"No, Doctor. Look, I'm telling you this, we're finished. You're just too callous for me. Anything goes by the board, anything at all."
"That's just not true, Jamie. I've never held that the end justifies the means."
"Ach, words. What do I care about words? You don't give that much for a living soul except yourself."
"I care about life. I care about human beings. Do you think I let you go through that Dalek test lightly?"
"I don't know, did you? Look, Doctor, just whose side are you on?"
-- Jamie McCrimmon and the Second Doctor, Doctor Who: "The Evil of the Daleks"
Hello again, everyone! My partner in time Jesse Jackson and I are back with a new episode of Next Stop Everywhere: The Doctor Who Podcast! This time, we're joined by Special Guest Companion Holly Mac as we discuss "The Evil of the Daleks", the ninth serial from Doctor Who Season 4 in 1967, featuring Patrick Troughton as the Second Doctor, Frazer Hines as Jamie McCrimmon, and the introduction of Deborah Watling as Victoria Waterfield!
In this episode, Jesse and I discuss things like Jesse waiting to come back out to Columbus, Holly watching Inter Milan football, Jesse watching "The Evil of the Daleks" on Tubi, my getting the Target novelization by John Peel in 1993, waiting for the surviving Episode 2 to be released on video, the new novelization of "The Evil of the Daleks" written by Frazer Hines, Jesse's local polka fusion band Brave Combo, Episode 2 being found in a car boot sale, "The Evil of the Daleks" originally planned as the last Dalek story on Doctor Who, Denise Buckley originally being cast as Victoria Waterfield, the Beatles song "Paperback Writer" originally being featured in Episode One, Patrick Troughton and Deborah Watling going on holiday during production, Jamie and Kemel working together to rescue Victoria, Kemel being likeable even as a mute character, the Daleks threatening the Doctor into working for them, Jamie calling out the Doctor for collaborating with the Daleks, the Second Doctor being a manipulator like the Seventh Doctor, Victoria's characterization being a victim of 1960s male writers, Theodore Maxtible wanting the Daleks to give him the alchemical secret of turning base metals into gold, Edward Waterfield and Theodore Maxtible somehow inventing a time machine in Victorian England, the first appearance of the Dalek Emperor, Jesse's Dalek spinoff series My Three Daleks, our favorite quotes of the episode, my Reverse the Reverse the Polarity segment, new listener feedback from Christine Peruski and Dave Proctor, DJ Nik returning to talk an early Matt Smith story, and more!
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