Difference between revisions of "Taiwan Prints"
Jon Preddle (talk | contribs) |
Jon Preddle (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
All ten films bore markings that they had been used by the '''[[Armed Forces Network|American Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS)]]''', and subject to censor edits. | All ten films bore markings that they had been used by the '''[[Armed Forces Network|American Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS)]]''', and subject to censor edits. | ||
− | The films had been acquired (circa 2008) by a collector who bought several boxes of material that had been cleared out of the old Armed Forces Network Radio Taiwan station, which had been decommissioned in 1979. | + | The films had been acquired (circa 2008) by a collector who bought several boxes of material that had been cleared out of the old Armed Forces Network Radio Taiwan station ([http://gallifreybase.com/w/index.php/Armed_Forces_Network#FAR_EAST_NETWORK_.28FEN.29_.28.231.29 Far East Network (FEN / AFNRT)]), which had been decommissioned in 1979. |
Since the US base on [[Taiwan]] didn't operate a television station, it's a mystery as to why the radio station there would have old TV films! | Since the US base on [[Taiwan]] didn't operate a television station, it's a mystery as to why the radio station there would have old TV films! |
Revision as of 23:13, 6 March 2014
The Mystery of the "Taiwan Prints"
On 19 December 2013 it was announced that five black and white episodes had been found in Taiwan:
- The Dominators episodes 2 and 3
- The Seeds of Death episode 2
- The War Games episodes 1 and 2
A month later, on 16 January 2014, another five were announced:
- The Keys of Marinus episode 6
- The Enemy of the World episode 6
- The Krotons episode 3
- The Ambassadors of Death episodes 1 and 2
All ten films bore markings that they had been used by the American Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS), and subject to censor edits.
The films had been acquired (circa 2008) by a collector who bought several boxes of material that had been cleared out of the old Armed Forces Network Radio Taiwan station (Far East Network (FEN / AFNRT)), which had been decommissioned in 1979.
Since the US base on Taiwan didn't operate a television station, it's a mystery as to why the radio station there would have old TV films!
The questions on everyone's lips were: where did they come from, when did they screen, and were there more?
The answer to the second question was likely to provide clues to answer the other two questions. So that was our starting point.
NEWSPAPERS
We accessed the online archive of Pacific Stars and Stripes (at Stars and Stripes Archive), the US military newspaper, which had print editions that were distributed and circulated to US troops serving at the US Army, Navy and Air Force bases located in Thailand, South Korea, Japan, Vietnam, the Philippines, Guam, Taiwan, and various smaller islands in the South Pacific.
We also examined the online archive Berlin Observer which provided listings for AFN-TV in Germany, and the online archive for Morgunblað, the Iceland newspaper that listed TV for the US base there.
And we found -------- NOTHING.
That's right. Nothing. Zilch. Nada. Zip. Zero. Nil. Not a sausage.
The OCR searches did return listings for the two Peter Cushing Dalek movies (in 1966, 1967, 1975, 1981 and 1983), as well as the short run of Tom Baker stories in 1986 (as covered on the main Armed Forces Network profile), but there were NO OTHER LISTINGS AT ALL for Doctor Who.
The Stars and Stripes did publish very comprehensive TV schedules for AFKN, AFVN, and the FEN stations during the 1960s and 1970s (the weekly schedule for AFVN alone took up an entire page in 1970!), whereas the Philippines network AFPN had very few. The Iceland and Germany listings were also very comprehensive.
Even a random spot check without using OCR of every second month between 1969 and 1985 failed to return any listings.
If these black and white episodes of Doctor Who had been bicycled through the various AFN networks around the world (which would have been the case; they wouldn't have aired in just the Asia region), they should have left a "footprint" on at least one of the listed TV stations, shouldn't they?
The only conclusion that we could draw based on the available published TV listings was that THESE EPISODES OF DOCTOR WHO DID NOT SCREEN ON THE AMERICAN ARMED FORCES NETWORKS.
So where on earth did those films found in Taiwan come from?
We are still exploring several possibilities... And hopefully can provide some answers in due course...