Doctor Who Tender Perfect Time for Creative Regeneration: BBC Boss

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Posted in: BBC, TV | Tagged: doctor who


Doctor Who Tender Perfect Time for Creative Regeneration: BBC Boss

Director General Matt Brittin reaffirmed the BBC's commitment to Doctor Who, seeing the tender process as a time for a creative regeneration.


Published Tue, 14 Jul 2026 07:32:08 -0500
by Ray Flook
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Article Summary

  • BBC boss Matt Brittin says Doctor Who will regenerate again, reaffirming the broadcaster’s commitment to the series.
  • Doctor Who is headed to tender, but the BBC has not revealed when the franchise will return or what form it will take.
  • The BBC’s Annual Report shows 539,000 fewer licence fee payers, even as licence fee income rose to £3.9 billion.
  • Stephen Moffat urges Doctor Who fans to be patient, saying a new creative team will need time to shape the show.

We've been hearing it from everyone from Russell T. Davies and Stephen Moffat to Alex Kingston and David Tennant. Doctor Who isn't going anywhere. That's the good news. The not-so-great news? We have no idea when it will return or in what form. While we await the show officially being put out to tender, when the BBC lets interested producers know what it's looking for and they get to pitch their vision, BBC Director General Matt Brittin is reaffirming the media company's commitment to the long-running series. "That's a show that has regenerated multiple times in its 60-plus year history, and we'll do so again," Brittin shared earlier today, coinciding with the release of the BBC's Annual Report. "I think that's one of the great things about the 100-year history of the BBC. We can do that, and we can creatively renew shows that people love, and we'll be working hard on that right now." Speaking of that Annual Report, we also learned that the BBC took a big hit in the number of viewers paying its licensing fee, losing 539,000 payers last year (down to 23.3 million). In terms of income from the annual £180 ($240) fee, that actually increased by £36M to £3.9B (due to the license fee rising with inflation).

Image: BBC; Shutterstock.com/Bangla press

New Doctor Who Team "Will Need a Moment"; Moffat Advises Patience

While we await word on what the future could hold for Doctor Who, now that the BBC has made the decision to put it out to tender for new production companies to pitch, Moffat has been doing a nice job of keeping the fans focused on the "bigger picture": the show will have a future – it's just going to take a while. Checking in with Half the Picture, continued along that track – though he added that the new production/creative team "will need a moment" to really bring together its vision for Doctor Who.

"So long as everybody is talking about the future of the show, do you know what the show has? A future," Moffat shared about all of the buzz over the show's fate over the past few months. "If it's an entirely new team, which I think it will be, they need a moment. They need a moment to sit back and say, 'Okay, what's it going to be this time? Who's it going to be this time? What sort of show is it going to be?'" Moffat added. "Don't go rushing into that, and meanwhile, you've got all of 'Doctor Who,' all of it, on your iPhone. You can sit and watch anything that we haven't accidentally lost, and you'll be fine. Just watch it all end to end and give them time to get them going. But it will be back, and it will be good."

Images: BBC Screencap; BBC

Moffat also had some interesting perspectives on television writing and the importance of remembering that a writer's primary job is to entertain. "They never mention the word entertainment, which is the minimum condition of anything you write. Not theme, which some poor sods ask me about, and not subtext. Oh, do me a favour. It's entertainment. That's all you're doing," Moffat said. "When people come home at night to watch a TV show or go to the cinema to watch a movie or the theatre, that's all they're going for. They're not going there for your thoughts on things. They're not wanting to decode the inner mystery of it. They want you to provide approximately 90 minutes of entertainment so they can go to a restaurant and have a nice time. That's it."

But that doesn't mean that Moffat's telling writers not to hit on important themes and address key issues with their work; it just shouldn't be at the expense of the viewers engaging with what's on their screens. "If you're anything beyond that, if you have deep philosophical insights, that's fine, so long as it doesn't get in the way of being entertaining," he noted. "You should always be thinking what's the next interesting thing that could happen? What would be exciting now? The simple rule is every sentence has to make you want to read the next sentence. All the words should lean forward. That's what you're doing. You're trying not to bore people."


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