Set to Rights: The Teaching Room featured image

After over a year's gap, welcome back to Set to Rights, the series where I look at Red Dwarf's sets in mind-numbing detail. And having already looked at some thrilling wall sections and the Captain's Office, we turn to what might initially seem an unpromising avenue for spectacular revelations: the Teaching Room in Series 1.

I think, however, you may be surprised. Because telling the story of this set leads us into some rather interesting areas which I don't think have been examined before. As ever, we don't have the paperwork handy to be able to check any of this: instead, we have to do some deduction, some guesswork, and leave some questions unanswered.

With that health warning, let's take another trip through early Red Dwarf - as ever with these articles, in order of recording date rather than broadcast.

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Set to Rights: The Captain's Office featured image

Hello everyone. When we last met, I guided you through a history of three wall sections used in Red Dwarf in 1988. This went down disturbingly well. You fucking weirdos.

With this in mind, let's continue our in-depth examination of Red Dwarf's sets in its first couple of series with one of their most famous oddities: the disappearing and reappearing Captain's Office. This article was intended to be a more general look at the Drive Room set, but believe it or not I have found enough to say about this single topic to make a full standalone piece. We're not dumbing down our material. It's always been this stupid.

As before, we need to take this one in recording order, rather than broadcast order.

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Set to Rights: From Supply Pipe 28 to Floor 592 featured image

When I say to random people "Hey, what do you remember about the sets of the first two series of Red Dwarf?", they back away from me and look for the nearest exit. Before they manage to escape, however, they usually mention the bunkroom. They might stammer out an anecdote about a yellow banana. Really cool people might mention how the Drive Room changes between series, or how the Observation Dome is a perfect combination of live set elements and special effects.

Still, all those stories have been told. I want to dig a little deeper, and I don't care how boring things get in order to do so. With that in mind, Ganymede & Titan proudly present: a history of three wall sections, used at BBC Manchester in 1987-88.

Enjoy.

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