The Fourth Wall (audio story): Difference between revisions

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|doctor = [[Sixth Doctor]]
|doctor = [[Sixth Doctor]]
|companions = [[Flip Jackson]]
|companions = [[Flip Jackson]]
|enemy = [[Chimbly]]<br>The [[Porcion]]s
|enemy = [[Chimbly]]<br>The [[Porcion]]s<br>[[Lord Krarn]]<br>The Warmongers
|setting = [[Stevenage]], [[England]], [[United Kingdom|UK]]<br>[[Transmission (planetoid)|Transmission]]
|setting = [[Stevenage]], [[England]], [[United Kingdom|UK]]<br>[[Transmission (planetoid)|Transmission]]
|writer = [[John Dorney]]
|writer = [[John Dorney]]

Revision as of 14:53, 1 April 2012

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audio stub

The Fourth Wall is the second story in the 2012 Sixth Doctor audio trilogy.

Publishers summary

Business is bad for intergalactic media mogul Augustus Scullop, whose Trans-Gal empire is on the rocks. But, having retreated to his own private planet, Transmission, Scullop is about to gamble his fortune on a new show, made with an entirely new technology. And the name of that show… is Laser.

Back in the real world, far from the realms of small screen sci-fi fantasies about monsters and aliens, the Doctor is interested only in watching Test Match cricket… but finds himself drawn into Scullop’s world when his new travelling companion, Flip, is snatched from inside the TARDIS.

So, while the Doctor uncovers the terrible secret of Trans-Gal’s new tech, Flip battles to survive in a barren wilderness ruled over by the indestructible Lord Krarn and his pig-like servants, the Warmongers. And the name of that wilderness… is ‘Stevenage’.

Plot

to be added

Cast

References

Individuals

  • The Doctor tells Flip that he is not as interested in cricket as his previous incarnation and notes that many of his other incarnations are "astonishingly irritating."
  • The Doctor previously encountered Chimbly on Ballastron VII as well as several other planets.

Foods and beverages

Planets

  • Augustus Scullop has a home on an artificial planetoid called Transmission.
  • The Porcions once attempted to invade Skaro.

Cultural references from the real world

  • Flip compares Transmission to the Death Star from Star Wars. The Doctor expresses the hope that it is "not quite so ominous."
  • Flip refers to the James Bond film franchise and describes Lord Krarn as being "like every Bond villain you've ever seen."
  • Flip states that the Warmongers are not exactly crack shots, comparing them to "terrorists trying to attack Bruce Willis" from the Die Hard film series.
  • Flip tells Lord Krarn that she has seen more realistic looking weapons than the Warmongers' on Blue Peter.

Time technology

  • The Doctor watches the 2006 cricket Test Match between Australia and South Africa on the Time-Space Visualiser. Flip describes it as a "manky old thing" and criticises it for being in black and white.
  • Trans-Gal utilises dimensional transcendentalism to create the dimensional bubble. The Doctor derides the use of the technology for the purposes of "mere entertainment." The device was created by the Dream Spinners of Dashra, a long extinct species who inhabited the ninth galaxy, and acquired by Dr. Helen Shepherd, who told Augustus Scullop that it was her own invention.

Notes

Continuity

Timeline

External links