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The TV doctor can be traced back to the earliest days of television. Back in 1954, the drama Medic , on NBC, was the first show to focus on a doctor (played by Richard Boone ) doing procedures.
100 Greatest Episodes of All-Time (1997) and Top 100 Episodes of All Time (2009) are lists of the 100 "best" television show episodes on U.S. television as published by TV Guide. The first list, published on June 28, 1997, was produced in collaboration with Nick at Nite's TV Land. [1] [2] The revised list was
In a 2010 article, Charlie Jane Anders of the same site listed the cliffhanger to the ninth episode — in which the Doctor and his companions escape the base and try to get back to the TARDIS but their movements are slowed down as the Doctor tries to unlock and open the TARDIS doors — as one of the greatest Doctor Who cliffhangers ever. [13]
This is a list of Dr. Finlay's Casebook television episodes from the series that ran from 1962 until 1971. It had eight series of original episodes. Series one to seven aired in black and white, series eight was aired in colour. A total of 191 50-minute episodes were produced; 122 are missing.
Doctor Who – Series 1, Episode 2: ‘The Daleks’ 1963 British TV had already experienced a science-fiction phenomenon with The Quatermass Experiment a full decade before this episode of the ...
Doctors was originally shown at 12:30 pm as a lead-in to BBC News at One. [7] For a brief trial period in mid-2000, episodes from the first series were shown on Fridays at 7:00 pm, but due to rival soap Emmerdale being transmitted at the same time, Doctors suffered from low ratings, and was instead trialled in an afternoon time slot. [8]
Skill, cunning and some good-hearted larceny help three ex-Medical Center physicians keep their ramshackle community hospital operating in a tough part of town. Scott Hylands , William Redfield , Kim Richards , Percy Rodriguez , William Windom , Mary McCarty and Philip Michael Thomas guest star.
The series centres around the everyday lifesaving efforts of the Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia. [1] It was preceded by a three-part miniseries in 1985, and 221 episodes were produced over nine seasons. [2] The Flying Doctors aired until 6 October 1992. [3] In January 1993, the series was renamed R.F.D.S.