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Contenido proporcionado por The Dirty WHOers. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente The Dirty WHOers o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.
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Know What You See with Brian Lowery
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National Geographic photographer and conservationist Jaime Rojo has spent decades capturing the beauty and fragility of the monarch butterfly. Their epic migration is one of nature’s most breathtaking spectacles, but their survival is under threat. In this episode, Jaime shares how his passion for photography and conservation led him to document the monarchs’ journey. He and host Brian Lowery discuss the deeper story behind his award-winning images, one about resilience, connection, and the urgent need to protect our natural world. See Jaime's story on the monarch butterflies at his website: rojovisuals.com , and follow Brian Lowery at knowwhatyousee.com .…
066: 50th Anniversary Roundup [2013]
Manage episode 204576479 series 2289111
Contenido proporcionado por The Dirty WHOers. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente The Dirty WHOers o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.
It's the big 50! In an uncharacteristically speedy retort to the-week-that-was-solid-Who, we flop out a slightly inebriated and over-emotional review of all the 2013 extras.
119 episodios
Manage episode 204576479 series 2289111
Contenido proporcionado por The Dirty WHOers. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente The Dirty WHOers o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.
It's the big 50! In an uncharacteristically speedy retort to the-week-that-was-solid-Who, we flop out a slightly inebriated and over-emotional review of all the 2013 extras.
119 episodios
Todos los episodios
×Terry waves her Leela flag with pride as the usual crew heads back to 1977, with ratings at both ends of the spectrum and more than a gothic touch.
Ms. Tabatha, Mr. Sputnik, Mrs. Lightfeet, and The Lord President, with much talk about the H.A.D.S., the IQ of Gonds, and a meandering critique of the 1968 Second Doctor/Zoe/Jamie outing, Paddy and The Krontons.
Death by rock and roll. Sen, Lightfoot, Tabby, and a throat-sore Sputters, make the best of the Colin Baker "classic," Revelation of the Daleks.
Tabby, Sen, Terry, and Sputters finally get to the end of The Key to Time. A quick revisit of The Power of Kroll, then Armageddon Factor. The usual sweary nonsense.
The usual debauchery in the quest for The Key to Time, a believable retcon rabbit hole, plus an open-ended question for our listeners.
Casting a critical and somewhat squiffy eye over 'Stones of Blood,' part three of our ongoing and foolhardy commitment to finding The Key to Time.
60th Anniversary today, but we don't have a podcast ready, so we thought we'd share this in its full 6 minutes and 20 seconds of glory. Play it loud, and play it proud. Big up to Ron Grainer and Delia Derbyshire. x
Sen, Terry, Miss Tabby, and Sputters serve up a few jaded assumptions and world-weary criticisms for 'The Pirate Planet' [1978], as part of their misguided efforts to review all of The Key to Time.
Starting our ongoing mission to cover all of The Key to Time saga. Making the best of 'The Ribos Operation' [1978], with the usual irreverence from the usual squad.
Celebrating our 100th episode with our review of a Fushia favorite, 'Brain of Morbius' [1976]. Thank you, to everyone out there in podcast land, for not caring that we don't care and for listening to this bobbo.
Trawling through The Sea Devils [1972]. Is it the fan classic we thought it was, or is it just another wet kipper? Let's find out.
Bonjour frère Docteur Qui fanso. This time, we're chatting about 'City of Death' [1979]. Big Tom and Lala, skipping around the streets of Paris on a weekend jolly. Podcasting is cheaper than therapy.
This time we’re going back to the 17th Century for 'The Visitation' [1982] – a period tale of plague, goings-on in the country, highwaymen, yokels with pitchforks, and the Great Fire of London. What's not to love?
Welcome, Citizens of the Planet Earth, to our slightly boozy review of 'Frontier in Space' [1973]. Is it space opera or space pantomime? Is it epic, or just too damn long? Come get some.
The usual tribe of regulars. Much conversation about 'Face of Evil' [1977]. Right in the middle of the golden years, Big Tom and the first trip out for Terry’s favorite (Louise Jameson as Leela).
Our good friend St. Xtofer joins the usual alcoholic ramblings to add his erudite (yet mystical and ancient) opinion into the mix as we take a punt at 'Time Heist' [2014].
Hyped-up review of 'Listen' [2014]. Labeled as "possibly Moffat's most terrifying episode to date," we take a closer look at the unfortunate tent under the sheets. Luckily it's quite short.
A lot of fluff and meandering in this one, but such is life. Men in Tights or Prince of Thieves? Prepare yourself for 'Robot of Sherwood' [2014].
We clamber 'Into the Dalek' [2014]. The usual happy bickering fluff. It won't win any awards, but it's mercifully short.
Sen, Oolon, Begonia, and Lightfoot, bitching and moaning and slurring our words through 'Deep Breath' [2014]. Bless The Prof, as ever, for his sterling editing work and 'blatant Audacity.'
So, here we are once more. The usual shenanigans. Eccleston, Piper, and Charles Dickens, suffering from bad gas in 'The Unquiet Dead' [2005].
Only two weeks between podcasts? It's a miracle. Time to take a shufty at some Big Tom folk horror, 'Image of the Fendahl' [1977]. Prof is back on editing duty, so it's remarkably coherent.
Lightfoot, Spunik, Fushia, and The Prez, having a go at reviewing 'Sontaran Experiment' [1975]. Chatting about the awesomeness of Ian and Liz, Blackpool anecdotes and Brit nostalgia, and what makes a story arch?
We cast a bleary eye over the 1972 Pertwee outing, 'Day of the Daleks.' Recorded months ago, but technical issues (a can of Red Bull over Sputters MacBook) thwarted an earlier release. We got there in the end.
More from the regulars as we review the 'Donna-lite' episode, 'Midnight' [2008]. Over 30 minutes of rambling bollocks. Second, in a two-hour drinking session. You lucky people, you.
Sixty-nine, dudes! To celebrate, here are our slurring meanderings on the topic of 'The King's Demons' [1983]. The Great Charter of the Liberties of England, wasted assistants, ladyboys fighting midgets. This one has it all.
The Christmas episode reviewed, and it's a long one (sorry). 'The Time of the Doctor' [2013]. Brought to you by the power of Champagne and Jameson's Irish Whisky.
Nancy from the Happiness Patrol Podcast, and our Lightfoot, get together for dinner after the live worldwide showing of Day of the Doctor.
The usual reprobates, getting all over-excited, chink glasses over 'The Day of the Doctor.' Smith and Tennant, and the other bloke, giving it their all, with Zygons, and Timelords, and Moffat stuff.
It's the big 50! In an uncharacteristically speedy retort to the-week-that-was-solid-Who, we flop out a slightly inebriated and over-emotional review of all the 2013 extras.
Two yanks. Two limeys. Musing on 'Planet of Giants' [1964]. Another of our COVID lockdown episodes, and we’re still home educating, home working, and home improving, thanks to the power of wine.
Bursting blood vessels about Davison's 'Arc of Infinity' [1983], with some primo lore and retconning from Sen. If you need an introduction to 'typical Dirty WHOers,' this is the one.
Greetings. Children of the night. Grab yourselves a glass of wine - "Wine? I do not drink... wine." Terrance, Sputnik, The Kitty, and Lord Pez, cheerfully quibbling about 'State of Decay' [1980].
And lockdown continues... Getting hot under the collar about 'Delta and the Bannermen' [1987]. Contains the f-word, the c-word, spoilers, and nuts.
Grab y'self a cocoa; it's time for our review of Harnell's 1964 story, 'The Aztecs.' The usual mixed opinions. Sputters, Lightfoot, Tabs, and Sen in a remarkably sober outing.
Number four and Leela go cosplaying in Victorian London. The Lightfoot, Miss Tabby, Oolon, and The Lord President find time to discuss the pros and cons of this seminal classic, 'Talons of Weng-Chiang' [1977].
Mixed ramblings as we lay down our unwanted judgment upon the Davison era time-travel 'romp,' 'Mawdryn Undead' [1983]. Thinking is divided, but we all love The Brig.
Sen, Tabby, Lightfoot, and Sputters get their geek on for 'Logopolis' [1981]. The Doc and Algebra Boy try to repair the chameleon circuit - because maths. Even in Second Life, a TARDIS in a TARDIS is bad.
First episode for Miss Tabby, our new Dirty WHOers regular. Happily slurring our vowels through the vintage Jon Pertwee story, 'Doctor Who and the Silurians' [1970].
Our lockdown return. While we're bouncing around our respective homes, watching old episodes, and grazing from the fridge, it's the perfect time to grab our friend, X, and flop out a podcast.
Pour y'self a stiff one, it's podcast time again. This trip out, guided by the Timelords, we have a moan and a froth about the Pertwee classic that is 'Curse of Peladon' [1972].
Yup, we're still alive. Recorded before Christmas last year, we take a squint at the Patrick Troughton 'missing' episode 'Enemy of the World' [1967] and have a shout, with the help of The Prof, at last season.
Lend an ear, kind listener, to our ramblings about the 1965 Hartnell classic 'Space Museum.' The usual misfits, Fushia, Sputters, Sen, and Terry, quite sober for a change, but apparently not wearing trousers.
Probably the most extended rant to date, we look at the end of the 2015 season and make a unanimous decision. See you with some classic episodes once the hangover wears off.
Back to school. The Dirty WHOers, happily accompanied by our pal St. Xtofer, nit-pick our way over 'The Caretaker' [2014] and the start of Series 8.
The usual four whittier on for 30 minutes, nitpicking our way through 'Father's Day' [2005]. Taking time to get all nostalgic and chat about Who fandom.
A tribute to Paul McGann, the much beloved but short-lived Eighth Doctor, as we try to look at each of the Doctors in the 50th year.
Terry (briefly) chats to Daphne Ashbrook, and Fuschia interviews Matt Fitton, Philip Olivier, Toby Hadoke, and Lisa Bowerman.
We cast a squiffy eye over the McCoy classic, as part of our attempt to do an episode for each Doctor in this the 50th year, 'Remembrance of the Daleks' [1988]. Still a few sound problems, sorry, but we'll sort it out for the next one.
Lightfoot, Fuschia, Sen, and Sputters, review the Colin Baker story, Mindwarp [1987]. We 'pretty much' all agreed on this one. Pretty much. The usual banter, etc. But pretty much. Apologies for the squeaks.
Battling crappy sound for our review of 'Name of the Doctor' [2013]. Sorry, but you'll have to bear with it or give this one a miss. To be honest, I'd give them all a miss if I were you.
As part of a determined run at doing one for each Doctor this year, we look at Davison's 'Planet of Fire' [1984]. Hot stuff, or should it be beaten with a shoe?
Impromptu rantcast of the 2013 season. A little something extra that didn't fit anywhere else. A quick 10-minute bicker at the end of a long night.
The usual company, slagging off 'The Crimson Horror' and 'Nightmare in Silver' [2013]. Why wasn't there more Jenny? Why 'Warwick' isn't pronounced like that? Why Strax is (or isn't) a turd in armor?
Porridge. Sugar and milk, or salt and austerity? Did Oolon actually pee in a bottle!? McLightfeet, Shughie McFee, wee Sputters, and SenBoy getting over-excited about 'Terror of the Zygons' [1975].
Two for the price of one. Having a pop at 'Hide' and 'Journey to the Centre of the Tardis' [2013] c/o (mostly) Sen, with help from Auntie Terrance, Auntie Fuschia, and Uncle Sputters.
Roll up. Roll up. See the wastrels review another episode. Be amazed as they pay homage to the Pertwee era. Marvel as they talk about 'Carnival of Monsters' [1973].
First of the new season. Here we go. Three in one. Bosh! Quick mid-season overview of 'Bells of St. John,' 'The Rings of Akhaten,' and 'Cold War.' A mixed bag of ratings from the usual suspects.
Four grown adults ripping the Karkus out of a 45-year old kids programme. Free BJ's to $20. At least we can agree on Zoe's arse and Jamie's legs.
By the power of 'The Wheel of Who,' we reach back to the Hartnell era to cast a critical eye over series two's 'The Web Planet' [1965]. Terry at Gally. Like watching paint dry with a bug stuck in it.
Masterpiece prostitutes, the usual four miscreants (inc. Sputters with his porn-star voice), review the Big Tom methane refinery 'The Power of Kroll' [1979]. Knitted hair and literal wobbly sets.
Diving into the 2012 Christmas special, 'The Snowmen.' Lots of chat about the new console room, lots, obviously, really, lots. Companions, porno voices, titles and music, the sexuality of Whovians, and anniversary supposition.
Our first episode of 2013, and it's our 50th episode to start the 50th year of Doctor Who. Lets not make a big deal of it, it's a pure fluke. We're casually dedicating this one to Sir Patrick Moore.
Fuschia and The Prof went into the mundy, stalking Big Finish ladies at Dimensions on Tyne. Interviews with Jacqueline Pearce, Beth Chalmers, and Chase Masterson.
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This one breaks all our rules about 'keep it short' and 'never work with animals or children'. Closest thing we're gonna get to a Crimbo episode (cue jingle bells intro). Interviews with Will Barton and Lawry Lewin.
Never let it be said we're not good value. All in one: "Asylum of the Daleks," "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship," "A Town Called Mercy," "The Power of Three," and "The Angels Take Manhattan." Boom!
Come, you coyotes, and howl at the moon. Saddle up for another foray into the 60s with our review of Hartnell's 'The Gunfighters'. Sorry, the audio's a bit ropey.
The usual rating and tipping shenanigans. Gird your liver as we ponder upon Tom Baker's (arguably) finest season, colonic irrigation, and the story 'The Robots of Death' [1977].
Probably our WORST EPISODE EVER. Nothing to do with Whooverville guests Maurice Roëves and Tristan Peatfield, whom we crow-barred in as a saving grace. Sound problems killed our joy.
"You know, Dibber, I'm the product of a broken home." A squint at Colin Baker's 'Mysterious Planet' [1986], plus an earnest attempt to understand our own rating system. Enjoy.
Terry, Oolon, Sen, and Fuscia review The Five Doctors [1983]. A veritable shmorgers board of Who from the Davidson era. Plus, the most perfect killing machine ever devised.
Another Davidson, for our sins, we cast a bloodshot eye over 'Black Orchid' [1982]. The last of the pure historicals, it's double the Nyssa and double the fun. Accept no substitute.
Another feat of disjointed rambling and pointless arguments. On our 2-year anniversary, we chew the fat as Troughton and Baker (#2) take a vacation, dragging Hines and Bryant along for the ride.
From the dusty annals of Whovian history, we lyrically slur our way through Troughton's 'Tomb of the Cybermen.' Lovingly woven on a loom of golden audio magic by Fuschia's pet Professor. x
After 'Dalek' [2005] last time, The Pixie hunts down Rob Shearman and asks him why. Episode 39a, if you like. No money back if not entirely satisfied.
And lo it came to pass, in a flurry of (almost) competent podcasting activity, we did turn our attention to 'Dalek' from Christopher Eccleston's much under-rated tenure as the Doctor back in 2005.
Usual four with the usual dose of fanatical fan bigotry. This time reviewing last year's Christmas Special, 'The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe,' with Sputters and Lightfoot on the edit.
Courtesy of Fuchia's microphone and the Prof's dogged editing talents, our resident pixie cuddles up on a sofa (literally) with Frazer Hines, Lisa Bowerman, and that splendid Hadoke bloke.
Ding dong merrily, we're high, la la la la la la laaaaa... Cobbling the last of the year's interviews together. Nick Briggs and writer John Dorney talk (mostly) about Tom Baker and Big Finish for 2012.
This week, we step back to 1974. A time of innocence, Watergate, the Godfather Pt. 2, when you could get 2 MoJo's for 1/2 a penny and large nostrilled hallucinations terrorized the streets of Old London Town.
Our one-off Nicholas Courtney tribute special, with the usual muppets plus contributions c/o Tim Drury, Graham Harper, Rob Sherman, Nev Fountain, Nick Briggs, and Frazer Hines.
Here's our 2-in-1 rantings on 'Closing Time' and 'The Wedding of River Song' with our very special guest, Nancy from Happiness Patrol. Thanks to The Prof, as usual, and everyone out there for waiting.
We raise our glasses to a couple of Moffat's from the latest season and argue and nit-pick our way through 'The Girl Who Waited' and 'The God Complex.' Plus, at Whooverville, we talked to Sarah Sutton about wine and Jaffa Cakes.
Brace yourself and bite down hard on something. 2 in 1. A mish-mash ramble about 'Let's Kill Hitler' and 'Night Terrors.' Bear with it; it settles down once we finally get it out of (and a drink into) our system.
This is what happens when the lunatics run the asylum. We asked our Facebook Page which episode we should review, and they chose 'Pyramids of Mars.' Being his favorite, Sputters got a bit excited.
It's been a while in the making, and it's a big one (ooo, er, Mrs.), but here's our Elizabeth Sladen tribute episode - with contributions from Dirty WHOers listeners and assorted Who peeps. This ones' from the heart.
We review 'A Good Man Goes to War'. Did he rise and fall as much as Mr. Moffat would have us believe? Was the big reveal a big reveal at all? Was it the satisfying climax we'd all cough up the dollars for?
Double episodes. Double the Doctor. Double the conspiracy theories. Double the measures of spirits. Three drunks and the designated Pixie chew the podcasting fat over all things Flesh.
Fuschia attacked fellow Whovian Tony Lee with a microphone at MCM Expo, the big comic con down in London. Here are his death cries. Nice bloke. Great writer. Shame really.
We argue and nit-pick our way through 'The Curse of the Black Spot', and froth on about 'The Doctors Wife'. After a masterful edit c/o The Prof we almost sound sober. We don't know how he did it.
Sen, Sputters, Lightfoot, and Fuschia review the latest offerings of Auntie Beeb, 'Impossible Astronaut' and 'Day of the Moon.' Grab your favorite tipple, run a nice hot bath, and join in us our non-sequential meanderings.
A somber week for Doctor Who. We slur our way through our review of Blink [2007], but we've cut this one short. Our trademark flippancy just didn't seem funny, given the news this week. Please listen to the end.
A random selection ℅ The Wheel of Who, The Master's first outing 'Terror of the Autons.' Gin was spilled, and Sen goes off on a bit of diversion, but mostly we stick to the plot.
Brace for festive profanity, bigotry, Krap Daleks ™, and the usual pointless 30 minutes of arguments and cocktail abuse. Also, a look at the new trailer. Enjoy, get out more, don't forget to phone your mum, and don't take everything too seriously.
The last of our Christmas interviews, with Nick (Big Finish) Briggs talking Holmes, dream projects, kids, audio commentaries, politics, land the ritual of snowballs on Christmas day.
Sit back with a mince pie and a glass of sherry (or 3) and listen to the smooth tones of Rob Shearman as he waxes lyrical on his journey through the Whooniverse and his outlook on life, the ideal writing job, biscuits, hostage situations, and the name 'Dirty WHOers.'
It's as close to a festive cocktail as you'll get without Warninks Advocar or Egg Nog. Fuschia interviews Daleks, Jake McGann, Nev Fountain, and some bloke called Paul Cornell. Put that in your stocking, with bells on.
Begonia, El Presidente, Sputnik, and Terrance consider Terry Nation's 6-part 1964 TV epic - not the one with Grand Moff Tarkin and Wilf. It's all good clean fun, until someone loses an eye.
Something for the weekend? Another podcast, for your sins. 21 episodes, and you've still not seen the error of your ways? This time we review the classic series episode 'The Curse of Fenric,' and introduce our new feature, "The Wheel of Who."
Like buses, you don't get any for ages, then loads turn up at once. The regular crew review of the McGann TV Movie, a feature-length first attempt to revive the franchise after its woefully criminal cancellation in 1989.
Sputters popped his Dr Who convention cherry, and fulfilled a childhood dream. Loads of interviews from Whooverville, 2010. Katy Manning, Sophie Aldred, Deborah Watling, John Leeson, and more.
It's a whopper, as we take a look at Matt Smith's first season. Sen, Oolon, Terry, and Fuschia, with added Second Life friends Victor and Ezy. Back to short ones' again soon, we wouldn't want to make you sore.
Ladies, gentle peeps, and small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri, for your delectation, 'The Big Bang,' comes under the usual WHOers eloquent frothing examination.
This week, we take a squint at 'The Pandorica Opens,' and wild conspiracy theories abound in the run-up to the grand finale. It all gets quite heated, as heated as 4 Doctor Who geeks thousands of miles apart can get. The vino doth flow.
Mixed opinions on this one from the WHOers. We tried to stay on topic, but Sputters had a few too many and Sen couldn't articulate any other word than 'Timeship.' Thank god we don't have a swear box.
This week, it's all about Van Gough, and we get all Ministry of Arty and Farty about the mono-auditory Sunflower dude, the leggy ginger stripper, and the bloke with the fringe and bow tie.
The usual team with the usual banter. This episode, 'Cold Blood,' and even Fuschia needed a drink this time. Nobody pays us for this, y'know.
We try out our new rating system, go all hippy on Silurian mega-fauna, get mildly creeped out by dissection, and Fuchsia gets her 15 seconds of conspiracy fame. Money back if not entirely satisfied.
This time we're ranting and raving about 'Amy's Choice,' and anything else that takes our fancy. It all started so well, then we had a 10-minute laugh attack (that hit the cutting room floor) and it all went to shit, again.
Another 30 minutes of frothing and nit-picking about our favorite Gallifreyan and this week's episode, 'Vampires in Venice.' Alas, this one's a tad Lightfoot-lite, but normal service and regular interruptions will resume ASAP.
Sen, Fushia, Terry, and Sputters, with the same old tosh best quickly forgotten. If you enjoy the mediocre and predictable procedural drivel of Whovian podcasting, this is the one for you.
More time-consuming tequila-powered self-referential tosh. Fuschia was jet lagged, Sen gave up on the others and evolved into pure energy, Terry had a headache, and Sputters had a 30-minute rant about Alpha Centauri.
Another 35 minutes of interruptive alcohol abuse under the tenuous question mark umbrella of Whodom. By the power of wine and tea, we consider 'Victory of the Daleks.'
In Fushia's absence, we rope in another guest, Jimmy Naughton (of Podshock fame), to help us shoot the breeze on 'The Beast Below' [2010]. Poorly supervised hilarity ensues.
With the arrival of the Eleventh Doctor, Sen, Oolon, Fushia and Terry gather to share our hopes, opinions, and whisky. Get in!
Another 30 minutes of sweet FA. We're joined by a buddy from Second Life to discuss 'the best episode' of Who EVAH. Do we agree? No, of course not. Do we have our own opinion? Yes, and tequila.
We're joined by our friend Victor, from Second Life, as Fuschia forces us to listen to another Big Finish and we give a respectful nod to our favorite (and the best) Who companions.
Yay! More middle-aged anal-retentives and drunks arguing about Dr. Who! Where Fushia tries to introduce us to Big Finish audio, starting with 'Kingmaker.' What is 'cannon,' and why are Timelords cool?
Lord President Sen, Oolon 'Sputters' Spunik, Fushia Begonia, and Terry Lightfoot, discuss our favorite Docs, actors, and eras. Terry tries to read the news while the rest of us provide 'helpful and constructive comments.'
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