absolutely nothing.
The definitive answer came from Sylvia Anderson herself during a promotional tour of her book. It was something they made up on the spur of the moment during a writing session, Sylvia says, and it was never intended to stand for anything other than to spell out the letters of a popular British slang word--"fab"--during that era. Many people have attempted to find other meanings ("Filed, Actioned, Briefed", "Fine--Acknowledge Broadcast" and finally "Fully Advised and Briefed"), but it never meant anything other than "fabulous".
The definitive answer came from Sylvia Anderson herself during a promotional tour of her book. It was something they made up on the spur of the moment during a writing session, Sylvia says, and it was never intended to stand for anything other than to spell out the letters of a popular British slang word--"fab"--during that era. Many people have attempted to find other meanings ("Filed, Actioned, Briefed", "Fine--Acknowledge Broadcast" and finally "Fully Advised and Briefed"), but it never meant anything other than "fabulous".
Yes it was. The character was originally envisioned as the blond, blue-eyed hero, but Gerry Anderson was unhappy with how the puppet for John Tracy turned out, branding it ugly. So he was put aboard International Rescue's space station Thunderbird 5, presumably as once he took the emergency call in each episode and relayed it to Tracy Island, he wouldn't be seen again, thus keeping his screen time down. In fact John only takes an active role in one rescue in the series, in the episode Danger at Ocean Deep (1966). It is also worth noting as surely no coincidence that in the one episode that relies on heavy contact with Thunderbird 5, Operation Crash-Dive (1965), Alan Tracy just happens to be taking his turn aboard the station!
Yes. The first nine had already been scripted, shot and edited as 25-minute episodes (as were previous productions such as Fireball XL5 (1962) and Stingray (1964)) when the Andersons' backer, ATV head Lew Grade, sat down to watch the completed pilot, Trapped in the Sky (1965). He was so excited by the results that he immediately demanded that all episodes be increased in length to fill an hour-long TV slot. As a result these nine episodes were re-edited with extra footage to fill them out. Ironically, when the show was eventually sold to the American market, the entire series of 32 episodes had to be edited into 64 half-hour shows, due to a lack of hour slots in the US TV schedules.
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- How many seasons does Thunderbirds have?2 seasons
- How many episodes does Thunderbirds have?32 episodes
- When did Thunderbirds premiere?June 9, 2015
- When did Thunderbirds end?June 9, 2015
- How long are episodes of Thunderbirds?50 minutes
- What is the IMDb rating of Thunderbirds?7.9 out of 10
- Who stars in Thunderbirds?
- Who created Thunderbirds?
- Who wrote Thunderbirds?
- Who directed Thunderbirds?
- Who was the producer of Thunderbirds?
- Who was the composer for Thunderbirds?
- Who was the executive producer of Thunderbirds?
- Who was the cinematographer for Thunderbirds?
- What is the plot of Thunderbirds?In the year 2065, the Tracy family run International Rescue - a top-secret organization whose ongoing mission is to rescue people trapped in extraordinarily dangerous situations using their advanced Thunderbirds machines.
- Who are the characters in Thunderbirds?Tin-Tin Kyrano, Jeff Tracy, John Tracy, Scott Tracy, Alan Tracy, Virgil Tracy, Gordon Tracy, Kyrano, Grandma Tracy, Bob Gray, and others
- What is the Thunderbirds theme song?The Thunderbirds March
- What genre is Thunderbirds?Action, Adventure, Family, and Sci-Fi
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