You see, that’s the REAL Doctor right there, using his impeccable and razor-sharp intellect to outwit an enemy and get he and Sarah Jane out of a jam! Tom Baker will always be my Dr. Who. I grew up watching this guy, and this guy only as the Doctor. Whatever the heck they’ve got going on with the latest Doctor is nothing but window dressing. Number 4 will always be the greatest Time Lord from Gallifrey!
Watching on an NTSC TV from across the room, especially if I'm watching the VHS copy I made of the PBS "movie," you would never see that the buttons were held on by duct tape. I never did until I rewatched it, on my laptop, which is two feet from my nose. But I still like the riddle. And guess who's back?
@@jakeisthedoctor2308 Well, it was part of that event they ran a few years ago, The Doctor's Finest. They may have edited it down for time. At least, that's my guess.
@@sethsholtis5297 I wouldn't be surprised if scenes were cut in compilations. Back then stories ran for 100 minutes across 4 episodes on average and finales were 150 minutes.
This Resembles A Very Special Riddle, From An Episode of The Powerpuff Girls, "Him Diddle Riddle" In Which They Saw There Were Two Identical Ms. Keane, Which Are Hovering Over A Very Heated Swimming Pool, With Man-Eating Sharks, and Discover Which One of Ms. Keane is The Truthteller and The Other Ms. Keane is The Liar, and Also On Yu-Gi-Oh, Where Yugi Moto and Joey Wheeler Had A Very Similar Riddle, At Maximillan's Duelist Kingdom, Where They Face Off With The Two Brothers of Para and Dox.
Yes it is an example of a very old tradition of abstract logic puzzles involving truth-tellers and liars which have been appearing in TV shows, magazines and children's christmas annuals and other such places for ages and ages. The original reason I ever needed this uploaded was to use it as an example of the genre of puzzle.
you found a reality wall not a puzzle, there is no solution using this reality, doctor was wrong, you have to ask .. if you were the bad guy and wanted to live which button to push to live
Your comment is a year old but I'll reply anyway. The good guy would know that the bad guy would lie and point to the death button so that's the button the good guy would point at. The bad guy would know that the bad guy in your question would point at the death button so he would lie and point at the live button. So obviously that's not what you want.
Blame Mary Whitehouse she was on a crusade to destroy it because - think of the children...she caused the BBC to remove Holmes and Hinchcliffe there by killing the golden age of Dr Who, other than City of Death....
@@MaccamatBux Mary Whitehouse was a vocal critic of the golden years of Dr Who (Tom Baker, Robert Holmes) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seeds_of_Doom she was against the minor amount of horror/violence showing up in Dr Who and pushed to get Dr Who taken off the air. The effect was Robert Holmes was moved on to more adult tv programming and thus the great stories, Hand of Fear, Pyramid of Mars, Terror of the Zygons, Tales of Wang Chiang etc were never surpassed. I guess until what I think as the Weeping Angels probably being the most scariest of any Dr Who since Baker.
@@jakeisthedoctor2308 Robert Holmes was part of the writing team for Pyramids of Mars and many others. Quote from Wikipedia Holmes was known for his morbid sense of humour and his inclination to write dark and disturbing material. The previous producer Barry Letts often had Holmes tone down his writing, but Letts's successor Philip Hinchcliffe wanted to take the programme in a darker and more dynamic direction along with the introduction of its new lead actor, Tom Baker. Holmes continued as script editor for the next three years, seeing Doctor Who through one of its most successful eras in terms of both viewing figures and critical acclaim. Despite this, a number of stories came under fire from Mary Whitehouse of the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association for their alleged excessive violence or frightening tone. Some of the most controversial stories were written by Holmes himself.
"Which switch would he indicate?" for what. Script flawed as the Doctor's question does not specify an outcome so he could not know to which outcome the guardian was answering too. Labyrinth did it better: ruclips.net/video/2dgmgub8mHw/видео.html
Given that the Doctor refers to 'the question' and the Eye poses the Riddle as: "Which is the Guardian of Life?", one COULD infer that the question being posed is 'Which is the release switch?'. Not CLEAR, yes, but followable.
I’ve seen three versions of this trial in film and tv. This is the only one where the actual method to solving it plays out.
The best Doctor Who story of them all. Flawless.
Doubt
Within the top 10 at least. Several where on par with this one. Masterfully written as many of these early episodes where.
But not "hand on cushion"-less.
Power of the Daleks?
A classic logic puzzle...
One of the greatest.
Star Gate before Star Gate
That was such a bamboozle of a riddle ...when you were 9 years old! Haha!
Which one would the other on choose.
@@Dave-te5bs What do you mean? Both would point to the same one.
One of my favorite classic bits from one of my all-time favorite stories.
The guardian's indication was vague to the point of being useless. Lucky the Doctor had read the script.
From a certain angle it may seem vague but if you were looking from the perspective of the finger, it would be clearer.
As me or as a worm?
I wish I had a video cassette recorder when this aired back in the day....I could have learned logic. Thanks for this post.
You see, that’s the REAL Doctor right there, using his impeccable and razor-sharp intellect to outwit an enemy and get he and Sarah Jane out of a jam!
Tom Baker will always be my Dr. Who.
I grew up watching this guy, and this guy only as the Doctor.
Whatever the heck they’ve got going on with the latest Doctor is nothing but window dressing.
Number 4 will always be the greatest Time Lord from Gallifrey!
Thank you so much for posting this clip because it is one of the best Tom Baker scenes and one of my favourites. ✌🏻
And it was honored by Jim Henson later on : Sarah's Certain Death Riddle
Labyrinth?
I am not sure how old a riddle it is.
@@ariaflame-auIt was around long before Doctor Who
Screenwriters still try to pass it off as something novel from time to time.
Genius.
Not really
Pyramids of Mars ❤️
Love the silver gaffa tape - those were the days….😊
Watching on an NTSC TV from across the room, especially if I'm watching the VHS copy I made of the PBS "movie," you would never see that the buttons were held on by duct tape. I never did until I rewatched it, on my laptop, which is two feet from my nose. But I still like the riddle. And guess who's back?
Such a simple riddle, The Asaryians had a sense of humor.
If the defenses had deemed them a threat, they would have been instantly killed.
Osirins
Simple and true.
Clever Dr🙌
Best doctor who ever!!!!
i still got the vhs copy of this story!
Me too.
Brilliant
Not smart writing. Not well done. Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant.
Dr Who created an XOR gate.
0:34 - Duck tape?
and badly done too - look at the creases!
Assistant directors have rolls of it attached to them
I had to be almost 50 to get the riddle
I've seen this episode before, but this scene wasn't in it. Why would they cut this scene? Who doesn't want to see the Doctor flex his mental muscles?
What are you talking about? It was in the episode
@@jakeisthedoctor2308 Well, it was part of that event they ran a few years ago, The Doctor's Finest. They may have edited it down for time. At least, that's my guess.
@@sethsholtis5297 I wouldn't be surprised if scenes were cut in compilations. Back then stories ran for 100 minutes across 4 episodes on average and finales were 150 minutes.
or ask, if u were bady guy or good guy and wanted to die wich button to push to die
The bad guy would still lie and point at the good one.
@@MaccamatBux the evil guys would do the opposite
Effects were good back then..
How would I know which one I was
The logic is on point, but how could he tell which switch that mummy was actually pointing at! Always bothered me as a kid.
Who's here after Ruby Sunday?
EoD, but no relation. I'm just having fun.
This Resembles A Very Special Riddle, From An Episode of The Powerpuff Girls, "Him Diddle Riddle" In Which They Saw There Were Two Identical Ms. Keane, Which Are Hovering Over A Very Heated Swimming Pool, With Man-Eating Sharks, and Discover Which One of Ms. Keane is The Truthteller and The Other Ms. Keane is The Liar, and Also On Yu-Gi-Oh, Where Yugi Moto and Joey Wheeler Had A Very Similar Riddle, At Maximillan's Duelist Kingdom, Where They Face Off With The Two Brothers of Para and Dox.
Yes it is an example of a very old tradition of abstract logic puzzles involving truth-tellers and liars which have been appearing in TV shows, magazines and children's christmas annuals and other such places for ages and ages. The original reason I ever needed this uploaded was to use it as an example of the genre of puzzle.
Lucky Karl Pilkington wasn’t playing the Doctor.
k9
Mummy’s
you found a reality wall not a puzzle, there is no solution using this reality, doctor was wrong, you have to ask .. if you were the bad guy and wanted to live which button to push to live
Your comment is a year old but I'll reply anyway. The good guy would know that the bad guy would lie and point to the death button so that's the button the good guy would point at. The bad guy would know that the bad guy in your question would point at the death button so he would lie and point at the live button. So obviously that's not what you want.
Unfortunately the series failed after this mainly due to poor script s and casting, such a shame
Blame Mary Whitehouse she was on a crusade to destroy it because - think of the children...she caused the BBC to remove Holmes and Hinchcliffe there by killing the golden age of Dr Who, other than City of Death....
What do you mean? This season was great!
What are you talking about?
@@MaccamatBux Mary Whitehouse was a vocal critic of the golden years of Dr Who (Tom Baker, Robert Holmes) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seeds_of_Doom she was against the minor amount of horror/violence showing up in Dr Who and pushed to get Dr Who taken off the air. The effect was Robert Holmes was moved on to more adult tv programming and thus the great stories, Hand of Fear, Pyramid of Mars, Terror of the Zygons, Tales of Wang Chiang etc were never surpassed. I guess until what I think as the Weeping Angels probably being the most scariest of any Dr Who since Baker.
@@jakeisthedoctor2308 Robert Holmes was part of the writing team for Pyramids of Mars and many others. Quote from Wikipedia
Holmes was known for his morbid sense of humour and his inclination to write dark and disturbing material. The previous producer Barry Letts often had Holmes tone down his writing, but Letts's successor Philip Hinchcliffe wanted to take the programme in a darker and more dynamic direction along with the introduction of its new lead actor, Tom Baker.
Holmes continued as script editor for the next three years, seeing Doctor Who through one of its most successful eras in terms of both viewing figures and critical acclaim. Despite this, a number of stories came under fire from Mary Whitehouse of the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association for their alleged excessive violence or frightening tone. Some of the most controversial stories were written by Holmes himself.
"Which switch would he indicate?" for what. Script flawed as the Doctor's question does not specify an outcome so he could not know to which outcome the guardian was answering too. Labyrinth did it better: ruclips.net/video/2dgmgub8mHw/видео.html
Given that the Doctor refers to 'the question' and the Eye poses the Riddle as: "Which is the Guardian of Life?", one COULD infer that the question being posed is 'Which is the release switch?'.
Not CLEAR, yes, but followable.