Yeah, those two really were a perfect fit.Crossovers are good when done well.
My favorite science fiction ones are still when Warehouse 13 and Eureka had their crossovers.
Yeah, those two really were a perfect fit.Crossovers are good when done well.
My favorite science fiction ones are still when Warehouse 13 and Eureka had their crossovers.
There was another show that did a crossover that was related but it wasn't good. I forgot the name of the other show for that universe.Yeah, those two really were a perfect fit.
Alphas. Decent show, but tonally it did not fit with the other two at all. Fortunately that crossover was very minor and easy to ignore.There was another show that did a crossover that was related but it wasn't good. I forgot the name of the other show for that universe.
It had the guy from Sneakers as the lead. I don't remember it being all that good.Alphas. Decent show, but tonally it did not fit with the other two at all. Fortunately that crossover was very minor and easy to ignore.
Well, also, Big Finish did get to work with the man who was the incumbent Doctor on live-action TV, so it was technically the place where new Doctor Who other than TV was more legitimate than others.Something I saw on Twitter yesterday:
A quick thought on this fan's idea.
The second Wilderness Era will be nothing like the first. Yes, the Fugitive Doctor as "the face of the franchise" is a cool concept. I'd like that myself. But Big Finish, which is where the bulk of the tie-in activity is now, is diffuse in focus and doesn't have a "face," and novels and comics are niche and irregular. The media tie-in landscape, as relates to Doctor Who, is in a very different place than it was thirty-five years ago.
Well, also, Big Finish did get to work with the man who was the incumbent Doctor on live-action TV, so it was technically the place where new Doctor Who other than TV was more legitimate than others.
Yeah, that was a weird one, it just didn't really fit at all.Alphas. Decent show, but tonally it did not fit with the other two at all. Fortunately that crossover was very minor and easy to ignore.
Luckily they went back to lighter more fun stuff with shows like Wynona Earp and Vagrant Queen. It's been a while, but I think Dark Matter and The Killjoys tended to lean a little more in that direction than the BSG style.It had the guy from Sneakers as the lead. I don't remember it being all that good.
We did see SciFi go darker post BSG. We got Stargate Universe, which doesn't fit the tone of the other two series at all.
That's kind of true of media tie-ins in general now, at least as far as novels go. Starting off with Doctor Who, when their novels were at their peak output during the period of the PDAs and EDAs, I believe they alternate between each line on a monthly basis, IE, PDA one month, EDA the next, then another PDA the month after that and so on in that order. Even ignoring the fact Doctor Who hasn't been able to maintain any kind of regular novel release schedule since RTD's first term ended, even if we were to begin to see some sort of new novel line to fill in now that DW doesn't have a presence on television, we certainly wouldn't be getting that kind of annual output. At most, we'd likely get a total of four novels per year, and we'd probably be lucky to get that. After all, Star Trek only does two or three novel a year now while Star Wars does three to four, and these are properties that during the 90s and 2000s dominated the sci-fi tie-in novel business.novels and comics are niche and irregular. The media tie-in landscape, as relates to Doctor Who, is in a very different place than it was thirty-five years ago.
The NSAs established under RTD continued for a bit under Moffat, though in a slightly larger format. Then they started doing special novels, the NSAs would return sporadically, and it all kinda went kaput. I've heard reasons why the BBC Books line broke down under Moffat from people who were there, from Moffat himself to poor sales, and I have reasons to believe all of the reasons.Even ignoring the fact Doctor Who hasn't been able to maintain any kind of regular novel release schedule since RTD's first term ended...
The NSAs established under RTD continued for a bit under Moffat, though in a slightly larger format. Then they started doing special novels, the NSAs would return sporadically, and it all kinda went kaput. I've heard reasons why the BBC Books line broke down under Moffat from people who were there, from Moffat himself to poor sales, and I have reasons to believe all of the reasons.
It didn't totally break down, the most recent novel, The Moon Cruise with The 15th Doctor and Belinda came out in November, andThe NSAs established under RTD continued for a bit under Moffat, though in a slightly larger format. Then they started doing special novels, the NSAs would return sporadically, and it all kinda went kaput. I've heard reasons why the BBC Books line broke down under Moffat from people who were there, from Moffat himself to poor sales, and I have reasons to believe all of the reasons.
This is why I get most of my books from the library. Unfortunately, they don't have many Doctor Who novels.The problem with the Gatwa era NSAs is they're so damned expensive. $30.00 Canadian dollars for a mini-hardcover of 240 pages? Yes, I know, prices of everything in general are getting outrageous, but that really seems ridiculous. even taking modern day inflation into account.
The problem with the Gatwa era NSAs is they're so damned expensive. $30.00 Canadian dollars for a mini-hardcover of 240 pages? Yes, I know, prices of everything in general are getting outrageous, but that really seems ridiculous. even taking modern day inflation into account.
Not really, at least not in North America. Indeed, the fact the prices are so similar has been a factor in why books are the one market where physical media still rivals or even surpasses digital media in sales.Kindle exists.
And is really cheaper than reading paperbacks. Sort of.
Not really, at least not in North America. Indeed, the fact the prices are so similar has been a factor in why books are the one market where physical media still rivals or even surpasses digital media in sales.
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