Chart Placing - The Almost People

Friday, 10 June 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who RatingsDoctor Who just missed out on a top twenty place for the week ending 29th May, seeing Episode Six The Almost People, become the 21st most watched programme of the week.

The episode, which had a share of 29.5% of the total audience, was just edged out of the top twenty by Emmerdale, which has a particularly good week, with all its episodes inside the top twenty.

The chart does not include iPlayer figures which have seen over a million people access the episode. Final figures for the last episode before the series break should be out on Monday.




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 6/32

May iPlayer Requests

Monday, 6 June 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who: iPlayerDoctor Who took the top three places of the most requested programmes on the BBC iPlayer in May.

Top of the chart was the Neil Gaiman written episode, The Doctor's Wife, which was requested over 1.242 million times during the month. Close behind was The Curse of the Black Spot with 1.239 million requests and Day of the Moon with 1.120 million requests.

The highest non Who programme was The Apprentice Episode 2 which came in fourth with 1.18 million requests. The Rebel Flesh was fifth with 1.145 million requesting and The Almost People crept into the top ten with 0.848 million requesting, dispite only being available for the last four days of the month.

The most requested programme this year is still Episode 2 of the Matt Lucas, David Walliams comedy, Come Fly With Me which has been requested 1.86 million times. Hot on its heals is The Impossible Astronaut with 1.79 million requests so far, needing just another 70,000 before it goes off line at the end of this week to take the top place. Day of the Moon is currently 6th for the year.

Nothing has yet come near toppling the Matt Smith début episode, The Eleventh Hour, which still holds the record for the most requested programme ever with over 2.5 million requests.

The complete request analysis for iPlayer in May are available from the BBC Internet Blog




FILTER: - Doctor Who - Ratings - UK - Series 6/32

The Almost People - Official Ratings

Monday, 6 June 2011 - Reported by Marcus
The Almost People achieved a final official rating of of 6.72 million viewers.

The figure, which includes those who watched the programme within seven days of broadcast, makes Doctor Who the 6th most watched programme on BBC One for the week.

Overall it was either 20th or 21st for the week, depending on the numbers watching Friday's edition of Emmerdale on ITV1 HD. Figures outside the ITV1 HD Top Ten are not yet available. An ITV1 HD audience of over 290,000 would see Fridays Emmerdale push Doctor Who out of the top twenty for the first time since Silence in the Library in 2008.

Full figures, which will reveal the final chart position of the episode, should be available in the next few of days.




FILTER: - Doctor Who - Ratings - UK - Series 6/32

A Good Man Goes To War - AI

Monday, 6 June 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who: A Good Man Goes To WarDoctor Who: A Good Man Goes To War had an Appreciation Index, or AI score of 88, the joint highest of the series so far.

The AI is a measure of how much the audience enjoyed the episode. The score was the highest of the day on the two main channels with only Dad's Army on BBC Two and Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King scoring higher, albeit with lower audiences.

The Sunday BBC Three repeat had 0.66 million watching, with an additional 0.05 million watching on BBC HD.

Sunday saw two programmes score higher ratings than Saturday's Doctor Who, pushing the programme into 30th place for the week.

Official ratings should be released next Monday which will include those time-shifting the episode, and should see the programme in a much higher position in the charts.

Saturday's Doctor Who Confidential had an audience of 0.56 million with 0.02 million watching on BBC HD.






FILTER: - Doctor Who - Ratings - UK - Series 6/32

A Good Man Goes To War - UK Press reaction

Sunday, 5 June 2011 - Reported by Chuck Foster
With the first half of this year's series of Doctor Who reaching its finale, the media passed their own judgement on the 'game-changing' revelations of A Good Man Goes To War. The following are some of the quotes from the UK press - click on the links for the full reviews.

Please note that the reviews discuss plot elements of the episode, which can be considered spoilers to those that have yet to watch the programme (viewers in the United Kingdom can catch up with the episode on the BBC iPlayer).



Dan Martin, Guardian:
It's as if the prospect of the Doctor getting angry, rounding up a gang and storming in to rescue his mate was considered so much of a pivotal deal that nobody remembered to pack a story. The problem was, he didn't actually go to war at all. It was an ambush at best, and remarkably for an episode with so many kitchen sinks thrown in, not very much seemed to happen. Coming off best were Madame Vastra the lesbian Victorian Silurian serial killer hunter, and Commander Strax, the emasculated Sontaran nurse. But because I know so little about what's going on, I didn't really understand, buy into or care about Demons Run or what was going on there. What was the point of the Thin Fat Gay Married Anglican Marines if you're just going to behead one of them, then forget about them? Are we supposed to invest in Lorna Bucket? The only thing stopping Madame Kovarian from twirling a moustache is that she's actually a woman. And after that fearsome and lavish pre-credits sequence, we're denied the promise of more Cybermen.

But enough gripes. The very best thing about the complexity of the arc and the arcs is they mean more Alex Kingston and more Doctor Song. That reveal was hidden in plain view from the very beginning as soon as its revealed Amy has called the baby Melody, but I didn't join the dots of Water and Music first time and so the reveal was a headspinning shock. And this is despite having wondered over a link ever since it was announced that the new companion's surname was going to be Pond.

Gavin Fuller, Telegraph:
The revelation that River is a grown-up Melody was something of a surprise, although given the tenor of the episode and earlier revelations it does make sense. However, how it will psychologically impact on Amy when she’s realised her child is still lost and is confronted with a grown-up version of the child, who she’s met before, is perhaps a narrative strand that would sit uncomfortably with a series where loss has often been brushed off as soon as the next couple of episodes.

After an iffy start, this year’s series has developed well, Matt Smith is developing a greater potency and authority as The Doctor, and making us wait for the remainder of the series, how the fate of Melody is resolved and no doubt lots more besides is somewhat cruel on the part of the BBC and Steven Moffat!

Benji Wilson, Telegraph:
I know what you’re thinking: tommyrot and bunkum. Rest assured that with Doctor Who, actually watching the thing can sometimes make matters even more confusing. Essentially, though, it didn’t matter – Saturday’s episode was all about the cliffmax. And once the big humdinger was revealed – we finally discovered that River Song (Alex Kingston) is in fact a grown-up version of Amy’s daughter, Melody – it merely led to the Doctor galloping off in to the galaxy to save someone (Melody) who, we knew, was already safe in the future. Which was the present. Got that?

Tom Phillips, Metro:
Steven Moffat has clearly gone mad. Proper unhinged, woopsie-bonkers, ‘for my next trick I shall invade France’ crackers. This Doctor Who mid-series finale chucked everything it could think of at the screen, then scraped it off and threw it again while cackling manically.

And the result was that we ended up with 45 minutes of thoroughly entertaining - if somewhat unfocused - pop sci-fi.

The episode might not have been entirely sure where it was going, but getting there was still a blast. And yes, we’re grumpy that we have to wait until the autumn for the next episode. ... Oh - and as for the key moment of the episode, the big reveal of River Song’s identity that the whole series has been leading up to? It was... well, judging by the Twitter reaction, pretty mind-blowing.

The Shropshire Star:
Sometimes I could really hate the people behind Doctor Who. All week I’ve been looking forward to a Good Man Goes to War, safe in the knowledge that this series is back on track after the disappointing/cobblers (delete according to opinion) opening two parter with its flash pyrotechnics but lack of sense or reason. After all, we’ve had The Doctor’s Wife, one of the best episodes so far, and the past two weeks have also been strong.

And then, a few minutes in to A Good Man… it seemed that, actually, I was wrong again and we were indeed back to flash effects and no logical plot.

And then – and then – about 30 minutes in we got past the bitty, the confusing, the silly, the shouty, and we got to the talky.

The episode stepped back a bit, was allowed to breathe, and we found out more about baby Melody Pond. Now it was interesting again. Suddenly, when little Melody was transformed into a couple of litres of yoghurt, this episode of Doctor Who was firing on all cylinders and playing at the top of its game. The Doctor was forced to confront what he had become, the hurt he had caused, the deaths, and I was hooked once more.

And that River Song revelation? I’d guessed. I think most of us had (River Song/Melody Pond – s’obvious, innit?), but it was nice to have it confirmed. (Although it’s slightly Woody Allen/Soon-Yi, if you think about what happens between them.) And wasn’t Matt Smith brilliant?


The online presence of specialist magazines and sites also published their own reviews of the episodes.

Simon Brew, Den of Geek:
A Good Man Goes To War was, at it turned out, one of the more straightforward stories of the run. In a couple of ways, it was Steven Moffat leaving the intricate story weaving to the side, and for at least half of the episode's running time, just having some fun. It's hard to argue with that at Saturday teatime.

It was, for me, the closest episode in feel since he took over to the Russell T Davies era on the show (and that's not for the gay joke at the start), with a real blockbuster feel to large parts of it. That's why we got spitfires, a nursing Sontaran and the Silurians all thrown into the mix.

Plus, and I imagine it wasn't lost on many, there was a heavy coating of Star Wars, from the white birth room of Amidala through to the look of the headless monks. George Lucas would be proud.

After the weeks of quite brilliant, weaving storytelling, it did, in truth, feel a little different to have some of that taken away here, and A Good Man Goes To War, for all its many high points, isn't up there with the best Steven Moffat-penned episodes on Who to date (some might argue it could be his worse, I'd suspect). That said, it still sets a high standard, and there's some lovely writing and moments in it. It just, on reflection, felt a little like fifty minutes building up to a revelation that approximately 12.4 percent of the Internet (at least) had guessed at some point over the past year or so. The other 87.6% just had their heads blow, mind.

Dave Golder, SFX:
It was a satisfying slice of fantasy television which ticked lots of boxes: it featured dashing, daring storytelling that was bold and confident; it looked fantastic (how awesome were those space scenes early on, particularly the ones with the Cyber-ships?), there were some hilarious lines (my favourite has to be the Stevie Wonder one – genius) and the performance of the star upped his wattage a couple of notches once again. But we’d be gushing too much if we said it was perfect – the Headless Monks didn’t quite satisfy as baddies (but were close), and their battle with Rory and co near the end had the director struggling to make the combat especially convincing or expansive. For a foe that was bigged up not long before by the Colonel they seemed to go down quite easily. Also, I can’t help but worry that general audiences might be a little bamboozled by convoluted episodes like this. And there are still those unanswered questions – why did Melody, aka River, kill the Doctor (and which Doctor?) in “The Impossible Astronaut” for one – but we trust those will be answered in the autumn. For now, Moffat and friends have thrown us enough enjoyable scraps to make us feel very happy going into the summer months.

Morgan Jeffery, Digital Spy:
One of the most interesting aspects of 'A Good Man Goes To War' is the attempt it makes to question The Doctor's actions. It's certainly a bold move to point out the inherent flaws in the character's persona, but it begs the question, where do we go from here? It's all very well to criticise The Doctor for his increasingly violent ways, but ultimately the character's attempts at peace have to fail, and he has to battle the monsters. Otherwise, we're left with a very dull show indeed. Nonetheless, as events begin to spiral out of control for the overconfident Time Lord, the episode does well in slowly building a sense of impending dread.

A Good Man Goes To War' is not without its flaws, but it is still a terrific 50 minutes of entertainment. There's the odd plot oddity here and the occasional lack of clarity there, but ultimately this mid-series finale is thrilling, shocking and the cast give it their all. It's important here to give one last shout out to the main man, Matt Smith, who has truly excelled himself in these seven episodes. His performance displays a fantastic range and constant surprises. As for Who head honcho Steven Moffat, it's clear that he's going to be spinning this particular yarn for a little while longer yet, but enough answers have been provided for now to keep this reviewer satisfied (just about).

David Lewis, Cultbox:
If this is Doctor Who’s finest hour - and until the final five minutes, it was shaping up that way - the show, like its lead character, has never fallen so far so fast. River starts spouting uncharacteristically prosaic dialogue about her relationship with the Doctor and tells Amy that everything’s going to be alright. The Doctor dashes off in the TARDIS to save Melody and River reveals, as had become uncomfortably clear, that River Song and Melody Pond are one and the same person. It’s not a bad ending; it just feels wrong. It’s not like being given a plastic comb for Christmas when you were expecting a Scalextric; it’s like being told on Christmas morning that it’s actually Ash Wednesday. It’s not disappointing or disillusioning; it’s oddly desensitizing, leaving a bewildered sense that this just can’t be it.








FILTER: - UK - Series 6/32 - Press

A Good Man Goes To War - Overnight Ratings

Sunday, 5 June 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who: A Good Man Goes To War5.5 million viewers watched episode seven of Doctor Who: A Good Man Goes To War, according to unofficial overnight figures.

The final story before the mid season break attracted 25.4% of the overnight audience.

Doctor Who was the sixth most watched programme of the day with ITV1 taking the top five places and Britain's Got Talent results show winning the day with 12.5 million watching. The new talent show Popstar to Operastar and Euro 2012 Qualifier Live also beat the Doctor, although Doctor Who had higher figures than the football during the period they were both on together. This was after the game itself had finished, while post-match analysis was being broadcast.

The weekly chart was dominated by ITV1 which won every one on the top twenty places, thanks to the daily showing of Britain's Got Talent. Although Doctor Who is currently 28th for the week on overnight figures it is the 3rd most watched show on the BBC for the week.

Official figures for the story, which will include those time shifting the programme and should see the programme enter the top twenty, should be available next Sunday.





FILTER: - Doctor Who - Ratings - UK - Series 6/32

The Almost People: Australian ratings

Sunday, 5 June 2011 - Reported by Adam Kirk
The Almost People has debuted in Australia to solid ratings. TV Tonight reports that the episode averaged 718,000 viewers in the five major capital cities. It was the sixth highest rating programme for the day overall (only beaten in its timeslot by the Channel Nine movie, '17 again'). The corresponding Confidential Cutdown also rated a respectable 541,000 viewers in the five major capitals. These overnight figures, however, do not include regional, rural and time-shifted viewers and hence significantly understate the actual national ratings.





FILTER: - Ratings - Series 6/32 - Broadcasting - Australia

A Good Man Goes To War - final scene discussion

Saturday, 4 June 2011 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have released a couple of videos tying into the climax of the mid-series finale, A Good Man Goes To War. In the first video, Matt Smith, Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill discuss how they learned about the "game-changing" reveal at the end of episode, whilst in the second, director Peter Hoar gives his insight in the form of a in-vision commentary for the the final scene. Please note the videos explicitly discuss the plot of the episode, so will be a spoiler for those who have yet to see it.


Matt Smith, Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill on the big reveal, BBC, via BBC Website



Peter Hoar - key scene commentary, BBC, via BBC Website




FILTER: - Series 6/32 - Online

A Good Man Goes To War - Previews/Interviews

Thursday, 2 June 2011 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have released a couple of previews for this Saturday's episode, A Good Man Goes To War:


Preview One: A Good Man Goes To War, BBC, via BBC Website



Preview Two: A Good Man Goes To War, BBC, via BBC Website


Digital Spy talked to Matt Smith, Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill about what to expect in the mid-series finale:


Matt Smith, Karen Gillan, Arthur Darvill interview, Digital Spy, via YouTube



Karen Gillan chatted to TV & Satellite Week over the impact of Amy's revelation last week:
It is really, really emotional for Amy what she goes through. I think any woman watching will really feel for her. It is something that I actually found quite difficult to understand so I had to speak to my mum about the labour scene and just tried to make it really horrific. ... (Giving birth) is going to change her in a big way for the long run and I think we are going to get to see Amy in a really different light.

I didn’t know until we started shooting it because everything is really last minute on Doctor Who, so you just get the script. Then there was a dummy ending on the episode seven script so none of us knew what was actually going to happen until the readthrough when Steven Moffat took us outside and showed us on his laptop.

There are lots of monsters in this one and it really feels like a finale. There are lots of old familiar things coming back and lots of storylines that have been going on for many years will be resolved.

Read the full interview via What's on TV.

Guest stars Simon Fisher-Becker and Danny Sapani spoke to Cultbox about their characters and appearances in the episode:
Dorium is at heart a good guy, but he lives in the murky depths. Think of him as Arthur Daley. Oh, you’re probably too young to remember Arthur Daley! He works in the murky world of black marketing, so that’s why River Song went to him to get the vortex manipulator.

Everyone always talks in code - and I’m very bad at picking up code - everything is kept quite secret, so any development of the character I have to find from the page and in-between the lines.

Because my character is in it throughout, I did have a complete script. Our very first scene that we filmed, we were all together, but it was all out of context, it was all in the wrong order, so it was all very confusing. We had no idea what was going on, but it was an absolute hoot!

What I will say is that a lot of questions will be answered, but then a whole bucket load of new questions will come forward. And the cliffhanger is very good, as you would expect!

Read the full interview, including details on episode thirteen, on the Cultbox website.
Manton is a powerful leader, a scary man and a fearsome soldier. He understands and respects the religious, but is more interested in power. He is obsessed with killing the Doctor.

It is a very complex story with many strands involving many characters from the past and present. I felt it really challenged my need for a back-story, to flesh out the character and know how they relate to the story as a whole, but in the end it made for a more spontaneous experience. I trusted the direction. I am sure it will be great.

Read the full interview via the Cultbox website.





FILTER: - Series 6/32 - Online

Mark Gatiss in Series Six

Wednesday, 1 June 2011 - Reported by Chuck Foster
It has been reported that Mark Gatiss will be appearing in episode thirteen of Doctor Who, the finale of the second half of the current series due to be broadcast later in the year. The news comes as part of an interview with one of his co-stars, interviewed by Cultbox (note: the link contains a number of possible spoilers for A Good Man Goes To War as well as episode thirteen).

Gatiss was previously announced as one of the writers for this series, with his script - directed by Richard Clark (The Doctor's Wife) - originally slated as episode three before being moved into the second half as episode nine.


Earlier contributions to the series include the scripts for The Unquiet Dead, The Idiot's Lantern and Victory of the Daleks, plus an appearance as Professor Lazarus in The Lazarus Experiment; he also provided the uncredited voice of "Danny Boy" in his Dalek tale. He was the narrator for the second series of the behind-the-scenes programme Doctor Who Confidential.

He is one of the few people to contribute both behind and in front of the camera for Doctor Who.

(with thanks to Will Martin/Cultbox)




FILTER: - Series 6/32