21 Weird Facts You Didn’t Know About Space: 1999 (1975)

Remember when the Moon got blown out of orbit and we all just… accepted it? Space: 1999 was the most expensive sci-fi series of its era, and the story behind it is somehow weirder than anything Martin Landau and Barbara Bain ever encountered out in deep space. From Christopher Lee’s surprise guest spot to Brian Blessed in a velour jumpsuit, from Isaac Asimov’s brutal review to the show’s accidental prediction of rogue planets — we’re going deep into the strangest corners of Gerry Anderson’s cult classic.

Whether you grew up watching the Eagles roar across the screen on Saturday afternoons, stumbled into late-night reruns, or you’re a die-hard Alphan who’s seen every episode twice — there’s something here you didn’t know.

TIMESTAMPS

00:00 – Intro

00:40 – Number 21: The Show That Started As Something Else

01:39 – Number 20: The Most Expensive Sci-Fi Show of Its Era

02:27 – Number 19: Martin Landau Almost Said No

03:13 – Number 18: Christopher Lee Showed Up

03:58 – Number 17: The Eagles Were Cardboard Royalty

04:48 – Number 16: Barbara Bain’s Hair Was a Whole Department

05:36 – Number 15: The Mid-Show Reboot Nobody Asked For

06:24 – Number 14: Isaac Asimov Hated It and Loved It

07:11 – Number 13: The Brain Goes Boom Cold Open

07:51 – Number 12: The Real-World Inspiration Hiding in Plain Sight

08:39 – Number 11: The Theme Music Got Surgically Replaced

09:23 – Number 10: The Set That Doubled As a Real Studio

10:08 – Number 9: Brian Blessed in a Velour Jumpsuit

10:53 – Number 8: The Show Inspired a Generation of Real Engineers

11:39 – Number 7: The Cancellation Was Quiet and Brutal

12:26 – Number 6: Maya, the Shapeshifter, Almost Wasn’t

13:15 – Number 5: The Tie-In Toys Were Wildly Popular

13:58 – Number 4: The Crossovers That Almost Were

14:46 – Number 3: The Italian Connection Was Massive

15:32 – Number 2: The Premise Predicted a Real Astronomical Idea

16:22 – Number 1: The Show Was Quietly About Grief