Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Recap / DoctorWhoS10E5TheGreenDeath

Go To

1[[WMG:[[center:[-''[[Series/DoctorWho Doctor Who]]'' [[Recap/DoctorWho recap index]]\
2'''Third Doctor Era'''\
3'''Season 10:''' [[Recap/DoctorWhoS10E1TheThreeDoctors 1]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS10E2CarnivalOfMonsters 2]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS10E3FrontierInSpace 3]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS10E4PlanetOfTheDaleks 4]] | '''5'''\
4'''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS9E1DayOfTheDaleks <<< Season 9]]''' | '''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS11E1TheTimeWarrior Season 11 >>>]]''']]-]]]
5!The Green Death
6[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/maggots_6225.jpg]]
7[[caption-width-right:350:This is an actual screenshot of a ''Doctor Who'' serial that contains a GreenAesop. [[SincerityMode Seriously]].]]
8->Written by Robert Sloman and Creator/BarryLetts[[note]]uncredited[[/note]]\
9Directed by Michael Briant\
10'''Production code:''' TTT\
11'''Air dates:''' 19 May - 23 June 1973\
12'''Number of episodes:''' 6
13
14->''"Stevens, listen to me. You've seen where this efficiency of yours leads. Wholesale pollution of the countryside. Devilish creatures spawned by the filthy by-products of your technology. Men... men walking around like brainless vegetables. Death. Disease. Destruction."''
15-->-- '''The Doctor''' gets all eco-warrior
16
17JustForFun/{{The one w|ith}}here the Doctor goes crossdressing, and we say goodbye to Jo Grant.
18----
19
20A Welsh miner is found dead, his skin glowing bright green. UNIT is naturally called in to the village of Llanfairfach to investigate. A local environmental group, led by Professor Clifford Jones, has been investigating the work of nearby Global Chemicals. The Doctor can't bring himself to care and goes on a nice holiday to the planet Metebelis III instead. Jo and the Brigadier pay visit to Llanfairfach. They discover that the mine workings are full of giant maggots and green goo, both by-products of Global Chemicals' plant. People at the company also have a tendency to get hypnotised and start rambling about "the Boss".
21
22Metebelis III turns out to be the planet of EverythingTryingToKillYou, so the Doctor hastily rejoins the plot back on Earth, carrying a shiny crystal as a souvenir. He rescues Jo, who fell down a mineshaft, and discovers that the place is crawling with giant alien maggots.
23
24Clifford, who's a charismatic long-haired DeadpanSnarker and lives in a hippie commune, also happens to be a genius biologist who's working on a revolutionary new fungus that could globally replace meat. He and Jo get along very well (after some initial mutual snarking). The Doctor is also a big fan of his papers, and soon enough, the whole gang is happily drinking fine wine and eating fungus. But with a whole lot of maggots still out there, UNIT decides to infiltrate Global Chemicals: Mike Yates as an office drone, and the Doctor as a Welsh milkman and a harmless old cleaning lady.
25
26The plant is run by Stevens, who has been taken over by the intelligent computer BOSS (Bimorphic Organisational Systems Supervisor), which plans to seize power by linking to every other major computer in the world. BOSS was originally built by Stevens, became self-aware, and soon realised that human creativity is based on human error. He ordered Stevens to program human error into his system. Enjoying his new creative powers, and merrily humming Beethoven, BOSS toys with the Doctor a bit but can't even make a dent in his Time Lord psyche. The Doctor uses a large blue crystal he picked up on Metebelis III to break BOSS' hold on Stevens, and Stevens -- in a grand HeroicSacrifice -- programs BOSS to self-destruct. Meanwhile, the maggots, which are beginning to pupate into giant flies, are destroyed with Clifford's fungus.
27
28In the midst of all this, Jo has fallen in love with Clifford, and decides to leave the Doctor to go get married and explore the Amazon rainforest (in that order). She pulls some strings with her uncle to get Clifford all the funding he'll ever need. As the whole group celebrates, the Doctor puts everyone to shame by giving Jo an early wedding present: the Metebelis Crystal, and asks them to save some wedding cake for him. Jo asks if he minds that she's leaving. He does, of course, but he hides how much it hurts behind pride - yes, she's leaving him, but she's leaving him ''to do supremely nerdy things'' and how could he disapprove of that? It's what ''he'' does, after all. He notes that her trip down the Amazon may ''actually'' turn her into a scientist after all. But as the party starts to get into full swing the Doctor chugs a glass of wine and quietly slips away, noticed only by Jo who sends him an understanding look.
29
30The Doctor takes one final look back at the cottage, before he, saddened by the departure of his good friend but proud of where she's going and what she'll do, drives into the sunset. As the Novelisation states: "-and a tear rolled down the Doctor's 900 year old cheek..."
31
32The planet of Metebelis III will become important again [[Recap/DoctorWhoS11E5PlanetOfTheSpiders soon enough]]. And Jo will meet the Doctor again, although much, ''much'' [[Recap/TheSarahJaneAdventuresS4E5E6DeathOfTheDoctor later]].
33
34-----
35
36An excellent tongue-in-cheek {{Mockumentary}} sequel short film, "Global Conspiracy", was created by Creator/MarkGatiss in 2004 for the serial's home video releases and stars most of the original cast and a SequelEpisode, [[Recap/BigFinishTorchwoodS05E02TheGreenLife "The Green Life,"]] featuring Jo Grant investigating modern Llanfairfach with Captain Jack Harkness was released as part of the ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'' range by Creator/BigFinish in 2019.
37
38!!Tropes
39* AbsentMindedProfessor: Clifford.
40* ActuallyPrettyFunny: The Doctor and Jo have a brief bicker early on, but break out into giggles moments later.
41* AICronym: BOSS, from Bi(o)morphic Organisational Systems Supervisor, referring to his original intended purpose of factory management.
42* AIIsACrapshoot: A variation; BOSS noticed that humans achieve their goals better through being illogical, so had itself linked to Steven's brain to learn how to be illogical. The result is a megalomaniacal computer.
43* AloneInACrowd: The Doctor when the rest of the characters celebrate Jo and Clifford's engagement.
44* AuthorTract: See also GreenAesop, because the tract runs deep with this story,
45* BBCQuarry: But this time, it actually is a quarry! One is also used for the scenes set on Metebelis III in the first episode, though it's less obvious there, as the sequences are shot at night and with a blue filter on the camera.
46* BigBad: BOSS.
47* BittersweetEnding: Jo and her new boyfriend announce that they're getting married, the UNIT gang celebrate and the Doctor sadly walks off to Bessie and [[RidingIntoTheSunset rides off into the twilight]]. That's one of the most powerful endings of the series, hands down.
48* BlatantLies: Stevens to Elgin. "Don't worry- I won't hurt you."
49* BriefAccentImitation: The Doctor puts on a working-class Welsh accent while trying to sneak into the Global Chemicals building disguised as a milkman.
50* CallBack: When Jo meets Clifford, she inadvertently ruins his experiment. [[Recap/DoctorWhoS8E1TerrorOfTheAutons Just like how she met the Doctor]].
51* CardCarryingEvil: BOSS cheerfully admits to being a megalomaniac that wants to TakeOverTheWorld.
52* ChekhovsGun: There are two: the sapphire from Metebelis III, and the hybrid fungus that Clifford Jones was raising as a meat substitute. The sapphire is used to release Yates, then Mr. James, and finally Stevens from BOSS' control (and later becomes even more important in "Planet of the Spiders"). The dried spores of the fungus cures Clifford Jones of his own infection from the Green Death later on, while clumps of the fungus kill the maggots.
53* CondensationClue: When they both independently infiltrate the chemical plant, the Doctor needs to signal Yates without giving either of them away. Disguised as a cleaning lady, the Doctor soaps up a window, covertly writes a message in the cleanser, then wipes it away after Yates has seen it.
54* CorporateConspiracy: Global Chemicals not only [[ToxicInc dumps toxic waste]] into a Welsh mine (inadvertently creating giant maggots), but they're also dabbling in electronics, building a Master Computer named BOSS that promptly goes mad and takes control of the corporation in a plan to TakeOverTheWorld.
55%%Administrivia/ZeroContextExample* CorruptCorporateExecutive: Stevens.
56* DeliveryGuyInfiltration: The Doctor infiltrates Global Chemicals disguised as a milkman.
57* DisguisedInDrag: The Doctor dresses as a washerwoman. It's just convincing enough to fool an unobservant guard who isn't looking at him and to pass a message on to Captain Yates ... who promptly begins to rib him about it.
58--> '''The Doctor''': (having finally met up, in disguise and carrying a bucket, with Mike Yates) If you say one word...\
59 '''Mike Yates''': I like your handbag.
60* DisneyVillainDeath: Poor Fell.
61* DoesntTrustThoseGuys: The Doctor tells a joke that ends with the line "Never Trust A Venusian Shanghorn." It's the only part of the joke we get to hear.
62* DontTouchItYouIdiot: The Doctor has to resort to this several times to keep people from touching the green slime that causes a deadly infection.
63* DoppelgangerDating: Clifford is basically the Doctor, only younger and less asexual. His MeetCute with Jo (she wanders into his lab and gets yelled at for ruining an experiment) is even a reprise of her first meeting with the Doctor.
64* TheDragon: Hinks, Stevens' chaffuer, who also seems to moonlight as head security guard and disposer of people who Know Too Much. He also doesn't seem to be brainwashed, unlike most everyone else at Global Chemicals.
65* DreadfulDragonfly: The maggots' adult form resembles a dragonfly large and strong enough to do damage to a motor vehicle.
66* DrivingADesk: Although the maggots are very well-made, this story also features [[SpecialEffectFailure some of the worst greenscreen in television history]][[invoked]].
67* DudeNotFunny: As Benton treats poisoning the maggots like feeding cats, the Doctor scolds him for it.
68* EruditeStoner: Most of the people at Cliff's research facility, but especially Nancy. Shown in a completely positive light without any hint of sarcasm.
69* EverythingIsOnline: BOSS plans to take over the world by controlling all the world's computers. In the 1970s [[ContinuitySnarl (or was it the '80s?)]].
70* EverythingTryingToKillYou: The Doctor isn't on Metabillis 3 ten seconds before a plant... thing tries to grab him. He's then chased around by the local wildlife, including stock footage of a snake and a giant bird-like creature, and by the time he's found the crystal some locals with rocks and spears are trying to kill him for no readily apparent reason.
71* EvilIsHammy: BOSS knows what he is, doesn't care, and is having an absolute blast with it.
72* FightingFromTheInside: Poor Yates gets brainwashed by BOSS and sent to kill the Doctor, but is able to fight the programming just enough to give the Doctor the time to de-program him. Afterwards, the Doctor says if he hadn't, he probably would've killed him and the Brigadier.
73* FindTheCure: Much of the plot is devoted to searching for a cure the eponymous Green Death.
74* FiveRoundsRapid: The Brig still hasn't learned his lesson, here ordering ''ten'' rounds rapid to be fired against the maggots. Naturally, they are ImmuneToBullets.
75* {{Foreshadowing}}:
76** Jo's departure is foreshadowed in the first episode when after she leaves for Wales, the Doctor remarks "So the fledgling flies the coop".
77** The reveal of BOSS doesn't come until the end of episode four, but before that there's several hints Stevens' superior isn't exactly human, with his language being much more machine-like than it should be (such as labelling suicide "self-destruct").
78* FourthDateMarriage: Jo agrees to marry Cliff despite only having known him an unspecified number of days.
79* FunWithAcronyms: The Biomorphic Organisational Systems Supervisor. "My designers also found it amusing. I find it suitable."
80* GenreSavvy: BOSS notes that some Music/RichardWagner is [[MusicToInvadePolandTo appropriate]][[invoked]] if you're planning to TakeOverTheWorld.
81* GilliganCut: When he first meets the Brigadier, Stevens makes several boasts about how clean, safe, and environmentally friendly Global Chemicals' processes are. Each of these boasts is followed by a cut to Cliff and Jo in the Nuthutch, with Cliff explaining why each of Stevens' claims at best omits important details, and at worst is a complete pack of lies.
82* GoneHorriblyRight: BOSS was programmed with the objectives of maintaining productive order and ensuring profit for Global Chemicals. It just interpreted those objectives in an extremely broad and amoral manner.
83* GreenAesop: In case it wasn’t obvious from [[NewAgeRetroHippie Clifford]], the Doctor’s speeches, and the plot of the episode, this story ''really'' wants you to care about the environment.
84* HarmlessLadyDisguise: The Doctor infiltrates Global Chemicals disguised as a cleaning lady.
85* HypnoFool: The Doctor uses his Metebilis crystal on Mike to break BOSS's mind control by using a counter-hypnosis. Too bad the Brigadier was staring at it while the Doctor was doing so. He goes into a thick trance, stiff as a board.
86-->'''Doctor''': Oh, ''good grief!'' Wake up, Lethbridge-Stewart! ''(gibbers the Brig's chin)'' Wake up!
87* IfIDoNotReturn: The Doctor tells the Brigadier that if he's not out of Global Chemical in time, UNIT can charge in--not to rescue him because he'll be dead, but to destroy BOSS.
88* IKnowYoureInThereSomewhereFight: The page quote is part of one.
89* ImmuneToBullets[=/=]NighInvulnerability: The maggots... bullets, bombs, and even insecticide don't even faze them.
90* ImprobableAntidote: The cure for the eponymous death turns out to be the dried spores of the fungus Professor Jones is working on as a solution to world hunger.
91* JanitorImpersonationInfiltration: The Doctor disguises himself as a cleaning woman.
92* JustAMachine: BOSS is a nasty piece of work, but nevertheless, the Doctor's refusal to view him as an actual person looks bigoted (though he's also seeking to deliberately annoy BOSS).
93* LampshadeHanging: By this point, the Doctor is less than impressed by the revelation that the real villain is a crazy computer.
94* {{Leitmotif}}: BOSS has a militaristic and tyrannical-sounding incidental music sting that plays whenever he's plotting something megalomanical or his handiwork is seen in action.
95* LiarsParadox: The Doctor manages to stump an insane computer called BOSS with the question "If I were to tell you that the next thing I say would be true, but the last thing I said was a lie, would you believe me?" However after some looping, BOSS decides the question was irrelevant.
96* LogicBomb: Subverted. The Doctor tries to use the LiarsParadox on BOSS, but BOSS completely fails to blow up, stop working, or devote all its circuits to solving the problem. It's just mildly annoyed for a while.
97* TheMadHatter: BOSS cheerfully admits to being a megalomaniac.
98* TheManBehindTheMan: Up until BOSS is revealed to be a computer controlling the entire building, he is treated like this by the story. Stevens only communicates with him by office intercom and we're never given any indication he's anything but a corrupt human executive - "the boss," just as everyone keeps calling him. Then when the Doctor gets to the top floor where "the boss'" office supposedly is, only to find loads of computer equipment... we get the WhamLine.
99* MasterComputer: BOSS is one of these.
100* MeaningfulName: Fell. Guess what happens to him.
101* TheMole: Anticipating some obstruction from above, the Brig has Yates go to Global Chemicals as a supposed agent for the government, allowing them to have a man on the inside.
102* MoodWhiplash: It ends with everyone congratulating Jo and Cliff, including the Doctor... who then quietly leaves the party and drives off on his own.
103** Also, the shocking scene of Fell leaping to his death is immediately followed by... a party at the Nut Hatch.
104* MotherNatureFatherScience: We get Mother Nature (the hippie commune) and Father Science (Global Chemicals) BUT the commune is made up of research scientists trying, among other things, to breed high protein fungus to act as a meat replacement. And the chemical factory is spawning maggots and in the thrall of an intentionally irrational computer who refers to its employees by cutesy nicknames and gets so distracted by picking out a soundtrack for its eventual victory that it spends most of the climactic battle singing.
105* MyRuleFuIsStrongerThanYours: The Brigadier tries invoking UNIT authority over Global Chemicals, but Stevens just rings up the Environment Secretary, as he's in a cabinet meeting, and gets him to sort out the Brig by passing things along to ''his'' boss, the PM.
106* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: ''Don't'' name your intelligent supercomputer "BOSS"; it'll give it ''ideas''.
107* NiceJobFixingItVillain
108** The Doctor would never have stumbled across the BOSS's plan if he hadn't dumped those chemicals in the mine, drawing UNIT's attention.
109** An armed guard is stopping the Doctor from entering Global Chemicals. BOSS then activates the brainwashing signal, causing the guard and the rest of the staff to blank out, enabling the Doctor to enter unhindered.
110* NoodleIncident: There been several explanations outside the TV series about what the Perigosto Stick the Doctor mentions is. You can't trust a Venusian Shanghorn with one, you see.
111* NotHimself: Those under the control of the BOSS.
112* NotListeningToMeAreYou: When Jo realises Cliff is not listening to her, she asks him if he would like a nice cup of arsenic, to which he absently says yes.
113* NotThatKindOfDoctor: Professor Jones.
114* ObviousStuntDouble: Pay attention to when the Doctor drags the guard out of the way - he's replaced by an absolutely terrible dummy.
115* OffTheShelfFX: The maggots were made out of condoms. Seriously[[note]]More accurately, this was the case for the masses of maggots that were needed for long shots and CSO effects shots.[[/note]].
116* OneSteveLimit: Averted, with both Jo’s love interest and the milkman being named “Jones”.
117* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: A subtle one - Elgin notices something is up with Ralph Fell because he calls him by his last name. Apparently they're usually on a first name basis.
118* OrphanedPunchline: The Doctor tells a joke that ends with the line "Never trust a Venusian shanghorn with your perigosto stick."
119* PoorCommunicationKills: If only Professor Jones used an easier word than ''serendipity'', Jo would have understood him and known that the fungus was the cure for the maggots' bite.
120* PowerCrystal: The Metelbelis Crystal, which will come into play later...
121* PrimeDirective: Unfortunately for BOSS this is maximizing the profit and efficiency of Global Chemicals, regardless of what anyone else thinks.
122* PunnyName: The last name of Ralph, the worker conditioned to self-destruct by jumping to his death, is "Fell". How did Ralph die? [[{{Pun}} Ralph Fell]].
123%%* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Stevens.
124* RippedFromTheHeadlines: The story came about when Creator/BarryLetts had read an article about the dangers of pollution in the magazine The Ecologist, and he and Creator/TerranceDicks felt ''Doctor Who'' offered them an opportunity to tell a positive message about protecting the environment.
125** Wholeweal was inspired partly by Greenpeace and partly by the Biotechnic Research And Development (BRAD) community which had been established in Wales.
126* RousseauWasRight: Professor Jones honestly thinks that they can ask Global Chemicals to let them borrow cutting equipment to fix the Llanfairfach mine elevator. The same Global Chemicals he and the rest of the denizens of Wholeweal have been protesting and verbally chastising every other day. In fairness, Elgin would gladly give them the equipment, but everyone else is giving the runaround.
127* SicklyGreenGlow: Every victim of the "[[MeaningfulName Green Death]]".
128* SingleTear: Poor Stevens cries a single stream of tears after shutting off BOSS and awaiting his imminent death, coupled with a MyGodWhatHaveIDone reaction.
129* StrawmanPolitical: Played both straight and averted in Global Chemicals. While Stevens is a megalomaniac who is just fine with completely destroying the environment and unleashing a biological horror upon Wales if it'll raise Global Chemicals' stock price a tuppence a share, and BOSS is worse, most of people under Stevens, including the [=VPs=], are decent hardworking people who want to do the right thing and basically have to be brainwashed by BOSS to go along with the program.
130** In one scene set in the Cabinet Office in 10 Downing Street, the British Prime Minister (named only as "Jeremy") orders the Doctor by telephone to stop interfering in Global Chemicals' Business, or he will have imprisoned under the "Emergency Powers Act".[[note]]Some commentators believe this fictional PM to be Jeremy Thorpe, at the time leader of the Liberal Party, which was enjoying something of a revival and was widely tipped to be the next government. However, Thorpe's involvement in a homosexual scandal meant this never came about. Since the PM was portrayed as conniving at wide-ranging corrupt and illegal behaviour by a major British corporation, not least the illegal disposal of toxic waste, this may not have been a bad thing.[[/note]]
131* TakeThat: Writer Robert Sloman claimed that the slightly stereotypical portrayal of the Welsh were there because of his bad experience of playing rugby against Welsh teams when he lived in the West Country.
132* TemporarySubstitute: Tony Adams, the actor playing Elgin fell ill between recording sessions, so in episode 5 a Mr James appears instead. Which leads to a bizarre situation of a character being set up to betray the bad guys - then someone else turns up out of nowhere to do it instead.
133** What makes this weirder is that they could have easily explained his replacement, but didn't. Elgin was subjected to a mind control technique, which had caused another character it was used on to commit suicide earlier in the story. So they could have justified Elgin's replacement by having it explained that he took his life, or by shooting a suicide scene with a stunt man.
134* TemptingFate: [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]]. The Brigadier thinks blowing up the mine has solved the maggot problem. He says, "I don't understand you lot. Seems to me the problem's solved. We'll see no more of those creepie-crawlies, you mark my words." Everyone looks at him like he's gone daft.
135* TodayXTomorrowTheWorld
136-->'''Doctor:''' Today Llanfairfach, tomorrow the world, eh?\
137'''BOSS:''' [[IResembleThatRemark How well you understand me, Doctor.]]
138* TokenGoodTeammate: Elgin is a CorruptCorporateExecutive who is down with dumping gallons of toxic waste into a mine but only as long as said mine is abandoned. He draws the line at intentionally trapping innocent people in said mine and attempting to drown them in the stuff, though, and eventually angrily confronts Stevens over going too far. Unfortunately, he gets brainwashed by BOSS.
139* TooDumbToLive: Oh, Bert, ''why'' did you have to stick your fingers in the toxic goo to examine it?
140* ToxicInc: Global Chemicals is an oil refinery with a new process that produces 25% more usable fuel from each barrel of crude oil. The new process however produces more toxic waste as a by-product (where the extra mass comes from is not discussed). The BOSS doesn’t care a bit about the extra pollution.
141* {{Tuckerization}}: Stevens, was named after Jocelyn Stevens, formerly Robert Sloman's superior in the newspaper industry.
142* WhamLine:
143** The Doctor meets up with a semi-unexpected individual now working for Global Chemicals:
144--->'''Stevens:''' Doctor, may I introduce you to Mr. Yates?
145** The revelation of who "the boss" is when the Doctor finally reaches the top floor. "I am the BOSS. I am all around you. I am the computer." *[[MusicalSting Cliffhanger Screech]]*
146* WhatHappenedToTheMouse:
147** Elgin vanishes from the story after getting brainwashed. This is due to actor Tony Adams suffering an illness and needing to be taken to the emergency room. His role later in the serial was filled by SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute James.
148** The "Global Conspiracy" Mockumentary lampshades this with an older Elgin clarifying that he had appendix problems and thus, was absent from the second half of the adventure.
149** Stevens' chauffeur Hinks, who got bitten by a maggot and infected with the Green Death. Although it's possible he survived long enough to be given the cure, he's never mentioned again. ([[Literature/DoctorWhoNovelisations The novelisation]] states he died before the cure was found.)
150* WigDressAccent: The Doctor does a passable impression of a Welsh milkman and, a few minutes later, a Welsh cleaning lady.
151* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: When Fell starts to throw off his brainwashing, BOSS has him programmed to commit suicide.
152* YouTalkTooMuch
153-->'''BOSS:''' Well, Doctor, have you nothing to say?\
154'''Doctor:''' Why should I want to talk to a [[JustAMachine machine]]?\
155'''BOSS:''' Oh really, Doctor. As far as I can gather from your computer record at UNIT, the difficult thing is to stop you talking.
156----
157!!Tropes in Global Conspiracy:
158* BackupTwin: Bert’s appears as an interviewee.
159* BitingTheHandHumor: Stevens is now the Director-General of the BBC.
160* BourgeoisBohemian: Clifford Jones is now the short-haired, tie-wearing manager of a company selling a range of [[SoylentSoy meat-free products]].
161* CallBack:
162** The events in Llanfairfach are dismissed as another UsefulNotes/SillySeason story "like those [[Recap/DoctorWhoS9E3TheSeaDevils lizard men in string vests attacking sea forts]]."
163** Clifford Jones says that something came between him and Jo to break up their marriage. "It was this [[Recap/DoctorWhoS11E5PlanetOfTheSpiders big blue crystal]]."
164* HereWeGoAgain: The Green Death has seeped into the drainage system in Llanfairfach and is starting to infect people again. Meanwhile The BOSS has taken over the BBC and is planning an experiment in [[MassHypnosis "interactive broadcasting".]]
165* HeWhoMustNotBeNamed: Interviewees tend to clam up when the subject of "The BOSS" is raised.
166* PornStache: Subverted; Terry Scanlon has a lot more hair in 1973, but his stache is much the same.
167* SideTrackedByTheAnalogy: A Welsh housewife gets distracted by what type of green the Green Death was.
168* SunnydaleSyndrome
169-->'''Mark Elgin:''' It's hard to believe that people have forgotten it now. It was way before all those scandals that people ''have'' forgotten.
170* TitleDrop:
171-->'''Terry Scanlon:''' It wasn't just coal that came out of the ground...it was death. A death coloured green. [[OverlyLongGag A green death.]]
172* NotHimself: The security guard Terry tries to interview at Global Chemicals has a ThousandYardStare and talks in a CreepyMonotone. And that's even before he starts saying "You must be destroyed!"
173* NotQuiteDead: Stevens, who supposedly died in a [[BlatantLies freak computer accident]], is still alive. And is now [[BitingTheHandHumor running the BBC on behalf of BOSS.]]
174* OddlySmallOrganization: TheBrigadier and his "crack team of almost ten soldiers".
175* SayingTooMuch: The Minister for Environmental Protectiveness laughs off talk of conspiracy or giant flies.
176-->'''Interviewer:''' Nobody mentioned giant flies.\
177'''Minister:''' ''(OhCrap look)'' Didn't they...?
178* WhatTheHellHero: Terry accuses UNIT and Professor Jones of helping cover up the scandalous events at Llanfairfach instead of exposing them.

Top