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Doctor Who

  • Thread starter Thread starter Clean Sanchez
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Oh wow @Mr Stickyfingers - I have never met anyone who has been inside one of those mysterious things.

Fantastic story - you should develop it into a short story for the Doctor mag/fans, bet there are lots like me fascinated to hear about this.
And that photo.
So were those boxes everywhere? Wasn't a copshop in town enough?
And I wonder if those freaky cop things on some train stations here in Melbourne are like that, or more little gaols.
 
That's a fascinating story Mr Sticky, thanks for sharing. Is it hard for you to talk about or do you feel it's part of your history now? Do you mind me asking how you got out of the gang and onto the straight & narrow?
KIK is right, it would make a great short story, maybe with a DW twist of the Doctor saving you from the cops ;)
 
Oh wow @Mr Stickyfingers - I have never met anyone who has been inside one of those mysterious things.

Fantastic story - you should develop it into a short story for the Doctor mag/fans, bet there are lots like me fascinated to hear about this.
And that photo.
So were those boxes everywhere? Wasn't a copshop in town enough?
And I wonder if those freaky cop things on some train stations here in Melbourne are like that, or more little gaols.

...yes they were quite prolific around London at that time... they were usually situated near Railway Stations/major parks/bridges and tourist landmarks etc from memory... usually in places with high population density in London... remember London was and still is a highly populated city ... today London has about 8 million people living there and Sydney around 4 million... Police Boxes I guess were there mainly for the convenience of the public to be able to call for Police assistance urgently with a free phone call and that was mainly it... (except for being able to scare the hell out of 3 little mongrel kids of course lol!)... cheers.
 
That's a fascinating story Mr Sticky, thanks for sharing. Is it hard for you to talk about or do you feel it's part of your history now? Do you mind me asking how you got out of the gang and onto the straight & narrow?
KIK is right, it would make a great short story, maybe with a DW twist of the Doctor saving you from the cops ;)

...I don't mind talking about it at all at my age now Meglos lol!... how did I get out of the gang?... haha!... remember when I said in my previous post that I was the only gang member never to have been caught and charged for any crime?... that's because I was thin and wirey and could climb anything from drainpipes to brick walls almost like Spiderman... the more that I never got caught the riskier the crime I was sent to do... it's just by sheer chance that I got away with it... (I was revered as a 'master thief' by all the others in the gang at the time lol!)...

...the way that I got out of the gang was purely because my parents had decided that we were going to emigrate to Australia as '10 pound immigrants' and that was it... I always think of how ironic it was that I was the only one in the gang that was never caught but I still got transported to Australia lol!... when you get embroiled into a gang back then you never really get a way out of crime usually... when my sweet darling wife and I got married about 27 years ago we honeymooned in the UK... (my dear wife is English too)... obviously I went back to visit the five storey buildings where I used to live in the slum area (at that time) of the East end of London and I saw an old lady that lived in our block who remembered who I was and I asked her about various gang members and what had happened to them...

...to my horror at least one of them had been murdered... most had gone to prison... some just either moved away or just 'went missing'... so God knows where I would've been amongst all of that... I just hate to think to be honest... thank God that my parents dragged me away from all of that... the worst thing that happened after I had told the gang members that we were emigrating to Australia in 6 months was that they 'sent me to Coventry'... they totally ignored me from that day onwards... I didn't exist... if I tried talking to them they would all turn on me and punch the shit out of me collectively... it was as if I had 'betrayed' then as far as they were concerned... I was only 13 going on 14 at the time so they put me through hell... it had a deep effect on me and I became quiet and introverted and was more or less a hermit in those last 6 months... I turned 14 just 6 days after we arrived in Australia... hard times for me indeed... gawd haven't I turned this into a dismal post?... lol!...

...anyway... to cheer the post back up... just for the record... I never ever stole anything again in Australia... oh!... that's a lie... I stole my sweet darling wife's heart and that's it!... I swear!... lol!... and yes... it was quite exciting to be in 'a Tardis' but for mixed reasons obviously... remember the episode 'Fathers Day' with Christopher Eccleson where Rose stops her dad from getting killed by a car... The Doctor gets the shits with Rose and storms back to his Tardis and it is just hollow inside because Rose changed the Timeline?... every time I see that I always think of my 10 minutes in that box and laugh my head off lol!... will I write a short story of that ordeal?... hmmmm... perhaps lol!... cheers.
 
Everyone is trouble and gets into trouble around 13/14 don't they?
Most get lucky like you and me @Mr Stickyfingers and don't get caught or almost do and move on.
It is why they can't use kids records against them, we do stupid stuff trying to grow up with crazy hormones burning up your new body.

Kids are so vulnerable at that age, and schools here in Vic are recognising that and making year 9 separated to a different campus, and they do more adventurous stuff.
Capaldi is back - In the Thick of it repeats late tonight, I love that show
 
I have actually been in one of those Police Boxes believe it or not... lol!...
YOU INFIDEL!

(with a slap on the back of our heads to 'scare' us even more
Back in the day when it was acceptable to slap children! :D

...to my horror at least one of them had been murdered... most had gone to prison... some just either moved away or just 'went missing'... so God knows where I would've been amongst all of that... I just hate to think to be honest... thank God that my parents dragged me away from all of that... the worst thing that happened after I had told the gang members that we were emigrating to Australia in 6 months was that they 'sent me to Coventry'... they totally ignored me from that day onwards... I didn't exist... if I tried talking to them they would all turn on me and punch the shit out of me collectively... it was as if I had 'betrayed' then as far as they were concerned... I was only 13 going on 14 at the time so they put me through hell... it had a deep effect on me and I became quiet and introverted and was more or less a hermit in those last 6 months... I turned 14 just 6 days after we arrived in Australia... hard times for me indeed... gawd haven't I turned this into a dismal post?... lol!...

HOLY GOD!! THANK GOD YOU CAME TO AUSTRALIA! Thats awful!

I nicked a cassette once (and got caught), that probably scared me out of ever doing anything risky again.

I stole a nice looking rock from a jewellery shop at a school fete. I felt so guilty afterwards that I through it into the creek at the back! Such a waste! I was such a rebel :D
 
At 13 I was a stalker tweeny, obsessed with pop stars,
we were very intrepid and would find the Mum's address, and star's phone number.
And we lurked about TV stations and airports - we would be charged today most likely:)
But we were not so bold about approaching anyone.

By 14-15 I had advanced to sneaking out the window to pubs and clubs - not that anyone kept tabs on us, in the crowd of 11 people, nobody noticed what I did much.

Jenna as Queen Vic, aww
2DA026FF00000578-0-image-m-17_1445425717520.jpg
 
Thanks Mr Sticky, great reply and a very interesting story you have to tell.

I was so boring and shy at 13/14. I nicked a cassette once (and got caught), that probably scared me out of ever doing anything risky again.

...no worries Meglos... it was my confession... oops!... I mean... pleasure to tell you lol!... by the way... you would never had lasted long in our gang that's for sure lol!... cheers.
 
YOU INFIDEL!

...haha!... yep!... that's me alright lol!...

Back in the day when it was acceptable to slap children! :D

...that's right for sure... again... when I was about probably 12 or 13... I once got a flogging from one of the 'guardians' of the Tower Bridge... (the one that opens to let ships through)... my mate and I were going to 'visit' the dock areas near the Tower of London and we were stopped at the Tower Bridge because it was about to open... we're standing there and my mate dared me to run on the rising road part of the Bridge as it was beginning to lift up for a laugh... (it was only just starting to open and it was only slightly inclined and my run lasted all of 10 seconds) and (from memory) there was only a flimsy boom gate type of barrier to stop people walking on the Bridge when needed... so of course I bolted and began to run on the rising road bit for just a few feet and back just to do the dare and show off to my mate (because I thought that I could get away with it) but some bloke that obviously worked for the Bridge screamed out at me... grabbed me and then dragged me off to some sort of office...

...my mate came with us but they wouldn't let him in the office... after yelling at me for about a minute or so I did a very silly thing and just laughed in his face at him when he asked me if I was sorry for what I did because I was trying to be cocky with him... he lost it and gave me a flogging for being a little smart arse... (I've got to admit it... I might have done the same thing)... needless to say... I learned my lesson the hard way and of course I didn't tell my mum and dad because I would've copped another one because I shouldn't have been there in the first place lol!... like I said... I was a little bastard of a kid lol!... as you say BigBrotherCritic... nobody thought twice about giving kids a belting back then and I well and truly got one!... (he really was mighty pissed off lol!)...

HOLY GOD!! THANK GOD YOU CAME TO AUSTRALIA! Thats awful!

...when we came back to Australia from our honeymoon I sure thanked my parents a lot for having the guts to make the decision to emigrate to here in the first place that's for sure lol!...

I stole a nice looking rock from a jewellery shop at a school fete. I felt so guilty afterwards that I through it into the creek at the back! Such a waste! I was such a rebel :D

...haha!... naughty naughty naughty!... tut! tut! tut!... you little devil you lol!...
 
...anyhow... back to Doctor Who... does anyone remember this?... it's the 'Whomobile' that featured in a few episodes in Pertwee's days as The Doctor... it premiered in the 'Invasion of the Dinosaurs' series of episodes...

12150bf9814c2beb.jpg doctor-who-planet-of-the-spiders-20110914111222819-000.jpg vlcsnap38853.jpg Doctor-Who-Spider.jpg images.jpg whomobile.jpg
6a00d83452989a69e2013485f0ba86970c-800wi.jpg

...I vaguely remembered the "Whomobile' to be honest and the only reason it came to my attention is because I was looking for something else on the Internet and I came across this great video of Jon Pertwee explaining the origins of the car... I hope that you enjoy watching it :)... cheers.

 
...anyhow... back to Doctor Who... does anyone remember this?... it's the 'Whomobile' that featured in a few episodes in Pertwee's days as The Doctor... it premiered in the 'Invasion of the Dinosaurs' series of episodes...

View attachment 50277 View attachment 50278 View attachment 50280 View attachment 50282 View attachment 50281 View attachment 50283
View attachment 50289

...I vaguely remembered the "Whomobile' to be honest and the only reason it came to my attention is because I was looking for something else on the Internet and I came across this great video of Jon Pertwee explaining the origins of the car... I hope that you enjoy watching it :)... cheers.


I remember that! They used that in the planet of the spiders episode when they were chasing that guy who was controlled by those creepy spiders.
 
...believe it or not... do you know that a main belt asteroid (asteroid 3325) was named TARDIS after its discovery by scientists in 1984?... that's right... there is a asteroid running around out there named Tardis lol!... here is it's description from NASA... on this website...

http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=3325+Tardis

3325 TARDIS is a main belt asteroid that measures 29.66 km in diameter. It was discovered by Brian A. Skiff in May, 1984 at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona...

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3325 TARDIS (1984 JZ)
Classification:
Main-belt Asteroid SPK-ID: 2003325


Orbital Elements at Epoch 2457200.5 (2015-Jun-27.0) TDB
Reference: JPL 10
(heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
Element
Value Uncertainty (1-sigma) Units
e .01361704618373938 5.8448e-08
a 3.183573327369247 3.6979e-08 AU
q 3.140222462341139 1.9323e-07 AU
i 22.21781899219278 9.4941e-06 deg
node 46.25414963046003 1.7904e-05 deg
peri 83.0393011190323 0.00036825 deg
M 270.0815429720174 0.00036854 deg
tp 2457718.723446356447
(2016-Nov-26.22344636) 0.0021265 JED
period 2074.773598820353
5.68 3.615e-05
9.897e-08 d
yr
n .1735129077238519 3.0232e-09 deg/d
Q 3.226924192397355 3.7483e-08 AU

Orbit Determination Parameters
# obs. used (total) 1000
data-arc span 20770 days (56.87 yr)
first obs. used 1958-11-11
last obs. used 2015-09-23
planetary ephem. DE431
SB-pert. ephem. SB431-BIG16
condition code 0
fit RMS .46555
data source ORB
producer Otto Matic
solution date 2015-Oct-05 13:19:39

Additional Information
Earth MOID = 2.17704 AU
T_jup = 3.083


Physical Parameter Table
Parameter
Symbol Value Units Sigma Reference Notes
absolute magnitude H 11.4 mag n/a MPO309173
diameter diameter 29.66 km 1.2 IRAS-A-FPA-3-RDR-IMPS-V6.0 IRAS observations used: 9
geometric albedo albedo 0.0553 0.005 IRAS-A-FPA-3-RDR-IMPS-V6.0 IRAS observations used: 9

3325 TARDIS (1984 JZ) Discovered 1984-May-03 by Skiff, B. A. at Flagstaff (AM)
Discovered at the Anderson Mesa station, which is operated by the Lowell Observatory.
Reference: DISCOVERY.DB Last Updated: 2003-08-29


Alternate Designations
1984 JZ
= 1958 VB1 = 1969 TP3 = 1975 VC8 = 1975 WF1

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2015-Oct-22 09:31 UT (server date/time)
Site Manager: Ryan S. Park
Webmaster: Alan B. Chamberlin

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...yeah I know... it's all gobbledegook to me too but isn't that so cool?... the Astronomer must have been an avid Doctor Who fan methinks!... unfortunately there is no image available of it but let's pretend that this is it just for the sake of it eh?... lol!... cheers.

ASTEROID 3325- TARDIS.jpg
 
...while surfing the Internet about the 'Whomobile' I found this little snippet from this website below that was published in 2013 just before the 50th anniversary celebrations methinks... there are some great facts among them all... the numbers 4/14/17/18/21/23 and 47 are the most eye opening ones for me personally... for some reason it won't let me post this in the one post so I'll split it in two so here are the first 25 interesting facts...cheers.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsround/25003714

To celebrate 50 years of Doctor Who here are 50 fantastic, fascinating facts about one of the best-loved TV shows in history.

1. The original Daleks: The original Daleks were controlled from the inside by short operators who had to manipulate their eyestalks, domes and arms, as well as flashing the lights on their heads in sync with the actor's voices. John Scott Martin, one of the original Dalek operators, once said: "If you were related to an octopus then it helped!"

2. Title sequences: There have been around 12 different title sequences. The theme music was originally composed by Ron Grainer and created by Delia Derbyshire at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. Since then there have been a vast variety of remixes of the theme music. Matt Smith (the 11th Doctor) even got up on stage at the 2010 Glastonbury Festival to perform a version of the music with the band Orbital.

3. Home: The Doctor has visited many different planets, but his home planet is called Gallifrey.

4. Medical doctor: The Doctor actually is a doctor! In a sickbay in the 1967 story The Moonbase, the Doctor was asked, "Listen, are you really a medical doctor?" He replied, "Yes, I think I was once, Polly. I think I took a degree once in Glasgow. 1888 I think. Lister."

5. Bow ties: "Bow ties are cool" - that's what Matt Smith said in his first appearance as the Doctor. Bow tie sales shot up by 94% within a month at one high street store!

6. Gadgets: The Doctor has an array of gadgets, including the sonic screwdriver - which has many uses including the ability to unlock almost anything - and the psychic paper, which can bamboozle people into seeing whatever the user wants them to see printed on it.

7. Red Nose Day: In 1999, a four-episode special of Doctor Who called The Curse of Fatal Death was made for Red Nose Day. It featured big name stars such as Rowan Atkinson (Mr. Bean), Richard E. Grant, Jim Broadbent, Hugh Grant, and Joanna Lumley as The Doctor.

8. Regeneration: The regeneration effect, used for when one Doctor changes into the next one, was created at the end of the first series by accident! A faulty mixing desk allowed the image of William Hartnell (the first Doctor) to be overexposed almost to white so that Patrick Troughton (the second Doctor) could be put in his place before the effect faded again.

9. Multiple Doctors: The 50th anniversary episode will not be the first time more than one Doctor will have appeared in the same episode. For the show's 20th anniversary, a feature-length special called The Five Doctors was created, featuring the first five Doctors.

10. Doctor's real name: The Doctor's real name remains a complete mystery to all but a very small number of individuals including The Master, River Song and Clara Oswald.

11. Sherlock-tor Who? The character of the Doctor was partly inspired by Sherlock Holmes. Comparisons have been made between the Doctor and the fictional detective. In fact both the fourth and eleventh Doctors have dressed up as Sherlock Holmes in episodes of Doctor Who.

12. The biggest fan: A six year-old-boy called Flynn was named as the UK's biggest Doctor Who fan after a nation-wide search by the Doctor Who Adventures magazine this year. He won the title as a result of his monster themed tea-party idea, and a letter explaining how much he loves the show. Both he and his twin brother would like to be future Doctors.

13. Celery. Yum! The fifth Doctor wore a piece of celery on his lapel because he was allergic to a certain gas in the Praxis Range. Once the celery turned purple he would eat it and it would save him.

14. What's the time, Weeping Angels? The Weeping Angels are based on the children's game What's the time, Mr Wolf?

15. The Whomobile: (Not to be confused with the Batmobile) the Whomobile was a special vehicle created by the third Doctor and first appeared in the episode called Invasion of the Dinosaurs. It was capable of speeds of 105mph and even appeared on Blue Peter!

16. Matt's outfit: The original costume ideas for eleventh Doctor Matt Smith's look were very different from his iconic tweed jacket and bow tie. Some of the costume ideas included a buccaneer pirate-style one, which Matt wasn't very keen on.

17. Lost and found: The original pilot episode, which was thought to be lost forever, was rediscovered in 1978 in a mislabelled film can.

18. The key to the TARDIS: The distinctive TARDIS sound effect was originally created by simply rubbing the bass strings of a piano with a key. This sound was then modified by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop and then became the well-known sound effect that they still use variations of today!

19. Rewriting history: During his travels throughout time the Doctor has met and in some cases befriended plenty of historical figures, including: Leonardo da Vinci, William Shakespeare, Albert Einstein, Charles Dickens, Queen Victoria, Elizabeth I and Winston Churchill.

20. Top seller: Doctor Who is currently BBC Worldwide's biggest selling TV show around the world.

21. Lady Doctor? When the original series was struggling with ratings in the 1980s, the show's co-creator, Sydney Newman, wrote a letter to BBC One Controller Michael Grade, suggesting some radical new ideas for the show, including the introduction of a Time-Lady (a female Doctor).

22. Most-watched episode: City Of Death featuring the fourth Doctor, scored the highest viewing figures of any Doctor Who episode in the UK, drawing in over sixteen million viewers. The second highest is Voyage of the Damned starring Kylie Minogue and David Tennant as the eleventh Doctor, which on its original airdate was watched by 13.31 million viewers, and as of November 2013 still has the highest viewership of any episode since the show's return in 2005.

23. TARDIS-teroid: Asteroid 3325, a main belt asteroid discovered in 1984, is named TARDIS after the Doctor's time/space machine.

24. The Young Doctor: Matt Smith is the youngest actor to play The Doctor, starting at 26 years old.

25. Former fanboys: Both Peter Capaldi (the twelfth Doctor) and David Tennant (the tenth Doctor) were huge fans of Doctor Who growing up. David Tennant's nan even knitted him a scarf like the fourth Doctor's, and Peter Capaldi regularly sent letters, and essays into the Doctor Who production office, and wanted to run the Doctor Who fan Club.
 
...and here are the other 25 interesting facts... cheers.

26. B&W Who: Before 1970 Doctor Who was filmed in black-and-white. Spearhead From Space was the first serial to be shot in colour.

27. Alien Doctor: Although Time Lords look human, they are aliens, and they have quite a few physical differences: the Doctor has two hearts, a "respiratory bypass system" that allows him to go without air for much longer than a human, an internal body temperature of 15-16C, and the ability to absorb, withstand, and expel large amounts of certain types of radiation!

28. Oldest friend: Jamie McCrimmon was the Doctor's longest-running companion appearing in 116 episodes. He helped the second Doctor to battle the Daleks, the Cybermen, Yetis and Ice Warriors.

29. The shortest stint: The eighth Doctor, played by Paul McGann, starred in just one feature-length episode of Doctor Who made in 1996, not a TV series.

30. Award-winner: In 26 years, between 1963-1989, Doctor Who only won two awards, a Royal Television Society award and a Writer's Guild of Great Britain award. However, the newly-revived series from 2005 onwards has received great recognition from critics and the public, winning over 120 awards, and being nominated for 230, including Baftas and NTAs.

31. The big birthday party: The 50th anniversary episode has been filmed in 3D and will also be screened on television in around 75 different countries, and on the big screen in around 400 selected cinemas crossing time-zones in 8 different countries around the world!

32. Doctor/wife/daughter/Doctor/eh? David Tennant, who plays the 10th Doctor, is in real life married to Georgia Moffett, who is the daughter of Peter Davidson, who played the fifth Doctor! Not only that, Georgia also played The Doctor's cloned daughter in the episode The Doctor's Daughter.

33. The most fearsome enemy: First appearing in 1963 with the catchphrase "EXTERMINATE", the Daleks are considered one of the Doctor's most fearsome foes. They were even voted as the "greatest monsters in the galaxy" in 2010 by readers of the Science Fiction magazine SFX.

34. Dictionary corner: The words "TARDIS" and "Dalek" became so familiar to British audiences that they were added to the Oxford English Dictionary.

35. Hitchhiker's writer joined the team: Douglas Adams, who created the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, also wrote scripts, and even became the script editor for Doctor Who in 1979.

36. The fourth is the longest: Tom Baker (the fourth Doctor) played the Doctor the longest, reaching 7 years, and starring in around 172 episodes between 1974-1981. His companions included Sarah Jane Smith and K-9.

37. Why the TARDIS is shaped like a police box: The Doctor's TARDIS has a broken "Chameleon circuit" which is supposed to enable it to disguise itself to blend into any environment. For example in ancient Rome, it might look like a Roman pillar or statue from the outside. However in the first ever episode An Unearthly Child, we discover that the circuit is broken and the TARDIS is stuck in the shape of a police box.

38. Breaking new ground: Verity Lambert became the youngest drama Producer at the BBC in 1963 when she accepted the role to work on Doctor Who. She was also the first woman to gain such a role in television.

39. Family ties: Caitlin Blackwood, who played the young Amelia Pond, is Karen Gillan's real life cousin. The first time they met was at an on set read-through, as Caitlin was born in Northern Ireland and Karen in Scotland.

40. The sonic screwdriver: The iconic gadget first appeared in 1968, and was used by the second Doctor. It was then written out of the series in 1982 due to the limitations it caused when writing for the show. It then featured briefly in the 1996 Doctor Who TV Movie, before making a full return in 2005.

41. The opener: The first ever episode of Doctor Who, called An Unearthly Child, first appeared on BBC TV on 23 November 1963. On the same date this year the 50th anniversary episode will be broadcast simultaneously all over the world.

42. Record breaker: Doctor Who is listed in the Guinness World Records as the "longest running science fiction television show in the world" (with 798 episodes as of the 18th May 2013), and as the "world's most successful science fiction series", based on broadcast ratings, and sales.

43. The TARDIS: The acronym stands for Time and Relative Dimension in Space, and is The Doctor's chosen mode of transport for travelling through time. It is also bigger on the inside than on the outside.

44. One take: Many early episodes of Doctor Who were recorded in just one single take, so if the actors fluffed their lines, the others had to cover for them.

45. Villains and monsters: The Doctor and his companions have fought and encountered around 400 unique monsters/aliens/villains throughout the series, including The Daleks, The Cybermen, Weeping Angels and Ood.

46. Familiar faces: Peter Capaldi (The 12th Doctor) and Karen Gillan (Amy Pond) both previously appeared in the episode The Fires of Pompeii as side characters before gaining their roles later on in the series.

47. 'Banned' in China: Doctor Who (and other television programmes and films featuring time-travel) are essentially banned in China, because the government authorities don't want to promote anything that could be seen as re-writing history.

48. The big scarf: The Fourth Doctor's iconic scarf was created by accident. The costume maker misunderstood her instructions for the scarf and knitted all the wool she had been given. However, Tom Baker liked the overly-long scarf, and went on to wear it for the show anyway.

49. The missing episodes: In the 1960s and 1970s the BBC would routinely destroy TV tapes rather than archiving them. The transmission tapes of 253 Doctor Who episodes were destroyed, as it was thought they had no future value. To this day, 97 of them are still missing, however copies are being found and recovered from all over the world.

50. Codename Torchwood: Tapes of the early episodes were codenamed Torchwood - an anagram of Doctor Who - to protect them from being stolen. The name was then an obvious choice for the later spin-off series.
 
...believe it or not... do you know that a main belt asteroid (asteroid 3325) was named TARDIS after its discovery by scientists in 1984?... that's right... there is a asteroid running around out there named Tardis lol!... here is it's description from NASA... on this website...

http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=3325+Tardis

3325 TARDIS is a main belt asteroid that measures 29.66 km in diameter. It was discovered by Brian A. Skiff in May, 1984 at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona...

____________________________________________________

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JPL Small-Body Database Browser

3325 TARDIS (1984 JZ)
Classification:
Main-belt Asteroid SPK-ID: 2003325


Orbital Elements at Epoch 2457200.5 (2015-Jun-27.0) TDB
Reference: JPL 10
(heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
Element
Value Uncertainty (1-sigma) Units
e .01361704618373938 5.8448e-08
a 3.183573327369247 3.6979e-08 AU
q 3.140222462341139 1.9323e-07 AU
i 22.21781899219278 9.4941e-06 deg
node 46.25414963046003 1.7904e-05 deg
peri 83.0393011190323 0.00036825 deg
M 270.0815429720174 0.00036854 deg
tp 2457718.723446356447
(2016-Nov-26.22344636) 0.0021265 JED
period 2074.773598820353
5.68 3.615e-05
9.897e-08 d
yr
n .1735129077238519 3.0232e-09 deg/d
Q 3.226924192397355 3.7483e-08 AU

Orbit Determination Parameters
# obs. used (total) 1000
data-arc span 20770 days (56.87 yr)
first obs. used 1958-11-11
last obs. used 2015-09-23
planetary ephem. DE431
SB-pert. ephem. SB431-BIG16
condition code 0
fit RMS .46555
data source ORB
producer Otto Matic
solution date 2015-Oct-05 13:19:39

Additional Information
Earth MOID = 2.17704 AU
T_jup = 3.083


Physical Parameter Table
Parameter
Symbol Value Units Sigma Reference Notes
absolute magnitude H 11.4 mag n/a MPO309173
diameter diameter 29.66 km 1.2 IRAS-A-FPA-3-RDR-IMPS-V6.0 IRAS observations used: 9
geometric albedo albedo 0.0553 0.005 IRAS-A-FPA-3-RDR-IMPS-V6.0 IRAS observations used: 9

3325 TARDIS (1984 JZ) Discovered 1984-May-03 by Skiff, B. A. at Flagstaff (AM)
Discovered at the Anderson Mesa station, which is operated by the Lowell Observatory.
Reference: DISCOVERY.DB Last Updated: 2003-08-29


Alternate Designations
1984 JZ
= 1958 VB1 = 1969 TP3 = 1975 VC8 = 1975 WF1

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2015-Oct-22 09:31 UT (server date/time)
Site Manager: Ryan S. Park
Webmaster: Alan B. Chamberlin

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...yeah I know... it's all gobbledegook to me too but isn't that so cool?... the Astronomer must have been an avid Doctor Who fan methinks!... unfortunately there is no image available of it but let's pretend that this is it just for the sake of it eh?... lol!... cheers.

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Omg, Doctor who is REALLY is Galactic! :D
 
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