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The Night Of The Doctor

There's part of me that wants to say that online petitions are the modern version of a letter writing campaign.
Since this is Trek BBS, everyone here knows what happened in the 60's. It's possible it could work now.

Except the whole "The letter-writing campaign saved Star Trek" thing is a myth. There's no proof that the show was ever actually slated for cancellation; it was just on the bubble. NBC wanted to keep the show, since it brought them some prestige (it got Emmy nominations every year) and it encouraged the sale of color televisions, which brought profit to their parent company RCA. They just had to investigate whether they could trim the budget enough to justify keeping it for another year, which is the case with many shows, and eventually they decided they could. So they would've most likely renewed it anyway. The announcement they made on TV telling fans that the show had been renewed wasn't really saying "We surrender, you've convinced us not to cancel it" -- it was just saying "Hey, we aren't actually cancelling the show, so please stop flooding our poor mailroom employees with all this unnecessary mail."

As a rule, letter-writing campaigns don't work, because goodwill doesn't pay for a show. Networks decide whether or not to produce shows based on whether they think they can make enough profit to justify the expense. Even a large letter-writing campaign rarely involves enough participants to convince a network that the audience would be large enough to make a show profitable, especially if it's an expensive SF show. And petitions are even less helpful. It takes very little effort to sign a petition, and the act doesn't guarantee that you'd actually commit to watching the show. I'm sure such displays of fan support are something the networks and studios take into account, but a petition or letter-writing campaign wouldn't be enough by itself to make the difference. The network would have to take other factors into account in assessing the feasibility of the project.

So a petition wouldn't hurt, but we shouldn't have unrealistic expectations about its likely impact.
 
Petitions don't work, but it's a pretty safe bet that, should Moffat want to bring back McGann for a multi-Doctors episode in a couple of months, the BBC won't say "no".
 
Great interview. I'm honestly surprised he agreed to a video interview (especially one so impromptu as this one) considering he's typically interview shy, even with the Big Finish extras. Is it too much to assume that this shows the level excitement he had in doing this mini-episode?
 
Except the whole "The letter-writing campaign saved Star Trek" thing is a myth. There's no proof that the show was ever actually slated for cancellation; it was just on the bubble. NBC wanted to keep the show, since it brought them some prestige (it got Emmy nominations every year) and it encouraged the sale of color televisions, which brought profit to their parent company RCA.

Everything that isn't engaging in myth-making supports this.

They just had to investigate whether they could trim the budget enough to justify keeping it for another year

NBC actually paid more for the series each year, but Desilu (and, later, Paramount) kept slashing the studio's end of the budget.
 
As a veteran of a campaign that actually DID directly save a show that was going to be cancelled ("Chuck"), I have to say that petitions and letters aren't enough. You have to show the network that it's worth the investment. We did that by patronizing the show's sponsor, Subway, and writing thank you's to Subway and NBC for the show. Every day.

But Doctor Who doesn't have sponsors. So I guess there's the "Jericho" approach: flood the network with foodstuffs. What worked for them during that campaign was cans of nuts. What would work for Doctor Who? Huge amounts of jelly babies or jammy dodgers with "We want Paul McGann episodes!" notes tied to them?
 
Something I hadn't thought of - Ian Levine must be screaming his head off somewhere about the fact that the short references the Eighth Doctor's Big Finish companions, considering how he usually dismissed BF as "glorified fan fiction." :D
 
Something I hadn't thought of - Ian Levine must be screaming his head off somewhere about the fact that the short references the Eighth Doctor's Big Finish companions, considering how he usually dismissed BF as "glorified fan fiction." :D
"I still don't think they're proper Doctor Who."

"I am not remotely interested in Doctor Who as an audio only format. Never have been, never will be"

Talk about a hypocritical lifelong fan.
 
Hmm, a random thought, I wonder if it's intentional that Eight was brought back to life by Julia from Hellraiser? ;)
 
http://www.youtube.com/embed/AUq1L1Q4Pfg?feature=oembed

Another great interview with Paul McGann where he talks about the mini-episode, the dreaded word "canon," the moving of regeneration goalposts, wigs, and possibly makes a Star Trek reference.

It's rather sweet he only thinks some of the companions mentioned came from the audios (I'm guessing the-longest absent-from-them C'Riss is the name he's most likely to have drawn a blank on) and shows how little the audio recording sinks in.
 
Great interviews, was wanting to see what his reaction was to our reaction. Paul Mcgann is a top bloke. Funny too.
I must start listening to some of these audios, never have before but I'm wanting an 8th Doctor fix. Where do I start fellas?
 
Something I hadn't thought of - Ian Levine must be screaming his head off somewhere about the fact that the short references the Eighth Doctor's Big Finish companions, considering how he usually dismissed BF as "glorified fan fiction." :D

Has anyone even heard from Ian Levine since the recoveries of Enemy of the World and most of Web of Fear were announced?
 
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