Australian overnight ratings for The Woman Who Lived & final ratings for Before

Monday, 26 October 2015 - Reported by Adam Kirk
The Woman Who Lived has debuted in Australia, averaging 493,000 viewers in the five major capital cities. It was the highest rating ABC drama of the day and the thirteenth highest rating program of the day overallThese ratings do not include iview, regional or time-shifted viewers.

Meanwhile, including time-shifted viewers, Before the Flood averaged 660,000 consolidated viewers in the five major capital cities. With 152,000 extra viewers, it was the highest time-shifted program of the day (the second highest time-shifted program had an extra 134,000 viewers) and the fifteenth highest rating program of the day overallThese ratings do not include iview or regional viewers.




FILTER: - Australia - Broadcasting - Ratings - Series 9/35

The Woman Who Lived - Press Reaction

Sunday, 25 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThis item Contains Plot Spoilers

Press reaction to The Woman Who Lived is in with many reviewers picking up on the episodes theme of the curse of imortality. The Telegraph thought it was a stand out episode. "In the world of Doctor Who, immortality is an everyday topic. But this episode showed how, in reality, it would be a nightmare. To watch your lovers, your friends, your family and your children die, to witness every human disaster – the loss would be almost too tough to bear, at least while retaining one’s sense of humanity."

The Metro also picked up on the immortality theme. "Ashildr has become Me, an immortal, linear traveller through time, experiencing horrors on both a broad and a personal scale, such as losing her children to the Black Death. She is what the Doctor might have become had he not had human companions to ground him and remind him, as he tells her, ‘how beautiful and precious life is because it’s fleeting".

The Guardian enjoyed the lighter moments of the story. "Capaldi once again proves that he’s a lot better as “Funny Doctor” than he was as “Dark Doctor” last year; overcoming his aversion to punning in order to buy valuable time. And as his verbal sparring partner Sam Swift the Quick, Rufus Hound brings the same infectious glow of an actor clearly having the time of his life that Frank Skinner did last year. And since he may or not now be Me’s immortal companion, there’s plenty of scope for a return."

Radio Times while finding the episode a "dark and beautiful study of immortality and short lives", is not so sure about the character. "Sam Swift the Quick, who flounders around, delaying his hanging with mucky innuendo. He’s likeable as a one-off but now could be another immortal. Who knows what’s being set up there – I wouldn’t mourn if we never see him again."

The Independent found the episode very character driven, mainly at the expense of the plot. "The extraterrestrial lion king didn’t really make much of an impression, either from a design standpoint or as a particularly interesting villain. His plot was so by-the-numbers it barely warranted a couple of lines of dialogue and the inevitable ‘I’m invading you after all’ turnaround was so predictable it veered on the schlocky."

Digital Spy also felt the episode didn't quite hold together. "Where the episode fumbles is in its attempts to meld all of this with a broad, comic adventure, replete with bumbling guards, bungled robberies and a fire-breathing humanoid lion.The mix of moody introspection and historical romp doesn't quite gel, though Tregenna's script settles down in time to deliver a mostly satisfying final act, hinging on the fate of rival highwayman Sam Swift (a terrific, if underused, Rufus Hound)."

Author Catherine Tregenna wins plaudits from Den of Geek. "Catherine Tregenna is an ideal author of this week's script. She's already written for the near-immortal (in, surely, every sense) Captain Jack Harkness in Torchwood several times. Here, she's given the time and space to put at the heart of her episode a dissection of what that immortality means".

IGN felt the episode balanced the lightweight and humorous with some more heavy moments. "The Doctor reads Me’s journals, only to find ripped out pages -- and tear stains -- which reflects the horror that he has inflicted upon her in his attempt to do a good thing. Me’s recollection of her past lives is heartbreaking.". Mashable also picks up on the journals "Catherine Tregenna, takes us into the ineffable sadness of Me's journals, dotted with tears and ripped pages. And she takes us into the even worse sadness, that Me can't remember everything that happened to her, or the names she used."

TV.Com remarked on the absence of the Doctor's companion for much of the episode. "Over the years, Doctor Who has featured Doctor- and companion-lite episodes as a means of completing production on time and budget. It was often successful, especially in terms of say, "Midnight" or "The Lodger." Whether this episode was mostly Clara-less for production reasons, I have no idea, but it was a necessary episode story-wise."

Meanwhile TV Fanatic relished the mention of a former stalwart of the series. "I loved hearing Capaldi mention Captain Jack Harkness. If there's one character I'd love to see back, it's Captain Jack. "

You can read the Doctor Who News review in our reviews section.




FILTER: - Press - Series 9/35

The Woman Who Lived: Overnight Viewing Figures

Sunday, 25 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway4.34 million viewers watched Doctor Who: The Woman Who Lived, according to unofficial overnight viewing figures.

Doctor Who has an average share of 20% of the total TV audience as was third for the day. Top for the day was Strictly Come Dancing which had an average of 9.32 million watching. ITV had 6.55 million watching The X Factor, which was scheduled directly opposite Doctor Who.

Casualty was pushed below 4 million with 3.95 million watching.

Final ratings will be issued next week, which will be based on the exact transmission time for the episode and will include those who record it and watch it later.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

Before the Flood - Chart Placing

Thursday, 22 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus

Doctor Who: Before the Flood, which finished with an official rating of 6.05 million viewers, has been confirmed as the 21st most watched programme of the week.

Consolidated figures give the episode a share of 26.7% of the total TV audience.

The rating issued by the Broadcasters' Audience Research Board, or BARB, includes all those who watched the programme within one week of transmission. It does not include those watching online via iPlayer

This year Barb is reporting, for the first time, a 28 day figure, which gives an indication of how many watch the programme within four weeks of the original transmission. Data for the first episode of the series, The Magician's Apprentice, gave the episode a 28 day rating of 6.84 million viewers, 300,000 more than the initial 7 day figure.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

The Woman Who Lived: Publicity

Tuesday, 20 October 2015 - Reported by Chuck Foster
A roundup of publicity for the next episode in the current series of Doctor Who, The Woman Who Lived.

England, 1651. The deadly Highwayman 'The Nightmare' and his sidekick stalk the dark streets of London. But when they find loot that's not of this world, they come face to face with The Doctor.

Who is the Nightmare in league with? And can the Doctor avoid the hangman's noose and protect Earth from a devilish betrayal?

Writer / Catherine Tregenna
Director / Ed Bazalgette
Producer / Derek Ritchie
Cast / Peter Capaldi and Jenna Coleman

The Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway
Profile images of Ashildr (Maisie Williams), Sam Swift (Rufus Hound) and Leandro (Ariyon Bakare):

The Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon RidgwayThe Woman Who Lived: Publicity Photos. Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway

The Woman Who Lived: Known Broadcast Details
United KingdomBBC OneSat 24 Oct 20158:20pm
United States of AmericaBBC AmericaSat 24 Oct 20159:00pm EDT(1:00am GMT)
CanadaSPACESat 24 Oct 20159:00pm EDT(1:00am GMT)
Asia PacificBBC EntertainmentSun 25 Oct 201510:00am SGT(2:00am GMT)
New ZealandPRIMESun 25 Oct 20157:30pm NZDT(6:30am GMT)
AustraliaABCSun 25 Oct 20157:40pm AEDT(8:40am GMT)
Europe (Benelux)BBC FirstTue 27 Oct 20159:00pm CEST
United KingdomBBC TwoFri 30 Oct 20151:45am(British Signed Language)
FinlandYLE2Mon 26 Oct 20156:05pm EEST
IndiaFXSun 1 Nov 201511:00pm IST
South AfricaBBC FirstSat 31 Oct 20157:30pm SAST
GermanyFOXThu 17 Dec 2015~10:00pm CET(dubbed into German)





FILTER: - Publicity - Series 9/35

Before the Flood - Official Rating

Monday, 19 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Before the Flood (Credit: BBC / Simon Ridgway)
Doctor Who: Before the Flood had an official consolidated rating of 6.05 million viewers.

The rating issued by the Broadcasters' Audience Research Board, or BARB, includes all those who watched the programme within one week of transmission. It does not include those watching online via iPlayer

Doctor Who was the 8th most watched programme on BBC Television, and second overall on Saturday. Full data is not yet available for ITV+1, but Doctor Who is expected to be around 21st for the week.

Top of the week was the final of The Great British Bake Off with 15.05 million watching, the biggest audience for any programme this year.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

The Girl Who Died - AI:82

Monday, 19 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
The Girl Who Died (Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway)
Doctor Who: The Girl Who Died had an Audience Appreciation or AI score of 82.

The Appreciation Index or AI is a measure of how much the audience enjoyed the programme. The score, out of a hundred, is compiled by a specially selected panel of around 5,000 people who go online and rate and comment on programmes.

With Sunday's overnight viewing figures now available, Doctor Who finished as the 27th most watched programme of the week. Consolidated figures will be published next week.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

Australian overnight ratings for The Girl Who Died and final ratings for Under t

Monday, 19 October 2015 - Reported by Adam Kirk
The Girl Who Died has debuted in Australia, averaging 501,000 viewers in the five major capital cities. It was the second-highest rating ABC drama of the day and the thirteenth highest rating program of the day overallThese ratings do not include regional or time-shifted viewers.

Meanwhile, including time-shifted viewers, Under the Lake averaged 612,000 consolidated viewers in the five major capital cities. With 182,000 extra viewers, it was the highest time-shifted program of the day (the second highest time-shifted program only had an extra 95,000 viewers) and the eighth highest rating program of the day overallThese ratings do not include regional viewers.




FILTER: - Australia - Broadcasting - Ratings - Series 9/35

Doctor Who Extra - The Girl Who Died

Sunday, 18 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who Extra (Credit: BBC) The BBC have released clips looking behind the scenes of this weeks episode of Doctor Who, The Girl Who Died.




A full review of the episode can be found on Doctor Who Reviews




FILTER: - Doctor Who Extra - Series 9/35