs a rethink. When's the deadline again? ...oh.)
A book about changing times, changing technology, and changing diapers. Teenage fandom and creativity led to a life working in the media. And then tha...
Using the same format as the VWORP guides to Doctor Who, WARP 1 begins an exploration of the Star Trek universe back to its TV roots, and traces its DNA through other projects produced by Gene Roddenberry, from 1970s pilots that didn't make it to series, all the way back to the first series created by Roddenberry (hint: it wasn't even set in space). Did Star Trek really change the world...and did it live up to its own ideals? Covered in this volume: classic Star Trek, the Animated Series, Gene Roddenberry's 1960s series and 1970s pilots, the classic Trek movies, and the modern Trek movies...
Using the same format as the VWORP guides to Doctor Who, WARP 1 begins an exploration of the Star Trek universe back to its TV roots, and traces its ...