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Story In series ; Season 1: 1 1 An Unearthly Child: 78 61 74 2 2 The Daleks: 46 37 22 3 3 The Edge of Destruction: 183 158 115 4 4 Marco Polo: 84 65 57 5 5 The Keys of Marinus
Doctor Who is a British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC. Having ceased broadcasting in 1989, it resumed in 2005. The 2005 revival traded the earlier serial format for a run of self-contained episodes, interspersed with occasional multi-part stories and structured into loose story arcs.
The episode had an Audience Appreciation Index score of 82. [14] The episode received an official total of 4.69 million viewers across all UK channels and was the 30th most-watched programme of the week. [14] It was the lowest-rated episode of the show since its revival in 2005 after "The Eaters of Light" in 2017. [15]
40. The Time Warrior (1973). Doctor: Jon Pertwee. The debut of the Sontarans sees a spud-headed alien soldier crash-land in medieval England. He forms an alliance with local bandits, swapping ...
IN FOCUS: As the long-running sci-fi series celebrates 60 years on the BBC, Isobel Lewis explores the quest to locate the 97 ‘missing’ episodes seemingly lost to the past Doctor Who has 97 ...
Overnight ratings for the fourteenth series were noticeably lower than previous Doctor Who series as well as the 2022–2023 specials. [193] "The Church on Ruby Road", Gatwa's first full episode as the Doctor, lost over two million viewers compared that of his predecessor, David Tennant, in "The Star Beast" (2023). [194]
The Doctor identifies the beast as being from a species that is distantly related to the Nimon, previously a foe in the serial The Horns of Nimon (1979–80); [2] and the group witnesses two illusions of Weeping Angels, from the episodes "Blink", "The Time of Angels", and "Flesh and Stone".
"The Curse of the Black Spot" is the third episode of the sixth series of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. Written by Stephen Thompson, and directed by Jeremy Webb, the episode was first broadcast on 7 May 2011 on BBC One in the United Kingdom and on BBC America in the United States.