Shubik was appointed story editor and
Leonard White, who had produced the first two seasons of
The Avengers, was assigned to produce. Leonard found
Out of This World a welcome antidote to
The Avengers, which had proved a difficult production; he recalled, "It was a great pleasure to make, getting away from today and exploring the unrealities (or so we thought) of tomorrow. An opportunity for the suspension of disbelief even in the here and now ambiance of television". The budget for each episode averaged £5,000. Shubik soon ran into difficulties finding material suitable for adaptation, a problem that had plagued earlier aborted attempts to get a similar series off the ground. A useful contact Shubik made was with
John Carnell, a key figure in British science fiction, founder of the magazine
New Worlds and agent for many British science fiction writers. Carnell assisted Shubik in selecting material and put her in contact with writers and publishers. Carnell also promoted the series heavily in
New Worlds, giving it the cover of the July 1962 edition. When a
strike by actor's union
Equity hit production of
Armchair Theatre, it bought Shubik the extra time she needed to find sufficient scripts. All but two episodes were adaptations of short stories and novels. Shubik took the name
Out of This World from a series of anthology collections published by
Blackie and Son, edited by
Amabel Williams-Ellis. The actor Boris Karloff, well known for his association with the
horror film genre, was chosen as host for the new series. This was an idea taken from such U.S. anthology series as
The Twilight Zone,
Alfred Hitchcock Presents and
Thriller (which Karloff himself had hosted) and was in line with what had been done for
Armchair Mystery Theatre, which was introduced by
Donald Pleasence. Three scripts for
Out of This World, adaptations of Philip K. Dick's "
Impostor" and Clifford D. Simak's "Immigrant" as well as an original story called "Botany Bay", were supplied by
Terry Nation, who would, a short time after, create the
Daleks for
Doctor Who. Nation's scripts were his first professional foray into science fiction, the genre for which he would become best known. Apart from a number of scripts for
Doctor Who, Nation would go on to create the original science fiction series
Survivors and ''
Blake's 7''. ==Broadcast and critical reception==