User:SOTO/to-do

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< User:SOTO
Revision as of 14:09, 19 January 2019 by SOTO (talk | contribs)

Categories to re-sort (subcategories)

Categories to make

Templates to make

Pages to make

DWU

Real world

Remind me to add date info from...

TV

Classic series
  1. Delta and the Bannermen (7 March)
  2. Mawdryn Undead (7 June)
  3. The Evil of the Daleks (20 July, June)
  4. Colony in Space (3 March =>)

Prose

90s novels
  1. First Frontier (May Day, 4 October, 17 October, 7 December)
  2. Zeta Major (quite a few, numerically dated)
  3. The King of Terror (9-10 January, 1, 3, 11 July, 28 September, 4 December)
  4. Birthright (3 February, 15-24 April, 3 November)
  5. Interference - Book One (8, 18-20 August, 2-3, 13-14 September)
  6. The Ghosts of N-Space (18-22 May)
  7. World Game (9 August, 18 December, 18 November, July)
  8. Who Killed Kennedy (22 January, 16 June, 7 September, 14 September, 22 November)
  9. The Domino Effect (17 to 20 April, possibly others)
  10. The Doomsday Manuscript (1-3 January, 6 January)
  11. Wolfsbane (27-28 November (and 29?), 29 June)
  12. The Bodysnatchers (11 January, 13 January)
  13. Down (26 December, 14 January)
  14. The Sands of Time (9 to 10 November)
  15. The Shadow in the Glass (17 May, 18 August, possibly others)
  16. The Suns of Caresh (11 August)
  17. The Dying Days (30 April, 6 May)
  18. Eater of Wasps (27 August)
  19. Instruments of Darkness (29 December)
  20. The City of the Dead (30 April)
  21. The Roundheads (20 January)
  22. Head Games (20 January)
  23. Casualties of War (19 August)
  24. The Wheel of Ice (14 July, possibly others)
  25. Millennial Rites (figure out what 7 May 1994 is)
Gold Mines
  1. Revolution Man (goldmine)
  2. The Time Travellers (goldmine)
  3. The Witch Hunters (goldmine)
  4. So Vile a Sin (goldmine)
  5. Loving the Alien (goldmine)
  6. Dead Romance (goldmine)
  7. Reckless Engineering (2 February, 19 July, 2 October, 22 October, 23 October, 1 November)
  8. Damaged Goods (goldmine)
  9. Just War (goldmine)
  10. Interference - Book One (goldmine)
  11. The Left-Handed Hummingbird (minor goldmine)
  12. Byzantium! (14 to 30 March)
  13. Salvation (19, 20, 25, 29 March, 1 April, 3 April, 23 August, perhaps more)
  14. Genius Loci (5 November, 1 January, 2 February)
Short stories
  1. Artificial Intelligence from Short Trips: 2040 (24, 25, 26, 28, 30, 31 March, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 April)
  2. On Trial from A Life in Pieces (23 September, 16 October, 12 November, 14 November, 1 December, 2 December, 2 January)
  3. Short Trips: The Ghosts of Christmas (1, 8, 18 January, 29 October, 2, 24 December)
  4. The Lost Diaries of Winston Spencer Churchill from The Brilliant Book 2011 (18 March, 26 October, 3 September, 2 January, etc)
  5. Short Trips: Destination Prague (1, 15 January)
  6. White Man's Burden from Short Trips: Past Tense (10-12 April)
  7. Nursery Politics from Nobody's Children (11, 20 February, possibly more)
  8. Dear John (17 May, 23 June)
  9. The Little Things (16, 17 December)
  10. Ancient Whispers from Short Trips: The Centenarian (8 January)
New Series Adventures
  1. Nuclear Time (3 August, 23-24 February, 27 May, 3 February, 28 February, 28 August)
  2. Sting of the Zygons (16-18 September)
  3. The Stone Rose (17 April)
  4. The Taking of Chelsea 426 (20 August)
  5. Only Human (2 October)
  6. The Art of Destruction (11 April)
  7. Beautiful Chaos (15 May)
  8. Night of the Humans (14 March)
  9. The Stone Rose (19 March)
  10. The Glamour Chase (14 August)
Erimem
  1. Tick-Tock from Into the Unknown (14 May)

Audio

Big Finish
  1. 1963: The Space Race (10-23 November)
  2. 1963: The Assassination Games (30 November-1 December)
  3. The Girl Who Never Was (31 December, 1 January, 17 January)
  4. The Kingmaker (several, including 22 August)
  5. Project: Destiny (several in April, with 18 and 19 specifically mentioned but others before and after)
  6. Flip-Flop (24-25 December)
  7. Protect and Survive (9-18 November)
  8. Persuasion (27 September, maybe a day in May)
  9. Winter for the Adept (22 December)
  10. Bloodtide (19 September)
  11. Casualties of War (8 May)
  12. The Haunting of Thomas Brewster (14 November)
  13. The Curse of Davros (18 June)
  14. Invaders from Mars (31 October)
  15. Energy of the Daleks (30 January, partially covered)
  16. Storm Warning (4 to 5 October, maybe more, mostly covered)
AudioGO
  1. Blackout (9 November)

Comics

IDW Publishing
  1. Ripper's Curse (29-30 September, 8-9 November)
  2. The Doctor and the Nurse (17 October, covered but possible expansion)
Doctor Who Magazine
  1. The Love Invasion (20 July)

Other reminders:

  1. Read Happy Endings to create pub quiz (others: 42, Greeks Bearing Gifts, Love & Monsters)
  2. Bear through Oh No It Isn't!/Oh No It Isn't! for its abundance of pop culture and fairy tale references. If I can survive.
  3. Create Stag party and Hen night (main: Something Borrowed, The Vampires of Venice, The King's Dragon)



Today in Doctor Who history


A calendar showing November 1963. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)"])

9 November was a date.

Holidays and observances

9 November was the date of the Spiridon hide-and-seek tournament. (PROSE: Time Traveller's Diary [+]Loading...["Time Traveller's Diary (novel)"])

Events

In 1923, the Seventh Doctor and Ace arrived in Munich just as the Beer Hall Putsch concluded. Adolf Hitler and his followers had been driven away from the War Office by soldiers. To Ace's surprise, the Doctor told Hitler that he must not give up and would one day rule Germany. Hastily explaining his actions were necessary to ensure that Earth history ran its proper course, the Doctor ushered Ace back to the TARDIS, where they were fired upon with an energy weapon, a sign that a non-contemporaneous person had been manipulating the past. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Exodus [+]Loading...["Timewyrm: Exodus (novel)"])

In 1954, the First Doctor, Susan Foreman, Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright attended a performance of The Crucible by Arthur Miller in Bristol. (PROSE: The Witch Hunters [+]Loading...["The Witch Hunters (novel)"])

In 1989, the numerous revolutions against the rule of the Soviet Union in the Eastern Bloc countries led to the fall of the Berlin Wall in East Berlin, East Germany. (AUDIO: Protect and Survive [+]Loading...["Protect and Survive (audio story)"]; COMIC: The Broken Man [+]Loading...["The Broken Man (comic story)"]) Prior to or during his tenth incarnation, the Doctor had witnessed the fall of the Berlin Wall on two occasions. The actor David Hasselhoff was also present and sang a song. (PROSE: Autonomy [+]Loading...["Autonomy (novel)"])

Also in 1989, in an alternate timeline created by the Elder Gods in the hope of destroying Earth, a nuclear war which came to be known as World War III broke out between the United States and its allies including the United Kingdom on the one hand and the Soviet Union on the other hand. Given that nuclear weapons were used by both sides, hundreds of millions of people were killed in the conflict. This timeline was ultimately negated by the Seventh Doctor. (AUDIO: Protect and Survive [+]Loading...["Protect and Survive (audio story)"])


In 2024, the Fifteenth Doctor and Ruby Sunday landed on the Welsh coast. The Doctor stepped in a fairy circle and promptly vanished. The timeline which proceeded from this saw Ruby being haunted by a mysterious woman who stayed exactly 73 yards away from her and whose presence caused her to lead a life of isolation. Upon her death in that timeline, Ruby was sent back to the past and manifested as the Woman herself. The younger Ruby seeing her older self was able to change events and prevent the Doctor from stepping in the circle, undoing the timeline. Ruby, however, retained some lingering memories of its existence. (TV: 73 Yards [+]Loading...["73 Yards (TV story)"], PROSE: 73 Yards [+]Loading...["73 Yards (novelisation)"])