You can find my feature on the Doctor Who Worlds Of Wonder exhibition in the latest issue of Doctor Who Magazine here.Free Download DESPICABLE ME MINION RUSH GAME: HOW TO DOWNLOAD FOR ANDROID, PC, IOS, KINDLE + TIPS PDF ePubYou can download this ebook, i provide downloads as a pdf, kindle, word, txt, ppt, rar and zip. Vikki Gregorich joins Tim for a chat about Clint and Kate helping Santa out with his naughty list during a busy period in Hawkeye. It's Good, Except It Sucks: Hawkeye with Vikki Gregorich It's Good, Except It Sucks: Deadpool With Emma BurnellĮmma Burnell joins Tim for a chat about Wade Wilson running up the biggest taxi fare in superhero history in Deadpool. Lydia Mizon joins Tim for a chat about Look Around You, The Smurfs Go Pop!, Karma Hotel by Spooks,Ceefax Backchat and more. Looks Unfamiliar: Lydia Mizon – Keep Away From Our Music You Blue Freaks
With These Pocket Coffee You Are Spoiling UsĪ voyage through the biggest, grandest, and most expensive and unattainable chocolate assortment of them all - Ferrero Prestige! Singing and dancing Watch With Mother bear Barnaby used to be all over television - and then he wasn't. My favourite Doctor Who companions are Katarina and Sara - and apparently, they don't count.Īn only very slightly academic study of the houses, buildings, shops, sheds, walls, windmills and cider presses that appeared in Camberwick Green, Trumpton and Chigley.
I have a chat with Goon Pod about the all-star 1966 comedy caper movie The Wrong Box. It's Good, Except It Sucks: Silver Surfer with Al KennedyĪl Kennedy joins me for a chat about Norrin Radd gaining the cosmic ability to look a bit sad every couple of seconds in Silver Surfer. 2 with 10% off in paperback (Code MAKER10) from here. You can currently get Top Of The Box Vol.
There’s also a Looks Unfamiliar Disco Sci-Fi Spectacular – looking at some of the most ludicrously overdressed examples of the ‘genre’, including the hastily forgotten second series of Buck Rogers In The 25th Century – with Jonny Morris here. You can hear me chatting to Rae Earl about Battle Of The Planets in Looks Unfamiliar here. The Sci-Fi That Time Forgot is a nostalgic – and not always especially reverent – look back at more of the space-themed entertainment that fans used to keep themselves amused with between Star Wars movies and series of Doctor Who in the absence of any other options you can find it here.
Can’t Help Thinking About Me is available in paperback here or from the Kindle Store here.Īlternately, if you’re just feeling generous, you can buy me a coffee here. You can find plenty more about the strange world of late seventies and early eighties sci-fi, including a feature on Space Sentinels‘ close rival Battle Of The Planets, in my book Can’t Help Thinking About Me, a collection of columns and features with a personal twist. Incidentally, Graham provided the excellent cover art for a couple of my books as well as the logo for It’s Good, Except It Sucks – if you’re interested in deploying his design skills, give him a shout here! Buy A Book!
You can download TV Cream Stays Indoors: Space Sentinels here, find it on Spotify here, or listen to it below… And no, MO hasn’t got any more competent in the meantime. First seen in 1977 – and repeated for years afterwards – Space Sentinels was Filmation’s attempt to cash in on the emerging post-Star Wars ‘disco sci-fi’ boom, charting the heroic escapades of teenagers with the powers of gods Hercules, Mercury and Astrea – not to mention their mysterious floating head mentor Sentinel One and his maintenance robot MO – as they battled dastardly intergalactic villains across prog rock album cover-like landscapes to the accompaniment of a funky wah-wah-drenched soundtrack.īack during the first lockdown, I joined fellow TV Cream alumnus Graham Kibble-White on TV Cream Stays Indoors for a chat about Space Sentinels although I remember watching it very clearly, I can recall very little actually about the series itself, so it was especially interesting to be watching it as if it was ‘new’ and there was plenty to say about the cacophonous backing music, the late seventies preponderance of Evil James Galway villains, whether every single Filmation cartoon had the exact same storyline every single week, and how Star Wars changed everything that sci-fi meant to space-hungry youngsters literally while Space Sentinels was still on the drawing board.