The DS Intellivision Lives! includes over 60 different games including, Astrosmash, B-17 Bomber, Shark! Shark!, Motocross, Space Cadet and Thin Ice.
The story translates the standard military academy story into outer space: a boy from Iowa goes to officer school, sees action and adventure, shoulders responsibilities far beyond his experience, and becomes a man.
•
The novel inspired Joseph Greene of Grosset & Dunlap to develop the Tom Corbett, Space Cadet comic books, television series, radio show, comic strip, and novels that were popular in the early 1950s.
Tom Corbett, Space Cadet series on radio, television, and in comic books, novels
•
Space Cadet, a 1948 science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein.
Tom Corbett, Space Cadet, the main character in a series of Tom Corbett — Space Cadet stories
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | International Space Station | Space Shuttle | European Space Agency | Kennedy Space Center | National Air and Space Museum | Space Shuttle Challenger | Hubble Space Telescope | Marshall Space Flight Center | Lost in Space | Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center | 2001: A Space Odyssey | Goddard Space Flight Center | Three-dimensional space | Space Invaders | 2001: A Space Odyssey (film) | Space: 1999 | Space Shuttle Columbia | Symphony Space | space | Euclidean space | space shuttle | Space Shuttle Challenger disaster | Space Jam | Space Shuttle Discovery | Space Shuttle Columbia disaster | Space Oddity | Cadet | Spitzer Space Telescope | outer space |
Dave Hollins: Space Cadet was a series of five sketches on the BBC Radio 4 series Son of Cliché, produced by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor.
However, there are very few premiums or toys associated with the series, as compared to its rival live space adventure series such as Captain Video, Space Patrol, and Tom Corbett, Space Cadet.
On the back of boxes of Kellogg's Pep Cereal were cardboard cutouts of a space cadet cap, gauntlets and a ray gun, and the company made a direct tie-in with the product Kellogg's Pep: The Solar Cereal.
They worked extensively in early television, particularly the children's programs Howdy Doody and Tom Corbett, Space Cadet, although they also sold material to such mainstream performers as Jackie Gleason.