I'm thinking get the Lock-picking Lawyer over to open it up, "A click on one, two is binding, three is inter-dimensional, slight counter-rotation on four, might be a false gate".
My late mother was a 'Special' in the Met in the mid 1950's. She said that the only time she had cause to go into a Police Box, was to hang up waterproofs: sign the duty log; and, most important of all, use the box to eat an ice cream in on a warm day.
Working my way slowly and enjoyable through your videos, I suddenly hear the name of "Hannah Courtoy". I was doing my stepmother's family tree a couple of years ago and suddenly discovered she was related to Hannah. You've done a good job of clearing out most of the mystery - the Brompton Cemetery records are online and there's plenty of factual information about the mausoleum in them. It's not even true that the key is missing as a member of her extended family was put in there (dead, and in a coffin, obviously) only a few years ago.
I live in Edinburgh and had no idea that old police boxes aren't a thing elsewhere, so thanks. They had a sink in them which my father told me were used by policemen for peeing into. Several of these boxes are now coffee kiosks (no connection).
@@MontytheHorse - your almost right, regarding the British air-raid/civil-defence siren - that was on a pole next to these on the street corners, as the police were responsible for sounding them when warned by the military/RAF that the Luftwaffe was going to bomb that area 😉, 😨
I'm fairly sure I came across a blue one in Brunswick Street, Glasgow a few years back. But if you google image 'Glasgow police box' there seem to be quite a few, but some are fakes, I think.
Interestingly, the Glasgow ones were originally painted red (the only place in the UK where this happened) until the popularity of Doctor Who prompted them to be repainted to the more familiar blue. I believe a red one resides in the Glasgow Transport Museum.
The Tardis in the original episode was in a Scrap Merchants yard, since they are concrete, fixed to the ground, and have no real salvage value, it was out of place even there ...
Apparently some Edinburgh ones had running water. They all had a plug hole, so hot tea or coffee was an option. One had an armchair for the sergeant- or someone with enough clout- to get away with a snooze. I remember a retired officer talking about them. They're an ideal kiosk size too which is almost certainly why they've survived.
If you open the area outside of Earls Court Station in Google Street View and navigate into the police box that is there you get the interior of the Tardis. The easiest way is to take the “little man” and drop it on top of the police box.
My family migrated to Australia from Glasgow, & my mum once told me about the police in Glasgow used to be recruited from the highlands, like Billy Connolly described: "They looked like they swallowed a bear & left the arse hanging out." And my mum said that when you played up they'd drag you into one of those boxes, and watching from the outside, you could see it swaying.
Jago I really love your series and how you'd go seamlessly from one topic to another and back again helped by lots of dry humour! You are like a railway/London history-version of James Burke's "Connections", which influenced my own view of history immensely - Burke rejected linear narratives of history preferring to present the hidden interconnections between people and inventions. Many congratulations on having achieved the 13k subscription mark. Best regards from Hong Kong
@@JagoHazzard honestly, having been a railway enthusiast for the past two decades and the owner of dozens of VHS railway tapes (including John Betjeman's "Metroland") I have never seen someone explain railway history so well and so wittily. Your video on Queensbury is a case in point! I will be in London next April and I really hope to have a pint or a stroll with you. I'm sorry to have to write it here since I can't find a way of sending you a message directly, I'm happy to be corrected
That's a very interesting story indeed. Surely a good locksmith could open the lock. For a video that was not a Doctor Who documentary you had some of the best facts and history of the Tardis I have seen. Not that I am a Doctor Who fan or anything. Hold my jelly babies while I use my sonic screwdriver to open that door. Then I think K9 should go in first to check it out.
Love the fact that the next episode in this one is also called Episode 13 :) Having just watched it I apologise for any offence caused, I was unaware of the seriousness of the topic of the next episode and was not making light of it.
Thank you for another excellent video, if anyone is interested in the Police Boxes in Edinburgh, there is a geocache/Whereigo called “Edinburgh’s Cast Iron Heritage” which includes TARDIS noises when you find one!
Back to Brompton. This is uncanny. These bikes get everywhere. Very apt photo placement. Most amusing! The Edinburgh police boxes are unique in the UK. Because of their size they could accommodate a kettle, a sink and a chair though not all had water. I believe they were made of cast iron. They make ideal kiosks and coffee outlets which is why they survive although it must be hell on a long shift if the vendor gets caught short. They'd have to be cast iron too. Actually I thought the telephone kiosk dude did the Tardises too but that was Giles Gilbert Scott.
I remember there being a tardis with a phone, around Trafalgar Square. Also isn't Brompton cemetery the one they did some filming in for the RDJ Sherlock Holmes film? I intend to have a walk round there to walk in his footsteps when the pandemic is done, be cool to look at what seems to be the inspiration for John Carter aswell, criminally over looked that film I wish they'd done more in the series.
Emmeline Pankhurst is also buried at Brompton Cemetery. Her gravestone is beautiful - and is normally bedecked with Suffragette ribbons and purple and white flowers.
The 'Web of Fear', a Dr Who serial from the 1960s, was set in the underground and featured 'the Yeti'. The setting lent a claustrophobic and spooky atmosphere to the story, very enjoyable to 9 year-old me, particularly the memorable scene where the furry monsters pursue an army unit through a tunnel. My original intention in mentioning this was to perhaps provide another theme for you to explore with regards to where this was flimed but, according to Wikipedia, it transpires that the cost of location filming was prohibitive and all was done in the studio! However the high quality of the sets apparently led to accusations of clandestine on-location filming, so maybe there's some meat on those bones?
I did consider the idea of an alien invasion map of London based on the fact that just about every major landmark in the city has been some kind of Doctor Who location...
You actually got to see it when it was first shown? It was shown 7 months before I was born so I was out of luck on that ! Up until recently I had only ever seen episode 1 (back in 1987 when someone gave me a pirated tape with unreleased episodes) I flipped when I saw the rest had been found, I had waited 30 years to see it and thought I never would.
Sort of like that one '70s serial where they explored further into the interior of the TARDIS than just the control room, and strangely, it looked a very great deal like the interior of BBC Television Centre. :)
There is another police box in London, in Hendon next to the Northern Line, I think it belongs to the Met Police Training School. You can see it on right hand side of the line, going to Hendon.
Omg Jago you have done a video about Brompton Cemetery 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽 I jog pass this big tomb everyday always gives me the creeps. The latest film to use Brompton Cemetery was Guy Richies The Gentlemen, but it's been used for loads in the past.
The master's TARDIS worked correctly, in one setting it was a Grandfather (long case) Clock. In the Re-boot we saw the room full of Tardises (Tardi?) which looked like gray plastic tubes.
Wasn't there a episode where the doctor tries to get a fully working tardis, but the one he nicks gets broken in exactly the same way at the same place, or did I imagine it?
@@GreatSageSunWukong You did imagine it. There was a story where he briefly fixed the chameleon circuit, though! It didn’t last long; just the one story.
That’s making me wonder if it would disguise itself as a ventilation shaft or equipment locker upon materialising in a (space) naval ship, were it working correctly.
Was the use of these as interdimensional portals in Doctor Who the inspiration for Bill and Ted's use of an American-style phone booth in their excellent adventure?
My favorite part of that joke was always that Bill and Ted's time-traveling phone booth _isn't_ bigger on the inside, so as they accumulate their crew of famous historical figures, it gets increasingly crowded in there. :)
I'm surprised there's no mention of the fact that if you find the Earl's Court Police Box on Google Maps you can also find this 360° view of the interior, proving that it IS the Tardis 😉 maps.app.goo.gl/BbK7riY69e6RyDvp7
Jago I so enjoy all your episodes but this one struck a chord for me, as in one form or another I have either touched on, or been involved in every element of this episode . I like your delivery and style but most of all I like that you are so widely correct in what you state. these are not only good stories well told but they are a good and interesting record. Thank you and keep it coming
Speaking of Dr Who... Again. The four-part episodic story 'The Web of Fear', starring Patrick Troughton [spatial coordinates: mid sixties London], which, as I recall, took place almost entirely in the underground system, where the first use of UNIT were tasked with the Doctor to deal with the 'Yeti menace' (that turned-out to be remote-controlled robot, disguised as an 'abonimal snowman'... And controlled by an ET intelligence). I was a wee nipper when it aired, but can remember being suitably thrilled/horrified, as these beeping Yetis stalked the Doctor and his companions through the Underground tunnels of central London. But even then, I wondered why no-one, man or Yeti, got electrocuted! . But where was it filmed? Was it a BBC mockup of the architecture of the tunnels, or was it filmed in some disused part of the extant system? I recall it all looked pretty authentic.
I know this comment is 5 months old but I felt like I should still answer it lol. London Transport didn't allow the BBC to film in any stations, so they built their own sets to look like the old Charing Cross Station (modern day Embankment). Apparently LT threatened legal action as the sets were so realistic they thought they filmed in the station without permission
Are you aware of the police boxes in Glasgow as well, they are very tardisoid, especially the one on Buchanan Street. Other cities, such as Newcastle and Bristol still have examples of police boxes on the streets as well, i think?
You used to be able to click on the Police Box door in Google Maps and enter the TARDIS - it was in the style of the Eccelstone/Tennant's flight deck, I just tried it and it doesn't appear to work anymore :-(
That's officially the smallest police station in the UK, although it's just used for storage now. It's also more of a column. The light on top is rumoured to have come from the HMS Victory, in keeping with Nelson's column.
@@JagoHazzard blue peter did one which is how I remembered it. Noakes climbed the column, think it was Lesley Judd that looked at the pol stn. Or was it Nationwide
@@JagoHazzard I'm game to try, your time machine or mine? Edit, it will have to your's, since i got my freedom pass i haven't needed to use mine and the flux capacitor has gone flat and now i can't go back and remind myself to keep it charged.😢
@@JagoHazzard Sheffield has a Green One that is Larger, you can get to Sheffield on a little branch line from St Pancras ( and at one time from Marylebone Too using the joint GC/Met tracks for part of the journey )
@@JagoHazzard you did mention the ones in Edinburgh and they're not the right shape. I have been in one though; they're all right. They have a little sink and electricity in case you'd like some tea.
simpleminded1uk Fair point, fair point. I guess I just have a lot of nostalgia for the Edinburgh ones thanks to past holidays, so I was unfairly biased.
@@JagoHazzard I have been to edinburgh (festival, tattoo, royal mile, princes street etc, dont recall seeing them in the late 1980s but was not particulary looking for them.
Some people will go out of their way to avoid using the number 13. Jago Hazzard goes for labelling both episode 12 and episode 13 as 13. Way to avoid swimming the mainstream.
It is a real time machine. You sit in it and it moves forward in real time.
I'm thinking get the Lock-picking Lawyer over to open it up, "A click on one, two is binding, three is inter-dimensional, slight counter-rotation on four, might be a false gate".
lol :)
and I got a click out of five last week.
@@misterthegeoff9767 And six is binding next week as far as I remember…
.. using the pick Bosnial Bill and I made ..
You beat me to the comment by a year! Or did you travel back to do so?
My late mother was a 'Special' in the Met in the mid 1950's. She said that the only time she had cause to go into a Police Box, was to hang up waterproofs: sign the duty log; and, most important of all, use the box to eat an ice cream in on a warm day.
Working my way slowly and enjoyable through your videos, I suddenly hear the name of "Hannah Courtoy". I was doing my stepmother's family tree a couple of years ago and suddenly discovered she was related to Hannah. You've done a good job of clearing out most of the mystery - the Brompton Cemetery records are online and there's plenty of factual information about the mausoleum in them. It's not even true that the key is missing as a member of her extended family was put in there (dead, and in a coffin, obviously) only a few years ago.
I live in Edinburgh and had no idea that old police boxes aren't a thing elsewhere, so thanks. They had a sink in them which my father told me were used by policemen for peeing into. Several of these boxes are now coffee kiosks (no connection).
I remember seeing one of them in Edinburgh many years ago. I nearly wet myself!
They were a different design to the TARDIS version. I remember that they used to have air raid sirens on the roof. The Glasgow police boxes were red.
@@MontytheHorse - your almost right, regarding the British air-raid/civil-defence siren - that was on a pole next to these on the street corners, as the police were responsible for sounding them when warned by the military/RAF that the Luftwaffe was going to bomb that area 😉, 😨
I'm fairly sure I came across a blue one in Brunswick Street, Glasgow a few years back. But if you google image 'Glasgow police box' there seem to be quite a few, but some are fakes, I think.
Interestingly, the Glasgow ones were originally painted red (the only place in the UK where this happened) until the popularity of Doctor Who prompted them to be repainted to the more familiar blue.
I believe a red one resides in the Glasgow Transport Museum.
The Tardis in the original episode was in a Scrap Merchants yard, since they are concrete, fixed to the ground, and have no real salvage value, it was out of place even there ...
The Circle Line . Where Time Stands Still
Apparently some Edinburgh ones had running water. They all had a plug hole, so hot tea or coffee was an option. One had an armchair for the sergeant- or someone with enough clout- to get away with a snooze. I remember a retired officer talking about them. They're an ideal kiosk size too which is almost certainly why they've survived.
If you open the area outside of Earls Court Station in Google Street View and navigate into the police box that is there you get the interior of the Tardis. The easiest way is to take the “little man” and drop it on top of the police box.
Tried it. Failure 😞
@@harrysingh6577 you have to drop the little google man right on top of the police box. You can’t move into it. I have not tried it in a year or so.
Excellent as always.
Who else was waiting for the mausoleum to dematerialise at the end though? lol
My family migrated to Australia from Glasgow, & my mum once told me about the police in Glasgow used to be recruited from the highlands, like Billy Connolly described: "They looked like they swallowed a bear & left the arse hanging out."
And my mum said that when you played up they'd drag you into one of those boxes, and watching from the outside, you could see it swaying.
Jago I really love your series and how you'd go seamlessly from one topic to another and back again helped by lots of dry humour! You are like a railway/London history-version of James Burke's "Connections", which influenced my own view of history immensely - Burke rejected linear narratives of history preferring to present the hidden interconnections between people and inventions. Many congratulations on having achieved the 13k subscription mark. Best regards from Hong Kong
Many thanks!
@@JagoHazzard honestly, having been a railway enthusiast for the past two decades and the owner of dozens of VHS railway tapes (including John Betjeman's "Metroland") I have never seen someone explain railway history so well and so wittily. Your video on Queensbury is a case in point! I will be in London next April and I really hope to have a pint or a stroll with you. I'm sorry to have to write it here since I can't find a way of sending you a message directly, I'm happy to be corrected
If Jago had ended this video with the sounds of a departing TARDIS I would probably have fallen out of my chair.
That's a very interesting story indeed. Surely a good locksmith could open the lock.
For a video that was not a Doctor Who documentary you had some of the best facts and history of the Tardis I have seen. Not that I am a Doctor Who fan or anything.
Hold my jelly babies while I use my sonic screwdriver to open that door. Then I think K9 should go in first to check it out.
Love the fact that the next episode in this one is also called Episode 13 :)
Having just watched it I apologise for any offence caused, I was unaware of the seriousness of the topic of the next episode and was not making light of it.
Thank you for another excellent video, if anyone is interested in the Police Boxes in Edinburgh, there is a geocache/Whereigo called “Edinburgh’s Cast Iron Heritage” which includes TARDIS noises when you find one!
Back to Brompton. This is uncanny. These bikes get everywhere.
Very apt photo placement. Most amusing!
The Edinburgh police boxes are unique in the UK. Because of their size they could accommodate a kettle, a sink and a chair though not all had water. I believe they were made of cast iron. They make ideal kiosks and coffee outlets which is why they survive although it must be hell on a long shift if the vendor gets caught short. They'd have to be cast iron too. Actually I thought the telephone kiosk dude did the Tardises too but that was Giles Gilbert Scott.
I remember there being a tardis with a phone, around Trafalgar Square.
Also isn't Brompton cemetery the one they did some filming in for the RDJ Sherlock Holmes film? I intend to have a walk round there to walk in his footsteps when the pandemic is done, be cool to look at what seems to be the inspiration for John Carter aswell, criminally over looked that film I wish they'd done more in the series.
Brompton is indeed the location. I keep thinking I should do a full video there.
Earls Court station where you could buy a single or return platform ticket, people used station for a cut through to Warwick Ave.
Warwick road , Warwick ave is elsewhere .
@@dryliner6586 . It’s the other end of the station!
@@edwardoleyba3075 No ,Warwick Road.Warwick Avenue is on the Bakerloo line past Paddington .
Who wanders above and below the streets of old London Town without being seen? It’s our man Jago who absconded from Gallifrey in his Tardis.
Emmeline Pankhurst is also buried at Brompton Cemetery. Her gravestone is beautiful - and is normally bedecked with Suffragette ribbons and purple and white flowers.
The 'Web of Fear', a Dr Who serial from the 1960s, was set in the underground and featured 'the Yeti'. The setting lent a claustrophobic and spooky atmosphere to the story, very enjoyable to 9 year-old me, particularly the memorable scene where the furry monsters pursue an army unit through a tunnel. My original intention in mentioning this was to perhaps provide another theme for you to explore with regards to where this was flimed but, according to Wikipedia, it transpires that the cost of location filming was prohibitive and all was done in the studio! However the high quality of the sets apparently led to accusations of clandestine on-location filming, so maybe there's some meat on those bones?
I did consider the idea of an alien invasion map of London based on the fact that just about every major landmark in the city has been some kind of Doctor Who location...
@@JagoHazzard Good idea!
@@JagoHazzard Yes do it !!
You actually got to see it when it was first shown? It was shown 7 months before I was born so I was out of luck on that !
Up until recently I had only ever seen episode 1 (back in 1987 when someone gave me a pirated tape with unreleased episodes) I flipped when I saw the rest had been found, I had waited 30 years to see it and thought I never would.
Sort of like that one '70s serial where they explored further into the interior of the TARDIS than just the control room, and strangely, it looked a very great deal like the interior of BBC Television Centre. :)
Ah yes “not a tardis definitely just a police box” yuhuh
As a kid watching Doctor Who from outside the UK, I always thought that this thing was a phone booth painted blue to make it look weird! lol
Didn't Disney use the time travel tomb story as a plot device for John Carter?
That was, of course, informative and entertaining ..... I think I shall head off now to enjoy a beer. :)
There is an original at the Goodwood Motor racing track down in Chichester.
Also one at Hendon police college.
There is another police box in London, in Hendon next to the Northern Line, I think it belongs to the Met Police Training School. You can see it on right hand side of the line, going to Hendon.
There is a old police box which has been moved from Cottenham Drive to the entrance of new Hendon Police Training Centre!
there was a police box on western road, glasgow outside botanic gardens and Bucannon street , Glasgow city centre
Squirrel! Red too, not one of those horrid grey American ones.
The fuck did you say about my squirrels
They’re both delicious
no red squirrels in London - that's a grey
what a story - passed by the blue box once, next time I'll find the cemetery one ☺
I subscribed not because I have any particular interest in London but because I find your videos so entertaining.
Dont forget the time recording clocks in 55 Broadway.
The Earl's Court Police Box is called a "TARDIS" in Pokémon Go.
Yes there is a cable car in the east
Omg Jago you have done a video about Brompton Cemetery 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽 I jog pass this big tomb everyday always gives me the creeps.
The latest film to use Brompton Cemetery was Guy Richies The Gentlemen, but it's been used for loads in the past.
Where is the lock picking lawyer when you need him?
There's still a few in Glasgow.
particulary fascinating ,,,,Jago...........thank you..........h6
The master's TARDIS worked correctly, in one setting it was a Grandfather (long case) Clock. In the Re-boot we saw the room full of Tardises (Tardi?) which looked like gray plastic tubes.
Wasn't there a episode where the doctor tries to get a fully working tardis, but the one he nicks gets broken in exactly the same way at the same place, or did I imagine it?
The chameleon circuit in the Doctor's TARDIS is broken, but not in the master's TARDIS.
@@GreatSageSunWukong You did imagine it.
There was a story where he briefly fixed the chameleon circuit, though! It didn’t last long; just the one story.
That’s making me wonder if it would disguise itself as a ventilation shaft or equipment locker upon materialising in a (space) naval ship, were it working correctly.
Was the use of these as interdimensional portals in Doctor Who the inspiration for Bill and Ted's use of an American-style phone booth in their excellent adventure?
My favorite part of that joke was always that Bill and Ted's time-traveling phone booth _isn't_ bigger on the inside, so as they accumulate their crew of famous historical figures, it gets increasingly crowded in there. :)
Absolutely crazy... I want to investigate that tomb more
We have a Police Box at Crich Derbyshire. National Tramway Museum
Fascinating! With a slightly creepy end...
thanks for the vide, informative as usual
voila a comment for Mr Hazzard, we aim to please
a collab with Tim Traveler will be great!
I always call them clocks.
Fascinating!
I'm surprised there's no mention of the fact that if you find the Earl's Court Police Box on Google Maps you can also find this 360° view of the interior, proving that it IS the Tardis 😉
maps.app.goo.gl/BbK7riY69e6RyDvp7
4:35 Squirrel!
The Tardis is my google maps starting point. ✊😀👍
There's still one in Scarborough
Well that & the design of Ms Courtaulds tomb was used in two episodes of Dr Who as the outder of The Masters TARDIS
I've been enjoying so many of your videos lately, great stuff! Just wanna give a shout-out to the squirrel at 4:35
That guy is the hardest working squirrel in showbiz.
Well spotted.
Jago I so enjoy all your episodes but this one struck a chord for me, as in one form or another I have either touched on, or been involved in every element of this episode . I like your delivery and style but most of all I like that you are so widely correct in what you state. these are not only good stories well told but they are a good and interesting record. Thank you and keep it coming
You’re very welcome!
A time machine in a tomb and police box on the lamb. Lucky number thirteen.
Speaking of Dr Who... Again. The four-part episodic story 'The Web of Fear', starring Patrick Troughton [spatial coordinates: mid sixties London], which, as I recall, took place almost entirely in the underground system, where the first use of UNIT were tasked with the Doctor to deal with the 'Yeti menace' (that turned-out to be remote-controlled robot, disguised as an 'abonimal snowman'... And controlled by an ET intelligence). I was a wee nipper when it aired, but can remember being suitably thrilled/horrified, as these beeping Yetis stalked the Doctor and his companions through the Underground tunnels of central London. But even then, I wondered why no-one, man or Yeti, got electrocuted!
.
But where was it filmed? Was it a BBC mockup of the architecture of the tunnels, or was it filmed in some disused part of the extant system?
I recall it all looked pretty authentic.
I know this comment is 5 months old but I felt like I should still answer it lol. London Transport didn't allow the BBC to film in any stations, so they built their own sets to look like the old Charing Cross Station (modern day Embankment). Apparently LT threatened legal action as the sets were so realistic they thought they filmed in the station without permission
That one looks a good deal bigger than the Doctor’s.
First police box in England was in Sunderland
Isn't there a Police Box - of sorts - on Trafalgar Square (albeit disused/abandoned)?
You are correct! Albeit a stone one in keeping with the surroundings.
I wonder how many police boxes survive in the UK
2:08 - So is Roger the real Dr. Who?
Forgive me thinking it was John all this time! Silly me!
Maybe we have got the design for the tardis wrong and the real one is the tomb?? 😆
Are you aware of the police boxes in Glasgow as well, they are very tardisoid, especially the one on Buchanan Street.
Other cities, such as Newcastle and Bristol still have examples of police boxes on the streets as well, i think?
I’ll have to check them out.
You used to be able to click on the Police Box door in Google Maps and enter the TARDIS - it was in the style of the Eccelstone/Tennant's flight deck, I just tried it and it doesn't appear to work anymore
:-(
I thought it was the late Matt Smith one?
@@DrWhoFanJ no, it was the one with the spray concrete looking, branch shaped pillars
@@Ian_UK That Easter Egg must’ve existed a lot longer than I thought, then, and been updated, ‘cause I only remember it being the late-Matt-era one!
@@DrWhoFanJ Mat was after Eccelstone/Tennant
@@Ian_UK Where did I say otherwise?
And it’s Matt (two T’s) and Eccleston (no closing E).
4:36 spot the squirrel
With the key missing, it appears to be a Schrödinger's time machine ;) - I guess
So why was it built, and who built the the Earls Court Police Box if it isn't a genuine one?
the police as a cctv post
Inside, bigger on the inside.
Dont forget the small police station (box?) In trafalgar square
That's officially the smallest police station in the UK, although it's just used for storage now. It's also more of a column. The light on top is rumoured to have come from the HMS Victory, in keeping with Nelson's column.
Funnily enough, I passed that box the other day and thought there might be a video to be made about it.
@@mcarp555 I never knew that
@@JagoHazzard blue peter did one which is how I remembered it. Noakes climbed the column, think it was Lesley Judd that looked at the pol stn. Or was it Nationwide
If this is episode 13 where's 12? And why is there another 13 after this one...? Some kind of timey-wimey shenanigans?
Somewhere i have a key for a Tardis (police box) along with a whistle, and now you say there aren't any to use it on, and this is progress?😢
Maybe we can lure one forward through time from the 60s.
@@JagoHazzard I'm game to try, your time machine or mine?
Edit, it will have to your's, since i got my freedom pass i haven't needed to use mine and the flux capacitor has gone flat and now i can't go back and remind myself to keep it charged.😢
@5:00 Or wether it has a telephone inside
I find the Tube fascinating, but when I'm on it, I feel pretty stressed. Often for no particular reason. Wonder if this is a 'thing' yet.
Title states "Episode 13" although it is No. 12.
Have you been out drinking with the Doctor again?
It's not a TARDIS. ( ok wink wink)
the key!! Is the Key? Is it not??
Nothing about the original tardis-style police boxes in Glasgow then?
They’re not on the District Line. Unless they’re at the eastern end, I hardly ever go down there.
@@JagoHazzard Sheffield has a Green One that is Larger, you can get to Sheffield on a little branch line from St Pancras ( and at one time from Marylebone Too using the joint GC/Met tracks for part of the journey )
@@JagoHazzard you did mention the ones in Edinburgh and they're not the right shape. I have been in one though; they're all right. They have a little sink and electricity in case you'd like some tea.
simpleminded1uk Fair point, fair point. I guess I just have a lot of nostalgia for the Edinburgh ones thanks to past holidays, so I was unfairly biased.
@@JagoHazzard I have been to edinburgh (festival, tattoo, royal mile, princes street etc, dont recall seeing them in the late 1980s but was not particulary looking for them.
Some people will go out of their way to avoid using the number 13. Jago Hazzard goes for labelling both episode 12 and episode 13 as 13. Way to avoid swimming the mainstream.
Thanks, I always enjoy your contributions.
P.S. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emirates_Air_Line_(cable_car)
Key is missing... Best leave it locked and not meddle with it.
You should contact YT channels of LOCKPICKINGLAWYER or BOSNIANBILL re: missing key, they should be of immense help
Do you like Doctor Who?
I quite enjoy it. I must admit that I stopped following during the Moffatt era.
You liar! There is a real TARDIS in Glasgow, near St. Mungo. I saw and checked it myself.
Good Lord doesn’t anybody cut the grass in the cemeteries
Dr Who is too PC...
When wasn’t it PC‽