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Gerry Anderson, Co-Creator of Thunderbirds, Dies

jamstar7 writes "According to the BBC, 'Gerry Anderson, the creator of hit TV shows including Thunderbirds, Stingray and Joe 90, has died at the age of 83. He also created Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons and his puppet superheroes fired the imaginations of millions of young viewers in the 1960s and '70s. Thunderbirds, a science-fiction fantasy about a daring rescue squad, ran from 1965 and was his most famous show.' In my opinion, his greatest creation was Space: 1999, an ITV production with practically no budget, which had great shows in the first season. Unfortunately, like so many other Gerry & Sylvia Anderson projects, it ran out of gas in the second season. They did some great stuff." Anderson's son Jamie also has a post in remembrance of his father.

129 comments

  1. Gerry Anderson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Is GO!!!

    1. Re:Gerry Anderson by Brett+Buck · · Score: 2, Funny

      I don't know if he is "Go!" but he is certainly not F.A.B.

    2. Re:Gerry Anderson by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 2

      Supercar. Fireball XL5. Stingray. Joe90. UFO.

      Man.

      Exciting visual stuff, for a 4-9-year-old.

      And Barry Gray's theme music for Space:1999. I think I put up with the show, simply for that music.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
  2. Space: 1999 was awesome. by BitterOak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's amazing to read that Space: 1999 had a small budget. The sets, in the first season in particular, were quite amazing, a big step up from Star Trek in my opinion. (Though the writing and acting in Star Trek were far superior.) But there were some very good episodes of Space: 1999, some of them quite dark. I have them all on DVD and I do still enjoy watching them.

    --
    If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    1. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by trodofor · · Score: 3, Informative

      "no" budget, but wikipedia says that it was the most expensive show produced for British television up until that time: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_1999

    2. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by symes · · Score: 2

      Completely agree about Space 1999 - and embarrassingly I did not realise GA was behind it. What was nice was a certain air of realism, sci-fi that didn't rely on tricks and alien tech to move the story forward. Good writing with the dues ex machina.

    3. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about Space 1999, but I used to watch Stingray, Captain Scarlet and Terrahawks a lot. They were all very impressive, especially Terrahawks.

    4. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Dave+Emami · · Score: 2

      Completely agree about Space 1999 - and embarrassingly I did not realise GA was behind it. What was nice was a certain air of realism, sci-fi that didn't rely on tricks and alien tech to move the story forward. Good writing with the dues ex machina.

      Well, except for the "moon blown out of orbit" underlying premise...

      I loved the Eagle ships when I watched the show as a kid, but it wasn't until later that I could put my finger on why: they're believable, workable ships. In fact, they look like bigger, more-advanced versions of the actual lunar lander -- strictly functional. They manage to look cool by not looking like they were designed with the intent of looking cool.

      I'm just glad I didn't see the Dragon's Domain episode during the initial run. It would given me nightmares for sure. Hell, I've heard people comment that for them, it still does.

      --

      "The Greens lynched a hacker in Chicago. Last month, but I think the body's still hanging from the old Water Tower."
    5. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I loved Brian Johnson's model work done on series. I was too young to see 2001: A Space Odyssey yet, so I was completely blown away at how authentic looking Moonbase:Alpha and the workhorse Eagle ships looked.

    6. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I recall, the producers at the time bragged that they had a budget higher than Star Trek's.

    7. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by DrVxD · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing, but I'd imagine a sizeable chunk of that budget was to get Martin Landau and Barbara Bain on board (which was, as I recall, deemed necessary for the lucrative US market).

      For me personally, neither of them added much to the show (despite the fact that both are fine actors - Landau especially so); I think the whole thing would have worked better as an ensemble cast without the two "big names".

      --
      Not everything that can be measured matters; Not everything that matters can be measured.
    8. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, except for the "moon blown out of orbit" underlying premise...

      Perhaps Gerry and Sylvia should have called it The Who There, the Moon was always blown out of orbit.

      I'm just glad I didn't see the Dragon's Domain episode during the initial run. It would given me nightmares for sure. Hell, I've heard people comment that for them, it still does.

      Agreed. How about a parody on the monster from Dragons Domain? It would involve cardboard cutouts, miniatures, invisible thread and and some dude with hefty dreadlocks looking for his fifteen minutes of fame, especially if he has a strong set of falsettos. Don't forget the out-of-focus spinning wheel cover as an overlay.

      Consider one's first opportunity to be exposed to classical or neo-classical music from the likes of Tomaso Albinoni to Robert Farnon. I managed to snag myself the soundtrack from year 1 and 2. Let's not forget Derek Wadsworth from Year 2.

      This is a lyrical overlay for a track from One Moment of Humanity specifically called "The Strongest Passion".

      Let's...run-around...for-a-little-bit! [cue bongos]
      Let's...run-around...for-a-little-bit! [more bongos]
      Let's...run-around...for-a-little-bit! [yet more bongos]
      Let's...run-around...for-a-little-bit! [cue keyboard]
      Let's...run-around...for-a-little-bit! [more keyboard]
      Let's...run-around...for-a-little-bit! [cue Kenny-G saxophones]
      Let's...run-around...for-a-little-bit! [more wailing Kenny-Gsaxophones] .... electric guitars and Kenny-G saxophones while everyone catches breath.

      Let's not forget that piece that sounds suspiciously like Gino Vanelli's "Storm at Sun-up"

    9. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our group of high school friends at the time joked "Barbara Bain, the face of concrete.. Martin Landau - the stare that can break concrete"

    10. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Black+LED · · Score: 1

      That isn't saying much. If you watch the interviews and behind the scenes stuff for Star Trek, you'll see that they really didn't have much of a budget and were constantly forced to scrounge stuff out of dumpsters and jury-rig all sorts of set pieces from trash.

    11. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by hardburlyboogerman · · Score: 1

      My favorite episode was called "Black Sun" I do believe that was the first use of a Black Hole in any TV Sci-fi series up to then.I know taht after Season 2,the Alphans were left hanging.Not until 2004 when the fan flick"Return To Moonbase Alpha" was the series really concluded

      --
      Geek Hillbilly
    12. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My favorite episode was called "Black Sun" I do believe that was the first use of a Black Hole in any TV Sci-fi series up to then

      On Star Trek (TOS), the Enterprise had a close encounter with the intense gravity of a "black star" (not depicted on screen) resulting in the events of the first-season episode "Tomorrow Is Yesterday". That was about a decade before Space: 1999.

    13. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      A review at the time said something like "Barbara Bain maintains exactly the same expression while undergoing massive accelleration".

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    14. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by 1u3hr · · Score: 0

      . What was nice was a certain air of realism, sci-fi that didn't rely on tricks and alien tech to move the story forward. Good writing with the dues ex machina.

      Realism? As a teenager and SF fan at the time, I found the stories embarrassingly stupid in almost every respect. The moon wildly flying from one solar system to another each week for no reason at all (except to meet up with the next batch of "aliens of the week") being a major one.

    15. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 2

      The second season of Space 1999 was definitely as you describe, but the first season was not like that. It was much more serious and realistic. It is just like Lost in Space. The early black and white episodes of that show were ten thousand times better than the later, colour, and campy episodes.

      I can just imagine that there was some stupid network executive behind the downfall of both these shows, who thought that science fiction was just for kids and that kids only want to see monsters and aliens. It would be interesting to read an account of the behind the scenes decisions that changed these shows.

    16. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iirc the series 1 budget was £250,000 per episode. A lot of money in those days, you young whippersnappers. Now get off my lawn!

      Anderson has been quoted as saying he hated actors, but apparently he paid all of them well (not just big American stars). I saw an interview with the actor who played Dr Mathias, where he described working on Space 1999 as 'a lucrative 6 months finding different ways of saying 'Yes, Commander" and "No, Commander".'

    17. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by hardburlyboogerman · · Score: 2

      You're right on that,but the black hole was not the focus of the episode,but accidental time travel was.Black Sun also depicted what is called spagettification on objects falling into the hole.An asteroid and an Eagle were ripped apart by tidal forces.Turns out that this was correct,according to what we know now.It wasn't until the early 1990s that Black Holes were proven to even exist.That's when Stephen Hawking conceded his famous bet with Kip Thorne over black holes.
      I wonder if Thorne enjoyed the year of Penthouse he got for winning that bet.

      --
      Geek Hillbilly
    18. Re:Space: 1999 was awesome. by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      The second season of Space 1999 was definitely as you describe, but the first season was not like that. It was much more serious and realistic. It is just like Lost in Space. The early black and white episodes of that show were ten thousand times better than the later, colour, and campy episodes.

      As one who recently rewatched the first and second seasons of Space: 1999, I think the original poster had it right -- the moon seemed to accelerate and decellerate without reason so that an episode could take place within a solar system. The change of speed was never mentioned, it was just like if all these systems that Alpha visited were right next to each other. The obstacles to the episodes could be unbelievably stupid (like that in "Space Brain"), but they could also be excellent (like the "Dragon's Domain" monster). Indeed, after watching both seasons, the highs of Season 1 were better than the highs of Season 2... but the lows in Season 1 were far worse as well. Make no mistake, the worst moments of Space: 1999 came in Season 1 and there were times when I'd watch some horribly bad, drawn out scenes and think "why would anyone want to watch this?" Then it'd be followed by a brilliant episode. It was ambitious and took a lot of risks, some of which backfired.

      Season 2, by contrast, was evenly mediocre. It wasn't as bad as Season 1, but not as good either.
      Also, in Season 1, Martin Landau was Kirk, Barbara Bain was McCoy, and Barry Morse was Spock. They formed the same sort of trio that Star Trek had. Morse left after Season 1 and there was no serious, Spock-like character to replace him, and it threw a wrench in the chemistry for Season 2. Season 2 added Tony and Maya -- Tony was forgettable, Maya was a fantastic addition, but still the chemistry wasn't the same, and the series had shifted to more action-oriented episodes.

      I can just imagine that there was some stupid network executive behind the downfall of both these shows, who thought that science fiction was just for kids and that kids only want to see monsters and aliens. It would be interesting to read an account of the behind the scenes decisions that changed these shows.

      Fred Freiberger was brought on to save Space: 1999 after it was canceled at the end of its Season 1. He was also the person who "retooled" Star Trek in its final Season 3 (after it's earlier cancellation as well). I stole this note from Wikipedia: "Johnny Byrne has gone on record saying that Freiberger was a good man and good producer, but not good for Space: 1999. He had gotten them a second year after the cancellation, but the changes he made did not benefit the programme"

  3. Wow... by mcgrew · · Score: 0

    I saw the submission and didn't recognize the name, but I do remember some sci-fi puppetry when I was about 12. I'm sure it's the same guy.

    Wow. Been a long time.

    1. Re:Wow... by lister+king+of+smeg · · Score: 1

      scifi puppetry are you sure your not remembering farscape?

      --
      ---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
    2. Re:Wow... by DrVxD · · Score: 1

      The acting in Stingray was way less wooden than that in Farscrape...

      --
      Not everything that can be measured matters; Not everything that matters can be measured.
    3. Re:Wow... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I was only 12, that's almost fifty years. I remember the show, but not its name.

    4. Re:Wow... by barakn · · Score: 1

      lister king - when guessing the age of a /.er, look at the number of digits in the user id #. Those with 5 are old-timers. Those with 7 are usually clueless noobs.

      --
      "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
  4. My heart is still a fireball by niks42 · · Score: 2

    I'll always remember Gerry and Sylvia Anderson creations with huge fondness. The first program I can remember watching is Fireball XL5, and I've always managed to marry blondes all my life in deference to Venus.

    1. Re:My heart is still a fireball by SternisheFan · · Score: 2

      I'll always remember Gerry and Sylvia Anderson creations with huge fondness. The first program I can remember watching is Fireball XL5, and I've always managed to marry blondes all my life in deference to Venus.

      ...and Lady Penelope (voiced by Sylvia) was my puppet fantasy woman when I was 12. Come to think of it, she still is.

    2. Re:My heart is still a fireball by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 2

      I was enamored with Space: 1999 when I was a kid (even had the little metal lunar ship too), and I caught up with it again when they were selling the complete series for $20 on Amazon. I know the series hasn't aged well, but I still think it's pretty good knowing they had a shoestring budget. After putting a name with a creation, I bought the "UFO" series (pretty good, for a futuristic show), "Thunderbirds" and "Fireball XL5" (thanks to amazon.com). I look at Mr. Anderson (heh.. no pun intended) as a great visionary creator who made marionettes cool. (and made me want their vehicles and space ships for my own toy collection).

      He may not be missed by the current generation, but those of us old enough to remember 3 channel television, he will be greatly missed.

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
    3. Re:My heart is still a fireball by Vulch · · Score: 2
      He may not be missed by the current generation

      In the UK at least there are a lot of Grandads happily watch Thunderbirds with their grandsons, and thanks to some strong female characters quite a few Grandmas and granddaughters tutting about having to watch but enjoying it never the less.

      There aren't that many 45 year old series still bear watching.

    4. Re:My heart is still a fireball by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      I caught Space:1999 as a kid, but without knowing that I only ever saw epiodes from season 2. As kids do I got hooked on the ideas of the transport tubes, the pylons in the center of all the room that acted as a video phone, the eagles,etc.

      A few years ago I got on a kick of watching Thunderbirds which in turn had me looking up all the Anderson shows. I didn't realize they were related until then and then I finally got to watch season 1.

      Space: 1999 is really an odd bird. If you were a little kid you probably liked season 2 better, with that first episode with all the bombast of Brian Blessed and Maya the shapeshifter, but then the adults think season 1 is superior. It has all the better writing, the better plots, and the amazing freaking sets.

      I also have to say during that same time I came across Terrahawks. It's a funny series and I don't know if I can prounce it good or bad, but I sure as heck watched every episode. Same with Captain Scarlet and "New" Capatain Scarlet...

    5. Re:My heart is still a fireball by mannd · · Score: 1

      Agree on Fireball XL5. Watched it Saturday mornings, loved the opening sequence with the Fireball horizontal rocket-sled-assisted launch, and definitely triggered my lifelong fetish for blonde marionettes.

      --
      Sig expected Real Soon Now.
    6. Re:My heart is still a fireball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $19,000,000 for both seasons. Those shoestrings can hold tankers secure in a Cat 5 hurricane! Shoe strings...

    7. Re:My heart is still a fireball by DrVxD · · Score: 1

      ..and Lady Penelope (voiced by Sylvia) was my puppet fantasy woman when I was 12

      Trivia: Not only did Syliva voice Lady P, she also provided her ankles for the occasional live-action close up.

      Come to think of it, she still is

      *nods* :)

      --
      Not everything that can be measured matters; Not everything that matters can be measured.
    8. Re:My heart is still a fireball by murdocj · · Score: 1

      I can still hear a bit of the song in my head. Fireball was a fun show.

    9. Re:My heart is still a fireball by hardburlyboogerman · · Score: 1

      I remember Thunderbirds and loved it.Tickled me when a Movie based on the series was made.I have the entire Thunderbirds,UFO and Space 1999 series here at home,so I can watch them any time I want.They may be dated now,but still much better than the pig crap that passes for Sci-fi now days.
      One favorite thing I liked on Space 1999 was the character Victor Bergman sniping to David Kano over the main computer.Kano was so protective about the machine.That reminds me of Dr.McCoy and Spock with their(friendly) war of words.
      When I first seen any of these,they were being syndicated on various stations.Iffy at best as where I live,(SE KY) Sci-fi is not very popular here due to the lack of thinking brains .Sorry folks but NASCAR where you drive in a circle making left turns while being at least half drunk isn't my idea of TV entertainment.I have better things to do.

      --
      Geek Hillbilly
    10. Re:My heart is still a fireball by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 1

      Considering some television shows today (with breaks and incentives for shooting elsewhere) still run $4 million PER EPISODE, $19 million for two SEASONS is pretty much chicken scratch.

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
  5. RIP Gerry Anderson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let me know when Richard Dean posts

  6. also known for the UFO TV series by Sipper · · Score: 2

    Actually my favorite of Gerry Anderson's work was the TV series UFO https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFO_(TV_series)
    Space 1999 was good when I was a kid, but when I re-watched it as an adult I found it terrible -- the show needed better writing. [A few of the episodes are still good though.]

    1. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Walruzoar · · Score: 0

      UFO FTW

      --
      Take off every 'Sig'!! You know what you doing. http://www.donline.co.uk/
    2. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by vlm · · Score: 1

      Space 1999 was good when I was a kid, but when I re-watched it as an adult I found it terrible -- the show needed better writing

      We could list that kind of series all day. The original battlestar galactica... Buck Rogers... The A team... Frankly the bottom 25% of Star Trek TOS episodes (space hippies? spocks brain?). Seemed like pretty good stuff at the time, but seeing it again via the internet, ugh, I can't believe how much of my life was wasted watching that junk.

      Some TV ages pretty well. "World at War" by the BBC, better than any documentary made by the cable networks in the last couple decades. Maybe the best documentary ever made (and yes I am considering the Ken Burns series, although his Civil War might make a good 2nd place).

      I might be the only /.er to have ever watched any of I, Claudius. But man what a unhistorical hatchet job to livia (olivia?) or whatever her name was who was portrayed as a mass murderess although no one else historically thinks so (other than a couple conspiracy theory cranks).

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    3. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by sconeu · · Score: 1

      I might be the only /.er to have ever watched any of I, Claudius

      No, you're not, but unfortunately, I don't remember much of it. But from my class in Roman history (many many MANY moons ago), it was Livia, not Olivia.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    4. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by vlm · · Score: 1

      Yes yes Livia. The conspiracy theory is she was all scheming to kill, well, pretty much everyone except her son. To the point of utter ridiculousness. And the series kinda bought into it, which was a shame, although dramatic. Otherwise a more or less historically accurate show.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    5. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The I Claudius books were great, never saw the video version (and not just because I saw Caligula in a theater -- I still like Romans.)

      I was a big fan of UFO, but some of the plots were so ridiculous they hurt the others and I had to create my own canon. British TV is a stronger dose of fantasy than American. American film can be pretty silly too, but that's mostly about laziness and unwillingness to pay for decent writers.

    6. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Dadoo · · Score: 1

      Space 1999 was good when I was a kid, but when I re-watched it as an adult I found it terrible -- the show needed better writing

      We could list that kind of series all day. The original battlestar galactica... Buck Rogers... The A team...

      Yeah, but Battlestar Galactica had some decent episodes, even if some of the stories were stolen from movies. Space: 1999 (and Buck Rogers) redefined bad television. I've been re-watching it on DVDs from Netflix, and I'm up to the episode entitled "One Moment of Humanity". I have to say, it was possibly the worst hour of television ever produced. The "Star Wars Christmas Special" was better.

      I'm up to the "Those of you who watched when it originally aired probably remember having nightmares after the "Dragon's Domain" episode (I certainly do), but so far, that's the best one I've seen. "Mission of the Darians" was tolerable, too.

      --
      Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
    7. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Seemed like pretty good stuff at the time, but seeing it again via the internet, ugh, I can't believe how much of my life was wasted watching that junk."

      Too bad most Space Nutters don't think that way, they think the sci-fi they read as a kid is an instruction manual for the species.

    8. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I might be the only /.er to have ever watched any of I, Claudius.

      No, you're not alone there, it was required watching in my house back in '76.
      Now, I might be the only /.er to admit to watching (and liking) 'The Borgias' (Not the modern crap one, the superior older crap one featuring Adolfo Celli..)

    9. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can thank American producer Fred Freiburger, who the Andersons' brought in to make show more appealing to American audiences for schlocky turn the series took in It should be noted Freiburger was brought in as producer on Star Trek's third season which had it share of crap episodes.

    10. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by rm0659 · · Score: 1
      ufo was excellent & most of the episodes still hold up very well today - most of them were downers, not your typical tv fare.

      and i love the silver miniskirt/purple wig "uniform" the women wear on moonbase. :)

    11. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by murdocj · · Score: 1

      I was in college when Space 1999 came out and even at that time, I thought it was awful... horrible acting, bad stories, and a premise that was utterly absurd. I'll have to try to dig up an episode to see if it's as bad as I remember, but I'm really surprised so many people are so nostalgic for it.

    12. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by AtrN · · Score: 1

      I grew up with Gerry Anderson's shows from the early 1960s - I always wanted to be Joe 90 and get things downloaded into my brain (still do) and also think UFO is the best GA show. Dark themes with a cool look (the theme music is great too).

      Now back to the point... In the UFO books, yes, there are books, you learn that the purple wigs are in fact anti-static devices! No idea about the miniskirts and knee-high boots though.

    13. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by The+Optimizer · · Score: 2

      When I first watched Space:1999 season 1 in the mid-70s, one of the things they did made a big impression on me: Some of the episodes would end with something like this:

      John: What the hell was that and how did we survive?
      Victor: I don't know. We don't know. There's a lot of stuff in the universe that we have no idea about, and it could just as easily have killed us all. We survived due to sheer luck and not because we're anything special.

      That's paraphrased of course, but compared to the tone and formula/attitude of all the other action and sci-fi on TV in that era, and it was downright subversive.

    14. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by rrohbeck · · Score: 1

      Yes! I'm watching all of them again after running across a torrent :)

    15. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      I might be the only /.er to have ever watched any of I, Claudius. But man what a unhistorical hatchet job to livia (olivia?) or whatever her name was who was portrayed as a mass murderess although no one else historically thinks so (other than a couple conspiracy theory cranks).

      It was pretty popular in Australia. I'll have to give it another look, it was almost 40 years ago I last saw it. All based on the (brilliant) Robert Graves novels. And that in turn based on scurrilous contemporary "histories" by people with axes to grind. Anyway, it was a drama, not a documentary, As well to criticise Shakespeare for historical liberties.

      I've been looking at Roman history recently, and it was a pretty extreme and bloody time. Nero, for instance, didn't fiddle while Rome burned, but he did like playing the lyre, and he did have his mother, brothers and sisters and a couple of wives executed or just murdered -- in many cases, because they were plotting the same for him.

    16. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Ol+Biscuitbarrel · · Score: 1

      Ah ha. I'd read a chance remark about the purple wigs/getups being to combat static electricity somewhere and wondered if that was, er, the "truth."

      So why not enforce the same dress code for visitors? Ack, Ed Bishop in a silver miniskirt...

      And what was the deal with Nina Barry trotting around the cabin of SkyDiver in that mesh top? Not that I'm complaining - at all. ;)

    17. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Space: 1999 had a tendency to come up with great ideas for episodes, then screw up the execution.

      One of my favorites was the episode where they entered orbit around a planet whose technically-advanced occupants didn't want them to land. To prevent them from landing, they decided to give the Alpha crew "what they wanted" and terraform the moon to be like the Earth...

      Of course what happens is, first the Eagles can't fly in the dust-filled atmosphere, stranding some of the crew on the surface. Even worse, once they start adding water, the moonbase begins to flood because it was build on the bottom of a crater (soon to be a lake). The Alpha crew has to contact the aliens and explain that their good intentions are going to kill the entire colony.

      That was a great premise for a episode!

      The problem was, they then had to add this stupid sub-plot about how the food crops the aliens sent made people crazy for no reason. That subplot took up a large portion of the runtime and basically ruined the other, much better, plot of Moonbase Alpha suddenly having to deal with the changes. I'm sure the entire point of that subplot was to give Barbara Bain her contractually-obligated number of lines of dialog.

      Oh well.

    18. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Space 1999 had a few good episodes, but most of them, even in the pre-Freiburger days, were pretty bad. Bad science, bad scripts. The production design and actors were fine, but they were saddled with nonsense.

    19. Re:also known for the UFO TV series by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, Claudius.

      Nope. I watched it. I recommend everyone does. It's still brilliant.

      P.S. Livia was a manipulative bitch - and there's a lot of evidence that she, along with many women, used poison to kill off rivals.

  7. It didn't run out of gas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It was Freibergered. That's the same idiot who turned TOS Star Trek into "monster of the week" in the 2nd season.

  8. Don't forget UFO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We were watching UFO episodes on xmas day, found some Space 1999 episodes to watch on YouTube, and threw in a few Thunderbirds episodes as well.

    FAB Gerry!

  9. So Captain Scarlet wasn't based on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Captain Scarlet is indestructible. You are not. Remember this, do not try to imitate him.

  10. Supercar! by drainbramage · · Score: 1

    Wasn't Supercar prior to Fireball et al?
    I think it was on in 1961.
    Puppets with big heads and a flying car.

    --
    No brain, no pain.
    1. Re:Supercar! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I allways thought it funny how his 'futuristic' car designs came true, pity he didn't patent the designs.

    2. Re:Supercar! by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

      Yes supercar came first (ran two seasons) and then Fireball XL5. Both were in B&W but there are some color versions of FBXL5 floating about on youtube.
      I bought the Supercar DVD collection, one of these days I might spring for the XL5 one.

  11. Legendary TV Shows But Not In USA? by Freshly+Exhumed · · Score: 1

    During the 1960s and 70s, distribution of the Anderson shows was common throughout the UK and British Commonwealth countries but unfortunately less so in the U.S.A., sad to say. Today American kids of all ages can see for themselves what all the joy was all about back then. I for one used to run home from school to catch the late afternoon showing of the newest Fireball XL-5 episode on one of the local Canadian TV stations. Stingray was mind-blowing (buildings that lowered underground!) and when Thunderbirds came out (in colour!) I was ecstatic. According to various obituaries in today's British newspapers those Anderson shows have been rerun many times on UK TV and continue to pull in large audiences of all ages. To Gerry, where ever you have gone, a hearty "F-A-B!"

    --
    I deny that I have not avoided attaining the opposite of that which I do not want.
    1. Re:Legendary TV Shows But Not In USA? by sound+vision · · Score: 1

      Yeah, when I read the title I thought this would be about a Mozilla developer. Then I read the summary and I didn't recognize a single one of the names or series mentioned. Then I was like "Wtf, there's sci-fi puppet shows?"

    2. Re:Legendary TV Shows But Not In USA? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I watched Thundrbirds in the US as a kid, though reruns have been very scarce since then. And I wasn't even in a big market area.

    3. Re:Legendary TV Shows But Not In USA? by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      Thunderbirds was *extremely* popular in the US. It was on every afternoon for a long time. It was one of my favorites as a kid - when I see the old ITC logo/bump hear the music, I still get a bit of a jump, because it immediately preceded Thunderbirds. If it came on right now, I would watch it.

      The others, not so much. Fireball XL-5 and Captain Scarlet were pretty well-known and UFO was pretty obscure.

          Space:1999 was well known although most people thought it was garbage and some of the episodes were just embarrassing from start to finish - a few examples:

      they go through a field that "de-evolves" some of them to cavemen, and it also "devolves" their CLOTHES. I even called that one as it happened "don't make their clothes change, too!" and yet it happened anyway.

        one had some aliens make an atmosphere on the Moon (so they would stay up there, and not land on the planet until they were out of range), and we found that they built Moonbase Alpha with WINDOWS THAT OPEN, and that the staff *brought beach toys and bikinis*. On a trip to the moon.

    4. Re:Legendary TV Shows But Not In USA? by RoverDaddy · · Score: 1

      Lighten up. If you can deal with the fact that the Hulk's shirt always falls off when he transforms, but his -pants- magically manage to stay intact just enough, then you can deal with the clothing 'devolving'. If you pay attention, SF has problems with clothes responding to things that are supposed to affect living beings -all the time-. It happens in Star Trek. It happens everywhere. It's a necessary conceit. In this case it was -particularly- necessary to the plot, because otherwise the non-devolved crew members would have realized who the devolved people were immediately, killing the whole story.

      --
      RETURN without GOSUB in line 1050
    5. Re:Legendary TV Shows But Not In USA? by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      they go through a field that "de-evolves" some of them to cavemen, and it also "devolves" their CLOTHES. I even called that one as it happened "don't make their clothes change, too!" and yet it happened anyway.

      This particular episode was, IMO, the very worst of the series. And it wasn't just the stupid science, it was scene after scene of people wordlessly screaming at each other until I couldn't imagine how this show wasn't canceled by that point. It was a true jumping the shark moment.

    6. Re:Legendary TV Shows But Not In USA? by alices+ice · · Score: 1

      ok, well i know about the bikinis, it was established there was a relaxation area on moonbase alpha, with artificial sunlight and loungers

  12. Don't forget "UFO" by SpaceGhost · · Score: 1

    Just as good in many ways as "Space:1999" (which I also loved) was his 1969 series "UFO", which combined live action with some of the sci-fi puppetry from the Thunderbirds. It was dark and foreboding, centered on a secret government agency in an active war against recurring alien incursions, and you had the feeling that "we" were just at the edge of losing. It included an AI satellite which spoke with an English accent and a moonbase "manned" by women in purple hair and short skirts, one of the very few silly parts of an otherwise very serious drama. It seems to have influenced MIB in more ways than one; one of the secret organizations' special tools was a spray that took away ones recent memories, used on witnesses after debriefing, a tool re-incarnated as the "flashy-thing".
    Gerry was quite the visionary, and certainly influenced this old slashdotter.

    1. Re:Don't forget "UFO" by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      There wasn't puppets in UFO, was there? I know he did that, but I thought UFO was a full live action series.

      And there was some story explaination for the blue wigs on the moon station... but I don't remember it ever actually being brought up in the series.

    2. Re:Don't forget "UFO" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That should have been reserved for a more adult time slot. In the early 1970's on Saturday mornings, I remember WCBS TV broadcasting a station ident using the still-frame from the series with a voice over "UFO at Seven".

      When I was young, there were two clips on TV that sent me behind the sofa. One was the end shot in the Star Trek TOS favoring a humanoid face with cat eyes. The other was the end credits of UFO between after the sun entered frame from the left toward the end when a spherical asteroid entered frame from the right with the music reaching crescendo. Let's not forget the ITC "Sine & Spine" logo with the bubbling creepy ending to the music.

    3. Re:Don't forget "UFO" by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      Today that loud ITC logo is often associated with the fact that The Muppet Show is coming on, but I assoicated it with Space 1999. It wasn't until the late 80s that I saw the logo without thinking that Space: 1999 was coming on (and then being disapointed by a Muppet Show rerun).

    4. Re:Don't forget "UFO" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gigadittos! Same thing happened here. Year 1979, WCBS TV Channel Two New York, ITC Space Diamonds and the timpani and brass ensemble jingle, getting ready for a third season, fade out...WTF? Jaw crashed through the floor boards and cracked the concrete in the basement after seeing "The Muppet Show" title card. However, the ITC logo used in UFO was an earlier generation with the "world map and orb triplication" intro. The "Space Diamonds" began with the distribution of Space:1999.

    5. Re:Don't forget "UFO" by DrVxD · · Score: 1

      There wasn't puppets in UFO, was there?

      No puppetry, but a considerable amount of model work (for vehicles, moonbase, etc). Naturally, Anderson's team had a considerable amount of experience in that field from the earlier marionette series - as a result of which, UFO stands up extremely well to other shows of a similar age.

      --
      Not everything that can be measured matters; Not everything that matters can be measured.
    6. Re:Don't forget "UFO" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The wigs were spun from stainless steel, made as a stunt by long-defunct British Steel.

  13. And another genius dies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is such a shame that the childrens programming spewed out nowadays if throwaway trash. I am pretty sure that none of the shows crapped out of the bowels of the current TV will ever achieve the level of fandom that Gerry Anderson's shows did.

  14. Well, that's sad news by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

    I can only hope that at his funeral, the coffin is transported by some absurdly elaborate system of conveyor belts, slides, elevators, and so forth.

    --
    -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    1. Re:Well, that's sad news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can only hope that at his funeral, the coffin is transported by some absurdly elaborate system of conveyor belts, slides, elevators, and so forth.

      I heard that his coffin will get lowered by obvious strings. *ducks*

    2. Re:Well, that's sad news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Complete with heavy-duty stepper motor and pneumatic sounds played at half-speed----"KGRRRRRRRRRRRR-OHWWWWUUWWUUWWUUWWWUU-PFFFFFFFFFFFF..." and forget the speed up and pneumatic breaking sounds of the Travel Tube...all to the Derek Wadsworth soundtrack of the Swift departing from Planet D (prescient of Titan, anyone) in "Brian the Brain".

      "...and nooooooo monkey tricks or you know what you'll find when you come BA-ACK!"

    3. Re:Well, that's sad news by Dupple · · Score: 1

      It'll slide down a ramp and turn around part way through, so that it enters the grave feet first.

      Just as if you were boarding Thunderbird 2

      --
      Watch those corners
  15. My childhood would have been much different by stox · · Score: 1

    had it not been for Gerry and Sylvia's work. They inspired the imagination!

    --
    "To those who are overly cautious, everything is impossible. "
  16. Fireball XL5 & The Thunderbirds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have many fond memories of both Fireball XL5 and The Thunderbirds. My condolences go out to his family.

  17. GA & ITC: TV worth watching by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yesterday, Lord Lew Grade (Lev Winogradsky) would have been 106. He was the one who financed GA for many years via ITC. Which for us, that means International Television Cult.

    I am not ashamed to be one of Gerry's Kids.

  18. Psychedelic by DrEasy · · Score: 1

    All I can remember from Space: 1999 was all the psychedelic colors. The crew would inevitably land on some kind of orange/green/yellow planet with some tall flowers, some kerfuffle would ensue, and guns would make people vanish, problem solved and end of the episode. Fun stuff.

    --
    "In our tactical decisions, we are operating contrary to our strategic interest."
    1. Re:Psychedelic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was an article in Starlog Magazine in 1977 about using those stiff rainbow colored plastic balls for planets. It also mentioned the necessity of removing the price tags, lest one call the series "Space: $1.49".

      A note on the weird coloration of the planets in Space: 1999. A few years later, the shots from Voyager showed Io and Europa. That could have been used in the opening shot in Year Two. How about the Huygens lander and the Planet D shot from "Brian the Brain"? I could have imagined Gerry saying "See, I told you so..." complete with finger wagging.

  19. Captain Scarlet and Space: 1999 were the best by rklrkl · · Score: 2

    I have many of the Gerry Anderson DVD box sets and I think the best two series he did were Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons (easily the best puppet show he did - way better than Thunderbirds) and Space: 1999 (OK, you have to ignore most of Season 2 of that, but it did have Catherine Schell as eye candy to compensate).

    He didn't do too well with Space Precinct (Gary Ewing as a non-drunk cop? :-) ) and the CGI version of Captain Scarlet was awful (and even stole a whole episode from another sci-fi series!), but at least he tried to keep the UK sci-fi light alive when we've all had in recent years is the truly cringeful Primeval, a less than stellar return of Red Dwarf and the highly variable Doctor Who reboot.

  20. He made being a geek cool in the 70's by goblank · · Score: 1

    Many of Gerry Anderson's TV shows were about the ascendency of the well prepared geek over the muscle bound jock. Joe 90, Captain Scarlett, Thunderbirds, Stingray and Fireball XL5 were hard favorites through most of my childhood. (Doctor Who of course being the other show that celebrated the thinking hero). While geek culture has become much more mainstream, I think that the Gerry Anderson brand of action never found a serious parallel after his shows went off the air. Ryker's (sic) version of Thunderbirds was sad - it was great to see the ships come to life with CGI; but none of the old "feel" of the shows carried over.

  21. Terrahawks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody ever seems to mention Terrahawks? I can't be the only one to have watched it, surely?

    1. Re:Terrahawks by RubberDogBone · · Score: 1

      Hardly the only one. I watched as much as I could when it was on in my city, which was not very often. The local station tended to sell that slot to anyone who wanted to run a 30-min ad for something and only ran Terrahawks when they hadn't otherwise sold the time to someone.

      To this day, the name Zelda brings to mind nothing to do with Nintendo but instead the scary homicidal alien puppet. It was at least a unique concept for a villain not to mention Ninestein's clones. Not many shows get away with killing off the hero.

      Anyway, I suspect the show is not mentioned more because GA is supposed to have said he'd wished it had never been made and at least wanted to forget it existed. It was not one of his favorites for some reason.

      For fun, wander around Youtube and check out the Terrahawks Kate Kestrel live action music videos and also the Terrahawks Japanese theme songs. The Japanese open song is rather nice in my opinion. Hated by Fandersons for not being canon but honestly I don't need my fun stamped and approved.

      --
      Sig for hire.
    2. Re:Terrahawks by SternisheFan · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia has a decent tribute page... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrahawks

    3. Re:Terrahawks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To this day, the name Zelda brings to mind nothing to do with Nintendo but instead the scary homicidal alien puppet.

      Me too- actually, it was the only instance of the name "Zelda" I ever knew for a long time. (Especially as Nintendo was nowhere near as significant in the UK during the 8-bit era as they were in the US.)

    4. Re:Terrahawks by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 1

      I saw it on the Sci-Fi channel when I was younger. The brain still occasionally gets "Livin' in the 21st Century" stuck on loop.

      Or alternately: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeOaIm3dcD4

      (Human as Terrahawks character singing about Thunderbirds characters. Ow my head.)

    5. Re:Terrahawks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because it was a load of fucking shite.

  22. Journey to the Far Side of the Sun by stox · · Score: 1

    aka. Doppelgänger

    Since no one has mentioned it yet. An interesting movie, with an EPIC crash scene!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doppelg%C3%A4nger_(1969_film)

    --
    "To those who are overly cautious, everything is impossible. "
    1. Re:Journey to the Far Side of the Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who wouldn't have the Barry Gray soundtrack "Sleeping Astronauts" on their IPods docked into their alarm clocks set to SLEEP.

      I had the Eagle Transporter toy from Mattel when I was ten. My sister was chubby in those days. I would be in one end of the house and she would have her Ganymede-sized @$$ parked in the sofa watching tube in visual range. We had rust-colored "worm-pile pattern" carpeting in the parlor which doubled well as an extraterrestrial surface.

      [me with spacecraft pointed toward sister] "We're going to explore that planet over there"

      [sister gets angry and chases me] "It's an attack! Evasive action! Evasive action!"

      [crashes Eagle onto the carpet and pieces fall off] "Carter needs to go back to flight school."

      As for UFO, this is what some dude came up as a gag with on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2FvPdaC2jOA

  23. Actual explosions and fire by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

    re-watching Gerry Anderson shows proves to me that actual explosions and fire are a LOT more entertaining than computer graphics.
    Theres a feeling of realism in watching it; your brain KNOWS that this is a real object and this is real smoke etc. Modern CG just isn't the same.

    Also imagine how much more fun it was to work on! Actually building models and then blowing them up.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    1. Re:Actual explosions and fire by RubberDogBone · · Score: 1

      The genius of Derek Meddings, among other people.

      The man was incredible with models. It is enough to watch those scenes alone to see what he came up with.

      --
      Sig for hire.
    2. Re:Actual explosions and fire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Completely agree with you on this, and I love to see any scene in a movie that makes me think 'thats a model,,,what a great model!'

      And the attention to detail, when a prominent piece of debris came flying out of an explosion and as it hit the floor they would add a clang! sound effect, was awesomely effective. Alas, that sort of thing was noticeably absent from later productions like Joe 90.

    3. Re:Actual explosions and fire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BOOOM!-rattle-rattle-cheen-KLANK! Is that a spinning girder I see?

      Of course, it's a spinning girder. This is a Gerry Anderson Production, you insensitive clod!

  24. Aw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He was one of my heros. Thank you.

  25. Sad that a man died, yet HAPPY that he will never. by __aasehi2499 · · Score: 1

    Spill any of his 'creative' juices on long suffering audiences again.

  26. What no mention of UFO? by Phrogman · · Score: 1

    The best series of its kind IMHO.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFO_(TV_series)

    It was awesome, particularly the Moon girls in their miniskirts (I was a young teen after all)

    --
    "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
    1. Re:What no mention of UFO? by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      Purple hair, too. That Colonel Lake was one of the most attractive ladies on TV at the time, as far as I am concerned.

              It was a lot like a live-action version of "Captain Scarlett" and really creepy. They kidnapped people for *spare parts* and breath that green liquid.

           

    2. Re:What no mention of UFO? by mykepredko · · Score: 2

      I would put in a vote for Lt. Ellis over Col. Lake.

      I would agree that it was Anderson's best show.

      myke

    3. Re:What no mention of UFO? by niks42 · · Score: 1

      Was that Gabrielle Drake? Oh yummie ..

  27. Thunderbirds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By far, Thunderbirds was a favorite and influential show for me. In honorarium, and via YouTube, I present the Thunderbirds theme song

    Thanks Gerry, really enjoyed the show.

  28. My first experience by SylvesterTheCat · · Score: 1

    I remember I was at my Officer Basic Course at Fort Sill in 1991. I was in my room one night watching cable tv and one of his shows came on, Captain Scarlet, maybe.

    My first reaction was that it was incredibly juvenile and poor quality with the obvious puppet strings, etc. Of course, I had no idea who Anderson was and assumed that what I was watching was a current production. I did a little research and realized who he was and what I was seeing.

    I realized just how amazing it is that so much creativity can be wrung out of a medium which has fairly severe inherent limitations, at least when compared to live actors or animation.

    1. Re:My first experience by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      My first reaction was that it was incredibly juvenile and poor quality with the obvious puppet strings, etc. Of course, I had no idea who Anderson was and assumed that what I was watching was a current production. I did a little research and realized who he was and what I was seeing.

      I realized just how amazing it is that so much creativity can be wrung out of a medium which has fairly severe inherent limitations, at least when compared to live actors or animation.

            Needless to say, you were not the target audience. But as you say, a lot of creativity and they made good use of what they had. The Supermarionation process was actually quite technically advanced. The mouth movements were electro-mechanically synched with the sound. The heads on the early puppets were so large because the necessary solenoids and electronics were big. Later, with Captain Scarlett, they were able to shrink it down to anatomically accurate dimensions. But it lost something - it's like hand-drawn cartoons VS the God-awful computer animation. The first one you know is fake and you get past it, the second is in the "uncanny valley" - not quite real but not quite fake enough.

  29. Thunderbirds parodies by oluckyman · · Score: 1

    Thunderbirds parodies by Pete & Dud and D-Generation.

    1. Re:Thunderbirds parodies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember as a child being most indignant at Pete and Dud's implied criticisms of Thunderbirds. Most indignant!

  30. Re:Sad that a man died, yet HAPPY that he will nev by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

    If only TVs had a way to change what you see, or be turned off.

  31. Thank you for my childhood by mykepredko · · Score: 1

    Sad to hear Gerry. Anderson died.

    Stingray, Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlet were my favourite shows as a young child. (Although I would say only "The Thunderbirds" had any kind of staying power now that I look back at them as an "adult").

    When they came out, I never missed an episode of UFO and Space 1999 (although Space 1999 started out strong but didn't really have the chops to go the distance). If you get the chance, watch a few episodes of "UFO" - many of them are quite good and have aged reasonably well (despite being stuck in 1970).

    My favourite quote about him came from Matt Stone and Trey Parker, after "Team America" said that Gerry Anderson must be insane, because of all the problems they had with the puppets in the movie.

    A great legacy and I know many people who remember fondly growing up with his creations.

    Thank you,

    myke

  32. dear gerry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for dragons domain, thank you
    for ufo thank you
    just thank you actually !

    michael

  33. Re:Sad that a man died, yet HAPPY that he will nev by __aasehi2499 · · Score: 1

    I've seen things on the interwebitudes that I wish I could burn from my memory, yet I would live with those memories longer than the ones I have of watching even the few moments of 'Thunderbirds' I have been tragically exposed to.

  34. UFO Movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hopefully the UFO movie will be released this summer.

  35. Re: i love the silver miniskirt/purple wig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i love the silver miniskirt/purple wig "uniform" the women wear on moonbase. :)

    yeah, me too. this has undermined my relationships with women ever since. curse you mr anderson!!

  36. Re:Never forget "UFO" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there was a large breasted woman on a submarine who wore a string vest - these were the best (vest) parts of UFO - one glimpse at the boobage & i was hooked.
    ed bishop, the actor who played ed straker, the guy behind the secret organisation, got into a fight with another actor when he was called the puppet in UFO

  37. Re:Sad that a man died, yet HAPPY that he will nev by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've seen things on the interwebitudes that I wish I could burn from my memory, yet I would live with those memories longer than the ones I have of watching even the few moments of 'Thunderbirds' I have been tragically exposed to.

    Get a grip. I was never really a fan of Thunderbirds myself, but it wasn't that bad.

  38. Tank Riot podcast just featured Gerry Anderson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.tankriot.com/2012/128/

  39. Be sure to check out Tank Riot #128 by doggo · · Score: 1

    If you, as a Slashdot reader, are not listening to Tank Riot already, you should hang your head in shame. Or at least realize you're missing out.

    Sputnik, Tor, & Viktor did a very nice episode (#128) on Gerry Anderson. Gerry Anderson!