Wedding of River Song: Chart Position

Friday, 14 October 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who RatingsThe final episode in the recent series of Doctor Who, The Wedding of River Song has now been confirmed as the 16th most watched programme of the week, with a final audience share of 32.0%

Final Figures include those who record the programme and watch it within seven days, but do not include those watching on iPlayer.

ITV1 once more claimed all the top spots of the week with The X Factor, Downton Abbey and Doc Martin once again taking the top four spots. The main two soaps also did well and the start of the 2011 series of Strictly Come Dancing also scored highly. Doctor Who beat everything else during the week including all episodes of Emmerdale.




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

The Wedding of River Song - Official UK Ratings

Monday, 10 October 2011 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Doctor Who's series finale, The Wedding of River Song, received a final audience figure of 7.67 million viewers, according to official statistics released by BARB this week; with 6.1 million reported for the initial broadcast, the episode's audience increased by an additional 26% over the course of the week.

The BARB ratings cover the period 26th September to 2nd October, during which Doctor Who was the seventh highest rated individual programme on BBC One and the third as a distinct series, with only episodes of Eastenders and Strictly Come Dancing achieving a higher figure.

Figures do no include those who watched the programme via the BBC iPlayer.

ITV1 programme details for this period have yet to be released; however if viewing patterns have remained consistent with previous weeks, The Wedding of River Song should fall within the Top 20 programmes of the week, and be the eighth most popular distinct series on television - Coronation Street, Emmerdale, The X Factor, Downton Abbey and Doc Martin normally claim higher figures for the commercial channel.

The consolidated chart position should be available later in the week.





FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 6/32

Closing Time: Chart Position

Friday, 7 October 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who RatingsDoctor Who: Closing Time has now been confirmed as the 20th most watched programme of the week.

Final Figures include those who record the programme and watch it within seven days, but do not include those watching on iPlayer.

ITV1 once more claimed all the top spots of the week with The X Factor, Downton Abbey and Doc Martin taking the top four spots. The main three soaps also did well with Doctor Who rating more than once episode of Emmerdale to make 20th place for the week.

The final audience share for Doctor Who was 29.4%




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

iPlayer - September Totals

Tuesday, 4 October 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who: iPlayerDoctor Who took four of the five top places in the list of most accessed programmes on the BBC iPlayer for September.

Top of the list was the Tom MacRae episode, The Girl Who Waited, which had 1.16 million requests up until the end of the month.

Second was Mark Gatiss's Night Terrors with 1.11 million. Outnumbered Episode 1 sneaked into third place with The God Complex and Closing Time coming 4th and 5th respectively.

Let's Kill Hitler, which topped the August charts, also managed 16th in the September ones.

Torchwood took the 10th spot with its season finale getting 0.59 million requests.

The recent repeats of the comedy series Come Fly With Me have seen Episode Two of the series retake the top position, just ahead of The Impossible Astronaut, as the most accessed programme of the year.




FILTER: - Torchwood - Ratings - Series 6/32 - Online - Miracle Day (Series 4)

Closing Time: Official Ratings

Monday, 3 October 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who: Closing Time had a final official audience figure of 6.93 million viewers, according to figures released by BARB.

The episode was the fifth highest rated programme on BBC One for the week. When HD figures are counted it is likely to finish as 21st for the week.




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

The Wedding of River Song: Press Coverage

Monday, 3 October 2011 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The following are quotes from the initial UK and International media reviews for the broadcast of The Wedding of River Song over the last couple of days; click on the link for the full reviews. Note that reviews will contain spoilers for those that have yet to watch the episode.

United Kingdom


Patrick Mulkern of the Radio Times:
And thus Steven Moffat is pressing a reset button. He said in April, “We’re putting the Who? back in the Doctor.” If this promises less Last Gallifreyan grandstanding, the Doctor playing on a smaller stage like it was in the old days, I’ll be delighted.

So where does he go from here? I’m happy to see many more years of Matt Smith’s Doctor – up to the 50th anniversary in 2013 and beyond. But, much as I like Amy, Rory and River (and the actors who play them), I reckon their work is done. It’s time for some new playmates.

Dan Martin of the Guardian:
Not only does The Wedding Of River Song tie almost everything up, it moves along the bigger, 50-year story and effectively reboots the show. After seven years of saving the Earth/universe/future of humanity, The Doctor was in danger of becoming ubiquitous. Now, with everybody thinking he's dead, things will be different. Next year we will presumably be back to covert operations under cover of darkness. And that gives us somewhere new to go.

Neela Debnath of the Independent:
... there has been an argument running throughout the series about whether it is too complex for children (let alone adults) to understand. It has certainly been challenging to watch and there are times when the narrative becomes hard to follow. Moffat wants to make it more than just a show about a man with a blue box. But the next series must allow the viewer a moment to pause and catch up with what is going on. It could prove detrimental to continue at this break-neck speed which is already leaving some viewers feeling alienated.

As series finales go, it felt underwhelming in terms of drama yet it was overwhelming in terms of information. Maybe if it had ended on the same cliffhanger note as ‘A Good Man Goes To War’ it would have had more of an electrifying feel. Or if there had been more resolution, it would have worked in the episode’s favour.

Generally this series has been an interesting watch. The Doctor’s dark side has been shown along with the moral responsibilities and dilemmas he has in relation to his companions. The themes and character development has added a richness and depth that the show was lacking before. Sticking with the same characters could have proved to be a fatal error and made the series feel stale but instead it has made the programme feel more multi-layered. In some ways the show has felt more adult yet catering to the needs of the average 10-year-old. Aesthetically, the cheaply-made feel has vanished, now there is a cinematic quality to it which befits the series.

Rachel Tarley of the Metro:
As ever, the script was snappy and witty throughout, but the episode had its eery and touching moments where necessary, too. The Doctor certainly knows how to bow out in style. This was a finale that will have us waiting on the edge of our seats for the next series to begin.

Jim Shelley of the Mirror:
All the hokum about time “dying” was like a bad concept album from the 70s with Hipgnosis artwork.

Gavin Fuller of the Telegraph:
In all it was an uneven ending to a slightly uneven series which at times has been in danger of overcomplicating itself, but still has been one of the most creative and distinctive series on television.

Dave Golder of SFX:
With the final bite you’re expected to swallow something that makes you splutter: the final revelation that it wasn’t the Doctor that died by the lake, killed by River Song in an astronaut’s suit, it was a Teselecta double.

Initially – the first time River reveals what the Doctor really whispered to her (“look into my eye”) – it seems like a cool twist – the doctor in a doctor suit. And it’s certainly refreshing to have a denouement that’s based on good old-fashioned scripting sleight of hand rather than technobabble (there is technobabble, but it largely ends up as a red herring). Your great aunt Mabel who’s been moaning she can’t follow the show any more can’t fail to grasp this one, can she?

But it does mean the whole episode is just an elaborate version of the classic Star Trek: Voyager alternate timeline shtick complete with reset button. And while Moffat may have wrong-footed us by making us think it would be the Flesh Doctor on the beach, it’s still in essence the same get-out clause – a double.

(I’m just being a cynical, gnarly old SF hack who’s seen it all before and letting the clichés that 99% of the audience won’t be familiar with worry me too much.)

Simon Brew of Den of Geek:
The Wedding Of River Song was a bumpy mix. It was puzzling, yet ultimately straightforward by the time the credits rolled (although you really had to pay attention). It promised to answer questions, yet left some dangling (which isn’t something I have a problem with, it just feels that some have been dangling for a while now). And it wrapped up one of the strongest series of the show to date just a little below the peaks that it’s been hitting for my money.

It proved to be a cocktail of what makes Doctor Who brilliant, yet sometimes frustrating. But it sets things up in a strong position to take Doctor Who, with its next series, towards the kind of birthday that shows like these aren’t supposed to get to.


International Coverage


Samantha Holloway of The Examiner:
This was remarkably satisfying. I was concerned, going into the last episode, that there wouldn't be enough time to wrap it up, but once again, the Moff pulled it off, and he didn't even need a two-parter to do it. We got the question that can't be asked and the name of the place where it'll be asked anyway, without any indication of time so that we can still have as many seasons with Matt as he wants to do. We got the return of the Silence and an answer to what Madam Kovarian was. We got another alternate world, and this one was all sorts of interesting and wild. We got the headless monks back. We got Amy and Rory falling in love again. We got several injokes. And we got a nice, clean ending so that next season can be its own entity. In fact, it was wrapped up so well that it's not much of a horror that it's so long before we get another episode. A small horror, but it's not a cliffhanger. It's an ending, and it makes sense.

Charlie Jane Anders of io9:
In a lot of ways, "The Wedding of River Song" was pretty similar to last year's finale, "The Big Bang." There's a new alternate universe, in which Everything Is Wrong. Only Amy Pond (and River Song) fully remember the original universe. Amy and Rory find each other all over again. The Doctor meekly surrenders himself to oblivion to save the universe — except that he figures out a last-minute loophole. And there's a wedding. Except that "The Wedding of River Song" was a much stronger episode than "The Big Bang," in at least a few major ways: 1) We got answers; 2) No cheating; 3) More fun; 4) A very clear thematic resolution.
...
The last time we were told to ask who the Doctor really is was on the show's 25th anniversary, in the dreadful "Silver Nemesis." And now, it seems likely that the show is finally going to give us the answers it hinted at back then — just in time for the 50th anniversary. Let's hope the show leaves some big revelations for the 75th and 100th anniversaries, though.

Matt Risley of IGN:
What really excites though is the potential inherent in the massive thematic reboot button that's just been pressed. With the Doctor's faked death essentially giving the show the opportunity to explore a tantalisingly fresh 'black-ops covert' angle and dial the bombastic-asity back, things would be interesting enough as they were.

But throw in the revelation that the show's title is now linked to its very being ("Doctor WHO?"), and you've got a whole raft of new possibilities conveniently laying the groundwork for 2013's 50th anniversary celebration.

Chris Pritchard of On The Box:
Overall, I thought this series was sizzling hot. The suavely dressed Silence deserve applause as one of the best monsters ever created. And Episode 4, The Doctor’s Wife written by sci-fi extraordinaire Neil Gaiman was among the highlights as Idris (who was actually the TARDIS) partook in some brilliant verbal sparring with the Doctor.

But now The Doctor has another wife – good old River Song. The time will soon come when the last notes of her song are sung in a forest of books with David Tennant, and the time will soon come for ‘the fall of the eleventh’, as prophesised by fatty-blue head Dorium, who no doubt heard such things on the internet with his ‘excellent wi-fi’. With Stephen Moffat in control, we are in the hands of a master story-teller, and I for one cannot to see what happens next. Doctor Who?




FILTER: - Series 6/32 - Press

The Wedding of River Song: AI

Monday, 3 October 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who: The Wedding of River Song had an Appreciation Index score of 86

The score is a measure of how much the audience enjoyed the episode. A score of 86 is considered excellent.

The Sunday repeat had an audience of 0.48 million viewers and a 2.2% share of the audience.

With overnight figures available for the whole week, Doctor Who is currently the 20th most watched programme. Final figures should be available next week.

The final Doctor Who Confidential had an overnight audience of 0.4 million on BBC Three on Saturday.




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

Wedding of River Song: Overnight Viewing Figures

Sunday, 2 October 2011 - Reported by Marcus
6.1 million watched the Doctor Who series finale, The Wedding of River Song, on Saturday, according to unofficial overnight figures.

The the programme had an audience share of 28.3%. It was the third highest rated show of the day and the second highest rated programme on the BBC.

Top of the day was The X Factor with 9.5 million watching and Strictly Come Dancing was second for the day with 7.5 million, giving Doctor Who a much better lead-in than the two previous weeks. The new series of Merlin had 5.2 million watching as was fourth for the day.

All Star Family Fortunes on ITV1, had an average of 3.6 million viewers, with its audience dented by Strictly Come Dancing. During the period it was placed directly against Doctor Who it achieved 5.5 million against Doctor Who's 6 million viewers.

With one day to come Doctor Who is the 17th most watched programme of the week.

Final official figures should be available next week.




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

Closing Time: Australian ratings

Sunday, 2 October 2011 - Reported by Adam Kirk
Closing Time has debuted in Australia to respectable ratings. TV Tonight reports that the episode averaged 691,000 viewers in the five major capital cities. It was the second highest rating drama and the ninth highest rating programme for the day overall. The corresponding Confidential Cutdown rated 469,000 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.

Meanwhile in New Zealand, The Girl Who Waited and episode 5 of Torchwood: Miracle Day: (both on Prime) rated 102,210 viewers and 82,580 viewers respectively.




FILTER: - Torchwood - Ratings - Series 6/32 - New Zealand - Broadcasting - Australia

Doctor Who pays tribute to The Brigadier

Saturday, 1 October 2011 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who took time tonight to pay tribute to one of its longest-running characters.

Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart as played by the late Nicholas Courtney, was a stalwart of the series in the early seventies and appeared in a total of 102 episodes over the years. The actor died earlier this year after a long illness.

The 2011 series finale, The Wedding of River Song, saw the Doctor learn of the death of his former colleague in a phone call from the nursing home where the fictional brigadier spent his last days. "I'm afraid Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart passed away a few months ago," the nurse told the Doctor. "It was very peaceful. Talked a lot about you, if that's any comfort. Always made us pour an extra brandy in case you came round one of these days."

Executive producer, Steven Moffat, said of the decision to include the tribute to Courtney's character:
In a story about the Doctor going to his death, it seemed right and proper to acknowledge one of the greatest losses Doctor Who has endured.
The character of The Brigadier first appeared in 1968 as Colonel Lethbridge-Stewart, in Episode Three of the Patrick Troughton story The Web of Fear. His last appearance in Doctor Who was in the fourth episode of the 1989 story  Battlefield.

After the series returned in 2005, viewers were told his character was in Peru until he was revived again for two episodes of The Sarah Jane Adventures, Enemy of the Bane


The Phone Call, BBC, via the BBC Doctor Who site - may not play outside of the United Kingdom





FILTER: - Series 6/32 - Production