1988: Difference between revisions

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(When was the date Rory was sent to confirmed?)
m (Robot: Cosmetic changes)
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* [[25 December|25]] - [[Terence Dudley]], writer and director, died.
* [[25 December|25]] - [[Terence Dudley]], writer and director, died.
* [[28 December|28]] - [[TV]]: ''[[The Greatest Show in the Galaxy]]'' Part Three was first broadcast.
* [[28 December|28]] - [[TV]]: ''[[The Greatest Show in the Galaxy]]'' Part Three was first broadcast.
[[Category:Years]]
[[Category:Years]]

Revision as of 22:50, 4 January 2013

Timeline for 1988
20th century | 1980s

1982 • 1983 • 1984 • 1985 • 1986 • 1987 • 1989 • 1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1993 • 1994
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Events

July

November

Unknown date

Behind the scenes

January

February

  • 15 - BBC Broadcasting Research issued its Television Audience Reaction Report for Season 24 of Doctor Who, which had introduced a new Doctor, Sylvester McCoy. The show's Appreciation Index was 60, down from 69 for Season 23. Troubling numbers in the report indicated that the new Doctor and his companion, Mel, were not popular with viewers. Fewer than half were interested in seeing further seasons of the series. Despite this, viewer count actually rose over the previous year.[1]
  • 15 - Red Dwarf debuted on the BBC. This science fiction comedy series became the BBC's longest-running SF program after Doctor Who, producing nine seasons over the next twenty-one years.
  • 18 - PROSE: Doctor Who - Terror of the Vervoids was first published. It was the first of four novelisations based upon TV: The Trial of a Time Lord, even though it was the third chapter of the arc.
  • 18 - REF Doctor Who: The Early Years was published in paperback.

March

April

May

June

July

August

  • 08 - David Tennant made his TV acting debut in "The Secret of Croftmore", an episode of Dramarama.
  • 18 - PROSE: Doctor Who - The Wheel in Space was first published. It was the final Target Books release to use the neon-tube series logo established in 1980. All further releases used the McCoy era logo introduced in 1987. This book had an extremely low print run which resulted in it becoming a collector's item.
  • 18 - In an effort to boost sales of older novelisations, Target Books launched the Doctor Who Classics line of releases. These were omnibus reissues of novelisations, two per volume. Two books were released this date (with the original book titles shortened to their original TV titles in the case of those with Doctor Who and... in the original release): PROSE: Dalek Invasion of Earth/The Crusaders and PROSE: The Myth Makers/The Gunfighters.

September

October

November

December