Fifteenth Entry in the Charles Daniels Unauthorized Programme Guide O' Meat Extra special thanks to me for ripping off even MORE of my old material Serial Q - The Spam Museum - Episodes: 1. The Spam Museum 3. The Sick 2. The Dimensions of Meat 4. The Final Glaze The Doctor, Barbara, Ian, and Vicki arrive on a wobbly set that the inhabitants call Xerox. The inhabitants have long become bored and having nothing better to do taken to carving their gods, favourite Australian Television Soap Opera Stars, and anything else they could think of, including cartoon dogs, out of the spam that seems abundant and laying around in half open tins everywhere. No one will eat the spam, and in fact the natives, who call themselves the Morons, consider any such suggestion highly offensive, if not throughly disgusting. From this one example, the Doctor judges that the Morons are, in fact, vastly more intelligent than the people who buy Store Own Brands at Safeway. The confused regulars walk about the Spam Museum that the Morons have constructed, and have a fun romp around. The Doctor climbs inside a Dustbin made of some particularly crusty spam, and hobbles around it in swearing in Welsh much to the annoyance of everyone. Meanwhile Ian, Barbara, and Vicki discover perfect spam replicas of themselves on display in some glass cases. All of them are very upset, not only because of the spam sculptures' mysterious origins, but also because they are completely goofy looking - Ian has a nose that would make the Sphinx jealous, Barbara has gigantic cartoonesque hands, while Vicki is indistinguishable from her Spammy self and therefore throughly annoyed. After dragging the Doctor away from the grips of three spotty teenage rebels they consult the Doctor who decides not to give any advice until they sculpt a Spam statue of him. Once it is completed he tells them that his initial ideas were wrong, the Morons are, in fact, Morons and they would be better off going to the next planet and forgetting this whole sordid ordeal. Before leaving the Doctor hands over the secrets of the universe to the spotty teens and watches gleefully as they kill the Morons for making them pose for questionable Spam sculptures over the years. Safe in the knowledge that the Morons have been defeated he encourages the teens to help him loot their homes. After much searching he finally discovers something INTERESTING - A Transdimensional Sony Trinatron Total Image Screen. A super science invention designed to help voyuers look in on half-naked women from across the universe in the comfort of their own home. It also gets free HBO and PlayBoy! The last scene has the Doctor reflecting that `The future doesn't look too bad after all, does it?' as he tunes in a female mud wrestling competition from 1986. Book(s)/Other Related - Doctor Who & The Spam Museum My Meat, My Friend Meat Sculpting For Beginners Fluffs - Hartnell seemed confused for most of this story While explaining where the spam comes from Hartnell has three tries before he gets his line "f*(k all if I know" "So, fried are we? Like so much spam I imagine..mmm who's frying baloney my child?" "You my dear fellow are a Moron and you aren't very bright for one either and more over...where am I anyway?" Fashion Victims - The Morons all wear huge bell bottoms and ridiculous shoulder pads, quite in keeping with their character. Goofs - In episode one Ian says he is still wearing 15th century silk panties, where did THIS come from? When they leave the TARDIS the Doctor slams the door so hard the entire world wobbles! How does the Doctor get a subscription to "Naughty Space Vixen Monthly" delivered directly to the TARDIS? Technobabble - "Time, like space, is really big and has an infinite bigness dimension with an infinite amount of spam occupying spam-space" according to Vicki. The Morons are armed with 'Crisco Guns' Dialogue Disasters - On the all time dumb lines in Doctor Who history, as said by a Moron: "How many arms have fallen into Xerox hands?" DOCTOR: You, the little spotty boy...NO! Not you! The OTHER little spotty boy! Yes, you my child...get some Clearasil GOD DAMN! In the famous scene when the Doctor is strapped down to a chair by an evil Moron and forced to watch a video about buying real estate - DOCTOR: Development area? Hmm?? Looks more like a walrus campsite. Dialogue Triumphs - Vicki: We MUST have changed the future..we must have done? Barbara: Must we, Vicki? Oh, shut up and eat more spam. Xerox: But I DON'T LIKE SPAM! Ian: Well I'll have your spam then! I love it! I'm having Spam, Spam, Baked Beans, and SPAM! Moron: We're all out of baked beans. Ian: Can I have spam instead? Moron: Ughhhh! Rumors & Facts - This story started out as a dream and ended as a nightmare. It was a story that was destined to be made however, not because the story was good, or inventive, or insightful but just because by the time Doctor Who accepted it it had been whored around in more countries for more television shows than any other in human history. The first episode of this story was taken from a rather promising, but still very awful, script that had been rejected by such science fiction shows as The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, One Step Beyond, Science Fiction Theatre, The Time Travellers, Puppet Theatre, 3rd Rate Kiddies Pantomimes R Us, and probably most crushingly public access television itself. The other three episodes were taken from a series of discussions about going to the lavatory and writing up something as fast as possible so they could go out to the pub for some more drinks before lunch time. This was the first story written by Terry Jones, the famous Monty Python cast member. It is rumored that drab, wobbly, cheaply painted, low maintained, incomplete sets can be explained away by the BBC giving this serial an understandably low budget. However this serial went over budget! After research it seems that the majority of the budget did not go to sets, costuming, actors, or editing, but instead the vast majority went towards paying Terry Jones' telephone bill, bar tab, outstanding debts of various natures, and to his lawyer in a court case charging abuse of funds.