Dead Air (audio story)

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 20:12, 22 October 2011 by CzechBot (talk | contribs) ("Races and species" is a vague term. "Species" is what the section head is trying to say.)
RealWorld.png

audio stub

Dead Air is the seventh and final exclusive-to-audio adventure to feature the Tenth Doctor. It was written by James Goss and performed by David Tennant. Released by BBC Audio as a part of their ongoing line of original, single-actor plays, it went on sale on 4 March 2010.

While all previous BBC Audio-exclusive Doctor Who stories have been two-disc sets with run times of about 2 1/2 hours, Dead Air is a shorter story with a run time of approximately 60 minutes on one CD.[1]

Publisher's summary

Hello, I'm the Doctor. And, if you can hear this, then one of us is going to die.'

At the bottom of the sea, in the wreck of a floating radio station, a lost recording has been discovered. After careful restoration, it is played for the first time - to reveal something incredible. It is the voice of the Doctor, broadcasting from Radio Bravo in 1966. He has travelled to Earth in search of the Hush - a terrible weapon that kills, silences and devours anything that makes noise - and has tracked it to a boat crewed by a team of pirate DJs. With the help of feisty Liverpudlian Layla and some groovy pop music, he must trap the Hush and destroy it - before it can escape and destroy the world...

Cast

References

Species

Cultural References

  • When Layla discovers The Doctor isn't human, The Doctor asks her if that dosne't surprise her, which to she replies "When you've met The Beatles nothing surprises you". The Beatles being an important part of 1960s culture.
  • The Doctor compares the distruction The Hush will leave behind to Pinky and Perky by saying "Seriously if that thing gets transmitted it will be worse than a Pinky and Perky B-Side".
  • Tommo firgures if non stop music is played on their radio station will be a succses saying the famous catch phrase "Thunderbirds Are Go!". Thunderbirds was a popular puppet show in England in the 1960s.

Notes

Continuity

To Be Added

Timeline

External links