Difference between revisions of "Belgium"
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− | '''Doctor Who''' did not air on any terrestrial stations in '''[[wikipedia:Belgium|BELGIUM]]''', but | + | '''Doctor Who''' did not air on any terrestrial stations in '''[[wikipedia:Belgium|BELGIUM]]''', but it was available by other means. |
− | Under the right atmospheric conditions, and with specially modified aerials, some viewers on the coast could tune | + | Under the right atmospheric conditions, and with specially modified aerials, some viewers on the coast could tune in to transmissions directly from the BBC propagating across the English Channel. |
− | From '''24 March 1987''', '''Doctor Who''' was available via the UK satellite station [[Super Channel | + | In '''1975 and 1976''', and again in '''1985 and 1986''', viewers could see the programme on cable or terrestrial transmissions from the [[Netherlands]]. |
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+ | BBC1 became officially available on the Belgium subscriber cable network 'Intergem' from '''October 1983''' (with BBC2 added months later), so '''Doctor Who''' would have been seen from season 21 on-wards. (And by '''1984''' (if not earlier) BBC1 and BBC2 may have both been available "live" via satellite.) | ||
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+ | From '''24 March 1987''', '''Doctor Who''' was available via the UK satellite station [[Super Channel]]. | ||
{{Image table | {{Image table | ||
− | |[[File:BelgiumNED1.JPG|thumb|right| | + | |[[File:BelgiumNED1.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Netherlands channel TROS could be viewed in Belgium - the listing here is for [[Robot]] ep1 on 28 July 1975; Belgian newspaper, De Voorpost]] |
− | |[[File:BelgiumFrance.JPG|right|thumb| | + | |[[File:BelgiumFrance.JPG|right|thumb|475px|French station TF1 could be seen in Belgium - this listing shows the Saturday and Sunday morning airings on 22-23 April 1989; Belgian newspaper, De Voorpost]] |
}} | }} | ||
+ | The series could also be viewed on cable or satellite from [[France]] (in '''1989'''), and [[Germany]] ('''1989-1995'''), and on [[BBC Prime]] in the mid-'''1990s'''. | ||
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==Belgium in Doctor Who== | ==Belgium in Doctor Who== | ||
*The Gatwick airport Commandant took a call from Brussels ([[The Faceless Ones]]) | *The Gatwick airport Commandant took a call from Brussels ([[The Faceless Ones]]) |
Revision as of 04:46, 25 July 2020
Doctor Who did not air on any terrestrial stations in BELGIUM, but it was available by other means.
Under the right atmospheric conditions, and with specially modified aerials, some viewers on the coast could tune in to transmissions directly from the BBC propagating across the English Channel.
In 1975 and 1976, and again in 1985 and 1986, viewers could see the programme on cable or terrestrial transmissions from the Netherlands.
BBC1 became officially available on the Belgium subscriber cable network 'Intergem' from October 1983 (with BBC2 added months later), so Doctor Who would have been seen from season 21 on-wards. (And by 1984 (if not earlier) BBC1 and BBC2 may have both been available "live" via satellite.)
From 24 March 1987, Doctor Who was available via the UK satellite station Super Channel.
The series could also be viewed on cable or satellite from France (in 1989), and Germany (1989-1995), and on BBC Prime in the mid-1990s.
Belgium in Doctor Who
- The Gatwick airport Commandant took a call from Brussels (The Faceless Ones)
- The Doctor says he has met Napoleon Bonaparte - perhaps on the eve of the battle of Waterloo (1815) (Day of the Daleks)
- The Doctor mentions Waterloo in The Sontaran Experiment
- The Doctor was with Puccini before he died (in Brussels) (TV Movie)