Juliet Bravo: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
(expanding)
No edit summary
Tag: 2017 source edit
 
(9 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{retitle|''{{PAGENAME}}''}}
{{retitle|''{{PAGENAME}}''}}
{{wikipediainfo}}
{{wikipediainfo}}
'''''Juliet Bravo''''' was a [[20th century]] [[Earth]] [[television]] drama. It would be among those broadcast by [[Reef Station One]] in the [[New Earth Republic]] during the [[101st century]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Synthespians™]]'') The show centres around a female cop on Epsilon Indi. The show began on 102,165 and ran for 106 years before being cancelled. It was remade in 102,211 with new producers and cast.
'''''Juliet Bravo''''' was a [[20th century]] [[Earth]] [[television]] drama. It would be among those broadcast by [[Reef Station One]] in the [[New Earth Republic]] during the [[101st century]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Synthespians™]]'') The show centres around a female cop on Epsilon Indi. The show began on 102,165 and ran for 106 years before being cancelled. It was remade in 102,211 with new producers and cast.


In a [[Meta-fiction universe|parallel universe]] in which ''[[Doctor Who (Deadline)|Doctor Who]]'' never got past a pilot episode, it had a large fandom, an official magazine and a series of audio dramas with its original cast. Some of its early episodes were written by [[Martin Bannister]]. He considered the show to be dull and repetitive. Fans generally considered Bannister's episodes to be among the series' worst. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Deadline (audio story)|Deadline]]'')
In [[1981]], an episode of ''Juliet Bravo'' was playing on a [[Television|TV]] while [[David Taylor (Fanboys)|David]] and [[Chris (Fanboys)|Chris]] read their new [[Target Books (in-universe)|Target novels]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Fanboys (short story)|Fanboys]]'')
 
In a [[parallel universe (Deadline)|parallel universe]] in which ''[[Doctor Who (Deadline)|Doctor Who]]'' never got past a pilot episode, it had a large fandom, an official magazine and a series of audio dramas with its original cast. Some of its early episodes were written by [[Martin Bannister]]. He claimed to consider the show to be dull and repetitive, but was nevertheless dismayed to learn that fans generally considered his episodes to be among the series' worst. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Deadline (audio story)|Deadline]]'')


== Behind the scenes ==
== Behind the scenes ==
*A number of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' actors appeared in the series, including [[Colin Baker]], [[Nicholas Courtney]], [[Mark Strickson]], [[Simon Williams]], [[Jeff Rawle]], [[Martin Jarvis]], [[Geoffrey Bayldon]], [[Robert Glenister]], [[Kenneth Cope]], [[William Gaunt]], [[John Savident]], [[Bernard Kay]], [[Leslie Schofield]], [[David Collings]] and many others. [[Robert Holmes]], [[Graeme Harper]], [[Peter Moffatt]], [[David Maloney]], [[Christopher Barry]] and [[Chris Boucher]] also worked on the series.
* A number of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' actors appeared in the series, including [[Colin Baker]], [[Nicholas Courtney]], [[Mark Strickson]], [[Simon Williams]], [[Jeff Rawle]], [[Martin Jarvis]], [[Geoffrey Bayldon]], [[Robert Glenister]], [[Kenneth Cope]], [[William Gaunt]], [[John Savident]], [[Bernard Kay]], [[Leslie Schofield]], [[David Collings]] and many others. [[Robert Holmes]], [[Graeme Harper]], [[Peter Moffatt]], [[David Maloney]], [[Christopher Barry]] and [[Chris Boucher]] also worked on the series.
[[Category:Television series from the real world]]
[[Category:Television series from the real world]]

Latest revision as of 19:05, 5 October 2023

Juliet Bravo

Juliet Bravo was a 20th century Earth television drama. It would be among those broadcast by Reef Station One in the New Earth Republic during the 101st century. (PROSE: Synthespians™) The show centres around a female cop on Epsilon Indi. The show began on 102,165 and ran for 106 years before being cancelled. It was remade in 102,211 with new producers and cast.

In 1981, an episode of Juliet Bravo was playing on a TV while David and Chris read their new Target novels. (PROSE: Fanboys)

In a parallel universe in which Doctor Who never got past a pilot episode, it had a large fandom, an official magazine and a series of audio dramas with its original cast. Some of its early episodes were written by Martin Bannister. He claimed to consider the show to be dull and repetitive, but was nevertheless dismayed to learn that fans generally considered his episodes to be among the series' worst. (AUDIO: Deadline)

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]