Real Time (webcast): Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox Webcast|
{{title dab away}}
story name= Real Time |
{{real world}}
image= [[Image:Real_Time_temple_webcast.jpg|250px]]|
{{ImageLinkWC}}
series= [[Doctor Who]] - [[Webcast]]|
{{Infobox Story SMW
number= 2 |
|image          = Doctor in Real Time.jpg
doctor= [[Sixth Doctor]]|
|number         = 2
companions= [[Evelyn Smythe]] |
|adapted into    = Real Time (audio story)
enemy= [[Cybermen]] |
|doctor         = Sixth Doctor
setting= [[Chronos]] |
|companions     = [[Evelyn Smythe|Evelyn]]
writer= [[Gary Russell]] |
|enemy           = [[Cyber-Controller (Real Time)|Cyber-Controller]]
director= [[Gary Russell]] |
|setting         = {{il|[[Earth]], [[1951]]|[[Chronos]], [[3286]]|[[Far future]]}}
producer= [[Jason Haigh-Ellery]] (For Big Finish) <br> [[Jacqueline Rayner]] (For BBC Worldwide)|
|writer         = Gary Russell
animator= [[Lee Sullivan]]|
|director       = [[Gary Russell]]
broadcast date= 2nd August [[2002]] - 6th September [[2002]] |
|producer       = {{il|[[Jason Haigh-Ellery]] (for Big Finish)|[[Jacqueline Rayner]] (For BBC Worldwide)}}
format= 6 Episodes |
|animator       = [[Lee Sullivan]]
production code= BBCI-2 |
|broadcast date = 2 August - 6 September 2002
previous production= [[Death Comes to Time]]|
|format         = 6 Episodes
next production= [[Shada (webcast)|Shada]] }}
|production code = BBCI-2
'''Real Time''' was a six-episode [[webcast]] animated adventure featuring the [[Sixth Doctor]], which was available via the BBCI website in 2002. ''Real Time'' was one of a few animated webcasts produced featuring various incarnations of the Doctor in the years prior to the revival of the series.  
|series          = [[BBCi]] animations
|prev            = Death Comes to Time (webcast)
|next           = Shada (webcast)
}}{{TV stub}}
'''''Real Time''''' was a six-part [[webcast]] animated adventure featuring [[Colin Baker]] as the [[Sixth Doctor]]. It was available via the BBCI website in 2002. ''Real Time'' was one of a few animated webcasts produced featuring various incarnations of the Doctor in the years prior to the revival of the series. It is notable for including the character [[Evelyn Smythe]], marking the first time a character created for the [[Big Finish Productions]] audio dramas had appeared in a BBC-sponsored production.


This serial is notable for including the character of [[Evelyn Smythe]], marking the first time a character created for the [[Big Finish Productions]] audio dramas had appeared in a BBC-sponsored production. It also marked the final (active) appearance, to date, of the original version of the [[Cybermen]] in a BBC-sponsored production before the advent of the [[Cybus Cybermen]] in 2006.
''Real Time'' is also known for its unresolved cliffhanger, which has largely remained an untouched subject since its initial release, due to plans to continue the webisodes falling through.


==Synopsis==
== Synopsis ==
''to be added''
From Big Finish's website:


==Plot==
On a planet known only as Chronos, two scientific survey teams have vanished. Inexplicably. Without warning. But with just one clue supplied - a single screamed word: "Cybermen!"
===Episode 1===


The University they worked for has called in the Earth security forces who despatch a third team, a mix of military and scientific might, under the auspices of a University Administrator. If that kind of volatile grouping isn't bad enough, three strangers have been added to the mix - a young human expert in Cybermen and a mysterious traveller in space and time, the Doctor, along with his companion, Dr Evelyn Smythe.


Two humans, Hoyer and Fantham, manage to evade the Cybermen searching for them and reach their destination, the Chronosphere. The Doctor is already locked into its matrix, and they send him from 1951 to a nexus point in the year 3286. If all goes well, the Doctor will change the web of Time, and Hoyer and Fantham will cease to exist.
But can they solve the riddle of the vanished survey teams before the Cybermen harness Chronos' unique temporal gifts and rewrite the history of the galaxy?
 
== Plot ==
A human survey team lands on a deserted planet to find out what happened to two other, missing survey teams. Exactly one day after the previous disappearance, Osborn contacts the mothership to report that his team has found nothing -- but then a wave of temporal energy washes out of the structure which Osborn believes to be an ancient temple. As the signal begins to break up, the desperate Osborn warns his contact, Krueger, that there’s a Cyberman at the heart of the temporal wave...
''to be added''
 
The mention of Cybermen naturally causes concern, and soon another expedition has arrived on the planet, accompanied by the Doctor and Evelyn. Administrator David Isherwood isn’t pleased to have been saddled with strangers, and he turns Evelyn over to another man he’s been stuck with -- Doctor Reece Goddard, an expert on Cybermen who seems awed to learn that Evelyn is a companion of the legendary Doctor. Evelyn modestly dismisses her own exploits and inquires about the Cybermen, and Dr. Goddard gives her a potted history of the race, from their origins on Mondas through to their colonisation of other worlds, the destruction of Mondas, and the Orion wars. The Cybermen have learned from each defeat, and have constantly adapted their design to overcome their early weaknesses, such as radiation and gold dust. However, they haven’t been heard from in centuries, which is why Central became so worried when Osborn went missing after he reported seeing a Cyberman...
 
Inside the “temple”, the Doctor is studying the hieroglyphs on the walls while Renchard and Carey, unable to find any sign of the missing expeditions, amuse themselves by generating an echo field to block the transmissions from their subcutaneous transponders. The Doctor points out certain architectural oddities which suggest that this building was meant to be easier to get into than out of, and a large stone doorway which is much thinner than the others. Scans indicate a solid stone wall on the other side, which suggests that this stone is not a door but a cover. Savage sends Renchard back to fetch vacuum cylinders, with which to preserve whatever lies behind the covering, and she, Carey and the Doctor attempt to move it aside. However, the Doctor then notices scratches which suggest that the cover has been moved before; perhaps this is what unleashed the temporal wave in the first place. Savage’s professionalism slips, as she believes her missing friends and colleagues may be trapped behind the cover, and she feels the Doctor is risking their lives with unnecessary caution. As they argue, however, the covering vanishes to be replaced by a translucent membrane, behind which they can see a room too large to fit into the small space behind the covering. The Doctor realizes the truth, but Savage again ignores his pleas for caution and sticks her hand through the membrane -- and is yanked through, screaming, by something on the other side.
 
As Goddard and Evelyn discuss her spirit of adventure and his apparent fascination with the Cybermen, Isherwood informs them that Savage’s transponder has ceased signalling. Inside, the membrane has gone dark, and three Cybermen step out -- including one who is still recognisable as Nicola Savage. Her conversion has taken place remarkably quickly, and the Doctor realizes that the membrane is a time portal under Cyber control. And now he and Carey are prisoners of the Cybermen...
 
===Episode 2===
 
 
Evelyn doesn’t understand Isherwood’s mention of “transponders,” and Goddard explains that the expedition members have tiny transmitters implanted in their skin -- apart from the Doctor and Evelyn, and Goddard himself, who claims to be allergic. Savage’s transponder signal returns, but Evelyn remains concerned -- and her concerns are justified when the Doctor and Carey return with the Cyberman that used to be Savage in close pursuit. The “temple” is a time gate, and Savage’s conversion, which should have taken months, has taken place in subjective moments. Evelyn inadvertently gives away the Doctor’s identity, and Savage orders him to hand over his TARDIS on pain of watching his four friends die. Puzzled, the Doctor lets this slide for the moment but questions why Savage’s Controller hasn’t passed through the portal itself. Perhaps it’s unable to survive the journey, which is why it needs the TARDIS. The Doctor doesn’t yet realize that the Controller has been listening to this conversation, as Savage’s transponder has been reconfigured to transmit and receive through the portal...
 
Following the Controller’s orders, Savage separates the Doctor from the others and threatens to kill them slowly unless he surrenders the TARDIS. He refuses to do so, knowing that Cybermen with unlimited time travel would pose a far greater threat to the Universe. Savage gives the Doctor a few minutes to decide, and he, Evelyn and Goddard discuss their time limit -- and the fact that the temporal wave will shortly wash out from the portal, presumably transporting them all into the Cyber Controller’s domain in any case. The Doctor is convinced that the portal is the creation of another alien race, and that the Cyber Controller doesn’t know how to use it properly. Perhaps the Doctor can take advantage of that fact by giving the Cybermen incorrect operating instructions. But something which Savage had said earlier is nagging at him...
 
Isherwood isn’t willing to give up his life for a principle, and despite Renchard and Carey’s misgivings, he decides to help the Cybermen acquire the TARDIS in the hope that the Cybermen will then let their captors live. The Cybermen can easily overhear his plotting, however, and Savage decides to pretend to accept his terms. It doesn’t really matter, as they need the Doctor to operate the TARDIS -- and as this is the case, the Controller intends to convert the Doctor into more than just another Cyberman. The Doctor will be the Controller’s successor...
 
===Episode 3===
Isherwood makes a deal with Savage, offering to use the expedition’s sealant packs to create a mould of the TARDIS lock in exchange for their lives. Savage accepts his terms and orders her troops to take the TARDIS into the time portal, intending to betray Isherwood and take him through as well. However, when the Cybermen attempt to carry the TARDIS through the temple door they find it won’t fit through -- something they really should have noticed earlier. The Doctor, watching them, concludes that there’s something seriously wrong with these Cybermen, and he and Goddard set off to confront Savage while Evelyn keeps Isherwood occupied.
 
The Doctor taunts Savage and notes that her cybernetic parts are falling off -- this is not just decay, it’s the result of poor workmanship. Savage explains that the Controller exists in the distant future, at a time when the Cybermen are all but extinct; only a handful survived the wars, and they fled to a water world where they found this time portal. All attempts to travel back through Time failed, as the troopers’ cybernetic implants began to disintegrate on the other side; this is why they need the TARDIS. The Doctor theorizes that the water world of the future and this desert planet of the present are the same planet, and that its inhabitants built the portal to travel to a time when their world was habitable again -- only to be wiped out by the Cybermen. He also deduces that Savage is in contact with the Controller, which means that if he can sever their link the Cybermen on this side would be helpless.
 
The Doctor sets off to confront Isherwood, and informs him that Savage can listen in on all of their conversations through their transponder. Upon hearing this, Renchard reactivates the echo field which he and Carey had created earlier as a joke, thus shielding their conversation. The Doctor needs someone to dismantle whatever the Cybermen are using as a relay through the portal, and Isherwood suggests sending Evelyn and Goddard, as neither has a transponder and thus they cannot be detected by the Cybermen. Unfortunately, Goddard has taken the initiative and taken Evelyn and Carey into the ruins to dismantle the relay -- and as Carey does still have a transponder, the Cybermen are aware of their presence. The Doctor heads to the rescue, taking Renchard in the hope that his echo field will prevent the Cybermen from detecting them, and advises Isherwood to go through Goddard’s belongings while they’re gone. He’s beginning to suspect that Goddard knows more than he’s saying...
 
Evelyn, Goddard and Carey study the time portal and realize that it’s threaded through with tiny fibre-optic cables. The Cybermen then arrive and capture Evelyn and Carey, for Savage has decided that Evelyn may have the knowledge which they require. The Cybermen break Carey’s arm when he resists, and drag him and Evelyn through the portal to the Cyber Controller’s domain. There, Carey is taken to the conversion chambers, while the Controller explains to Evelyn that, though her body is too old and frail to be of use, her mind will be reprogrammed and attached to the control circuits of the TARDIS. She is to become a time-travelling Cyber Controller...
 
===Episode 4===


== Cast ==
* [[Sixth Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Colin Baker]]
* [[Evelyn Smythe]] - [[Maggie Stables]]
* [[David Isherwood|Administrator Isherwood]] - [[Christopher Scott]]
* [[Reece Goddard|Doctor Reece Goddard]] - [[Yee Jee Tso]]
* [[Nicola Savage]] - [[Jane Goddard]]
* [[Cyber-Controller (Real Time)|Cyber-Controller]] - [[Nicholas Briggs]]
* [[Taylor Renchard]] - [[Richard Herring]]
* [[Ryan Carey]] - [[Stewart Lee]]
* [[Hoyer (Real Time)|Hoyer]] - [[Alistair Lock]]
* [[Fantham (Real Time)|Fantham]] - [[Andrew Hair]]
* [[Kreuger (Real Time)|Kreuger]] - [[William Johnston]]
* [[Osborn (Real Time)|Professor Osborn]] - [[Nicholas Briggs]]


Carey is placed in the conversion chamber by a Cyberman he recognizes as Richie Allen, a former friend from one of the previous expeditions. But his pleas for mercy are ignored, and the conversion machinery cuts into his flesh, replacing his organic parts with bionic implants and reprogramming his brain. Soon Carey is himself a Cyberman.
== Crew ==
* [[Writer]] - [[Gary Russell]]
* [[Director (crew)|Director]] - Gary Russell
* [[Producer]]s - [[Jason Haigh-Ellery]] ([[Big Finish Productions|BF]]), [[Jacqueline Rayner]] ([[BBC]]), [[Richard Fell]], [[Martin Trickey]]
* [[Animator|Animation]] - [[Lee Sullivan]], [[James Goss]], [[Rob Francis]], [[Eduardo Armentia]]
* [[Online presentation|Online Presentation]] - James Goss
* [[Dialogue editor]] - [[William Johnston]]
* [[Composer]] - [[Alistair Lock]]
* [[Post-production|Post production]] - Alistair Lock
:''[[Cyberman|Cybermen]] created by [[Gerry Davis]] and [[Kit Pedler]] and used by kind permission.''


Goddard informs the Doctor and Renchard of Evelyn and Carey’s fate, and Savage then confronts the Doctor, once again demanding the TARDIS and this time using Evelyn as a bargaining chip. Infuriated to learn that Carey’s conversion has already begun, the Doctor tries to reach out to the human part of Savage, but fails. When Savage threatens to crush Renchard’s arm before his eyes, the Doctor reluctantly leads her to the TARDIS -- but she slips up when she rushes him, claiming that there isn’t time to enlarge the opening to the temple. The Doctor realizes that the Cybermen aren’t in control of the temporal wave after all, which means that he just has to stall them for a while longer and shelter in the TARDIS while the wave passes by. However, Savage then collapses in agony, speaking in her own voice and begging the Doctor to save her before she succumbs to the Controller’s influence again. The Doctor compassionately promises to do all he can, apparently unaware that Savage is in fact still fully under Cyber control and is only trying to trick him...
== Story notes ==
* This story featured the debut of the blue version of the [[Sixth Doctor]]'s outfit. Multiple reasons were given for this: [[Colin Baker]] not having been fond of the original version and the blue suit being more suited to Big Finish's evolved version of the character. The main reason, though, was technical simplicity: the original version of the costume would have been too complex to portray in this webcast's illustrations of limited detail.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/webcasts/realtime/faq.shtml BBC - Cult - Doctor Who - Real Time - FAQ]</ref>
** The blue suit has since been adopted into the Sixth Doctor's continuity in his Big Finish audio timeline, featuring in his audios both in dialogue ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Wrong Doctors (audio story)|The Wrong Doctors]]'') and in cover art.
** The blue-suited version of the Doctor from this webcast has since been released as [[Character Options]] and [[Character Building]] action figures.
* Episodes 4 to 6 had warnings that "this week's episode contains scenes that may not be suitable for younger children".
* Each episode was released at noon on a Friday.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2002/07_july/23/cybermen.shtml BBC - Press Office - Cybermen - BBCi brings Cybermen to Cyberspace]</ref>
* According to the [[Big Finish]] website, this story was specifically written to work as either a webcast or audio drama.
* Author Gary Russell's subsequent novel ''[[Spiral Scratch (novel)|Spiral Scratch]]'' contains a cameo by, among other [[alternate timeline]] versions of the Sixth Doctor, one dressed in blue and accompanied by a woman in her fifties with visible cybernetic implants; this is suggested to be the Doctor and Evelyn from this story, some time after the effects of its cliffhanger.


Goddard catches Isherwood going through his belongings. Isherwood, still believing that the Cybermen are responsible for the temporal waves, believes that if he can strike a deal with the Cyber Controller he can learn the secrets of the future; however, Goddard warns him that Time isn’t a toy, and the Cybermen are not to be trifled with. Isherwood believes that Goddard is too young to know what he’s talking about -- but Goddard is older than he looks...
=== Original website release/broadcast ===
* Episode 1 - [[2 August (releases)|2 August]] [[2002 (releases)|2002]]
* Episode 2 - [[9 August (releases)|9 August]] 2002
* Episode 3 - [[16 August (releases)|16 August]] 2002
* Episode 4 - [[23 August (releases)|23 August]] 2002
* Episode 5 - [[30 August (releases)|30 August]] 2002
* Episode 6 - [[6 September (releases)|6 September]] 2002


The Cyber Controller postpones Evelyn’s conversion while it monitors Savage’s progress. Oddly, however, it notices Evelyn’s fear and questions her about it. She tries to explain that the sense of adventure and the fear of dying is what makes life worth living, but the Controller no longer understands such concepts. Its sole purpose is to seed the Universe with Cybermen, and ensure the survival of its race. Evelyn senses a core of humanity within the Controller which still remembers what it was like to dream, but the Controller cuts off the conversation when Savage reports that she has successfully tricked the Doctor. Evelyn is horrified when Carey arrives, fully transformed into a Cyberman, and reporting for duty.
=== Production errors ===
[[File:Cat brooch.jpg|thumb|right|The superimposed cat brooch.]]
* In closeup shots of the Doctor's changing [[cat brooch]], it is obvious that the brooch is a rectangular image superimposed onto the image of the Doctor's lapel, as the background of the cat is a shade of blue slightly different to the lapel.
* Due to the {{w|limited animation}} style of the broadcast, the character drawings are often mirrored to make it look like they have changed direction. This results in non-symmetric visual details like clothing and hairstyles constantly switching back and forth from one side to the other.


The Doctor sends Goddard to wait by the TARDIS and questions Isherwood, who shows the Doctor something terribly interesting which he found amongst Goddard’s possessions. The Doctor thus confronts Goddard by the TARDIS, admitting that he’s just playing Savage along for time -- and for the opportunity to speak to Goddard alone. Goddard knows far more about the Cybermen than he should for someone so young, Savage hasn’t responded to any of Goddard’s sarcastic taunts, and earlier, she threatened the Doctor’s four friends when there were clearly five other people in front of her. Goddard admits that he’s invisible to the Cybermen -- because his own body is cybernetic, and is generating a frequency scrambler keyed to their receptors. Goddard himself is a Cyberman, of a design far more advanced than any of the others, and the Doctor is the one who will give the Cybermen the ability to do this -- in about fifteen minutes’ time...
== CD release ==
{{main|Real Time (audio story)}}
[[Big Finish Productions]] released an extended version of this story on audio CD. The release contains two scenes not present in the webcast version, and the CD booklet contains the script for a further unrecorded scene.


===Episode 5===
== Modern accessibility ==
===Episode 6===
Due to technical changes behind the scenes of the BBC website, the {{w|Realmedia}} audio and video streams which made up the webcast stopped working. The BBC acknowledged the error in a FAQ on the ''Doctor Who'' website during [[Series 4 (Doctor Who 2005)|Series 4]], stating they were aware of the error and were working to restore the webcast to functionality in another format "as soon as possible,"<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20081025103910/http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/s4/faq/classic.shtml BBC - Doctor Who - FAQ - Classic Doctor Who]</ref> but no further announcements have been made. The relevant FAQ has since gone offline.


==Cast & Characters==
Though the webpages and links for the webcast still remain online as part of the archived "classic" ''Doctor Who'' website, the ''Real Time'' webcast itself remains inaccessible, although it can be unofficially found being shared around the internet.
*[[Sixth Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Colin Baker]]
*[[Evelyn Smythe]] - [[Maggie Stables]]
*[[David Isherwood|Administrator Isherwood]] - [[Christopher Scott]]
*[[Reece Goddard|Doctor Reece Goddard]] - [[Yee Jee Tso]]
*[[Nicola Savage]] - [[Jane Goddard]]
*[[Cyber-Controller]] - [[Nicholas Briggs]]
*[[Taylor Renchard]] - [[Richard Herring]]
*[[Ryan Carey]] - [[Stewart Lee]]
*[[Hoyer]] - [[Alistair Lock]]
*[[Fantham]] - [[Andrew Hair]]
*[[Krueger]] - [[William Johnston]]
*[[Osborn|Professor Osborn]] - [[Nicholas Briggs]]


==References==
The [[Real Time (audio story)|audio version]] of the story remains available on CD from [[Big Finish Productions]].
''to be added''


==Story Notes==
== External links ==
*Episodes 4 through 6 had warnings that "this week's episode contains scenes that may not be suitable for younger children".
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/webcasts/realtime/ BBC Official Website - Real Time Webcast]
*Yee Jee Tso played [[Chang Lee]] in ''[[Doctor Who (1996)|Doctor Who]]''.
{{dwrefguide|bbci_02.htm|Real Time}}
* {{tetrap|6/real.html|Real Time}}


===Original Website Release/Broadcast===
== Footnotes ==
*Episode 1 - 2nd August, 2002
{{reflist}}
*Episode 2 - 9th August, 2002
*Episode 3 - 16th August, 2002
*Episode 4 - 23rd August, 2002
*Episode 5 - 30th August, 2002
*Episode 6 - 6th September, 2002
 
===Myths===
''to be added''
 
===Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors===
''to be added''
 
==Continuity==
''to be added''
 
==CD and Other Releases==
*Big Finish released an extended release on CD, see [[Real Time (audio release)|Real Time]] (audio release) for more information.
 
==See also==
''to be added''


==External Links==
{{WC}}
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/webcasts/realtime/ BBC Official Website - Real Time Webcast]
{{DWAP}}
*{{dwrefguide|bbci_02.htm|Real Time Webcast}}
{{Cyberman stories}}
*[http://www.tetrap.com/drwho/disccon/6/real.html The Discontinuity Guide '''Real Time Webcast''' page]
{{TitleSort}}


{{audio stub}}
[[Category:Sixth Doctor webcasts]]
[[Category:Webcasts]]
[[Category:2002 webcasts]]
[[Category:Cybermen stories]]
[[Category:Stories set in 1951]]
[[Category:Stories set in 3286]]
[[Category:Stories set in the far future]]
[[Category:Stories set in alternate timelines]]
[[Category:Stories with unique variations of the Doctor Who opening titles]]
[[Category:BBCi]]
[[Category:Stories that use Delia Derbyshire's 2nd theme]]
[[Category:2D animated productions]]

Latest revision as of 19:21, 25 April 2024

RealWorld.png

TVStub.png

Real Time was a six-part webcast animated adventure featuring Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor. It was available via the BBCI website in 2002. Real Time was one of a few animated webcasts produced featuring various incarnations of the Doctor in the years prior to the revival of the series. It is notable for including the character Evelyn Smythe, marking the first time a character created for the Big Finish Productions audio dramas had appeared in a BBC-sponsored production.

Real Time is also known for its unresolved cliffhanger, which has largely remained an untouched subject since its initial release, due to plans to continue the webisodes falling through.

Synopsis[[edit] | [edit source]]

From Big Finish's website:

On a planet known only as Chronos, two scientific survey teams have vanished. Inexplicably. Without warning. But with just one clue supplied - a single screamed word: "Cybermen!"

The University they worked for has called in the Earth security forces who despatch a third team, a mix of military and scientific might, under the auspices of a University Administrator. If that kind of volatile grouping isn't bad enough, three strangers have been added to the mix - a young human expert in Cybermen and a mysterious traveller in space and time, the Doctor, along with his companion, Dr Evelyn Smythe.

But can they solve the riddle of the vanished survey teams before the Cybermen harness Chronos' unique temporal gifts and rewrite the history of the galaxy?

Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]

to be added

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]

Cybermen created by Gerry Davis and Kit Pedler and used by kind permission.

Story notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • This story featured the debut of the blue version of the Sixth Doctor's outfit. Multiple reasons were given for this: Colin Baker not having been fond of the original version and the blue suit being more suited to Big Finish's evolved version of the character. The main reason, though, was technical simplicity: the original version of the costume would have been too complex to portray in this webcast's illustrations of limited detail.[1]
    • The blue suit has since been adopted into the Sixth Doctor's continuity in his Big Finish audio timeline, featuring in his audios both in dialogue (AUDIO: The Wrong Doctors) and in cover art.
    • The blue-suited version of the Doctor from this webcast has since been released as Character Options and Character Building action figures.
  • Episodes 4 to 6 had warnings that "this week's episode contains scenes that may not be suitable for younger children".
  • Each episode was released at noon on a Friday.[2]
  • According to the Big Finish website, this story was specifically written to work as either a webcast or audio drama.
  • Author Gary Russell's subsequent novel Spiral Scratch contains a cameo by, among other alternate timeline versions of the Sixth Doctor, one dressed in blue and accompanied by a woman in her fifties with visible cybernetic implants; this is suggested to be the Doctor and Evelyn from this story, some time after the effects of its cliffhanger.

Original website release/broadcast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Production errors[[edit] | [edit source]]

The superimposed cat brooch.
  • In closeup shots of the Doctor's changing cat brooch, it is obvious that the brooch is a rectangular image superimposed onto the image of the Doctor's lapel, as the background of the cat is a shade of blue slightly different to the lapel.
  • Due to the limited animation style of the broadcast, the character drawings are often mirrored to make it look like they have changed direction. This results in non-symmetric visual details like clothing and hairstyles constantly switching back and forth from one side to the other.

CD release[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Real Time (audio story)

Big Finish Productions released an extended version of this story on audio CD. The release contains two scenes not present in the webcast version, and the CD booklet contains the script for a further unrecorded scene.

Modern accessibility[[edit] | [edit source]]

Due to technical changes behind the scenes of the BBC website, the Realmedia audio and video streams which made up the webcast stopped working. The BBC acknowledged the error in a FAQ on the Doctor Who website during Series 4, stating they were aware of the error and were working to restore the webcast to functionality in another format "as soon as possible,"[3] but no further announcements have been made. The relevant FAQ has since gone offline.

Though the webpages and links for the webcast still remain online as part of the archived "classic" Doctor Who website, the Real Time webcast itself remains inaccessible, although it can be unofficially found being shared around the internet.

The audio version of the story remains available on CD from Big Finish Productions.

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]