CT of Death (tapezine): Difference between revisions

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Currently, no archived copies of this tapezine series exist online; a remastered version of volume #1 was available on Alastair Hooley's website by 2013, with plans to release the second volume in the same way,<ref name="stairs"/> but the website has since gone defunct and no archived copies of the download page are preserved on the Web Archive. Therefore, both volumes of ''CT of Death'' appear to be [[lost media]], unless if physical copies remain in private collections.
Currently, no archived copies of this tapezine series exist online; a remastered version of volume #1 was available on Alastair Hooley's website by 2013, with plans to release the second volume in the same way,<ref name="stairs"/> but the website has since gone defunct and no archived copies of the download page are preserved on the Web Archive. Therefore, both volumes of ''CT of Death'' appear to be [[lost media]], unless if physical copies remain in private collections.


Volume #1 contained a comparison between "{{cs|The Pilot Episode|noital=1}}" and {{cs|An Unearthly Child (TV story)|namedep=An Unearthly Child (1)}}, a two-part review of Directors in Who, a review of [[Donald Cotton]]'s works, skits and a quiz.<ref name="stairs"/> It had a runtime of sixty minutes.<ref name="tapezinematrix"/>
Volume #1 contained a comparison between {{cs|The Pilot Episode|quote=1|noital=1}} and {{cs|An Unearthly Child (TV story)|namedep=An Unearthly Child (1)}}, a two-part review of Directors in Who, a review of [[Donald Cotton]]'s works, skits and a quiz.<ref name="stairs"/> It had a runtime of sixty minutes.<ref name="tapezinematrix"/>


Volume #2 was released a year later after the positive reception of volume #1, with an extra half an hour in runtime. After the issues of finding material for the first volume, Hooley and Bickerstaff found that much more content was submitted, including a now-lost audio play by [[Paul Magrs]], an immature child who recorded himself pretending to shoot [[John Nathan-Turner]] whilst playing {{wi|Rambo (1985 video game)|Rambo}} on his {{w|ZX Spectrum}} ― this caused concern to Hooley and Bickerstaff, who believed that their listeners had an immature mentality ― but these thoughts were mitigated by the next contributions they looked through, which weren't anywhere near as silly.<ref name="tapezinematrix"/>
Volume #2 was released a year later after the positive reception of volume #1, with an extra half an hour in runtime. After the issues of finding material for the first volume, Hooley and Bickerstaff found that much more content was submitted, including a now-lost audio play by [[Paul Magrs]], an immature child who recorded himself pretending to shoot [[John Nathan-Turner]] whilst playing {{wi|Rambo (1985 video game)|Rambo}} on his {{w|ZX Spectrum}} ― this caused concern to Hooley and Bickerstaff, who believed that their listeners had an immature mentality ― but these thoughts were mitigated by the next contributions they looked through, which weren't anywhere near as silly.<ref name="tapezinematrix"/>
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