Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 83. Chapters: Red Dwarf, The Pirate Planet, Treasure Planet, Space Pirates Barban, Skywarp, Cobra, Villains in Power Rangers Lost Galaxy, Villains in Power Rangers Turbo, Seacons, Captain Harlock, Kagato, Enlightenment, Black Zero, Ridley, Lilandra Neramani, Ryoko, Runamuck, Corsair, Han Solo, Hepzibah, Kanjar Ro, The Space Pirates, List of space pirates, Nebula, Rocket Robin Hood, Raza Longknife, Tarant Shank, Mikamo and Yataka, Dark Eldar, Queen Emeraldas, Ch'od, Sol Bianca, Ryoko Balta, Seiryo Tennan, Pirate Clans, Minagi, Reptyl, The Ice Pirates, Jenna Stannis, Sikorsky, Halfshell, Ulf Reichstein-Markham, Elon Cody Starbuck, Spyder, Geatar, Boskone. Excerpt: Red Dwarf is a British comedy franchise which primarily comprises eight series of a television science fiction sitcom that aired on BBC Two between 1988 and 1999 and Dave from 2009-present. It gained cult following. It was created by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor, who also wrote the first six series. The show originated from a recurring sketch, Dave Hollins: Space Cadet part of the mid-1980s BBC Radio 4 comedy show Son of Cliche, also scripted by Grant and Naylor. In addition to the television episodes, there are four bestselling novels, two pilot episodes for an American version of the show, a radio version produced for BBC radio 7, tie-in books, magazines and other merchandise. In 2008, a three-episode production was commissioned by the digital channel Dave. These episodes were screened in April 2009 during the Easter weekend and comprised a three-part story titled Red Dwarf: Back to Earth. Unlike the majority of the original BBC episodes, this mini-series was a comedy drama filmed without a studio audience or an added laugh track. Despite the pastiche of science fiction used as a backdrop, Red Dwarf is primarily a character-driven comedy, with off-the-wall, often scatologi...