, following the same template as the French redub but this time using the episode
the series took a six month break and eventually resumed with weekly Sunday lunchtime broadcasts of the remaining episodes on October 3
premiered on BBC 2 on Friday October 1st 1993 at 6pm, with the first episode attracting an audience of 4.17 million viewers and subsequent episodes performing consistently well. The return of the series was once again accompanied by a flurry of merchandising, and the result was another successful revival of a nearly thirty-year-old series. The episodes were however edited to remove the appearance of the Spectrum logo and cut to black during the mid-episode advert break cliffhanger, with the two halves of each episode now running seamlessly into each other. The series took a break for Christmas after
1994
Captain Scarlet continued into 1994 (resuming with
The Trap on January 7
th) but as with
Stingray BBC 2 chose not to air all the episodes during its first run. This time however, only one story would be held back; the flashback episode
The Inquisition, with the series instead ending with
Attack on Cloudbase on May 27
th 1994. Meanwhile,
Thunderbirds in Hindi was shown again from January 11
th until March 24
th.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9DNQq8cm8o
During the final weeks of
Captain Scarlet’s first run on BBC 2 another Anderson series had arrived on BBC 1, as
Joe 90 premiered at 7.45am on Saturday April 23
rd. In keeping with the public misconception of
Joe 90 as a more child friendly Supermarionation series, the BBC chose to air the series as part of its children’s programming block known as CBBC, hosted by the likes of Chris Jarvis, Zoe Ball, Toby Anstis, and Philippa Forester. In order to fit that timeslot, cuts were made to many episodes to limit the level of violence and gunplay; cuts that had never been needed to be made to the early evening broadcasts of
Thunderbirds and co on BBC 2. In addition, the show’s time-lapse zooms at the advert break points were often trimmed, episodes which featured a pre-titles sequence were re-edited to move it to after the opening titles instead, and the series was broadcast with a completely new
Joe 90 logo (seen here);
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yonIli-biB4
While the BBC 2 broadcasts of
Thunderbirds had enjoyed average audience viewing figures of between four and seven million, the Saturday morning screenings of
Joe 90 struggled to reach even a quarter of a million – scuppering Vivid Imaginations’ hopes for another smash hit rerun that would guarantee sales figures for their
Joe 90 merchandise comparable to that of their highly successful
Captain Scarlet range.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-9qlk51ylVU
While
Joe was failing to make an impact on Saturday mornings on BBC 1, BBC 2 was preparing a night of programming dedicated to Lord Lew Grade and ATV. Broadcast on Saturday August 27
th, this five hour ‘ATV Night’ prompted BBC 1 to join in by scheduling accompanying weeknight episodes of four ITC action shows beginning on Monday August 29th, which included two live action Anderson series;
Space:1999 (
War Games) on August 30th, and
The Protectors (
Triple Cross) on Thursday September 1
st.
War Games would be shown again during 1998 as part of BBC 2’s full repeat run of
Space:1999, but
Triple Cross was the only episode of
The Protectors to air on any of their channels.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_w0DsFJwZDY
Captain Scarlet returned to BBC 2 for a second Friday evening run commencing on September 9
th with the previously unscreened
The Inquisition and then proceeding through the entire series again from
The Mysterons the following week. Meanwhile, the BBC 1 Saturday morning reruns of
Joe 90 were halted after
Child of the Sun God on September 17
th, resuming on December 27
th with the first of the eight remaining episodes
See You Down There and continuing each weekday morning at 10.30am.
Thunderbirds in French was shown again, from September 20
th to November 22
nd, while September 22
nd saw the start of another run of
Thunderbirds in Hindi which concluded on December 1
st.
December 19
th saw the start of the shortest
Thunderbirds repeat run yet, as children’s schedule filler in the week leading up to Christmas; daily 8.15am BBC 2 weekday repeats of
Trapped in the Sky,
Pit of Peril,
City of Fire,
Sun Probe, then temporarily ending with
Give or Take a Million on December 23rd. This run would continue into 1995 - but not very far!
TO BE CONTINUED...