Talk:K9

Roy Skelton provided K9's 'croak' in Destiny of the Daleks, should that be listed?--GingerM 17:00, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)


 * I think it should be listed next to David Brierly, put something in italics about it.--The Master 15:45, 1 Jul 2005 (UTC)


 * I've had a rethink and decided there's no point in putting it there.--GingerM 16:11, 3 Oct 2005 (UTC)


 * So, Roy Skelton has done K-9's voice and John Leeson has done Dalek voices! how symmetrical! --***Stardizzy*** 22:12, 31 January 2007 (UTC)

Upcoming K-9 Series?
Should we go ahead and start a page for the upcoming K-9 children's series, or would it be better to wait until the actual debut? --Colleyd 22:50, 13 October 2007 (UTC)

K9 or K-9
This is just a minor thing, but where is it actually ever written as K-9? On K9 himself it's more of a dot than a hyphen and in the credit sequences it's just 'Voice of K9' without a hyphen. --Tangerineduel 08:27, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
 * The RC toy lists it as "K-9," if that helps any--Colleyd 16:23, 4 November 2007 (UTC)Woof


 * Just had a quick flick through Decalog 2: Lost Property in one of the stories (Housewarming it uses K-9...So it doesn't matter, I think just stick with K-9 then. --Tangerineduel 16:38, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
 * Actually I think you make an interesting point, here. In no credits on television, even into the modern era, does any actor receive the credit, Voice of K-9.  Yet, if you look on this very site, Wikipedia, the old Outpost Gallifrey Site, drwhoguide.com, or Shannon Sullivan's Brief History of Time (Travel) site, the mistake is repeated over and over again.  Consistently, throughout these various episode guides, we get: "K-9".  And I really don't know where it comes from.


 * Certainly, it doesn't come from any BBC or BBC Wales production, where the credit is almost always Voice of K9. The one exception is "Full Circle", where the credits read Voice of K.9 on every episode in which he appears.   Though this is the only known example of any sort of consistent punctuation in a credit on any BBC production, the period seems to have returned in the latest promotional poster for the animated series, seeming to indicate that that series might actually be called, K•9..


 * Nevertheless, the dominant form of his name in credits is simply K9. Since he was credited from the very start as "K9", I'm led to believe that was the authorial intent; that is, in the script of "The Invisible Enemy", Baker and Martin spelled it that way.  For that reason alone, it seems to me, "K9" should be the title of the article, with "K-9" and "K.9" given as alternates.


 * Indeed, perhaps because of this manner of crediting, most non-fictional, "out-of-universe' uses of the name, do avoid the hyphen. I've never actually seen a British press release, for instance, which spells it any other way but K9.  Here's the latest, for example, from the UK mag, SFX:


 * Like you, I'm not quite sure how and why the hyphenated form came about, since we've never been given any indication from the BBC that this is in fact the way to spell the name. One tiny, now-contradicted-by-School-Reunion story in a Decalog, notwithstanding, the preponderance of actual evidence from the BBC seems to suggest the name is K9.  Czech Out   ☎ | ✍  18:54, 21 February 2009 (UTC)


 * K-9 & Company calls him K-9. (Obviously.)
 * I haven't found any evidence of this. The title card uses the K9 logo and thus appears to be K•9 and Company, which doesn't actually employ a hyphen.   The end credits read Voice of K9, and the contemporary internal papers from the BBC as well as the VHS and Region 1 DVD releases go without any punctuation.  That said, the Region 2 version of Invisible Enemy/A Girl's Best Friend does attempt to replicate the actual K9 logo, leaving us with that curious "dot-separated" way of expressing the name:  "K•9 Tales" and "K•9 and Company", which can be seen even on the disc itself. In not only the case of K9 and Company, but all appearances of the character on television, the hyphenated K-9 just really seems to me like the one least backed up by actual evidence from the BBC.   Czech Out   ☎ | ✍  01:24, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

Name?
Should the pun in the name be explained, or is it considered too obvious? 14:44, 17 September 2008 (UTC)