1999: Difference between revisions

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Throughout '''1999''', much concern was raised on [[Earth]] over a feared [[computer]] glitch known as Y2K, or the Millennium Bug, which had the potential to cause technological havoc as clocks changed from 1999 to 2000 (the "00" in the date being expected to cause problems for many computer systems). The concern ended up being unfounded, though not without a little help from one, or possibly two incarnations of [[the Doctor]]. ([[PDA]]: ''[[Millennium Shock]]'')
Throughout of '''1999''', much concern was raised on [[Earth]] over a feared [[computer]] glitch known as Y2K, or the Millennium Bug, which had the potential to cause technological havoc as clocks changed from 1999 to 2000 (the "00" in the date being expected to cause problems for many computer systems). The concern ended up being unfounded, though not without a little help from one, or possibly two incarnations of [[the Doctor]]. ([[PDA]]: ''[[Millennium Shock]]'')


== [[Doctor Who universe|''Doctor Who'' universe]] ==
== [[Doctor Who universe|''Doctor Who'' universe]] ==
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* [[1 February|01]] - [[EDA]]: ''[[The Taint]]'' was first published. [[Fitz Kreiner]] becomes a companion.
* [[1 February|01]] - [[EDA]]: ''[[The Taint]]'' was first published. [[Fitz Kreiner]] becomes a companion.
** [[PDA]]: ''[[The Wages of Sin]]'' was first published.
** [[PDA]]: ''[[The Wages of Sin]]'' was first published.
* [[9 February|09]] - [[Buddy Windrush]], aka Bryan Mosley, who played the [[prop man (The Daleks' Master Plan)|prop man]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan]]'' and a [[pirate]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Smugglers]]'', died in [[Wikipedia:Shipley|Shipley]], [[England]].
* [[9 February|09]] - [[Buddy Windrush]], aka Bryan Mosley, who played the [[prop man (The Daleks' Master Plan)|prop man]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan]]'' and a [[pirate]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Smugglers]]'',who died in [[Wikipedia:Shipley|Shipley]], [[England]].


=== [[March]] ===
=== [[March]] ===
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* [[1 March|01]] - [[EDA]]: ''[[Demontage (novel)|Demontage]]'' was first published.
* [[1 March|01]] - [[EDA]]: ''[[Demontage (novel)|Demontage]]'' was first published.
** [[PDA]]: ''[[Deep Blue]]'' was first published.
** [[PDA]]: ''[[Deep Blue]]'' was first published.
* [[6 March|06]] - [[Graham Armitage]], who played [[Barney (The Macra Terror)|Barney]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Macra Terror]]'', died in [[South Africa]].
* [[6 March|06]] - [[Graham Armitage]], who played as [[Barney (The Macra Terror)|Barney]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Macra Terror]]'', died in [[South Africa]].
* [[12 March|12]] - ''[[The Curse of Fatal Death]]'', a spoof based upon ''Doctor Who'', was broadcast as part of the BBC's [[Comic Relief]] appeal. The special starred [[Rowan Atkinson]] as the [[Ninth Doctor (The Curse of Fatal Death)|"Ninth" Doctor]], [[Jonathan Pryce]] as [[The Master]] and was written by [[Steven Moffat]] -- his first televised work with the franchise. Also featured was [[Joanna Lumley]] as the first female incarnation of the Doctor featured in a BBC-sanctioned production (and the only one until [[Arabella Weir]] in [[BFDWU]]: ''[[Exile]]''). The special was also webcast, making it the first original ''Doctor Who''-related production to be distributed this way.
* [[12 March|12]] - ''[[The Curse of Fatal Death]]'', a spoof based upon ''Doctor Who'', was broadcast as part of the BBC's [[Comic Relief]] appeal. The special starred [[Rowan Atkinson]] as the [[Ninth Doctor (The Curse of Fatal Death)|"Ninth" Doctor]], [[Jonathan Pryce]] as [[The Master]] and was written by [[Steven Moffat]] -- his first televised work with the franchise. Also featured was [[Joanna Lumley]] as the first female incarnation of the Doctor featured in a BBC-sanctioned production (and the only one until [[Arabella Weir]] in [[BFDWU]]: ''[[Exile]]''). The special was also webcast, making it the first original ''Doctor Who''-related production to be distributed this way.


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* [[BNA]]: ''[[Tears of the Oracle]]'' was first published.
* [[BNA]]: ''[[Tears of the Oracle]]'' was first published.
* [[BBV]]: ''[[The Choice]]'' was first released, the first of two audio dramas in the [[Adventures in a Pocket Universe]] series starring [[Lalla Ward]] as "The Mistress" (though implied to be [[Romana II]]) and [[John Leeson]] as [[K9 Mark II|K9]].
* [[BBV]]: ''[[The Choice]]'' was first released, the first of two audio dramas in the [[Adventures in a Pocket Universe]] series starring [[Lalla Ward]] as "The Mistress" (though implied to be [[Romana II]]) and [[John Leeson]] as [[K9 Mark II|K9]].
* [[2 June|02]] - The [[wikipedia:What You Leave Behind|final episode]] of ''[[wikipedia:Star Trek: Deep Space Nine|Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' broadcasts in America.
* [[2 June|02]] - The [[wikipedia:What You Leave Behind|final episode]] of ''[[wikipedia:Star Trek: Deep Space Nine|Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' was broadcasted in America.
* [[7 June|07]] - [[EDA]]: ''[[Unnatural History]]'' was first published.
* [[7 June|07]] - [[EDA]]: ''[[Unnatural History]]'' was first published.
** [[PDA]]: ''[[Storm Harvest]]'' was first published.
** [[PDA]]: ''[[Storm Harvest]]'' was first published.
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** [[DW]]: ''[[The Five Doctors]]'' became the first episode of ''Doctor Who'' to be released to DVD by [[BBC Video]] when it was released in the digital format in the UK. This started an extensive and long-running series of archival DVD releases chronicling the series that continued for more than a decade.
** [[DW]]: ''[[The Five Doctors]]'' became the first episode of ''Doctor Who'' to be released to DVD by [[BBC Video]] when it was released in the digital format in the UK. This started an extensive and long-running series of archival DVD releases chronicling the series that continued for more than a decade.
* [[13 November|13]] - [[Tom Baker]] and [[Douglas Adams]] discuss ''Doctor Who'' on the BBC Radio 4 programme ''Today''.
* [[13 November|13]] - [[Tom Baker]] and [[Douglas Adams]] discuss ''Doctor Who'' on the BBC Radio 4 programme ''Today''.
** ''Doctor Who'' was featured on the cover of the ''[[Radio Times]]'', promoting upcoming rebroadcasts of classic episodes.
** ''Doctor Who'' was featured on the cover of the ''[[Radio Times]]'', promoting upcoming rebroadcasts of the classic episodes.
* [[28 November|28]] - [[EDA]]: ''[[Frontier Worlds]]'' was first published.
* [[28 November|28]] - [[EDA]]: ''[[Frontier Worlds]]'' was first published.



Revision as of 21:27, 22 December 2011

Timeline for 1999
20th century | 1990s

1993 • 1994 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 2000 • 2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005
WikipediaInfo.png

Throughout of 1999, much concern was raised on Earth over a feared computer glitch known as Y2K, or the Millennium Bug, which had the potential to cause technological havoc as clocks changed from 1999 to 2000 (the "00" in the date being expected to cause problems for many computer systems). The concern ended up being unfounded, though not without a little help from one, or possibly two incarnations of the Doctor. (PDA: Millennium Shock)

Doctor Who universe

May

December

Due to time zone differences, the above events technically occurred hours prior to the incident in San Francisco.

Behind the scenes

References in the Doctor Who Universe tend to indicate the year 2000 was the start of the millennium, rather than 2001, the technical start of that millennium.

Behind the scenes

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Unknown dates