Doctor Who’s ‘woke, boring rubbish’ storylines have caused staggering number of fans to turn off
MORE than half of Brits who used to watch Doctor Who say they turned off because it had become “woke, boring rubbish”.
That is the result of an independent survey conducted as star Ncuti Gatwa exited the Tardis with a paltry 2.3 million viewers on Saturday.
In a shock twist, he appeared to regenerate into the Doctor’s former companion Rose Tyler, played by Billie Piper — but many are not convinced she is the Time Lord’s 16th incarnation.
The Sun exclusively revealed last month that Ncuti, 32, would be leaving the role after two series — the shortest tenure of any actor in the role since Christopher Eccleston, who left the rebooted BBC show after one series in 2005.
The survey quizzed 2,135 adults and found 42 per cent of current and former viewers said it had got worse since its relaunch two decades ago, with stories increasingly preachy and worthy.
Even one in three current viewers think it has got worse.
Plotlines over the past three years have featured trans heroines, non-binary baddies and drag-queen villains — and the Doctor coming out as gay, and crying in most episodes.
James Johnson of pollsters JL Partners said: “This is the first ever major poll done on attitudes to Doctor Who and the results are bleak.
“The public believe a once-great show has lost its way — and their biggest complaint is it puts pursuit of wokeness above entertainment value.
“The main words associated with it are rubbish, boring, and woke.
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“If the BBC want to grow the show’s audience once more, they will need a total revamp.
“And to get back to telling entertaining stories rather than preaching lessons that simply do not have an audience among the British public.”
The poll found 46 per cent of current viewers think it puts social justice and woke issues above quality, compared with 37 per cent who believe the show puts quality first.
Those who have stopped watching say it puts social justice and woke issues first by a ratio of three to one.
The average age of current viewers is 42, compared with 51 for ex-fans.
They are also heavily Labour voters compared to a more politically diverse former audience.
The wokery ratcheted up after Doctor Who was taken over for a second time by showrunner Russell T Davies in 2023.
He was the man who rebooted the show in 2005 with Eccleston, followed by David Tennant.
A respectable 5.1 million tuned in to see his “comeback episode” with David returning to play the Doctor for a second time in 2023.
The actor then handed over to Ncuti who had his first full series as the Fifteenth Doctor last year.
One Whovian writing on X/Twitter, said: “Thanks to RTD (Russell T Davies) Ncuti is tainted and ‘15’ will be remembered as the worst Doctor with the worst era in the history of Doctor Who.”
The Sun revealed BBC bosses were considering a hiatus for the show, though execs maintained they would not make a decision until the second series had aired.
Russell T Davies teased a return on Saturday, saying: “After 62 years, the Doctor’s adventures are only just beginning!”
But that seems optimistic given their current multimillion-pound deal partnership with Disney+ is facing an uncertain future — and the viewing figures for one episode of the last series fell as low as 1.6 million.
A spokeswoman for Doctor Who said: “Doctor Who remains one of the biggest dramas on the BBC and is the most watched drama for under-35s, as well as being one of the most popular brands on BBC iPlayer.
“As we have previously stated, a decision on any future deal between the BBC and Disney+ regarding Doctor Who is yet to be made and any other claims are pure speculation.”