Awright, 'fess up: How many others out there have their TV's tuned to nothing but BBC America all this past week?
This has become the single greatest week of television broadcasting in the history of anything. Apart from an hour of BBC News early in the morning, it has been wall-to-wall Doctor Who. And I have not got nearly enough of it. The network even ran "Pyramids of Mars" from the Tom Baker era on Monday afternoon, followed soon after by the 1996 Doctor Who television movie.
My workload has been packed with freelance projects. If I'm not watching it directly I've still had BBC America on the tube as I write and research. It makes for excellent (or should that be Cyberman style and pronounced "EKS-selent"?) background noise, even inspiring. Although the past few nights I must confess that my dreams keep getting invaded by Daleks screaming "Exterminate! Exterminate! EXTERMINATE!"
It's understandable that the Beeb is showing mostly the episodes of the revived era, from Christopher Eccleston's Ninth Doctor, David Tennant's run as the Tenth Doctor and Matt Smith's turn as the Eleventh Doctor. But all of The Doctor's generations have been healthily represented in specials, from the "cosmic hobo" that Patrick Troughton made The Doctor in his second life to the Scottish-accented master strategist Sylvester McCoy as the Seventh Doctor. Along with a whole honkin' heap of programming, such as The Science of Doctor Who.
This hasn't even been the anniversary proper. That kicks off tomorrow, which includes the premiere of the documentary drama An Adventure in Space and Time starring David Bradley as William Hartnell: the Doctor who first brought us aboard the TARDIS.
And then on Saturday, at 2:50 p.m. EST, broadcast worldwide simultaneously, the Fiftieth Anniversary mega-episode: "The Day of the Doctor". With Matt Smith's Eleventh and David Tennant's Doctors sharing the screen for the first time... along with a Doctor whose incarnation we had never known before: "The War Doctor" portrayed by John Hurt.
It is as Peter Capaldi - soon to be the Twelfth Doctor - has said: "The geek have inherited the Earth."
So if you haven't caught it yet, tune in to BBC America. And leave it there. Until after Sunday, when the Doctor Who-intense programming ends. Do it. Or perish in flame. It's your choice. But, not really.
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