DOCTOR WHO Showrunner Russell T Davies Explains Why Disney Is Crucial To The Sci-Fi Franchise's Future

DOCTOR WHO Showrunner Russell T Davies Explains Why Disney Is Crucial To The Sci-Fi Franchise's Future

Doctor Who showrunner Russell T Davies has revealed why BBC's partnership with Disney is crucial to both the show's new big budget feel and its future on our screens. Find his comments in full here...

By JoshWilding - Mar 28, 2024 01:03 PM EST
Filed Under: Doctor Who
Source: SFFGazette.com

Since its 2005 relaunch, Doctor Who has been produced by the BBC. The broadcaster is publicly funded in the UK through a TV License which is mandatory to watch the BBC and live television (it's as ridiculous as it sounds), but the rise of streaming and a general unhappiness over those increasing fees will likely lead to it eventually being scrapped.

What that means for the BBC - and the shows which call it home - is unclear. 

The Whoniverse's latest creative overhaul - which has seen Russell T Davies return as showrunner - is being co-produced by Disney, meaning the franchise's future no longer hinges on the BBC's continued existence. After all, there's now a scenario where, if BBC gives up on the show, it could become a Disney+ exclusive.

As you might expect, that's left fans concerned about what will happen to Doctor Who down the line, and talking to They Like To Watch (via SFFGazette.com), Davies opened up on Doctor Who's future. 

"You’ve got to look in the long term at the end of the BBC, which is undoubtedly on its way in some shape or form," he explains. "Is Doctor Who going to die then? No! You’ve got to prepare for that kind of stuff."

Disney's involvement has also led to a significant budget increase for Doctor Who, a big change from Davies' previous stint as showrunner when a lack of funds clearly held the ambitious sci-fi series back. 

Davies says Disney has helped bring Doctor Who "up there with the big hitters," but notes, "If Disney collapsed tomorrow and we had to go back to making Doctor Who on a normal BBC budget, you know what? We’d all rally round and make it and suddenly the stories would become claustrophobic ghost stories."

"A lot of people would like that very much, so I’m not saying you have to have this happen. But while it’s happening elsewhere, I think it’s unfair that it doesn’t happen to Doctor Who," he said of the show taking advantage of Disney's input.

Ultimately, what comes next for Doctor Who will hinge on the BBC's evolution and those all-important streaming numbers on Disney+. Either way, Davies - who is already working on a third season - is free to walk away from the show whenever he pleases.

"It’s kind of a rolling contract. It’s very free. Look, if I had enough tomorrow, I could walk out. Well, I wouldn’t walk out, because I wouldn’t let people down. But nothing could trap me. I would never be in a situation where I had to write things."

"I’m talking as though that’s about to happen. That’s not about to happen," he adds. "I love it. But, oh my God, I’d never be stuck sitting somewhere going: I must do five years here. Never. I’m too old for that now."

The first two episodes of Doctor Who will be released internationally on Friday, May 10, at 7pm ET on Disney+ and also the BBC iPlayer in the UK at 12am BST on May 11 (they'll then air as normal on BBC One later that same day).

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Biggums
Biggums - 3/28/2024, 1:09 PM
That doc look zesty af.
TheVisionary25
TheVisionary25 - 3/28/2024, 1:15 PM
@Biggums - he is lol

Dude has so much charisma , swagger and sexual energy.

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Definitely has that 3rd Doctor vibe to him an extent.
TheVisionary25
TheVisionary25 - 3/28/2024, 1:24 PM
Certainly fair imo…

The show does look better then ever but I’m not gonna lie , I do miss the kitschy charm a lower budget brought to the show (it felt part of its appeal honestly) and they did well with the resources they had for the most part.

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Anyway can’t wait for the new season , this might be the most excited I’ve been for the show ever!!.
Twenty23Three
Twenty23Three - 3/28/2024, 1:55 PM
The BBC will be gone within the decade. At least in the sense that it won’t be publicly funded. Doctor Who would be the first thing to go when that happens because it’s one of its most expensive shows. Makes sense to get funding elsewhere
Apophis71
Apophis71 - 3/28/2024, 2:16 PM
@Twenty23Three - Which is nuts when shows like Dr Who and David Attenborough's nature documentaties, whilst amongst the most expenside, are at the same time the most profitable for the Beeb but your 100% correct that they would likely be dropped when the TV licence goes without a suitable alternative source of funding. Why they have been doing more of these collaboration deals such as they did with HBO for His Dark Material's which I think was the most expensive show the BBC ever made in terms of drama although Walking with Dinosaurs may have cost more (unclear as the exact budget for HDM was never revealed to my knowledge).
JonC
JonC - 3/28/2024, 2:41 PM
@Twenty23Three - they need not be gone... it is an entity that can have new ownership taken like anything else, heck, disney could buy them out or take over the brand and shows.
Twenty23Three
Twenty23Three - 3/28/2024, 4:03 PM
@JonC - hence why I followed with how it’s currently run. It can’t stay funded by the British public
DocSpock
DocSpock - 3/28/2024, 2:09 PM

Isn't not being sh!tty as hell also crucial to the show's future?

braunermegda
braunermegda - 3/28/2024, 3:27 PM
@DocSpock - yeah, that's why doctor who is safe. If you'd watch instead of whining online you'd understand.
DocSpock
DocSpock - 3/28/2024, 4:16 PM
@braunermegda -

I watch it. It now sucks. I hope it gets better.

Not a whine, just an observation.
mpk1988
mpk1988 - 3/28/2024, 4:24 PM
@braunermegda - Maybe if you had an iota of taste you'd not be gobbling up pathetic TV junk.. The recent Dr. Who episodes were some of the most embarrassing and pandering television momenta to air... Devoid of logic, any semblance of intelligence and horrible screen writing
marvel72
marvel72 - 3/28/2024, 2:10 PM
When they see the ratings dip, they'll cancel the show.
braunermegda
braunermegda - 3/28/2024, 3:30 PM
@marvel72 - oh, you mean the 7.49m from the last episode alone on bbc? or the 6.85m on the final special? maybe you're talking about the 7.14m and 7.61m respectively from the first two specials? All of that without even the disney worldwide range, where Doctor Who was the fifth most-streamed series for the week in the first week of january, and streamed 10.01 million times over the week between Christmas Day and New Year’s Eve.

So stop being a [frick]ing hater for absolutely nothing, just to go with it.
marvel72
marvel72 - 3/28/2024, 5:53 PM
@braunermegda - Stop acting like the show isn't in a downward spiral.

No one is going to watch this crap, so stop pretending there is nothing wrong with the show.
braunermegda
braunermegda - 3/28/2024, 7:08 PM
@marvel72 - so you baiscally ignore the highest ratings I gave, which can be found online, so you can stick to your bigotry. Typical big fat [frick] nerdie.
bkmeijer1
bkmeijer1 - 3/28/2024, 3:04 PM
"We’d all rally round and make it and suddenly the stories would become claustrophobic ghost stories. A lot of people would like that very much."

Oh yeah, episodes being forced to work on small budgets get the most out of it. I'll take that over serialized spectacle every day.
SpiderBloke2099
SpiderBloke2099 - 3/28/2024, 3:17 PM
"Since its 2005 relaunch, Doctor Who has been produced by the BBC. The broadcaster is publicly funded in the UK through a TV License which is mandatory to watch the BBC and live television (it's as ridiculous as it sounds)"

yeah, because paying a subscription to watch ad-free linear TV is so insanely stupid when you pay a subscription to stream ad-free content on Netflix et al and you pay a subscription fee to watch Sky or HBO or whatever. The licence pays for the BBC which is 8 TV stations, 6 or 7 national radio stations, iPlayer, Sounds, the news website, the Bitesize educational website and local radio stations. On top of that, it allows you to then watch the commercial stations like ITV, Channel 4, 5 and the free-to-air digital stations.

For £140-odd quid a year, you get access to a LOT of stuff.
Scarilian
Scarilian - 3/28/2024, 7:21 PM
@SpiderBloke2099 -
"For £140-odd quid a year, you get access to a LOT of stuff."

The fact they manipulated the UK tax payers into paying for propaganda is insane.
Nightwing1015
Nightwing1015 - 3/29/2024, 9:26 AM
@SpiderBloke2099 - I assumed he was talking about the 'mandatory' part being insane. Not that people would voluentarily pay for the BBC
soberchimera
soberchimera - 3/28/2024, 3:43 PM
If Afghanistan is the graveyard of empires, Disney is the graveyard of franchises.
mpk1988
mpk1988 - 3/28/2024, 4:25 PM
What a shit show... Haven't seen such a hot mess and crash since the last episodes of GoT... This was way way worse tbh
Batmangina
Batmangina - 3/28/2024, 4:32 PM
Disney is crucial as they're the only ones funneling money to shitty DEI projects no matter what but they only have about $17 left to spend.
Scarilian
Scarilian - 3/28/2024, 7:20 PM
I'd rather have lower budget episodes with a better storyline as opposed to the high budget trash we're going to get with Disney.

Also, if the goal was to help the show survive, turning it more into a fantasy and race swapping the Doctor is only going to risk driving away the audience. The US audience flocked around the show primarily with Tennant and Smith, if you want to regain that audience then he needs to be characterized similarly and appeal more to the demographic

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