Radar trackers reporting ETT of news roundup – somewhere on a screen near you!
This week’s edition of the Gerry Anderson Podcast launched on Sunday evening, and featured the first part of an interview with Morgan Jeffery and Tom Eames from the Two Geeks, Two Beers podcast! If you prefer to stick with traditional audio-only rather than our new and improved video format you can still catch it (and all other previous episodes) every week either through our website or via your podcast platform of choice.
Also new this week over on the Gerry Anderson Randomiser Podcast (also available on all podcast platforms) the Stingray crew set out to investigate the destruction of several drilling rigs, in Sea of Oil!
Speaking of Stingray, Gerry and Sylvia Anderson’s first full-colour Supermarionation series launches today (Saturday March 2nd) at 3pm on Talking Pictures TV – and you can read an article about it here! A third run of the first 13 episodes of Fireball XL5 is also currently airing on the channel Friday evenings at 6.30pm.
We’ve also got some exciting news for attendees of the upcoming Stand by for Action 2 concert! We’re spilling the beans on what goodies VIP ticket holders can expect to find in their goodie bags in this new article! If you haven’t yet pre-ordered your tickets to the concert, you can do so here!
Our limited edition Thunderbird 2 collectible had a terrific launch weekend, with over 75% of stock now sold! If you’re still on the fence about placing an order, don’t wait much longer – the clock is ticking!
Our own Jamie Anderson celebrated his birthday this week on March 1st, while popular Anderson episodes that first aired in decades past include the very first episode of Four Feather Falls How It Began (February 25th 1960), Supercar‘s Hi-Jack (Feburary 25th 1962), Lavender Castle‘s A Stitch in Time (February 25th 1999), New Captain Scarlet‘s Swarm (February 26th 2005), Stingray‘s Tom Thumb Tempest (February 28th 1965), Captain Scarlet‘s Flight 104 (March 1st 1968), and The Protectors‘ Wheels (March 1st 1974).
Deploy the mobiles; the roundup must have dipped under our radar screen again!
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