When Doctor Who’s Daleks beat The Beatles in TV ratings battle

When Doctor Who’s Daleks beat The Beatles in TV ratings battle

By Peter ShuttleworthBBC News

For The Beatles it must have been a hard day’s night, but such was Dalek-mania, the robot mutants helped Doctor Who exterminate the Fab Four in one of the first major TV ratings battles.

Beatlemania was just kicking in and the 1960s were in full swing, yet it was The Doctor and his nemesis the Daleks on top of the 1964 Christmas TV charts.

Now as The Doctor prepares for a 60th birthday, many feel those Daleks are behind his record-breaking longevity.

Some say they even saved the doctor.

“Doctor Who was in very strong danger of being cancelled just weeks after it started,” recalled cultural historian Alwyn Turner.

But one wannabe comedian conjured up a fictional extra-terrestrial race of xenophobic mutants who saved the show from early extermination – and within a year of the first episode in 1963, Doctor Who was big enough to take on The Beatles.

“Doctor Who was originally scheduled to run for 52 weeks but after the first storyline, viewing figures were lower than expected,” said Turner.

“Many had the knives out, thinking ‘this isn’t going to last the 52 weeks, let alone the 60 years’.”

What saved the show was comedy writer Terry Nation, who had worked with comic legends like Spike Milligan, Eric Sykes and Tony Hancock – and prescribed what the doctor ordered by accident.

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Ice volcanoes are erupting on Comet 12P

Ice volcanoes are erupting on Comet 12P

Space Weather News for Nov 15, 2023
https://spaceweather.com
https://www.spaceweatheralerts.com

CRYO-VOLCANIC OUTBURST: Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks just experienced its biggest outburst yet. On Nov. 14th, the cryo-volcanic comet abruptly brightened more than 100-fold, putting it well within range of backyard telescopes. Dubbed ‘the Devil Comet’ by mainstream media, 12P might not be sprouting horns this time, indicating a new form of debris. Updates and observing tips @  Spaceweather.com.

 

Above: A previous cryo-volcanic outburst on Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks in July 2023 produced a pair of “horns.” Photo credit: Igor Smolić

 

All about time, from the BBC

From the BBC:

Time: The Ultimate Guide

To mark the 60th anniversary of Doctor Who, we’re exploring the big questions about time, including the science of time travel, how clocks have shaped humanity, and even the mind-bending temporal consequences of flying into a black hole. Read and watch more fromTime: The Ultimate Guide.

The ability to jump forward and backwards in time has long fascinated science fiction writers and physicists alike. So is it really possible to travel into the past and the future?

Doctor Who is arguably one of the most famous stories about time travel. Alongside The Time Machine and Back to the Future, it has explored the temptations and paradoxes of visiting the past and voyaging into the future.

In the TV show, the Doctor travels through time in the Tardis: an advanced craft that can go anywhere in time and space. Famously, the Tardis defies our understanding of physical space: it’s bigger on the inside than it appears on the outside.

While time travel is fundamental to Doctor Who, the show never tries to ground the Tardis’ abilities in anything resembling real-world physics. It would be odd to complain about this: Doctor Who has a fairy-tale quality and doesn’t aspire to be realistic science fiction.

But what about in the real world? Could we ever build a time machine and travel into the distant past, or forward to see our great-great-great-grandchildren? Answering this question requires understanding how time actually works – something physicists are far from certain about. So far, what we can say with confidence is that travelling into the future is achievable, but travelling into the past is either wildly difficult or absolutely impossible.

Let’s start with Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity, which set out a description of space, time, mass and gravity. A key outcome of relativity is that the flow of time isn’t constant. Time can speed up or slow down, depending on the circumstances.

“This is where time travel can come in and it is scientifically accurate and there are real-world repercussions from that,” says Emma Osborne, an  astrophysicist at the University of York, in the UK.

For example, time passes more slowly if you travel at speed, though you need to start approaching the speed of light for the effect to be significant. This gives rise to the twin paradox, in which one of two identical twins becomes an astronaut and whizzes around in space at close to the speed of light, while the other stays on Earth. The astronaut will age more slowly than their Earthbound twin. “If you travel and come back, you are really younger than the twin brother,” says Vlatko Vedral, a quantum physicist at the University of Oxford, in the UK. Twins Scott and Mark Kelly did this for real when Scott spent months in space, albeit not at speeds close to that of light.

Similarly, time passes more slowly for you if you are in an intense gravitational field, such as a black hole. “Your head is ageing quicker than your feet, because Earth’s gravity is stronger at your feet,” says Osborne.

Doctor Who used this as the setup for season 10 finale World Enough and Time, in which the Twelfth Doctor and his friends are trapped on a spaceship close to a black hole. At the front of the craft, closer to the black hole, time passes more slowly than at the rear. This means the small group of Cybermen at the rear of the craft are able to develop into a huge army in, from the Doctor’s point of view, a matter of minutes. This effect of gravity on time also features in the plot of the film Interstellar.

According to Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity, you can compress time if you are able to travel fast enough relative to those around you (Credit: Getty Images)

In our everyday lives, these relativistic effects are too tiny to be noticed. But they do affect the satellites that we use for global positioning system (GPS). “The clocks above click faster than the clocks on Earth”, and must be constantly readjusted, says Osborne. “If we didn’t, Google Maps would be wrong about 10km (six miles) a day.”

Relativity means it is possible to travel into the future. We don’t even need a time machine, exactly. We need to either travel at speeds close to the speed of light, or spend time in an intense gravitational field. In relativity, these two acts are essentially equivalent. Either way, you will experience a relatively short amount of subjective time, while decades or centuries pass in the rest of the Universe. If you want to see what happens hundreds of years from now, this is how to do it.

In contrast, going backwards in time looks far, far harder.

Zines to share!

Zines to share:

From Leybl in Israel: CCNovember2023-v01

Updates to e-fanzines from Bill Burns:

J.L. Farey’s JenZine #7

Christopher J. Garcia’s Claims Department #60 & 61

Ray Palm’s The Ray X X-rayer #173

Heath Row’s The Stf Amateur, November 2023 (apazine bundle)

Garth Spence’s The Obdurate Eye #33

Nic Farey’s This Here…#69

Rich Lynch’s You’re Still on My Mind #4, a letterzine companion to My Back Pages

Octothorpe #96, a regular fannish podcast by John Coxon, Alison Scott and Liz Batty, is now on line

Meeting on the 26th of November

Exceptionally, our next meeting will be later than usual, and on a Sunday, November 26th.

There will be 3 presenters: Lil and Carly, Joe, and Danny.

Joe has sent us this outline:

Air Shows and Aviation Museums

by Joe Aspler, with contribution by L.E. Moir

Many SF fans are modelers and fans of old airplanes. This is a presentation on airshows and aviation museums. These include the RAF Museums (London and Cosford), the National Air and Space Museum (Washington), the USAF Museum (Dayton), the Imperial War Museum (Duxford), the RCAF Museum (Trenton), and the Canadian Aviation and Space Museum (Ottawa).

During my life as a business traveller, I spent the equivalent of more than three years on the road: airplanes, airports, hotels, meetings, taxis, rental cars….. That’s one reason why I missed so many monthly MonSFFA meetings, and several ConCepts as well. One benefit at least was that I could arrange side visits. Some destinations had air museums. Other destinations even had an air show.

This is a presentation on some of those places. Note that you’re seeing only a small selection of a vast number of aircraft. All are rare, and some are irreplaceable last examples.