Doctor Who is in its worst shape for decades. Low ratings, Ncuti Gatwa leaving the TARDIS behind after just two (shorter) seasons, and a baffling Billie Piper-shaped cliffhanger has left the sci-fi classic in desperate need of a doctor and a Doctor.
Far from pulling the plug entirely, the BBC has given fans some tough medicine to swallow: the previously announced 2026 Christmas special has been canceled, with showrunner Russell T Davies and long-time production company Bad Wolf departing for good.
“This decision was not taken lightly, and we know it will be disappointing for fans, but in order to set the show up for future series, it was decided that rather than bridge the gap with a one off special, we are choosing to push forward to invest in the long-term future of the show which ensures that when the TARDIS lands once more, it does so in all its glory,” the BBC said in a statement.
It may seem all doom and gloom, but a long break is best for everyone. After all, the show has been on a downwards trajectory for some time, with past Doctors Jodie Whittaker and Ncuti Gatwa being saddled with poor writing that did a disservice to their enormous – and history-making – talents.
Reinvention, not regeneration
That brings us to the decision itself to rob the Christmas schedules of Doctor Who for only the third time in 20 years.
Is it bad news? On the face of it, yes – shocking, even. Not only is it a festive fixture, but some of Doctor Who’s most experimental, joyous chapters have sprung forth from the holiday window. But any Christmas epilogue or bridging of the gap between one era and the next would inevitably feel like a halfway house, one that wouldn’t placate long-term fans, nor entice the next generation that’s needed for the show to survive in the streaming era.
Fresh talent, fresh voices, and fresh perspectives are needed – not nostalgia and a desperate move towards the good old days. That can only be achieved, unfortunately, with the passing of time instead of a business-as-usual reboot in a year or two. We’ll soon be entering the era of creatives and writers heading into the industry after being weaned on a diet of the Tenth Doctor. That’s exciting in and of itself, and the jolt in the arm the series desperately needs after years of sleepwalking through stories.
As for the Billie Piper cliffhanger – that can now safely be ignored. It’s probably for the best, isn’t it? Even at the time, it was a nonsensical story beat that provoked more questions than answers in the worst possible way. Let’s move on and have a clean break; the next Doctor can sidestep all that in favor of going full speed ahead in the TARDIS. Leave the answers up to comics, novels, or Big Finish. It’s not something we need to concern ourselves with anymore.
This may be a sad time, but there are reasons to be hopeful. Doctor Who is nothing if not resilient. A decades-long gap preceded the show’s successful 2005 reboot, with Russell T. Davies’s first trip through space and time launching a golden era that turned into one of the century’s best sci-fi adventures, complete with star (and starmaking) turns from the likes of David Tennant and Matt Smith.
If we could travel back in time, we would surely have done it all differently. No Disney deal, perhaps no Russell T. Davies second coming, either. But now is the perfect time to get it right. The Doctor passes from one era to the next with regeneration. There’s already a baked-in narrative excuse to move on from this mess. Now, what it sorely needs is reinvention – and not to deck the halls for a few more years at least.
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